How can anyone expect
me to like a food called grits? I looked up, grit, in my American Heritage
Dictionary. It doesn’t sound even remotely edible. Grit is “minute rough
granules, as of sand or stone.” What would possess me to even consider putting
that in my mouth and then actually swallowing it? I have no gizzards. I’m not a
fowl thing.
If I put grit in my
mouth, it would tear up my intestines and, Heaven Forbid! I don’t even want to
think of what it would feel like coming out the bottom end. Oh Lord, help
us!
I read down further in
the dictionary: “The texture or structure of stone to be used in grinding.” Hell
No! I’m not going to eat anything that is going to grind my innards. That’s
just crazy!
Why do people eat
that stuff? I continued my search. Maybe, just maybe, there is something else
in the dictionary. Grit is also a verb.
I can’t eat verbs. Herbs, yes. Verbs, no. I checked again. To grit is to clamp
(the teeth) together. Yup! That’s right. I’m going to clamp my teeth together
if any one tries to make me eat grits.
I almost put the
dictionary away when I saw the plural of grit, grits. Coarsely ground grains,
especially corn. I suppose that if you don’t have sand, you can use coarsely
ground corn to grind something down. Maybe it can be used in place of sand in a
sand-blaster when you don’t want to be too rough on the surface.
I’m even more puzzled
than I was before. Why would anyone want to eat grits? It must be a Southern
thing, like eating that poisonous plant, Polk Salad.
1 comment:
Poke salad.
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