*Author's Note: Any and all persons engaging in any sexual activity are at least eighteen years of age.
*****
Valerie Elswell, Editor In Chief of Parasols magazine was watching her favorite soap opera when an extremely annoying commercial began. She switched the channel and happened across 'The Cast Iron Stomach,' a cooking show on Channel 12, a local independent station in DeGarde, Louisiana.
The show was so entertaining; Valerie forgot to switch the television back to her soap opera. But, as Bobby, her brother constantly told her, 'watch it tomorrow; you haven't missed anything.'
Milt Duhon, the star of 'The Cast Iron Stomach' was funny, warm, and informative. Valerie couldn't cook; her freezer was chock full of microwave meals. But Milt showed how to make a simple hash and Valerie briefly thought of stopping off at the local grocery store to buy the ingredients.
Thankfully for her, and her neighbors, sanity intervened. Valerie realized, she did not own the cookware necessary, nor did she really have the remedial skills necessary to cook the simple meal.
But if watching thirty minutes of the man could almost inspire her, surely Milt could write a monthly article for their magazine.
"Cooking for sluts," she said, walking into the C.O.O.'s office.
"Huh?" Bobby, her younger brother asked, looking up from the proofs he was perusing for next month's issue.
"You've heard of cooking for dummies? This is cooking for sluts," Valerie said, sitting down in one of the low slung chairs in front of Bobby's desk. "I just saw this show on TV..."
"I'm paying you to sit on your ass and watch TV?" Bobby asked.
"Leave my ass out of this," Valerie smiled.
She crossed her legs and smirked as her own brother's eyes shot to her crotch.
"Anyway, this guy, Milt somebody..." Valerie said.
"Milt Duhon? The Cast Iron Stomach?" Bobby asked.
"You've heard of it?" Valerie asked.
"Valerie! You haven't?" Bobby laughed. "It's the hottest thing in DeGarde right now."
"We eat out what? A hundred times a week? When's the last time you've seen me in a kitchen?" Valerie said. "Anyway, I was thinking, what about a cooking thing? Sexy and fun foods?"
"Why not?" Bobby shrugged. "Two, three pages?"
Channel 12 patched Valerie through to the voice mail for Milt Duhon and Valerie hung up without leaving a message. She was Valerie Elswell, Editor In Chief of Parasols; she didn't leave messages. People left messages for her.
She drove down to the independent broadcasting station, parked next to a battered old pickup truck and hoped the rust wouldn't infect her BMW.
Valerie walked in, asked to speak with the manager and was introduced to John Guidry, the station's managing director.
"Sure; he's in the middle of taping a show right now," John smiled. "Studio C; want to see?"
"And that's how you do you a stir fry in a skillet," Milt Duhon was smiling, showing a completed dish.
"And that's a wrap," Bill Henderson, the floor manager called out after a long moment of silence.
"Milt, this here's Valerie Elswell; she's the Editor of Parasols magazine," John did the introductions.
Valerie presented her idea of a monthly cooking article and Milt smiled but shook his head 'no.'
"Cher, sorry but I'm under contract to Savoie Publishing; they doing a cookbook and everything," he apologized.
"Well, it was worth a shot," she smiled and turned to leave.
"But you need someone write real good and kind of smart?" Milt said and grabbed Kathy Kroff, one of the set directors.
Valerie looked at the attractive young woman, with her light brown hair, large breasts and small waist and bubble butt and nodded.
"You can cook?" she asked the flustered woman.
"Mr. Milt, I don't..." Kathy objected, and then turned her attention to the attractive brunette woman in her expensive jacket, blouse and short skirt and expensive pumps. "Well, yes ma'am; I interned on Mr. Milt's show, and now I'm set director, which is a fancy way of saying I run to the store and buy what he's cooking."
*.*.*.*
April, 2014
In the upper left hand corner was a photograph of Kathy Kroff, chef's hat on her head, tiny apron tied around her middle, leaving her heavy breasts and hard nipples as well as her lightly furred crotch visible. She wore a knowing little smirk and held up a wooden spoon.
Underneath her photograph, in bold face type was the title, 'Cooking For Two. Or Three by Kathy Kroff.'
My girlfriend brought by the carcass of their ten pound spiral cut honey baked ham; I said I wanted the bone for my red beans and rice. When she brought it by, there was still at least two pounds of the delicious ham left.
"We're just so sick of ham," she explained to me. "But I know you'll be able to whip up something fantastic."
So the next morning, I let her sleep a little late, I'd really worn her out the night before, and decided to make a ham hash for breakfast.
First I took two slices of the ham, roughly a quarter pound of the meat, put it on my plastic cutting board; I always use plastic for meats, especially chicken and got my sharp knife. The front of the two slices was facing away and the back was facing me, so I put the tip of my knife in front of the front part of the meat, brought the blade down and dragged the knife toward me, cutting off a very thin ribbon of the ham. I repeated this until I had shredded the ham slices into several thin slivers.
I got out a separate cutting board and another knife and diced both a bell pepper and a small onion which went into a medium sized skillet, where I had a tablespoon of butter melting over medium heat.