But back to why a person would need to
rescue pizza. All that has to happen is
to put the timer on for a little too long, and then wonder why there is smoke
coming out of the oven. At that point
Bonnie choose an expletive I am not familiar with – well, I know it, it is just
not one I choose to use. Knowing that
there would be no divine intervention, even if she was calling for some, I
leaped in to skim the blistered cheese topping off of pizza, -- using a long
knife and the bare tips of my fingers. I
then cut off the burned crusts and hoped for things to cool enough that David
wouldn’t notice. Sprinkling a little
more shredded Parmesan on the pizza was easy, since it was still hot enough to
melt it and had the damage I had done to the top of the product. And the rescue, part II, involved slicing off
the bottom crust, something Bonnie took on.
By now we just about had a new product … one that David would eat. And we felt good about rescuing what
initially looked to be a lost cause, a project instead of doing Christmas baking.
Arta
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