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A Hunger for Frito Pie, From the Artery-Clogged Heart of Texas
The New York Times ^ | February 21, 2003 | JOHN SCHWARTZ

Posted on 02/25/2003 10:55:10 AM PST by aculeus

NOT too long ago, I was seized by a craving.

I was in the mood to return to the kind of food that's bad for you but so good, that tugs at memory but sounds disgusting to the uninitiated.

Because I grew up in Texas, I am speaking, of course, of Frito pie, a dish only a Southwesterner could really love. If I had grown up in Pennsylvania, I might be talking about scrapple; Minnesota, lutefish. And other Texans might crave chicken-fried steak or the spicy Mexican beef tripe soup called menudo. I am struck by yearnings for those things from time to time, but this craving was for Frito pie, the high point of elementary school lunches and high school football games and political rallies.

I asked my mom to send me the fixings, and she sent six cans of Wolf Brand Chili. The Wolf Brand is essential. I make a pretty good bowl of chili myself, but Frito pie doesn't taste right to me without the can of red from Corsicana, Tex., with its 108-year-old recipe and folksy advertisements that were part of my TV upbringing.

I can always tell a Texan — not by the accent, or by the attitude, or even by whether they wear a cowboy hat or boots (oh, grow up). All I have to do is ask the question from the Wolf Brand commercial, with the proper over-excited growl-like drawl: "Neighbor?! How long has it been since you've had a Big! Thick! Steamin' bowl o' Wolf Brand Chili?"

Texans will immediately deliver the tag line: "Well, that's too long!"

Frito pie is not unknown in the North — the Cowgirl Hall of Fame restaurant in Greenwich Village serves a decent version of the dish. But I wanted to make it myself, since it is one of the few recipes that is fully within my set of kitchen skills:

1) Take bag of Fritos. Slice lengthwise. 2) Pour in a cup of hot chili. 3) Add cheese. Velveeta is fine. And onions and jalapeños, if you like. 4) Eat it before it congeals.

I tried to share the love with my children. Two, Elizabeth and Joe, are a little finicky, and Elizabeth has been calling herself a vegetarian lately. But Sam, my enthusiastic gourmand, loved it. We decided that the chili might taste really good on top of one of Elizabeth's Boca Burgers. We were right. It seems to add some kind of missing ingredient.

I realized that other Texpatriates might be feeling the same nostalgia, and packed up a few cans, with bags of Fritos, and sent them off to my wife's Cousin Jim, who is in Kuwait with the troops. "Aw gee! You shouldn't have!" he wrote back in an e-mail message. "Why bless your little white trash hearts, this is a present I will cherish for a long, long time (thank God for Tums)."

But satisfying a long-suppressed desire has a price. You don't want to read the Wolf Brand nutrition label, which told me that after finishing off the can, I had ingested two days' worth of sodium. We just aren't going to talk about the fat and cholesterol. And that doesn't count the sodium, fat and cholesterol in the Fritos. Or the, um, cheese.

A day or so later, I sent my latest blood pressure reading to my doctor via e-mail — part of our attempt to wean me from blood-pressure medications. It's been going well, but that night I reported a definite spike.

"Numbers seem to be creeping back up," he wrote to me the next day. "Have you been doing anything different lately?"

I said in response that I had not been getting as much exercise and sleep as I should have, and added, "I don't know if it makes a difference, but I went on a salty food binge a few days ago." I described the chili orgy. "I've been eating more normally since them," I wrote.

Within a few days, in fact, my numbers were looking good again. I sat down to write about the nostalgic ritual of making just the right food, even if it is, in many ways, wrong.

I sit here writing, and looking up Wolf Brand on the Web. (Hey, Mom — I can order it directly from www.wolfbrandchili.com!) It is getting toward midnight. The craving is back. I push the cat off my lap and go to the kitchen and open one of the cans. There is half a bag of Fritos on top of the fridge, left over from my last spree. I put half of the can's chili in the microwave and then dump it on the Fritos in a bowl, and top it all with cheese. No time to chop onions in this hour of urgent need. The nuked chili blasts the top of my mouth; no matter. I eat lustily, the rich greasiness of the Wolf Brand and the crunch of corn chips blend against all odds, against all sense, into something wonderful.

I return to my easy chair. There are chili spatters on my shirt among the cat hair. I am happy. Sorry, Dr. Pelzman. I'll be good tomorrow.

Let Proust have his dainty little madeleine. This is real eating. You can hardly move after you've had a serving, and how more real does it get than that?


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Texas
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To: JavaTheHutt
roflmao, that's a new one
101 posted on 02/25/2003 12:47:38 PM PST by knak (kelly in alaska)
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Wolf Brand Chili isn't the only thing Corisicana is famous for. It was the site of the first major oilfield in Texas(before Spindletop) and is home to Collin Street Bakery, the first mail-order fruitcake business(for better or worse. Personally I like THEIR fruitcakes, and they've got tons of other great pies and cakes, delivered in nice decorative tins.)
102 posted on 02/25/2003 12:47:38 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: knak
For 2 days now our high has been 18 degrees. If you keep it up, we are going to finish acclimating one of our Rangers to that ice cube you call a state and send him up there to Whup all ya'll.
103 posted on 02/25/2003 12:48:54 PM PST by CCWoody
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To: Jerry_M
Don't you really mean that Tejas was part of New Mexico (along with Colorado, Arizona, and portions of California) long before any "Texicans" got tired of Santa Ana?

Did them new Mexicans ever form their own country? Nope, I didn't think so.

104 posted on 02/25/2003 12:50:45 PM PST by JavaTheHutt
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To: DeFault User
Yep, that stringy stuff they call BBQ in Georgia and the Carolinas just doesn't compare. And good luck trying finding any links(sausage) at one of those BBQ joints.
105 posted on 02/25/2003 12:51:05 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: JustAnAmerican
And sausage is a "good" term for the meat product involved :)

LOL, its the only breakfast meat that can pucker.

I can't believe I just wrote that...:(

106 posted on 02/25/2003 12:51:05 PM PST by Ol' Sox
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To: CCWoody; Space Wrangler
I'll have to try those peanuts sometime, if I ever get to leave this frozen land.

CC: 18 degrees! You call that cold?

Just kidding. I was born and raised there and I still think 30 degrees in Texas is colder than it is here. Most of the time anyway.

107 posted on 02/25/2003 12:52:50 PM PST by knak (kelly in alaska)
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To: holyscroller
Herr's Potato Chips are good, and I miss Sheetz, Eat-N-Park, and Wawa's!
108 posted on 02/25/2003 12:53:52 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: aculeus
Didn't know about Frito Pie, but it reminds me of my version of Tamale Pie. Line an 8x8 baking dish with sliced XLNT tamales, then cover with chili (I sometimes add sweet corn to the chili). Top with lots of Fritos and cheese and/or onions, bake until hot. Black olives, if you prefer, on top. Most excellent!
109 posted on 02/25/2003 12:59:01 PM PST by Mjaye
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To: knak
The first time I was served grits, I put milk and sugar on them like oatmeal....Now after all these years, I realize a fried egg and butter is the best....
110 posted on 02/25/2003 1:02:33 PM PST by dakine
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Eat 'n' Park is good, but Sheetz? (I lived in PA for ten years. Took many years off Purgatory that way.)
111 posted on 02/25/2003 1:13:42 PM PST by annyokie
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To: TaqueriaFanatic
I had a scrapple sanwhich yesterday for lunch. I have been eating it for years, and to this day don't want to know whats really in it.

Suffice it to say, Its a breakfast "meat" made from scrap pig parts and corn meal.

What those parts are, you don't want to know.

If you do decide to try it, get habbersets, its the best.
112 posted on 02/25/2003 1:19:15 PM PST by uncbuck (Sen Lawyers, Guns and Money.)
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To: Jerry_M
(Don't stone me, I am married to a native Texan!)


Speaking as a Texan, everyone needs the experience. But, if you keep up your insolence against us, I may have to straighten you out when I come visit in May. HA!
113 posted on 02/25/2003 1:19:49 PM PST by CCWoody
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To: uncbuck
Scrapple, huh?

Well, if you'll eat that stuff, come on down South and have some liver mush and chittlin's. (Same sort of ingredients [waste pork products], just different appearance.)
114 posted on 02/25/2003 2:07:54 PM PST by DeFault User (Me cago en Chirac)
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To: DeFault User
Awwlh, now see, ya ruined it, tellin' me its got liver a stuff.

Unknown pork parts is better than knowin' it's liver a b*tt-holes and snouts.

Been down south many times, dated girl from Texas, used to fly down to her family every other weekend.

We northerners just don't know how to cook, it's all that german, irish, english fare--- Bland as all h*ll!
115 posted on 02/25/2003 2:17:58 PM PST by uncbuck (Sen Lawyers, Guns and Money.)
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To: annyokie
I worked for the railroad, would go to work at all hours of the night in small PA towns. The Sheetz places we went to could make pretty good breakfast and sandwich foods at 3am.
116 posted on 02/25/2003 2:36:24 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: ken5050
but I have to ask...what about the beans?..

F^&*ING yankee ..... don't know a damn thing 'bout nothing ....... *&*^%$ ^%&%$ **&^%%^ ...... snow up to their a$$ .............. ;-)

117 posted on 02/25/2003 2:45:13 PM PST by HoustonCurmudgeon (Compassionate Conservative Curmudgeon)
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To: Diddle E. Squat
I agree. Sheetz is thoe only place to eat when you're on the Turnpike. How I missed the Waffle House, though.
118 posted on 02/25/2003 2:47:47 PM PST by annyokie
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To: Jerry_M
The Woolworths on the Plaza in Santa Fe, New Mexico! Sorry, Texans.

No reason to be sorry, we gave up New Mexico long ago, not enough oil, but remember where you came from!

119 posted on 02/25/2003 2:49:25 PM PST by HoustonCurmudgeon (Compassionate Conservative Curmudgeon)
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To: holyscroller
Maybe you could put the chili over some lard-cooked potato chips for that PA touch!
120 posted on 02/25/2003 3:23:24 PM PST by jiggyboy
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