"The Way a Man Views Tofu Reflects How They View Women"

I had actually managed half a century on earth without conceptually connecting women and tofu, aside from the fact that no one I know eats tofu except a few women. Not most women I know, however! It's an outlier even among them. One woman I know did once bring some kind of fake-meat to a cookout; she asked me to cook the real burgers first and then cook hers in the meat grease, please. I was glad to comply; after all, she was my friend and I wanted her to be happy. If I could minimize her self-imposed torture, why wouldn't I want to do so?

From this article on meat pizza toppings being offensive to a certain kind of young woman seeking dates with whatever sort of young man would put up with them. Probably when we were young women had similar sorts of conversations, but before social media they were contained within their friend group and didn't have to be encountered by everyone else. Eventually the young grow up enough to realize that trivia like this is not important; loyalty and honor, trust and respect, these are the foundations of love between successful spouses. You can always order half-and-half pizza.

6 comments:

  1. "The Way a Man Views Tofu Reflects How They View Women"

    Curious. I view tofu as "OK", not very sturdy and not having much flavor of its own, taking the flavor of whatever it was put with.

    That's not a good description of the women I know, but perhaps it fits her and those she knows.

    If the lady eats kosher, or is Hindu, there may be some larger issues that will need to be resolved before getting more involved.

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  2. Anonymous4:42 PM


    Tofu- tasteless and not good bang for the buck.

    Too much hassle to make it.

    For decades, I pressure-cooked soybeans, as they were cheaper than tofu. In the last decade, I switched back to regular beans---mostly pinto beans. Cheaper, less hassle, better tasting, and not all that different nutritionally.

    My sister and I disagree on the pronunciation of "tofu." When I was a hippie dropout eco-freak in Berserkeley, I made the acquaintance of a grad student in Japanese & Chinese, who was also the husband of a neighbor up the road in (half a mile away, but also "next door.") my hometown who had been my main babysitter. From him, I learned to pronounce it Dofu. My sister pronounces it as Tofu.

    We have agreed to disagree.

    Gringo

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  3. I've eaten tofu a bit but always as tofu, not fake meat, as strips of it are usually included along with sliced veggies in hot-n-sour soup. I've probably eaten fake meat a few times, not that I really recall, and actually have no strong feelings one way or the other so long as nobody is trying to fool me with it. I do find it mildly amusing the vegan/vegetarian crowd thinks that the attempts to make non-meat look and taste like meat, rather than making good tasting food that does not contain meat (of which there is plenty), is going to produce some sort of epiphany moment regarding a vegetarian diet. But then lots of progressive argumentation by assertion seems to follow that form (see also 'this person you admire was akshually GAY!')

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    1. I did once stop in a restaurant in Athens, Georgia where the “steak” I ordered from the menu turned out to be meatless fakery. It was terrible. I think it was some kind of mushroom base, rather than tofu, but all I remember about it is that it was awful.

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  4. Gringo: “Tofu- tasteless and not good bang for the buck.”

    That’s not, I trust, also your opinion of women.

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    1. raven6:44 PM

      ^ Now see, this here is what we call provocation.
      Let me get some peanuts and a beer.....continue on.

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