Guess Again
I was eating lunch today with my co-workers in the cafeteria, as usual. The food is almost the same every day: rice, a variety of soup, kimchi (I always leave it), some cold gross vegetable, and the main dish, which changes each day.
Today's main dish was spongy dark tube. "What is it?" I asked my co-teacher.
"Do you really want to know?" she said.
Did I really want to know?
"Y-yes," I said.
She said the Korean name for the food, then added, "Normally, it's pig intestines."
Stop.
"Normally," she continued. "But this isn't the real thing. This is an imitation of {Korean word} made from noodles and flour."
"Oh." Relief. Not pig intestines. Not monkey brains or sheep testicles. Just flour. Thank God. Then something occurred to me: "Why is it black if it's made from noodles and flour?"
"Well, in Korea we make flour from many other things. Like potatoes, for instance."
"Oh," I said.
"But that's not why it's so dark," she said. "It's dark because they put pig blood in it."
Today's main dish was spongy dark tube. "What is it?" I asked my co-teacher.
"Do you really want to know?" she said.
Did I really want to know?
"Y-yes," I said.
She said the Korean name for the food, then added, "Normally, it's pig intestines."
Stop.
"Normally," she continued. "But this isn't the real thing. This is an imitation of {Korean word} made from noodles and flour."
"Oh." Relief. Not pig intestines. Not monkey brains or sheep testicles. Just flour. Thank God. Then something occurred to me: "Why is it black if it's made from noodles and flour?"
"Well, in Korea we make flour from many other things. Like potatoes, for instance."
"Oh," I said.
"But that's not why it's so dark," she said. "It's dark because they put pig blood in it."
3 Comments:
That's gross. And by gross, I mean awesome.
I edited your comment on my blog a teensy weensy bit.
Thanks a lot, John Ulmer ~ BLOG FASCIST!!
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home