tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7436838512938962987.post5799980721385621623..comments2023-11-05T07:01:56.478-05:00Comments on Good Green Witch: I blame cheese.Rhonnyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12519541867341575332noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7436838512938962987.post-65464712467617742492011-11-19T20:53:07.783-05:002011-11-19T20:53:07.783-05:00I wish I could remember the name of this comedienn...I wish I could remember the name of this comedienne from Louisiana who tells a horrifying story about herself as a child closet eating an entire package of this cheese. It involves trying to hide the fact by flushing like 32 individual slices' wrappers down the toilet, and her mother having to call a plumber to snake the drain. If everyone could hear her tell this story, NO ONE would ever eat that cheese again-!Pisserhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01654771483435830525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7436838512938962987.post-76754019261120251832011-01-13T10:02:26.887-05:002011-01-13T10:02:26.887-05:00As a life-long, Wisconsin born & raised "...As a life-long, Wisconsin born & raised "Cheesehead", I must comment. Kraft singles in this state are the "red-headed step-child" of cheese. Most people in this state buy them for use in sandwiches only (grilled cheese mostly) and I believe that has something to do with the price of real cheese and the shapes of block cheese being sold. Often times now, block cheese comes in these tiny "bricks", which makes them suitable for slicing for crackers and party platters and such....but horrible for sandwiches. The larger "blocks" proove capable of being sliced for sandwich size cheese, but once you have used 75% of the block it gets dicey trying to get the perfect slice. Me personally.....I blame lazy consumers for whom products like this are created in the first place.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com