Judge John Hodgman - Making Stock, Taking Stock
Episode Date: May 8, 2019Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn have some more cases on the docket to clear! This week they talk about feeding kitchen scraps to chickens, recording elderly relatives' stories, diluting hom...emade food with store bought food, using the stove top fan, putting cold hands on your partner, and follow up on tipping!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket with me, as always, the most powerful man in podcasting, Judge John Hodgman. cold and raw April. And here it is May. It is springtime.
All of my indoor cherry blossoms have bloomed in the chambers.
Some of you may have seen on Instagram that a Robin landed on the little balcony outside my window and stared at me for a while.
And as happens every spring,
I have grown my little horns and my human legs have turned into goat legs
and I'm playing a pan flute.
Oh,
that's nice.
Yeah.
Let's get some justice served so that i can get back to drinking some wine from
this amphora every spring i turn into one of those terrifying beaver people from the live
action version of the lion the witch and the wardrobe oh i have not Was that in the British TV live action version or the movie live action version?
The British TV live action version.
The original like.
Pre-CGI.
1985.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't even know.
Truly terrifying.
Most people dressed up as beavers.
I mean, I don't think I've ever seen it, but just your description, I can sort of picture how awful that will be.
And I'm just going to Google it right now.
Narnia beaver people TV.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's scary.
That's pretty scary.
Okay.
Well, let's dispense some justice while we're still shook.
Yeah.
Okay.
Let's go on.
Here's something from Jim. I share're still shook. Yeah, okay. Let's go on.
Here's something from Jim.
I share a home with my partner, Raven.
We keep a small flock of six laying hens.
They provide us with a steady stream of delicious eggs.
They turn up sod, and they eat much of our kitchen scraps.
We occasionally end up with bits of poultry scraps.
Personally, I have no problem with our girls eating the occasional minor bits of poultry scraps. Personally, I have no problem with our girls eating the occasional minor bits of poultry. Raven, however, considers this to be a horrific act of chicken cannibalism.
I'd like to make clear that I do not go out of my way to give the ladies large amounts of their departed cousins, but I just can't bring myself to think it is a big deal if it happens now and then.
What say you, Judge Hodgman? First of all, do we know if they
are just keeping these six hens for eggs or are they occasionally eating one of them? No, I think
these are chickens that they don't know. Right. These aren't friend chickens. Right. Here's what about this. Carnivorism requires a lot of moral cognitive dissonance. I eat meat and I will take
the heat that vegetarians and vegans may throw at me for this because I know what I'm doing. I am
killing the creature to enjoy its flesh. It would rather not die. It is not happy about me making this choice.
So let's face that fact.
But let's also face the fact that chickens are dumb.
They are as dumb as F.
And by F, I mean foul.
F-O-W-L, foul.
They don't know what they're eating.
They don't care what they're eating.
They don't understand the human taboo against cannibalism. And if they did, they would
do it anyway. Chickens peck each other already. That's how they establish a pecking order.
They're dumb and they're cruel, but they're also loving and lovable and wonderfully weird
and definitely not human, which is to say that they are honest where Raven is not. Yes.
Yes, you provide them with a loving home and they are your companions,
but also recognize by the same actions
you are keeping another creature in a cage,
enslaving it and stealing its eggs
because it is too weak and dumb to stop you.
Chickens don't deserve the burden of any human taboos.
Let the chickens be chicken,
which is to say chicken eating monsters just like you are chicken eating monster
do you like chicken i like chicken fine i do have one chicken hot take
why would anyone prefer a chicken breast to a chicken thigh? Why is chicken breast fancier than chicken thigh when
it tastes worse and is worse overall in every category? One time, my dad and my son a few years
ago and I were having lunch at the Hope and Olive restaurant in Greenfield, Massachusetts. It's a
really good restaurant. And they had a special that included chicken thighs prepared in some way.
And my son ordered it.
And my dad said, you know, grandson's name,
I have decided that I like chicken thighs more than I like chicken breasts.
I was like, this is some of the quality weird dad conversation that I am paying for.
That was great.
But he was right.
He was right.
They're better.
I feel like chicken breasts just were invented in 1989
and became famous by winning a reality competition show
called The Search for America's least pleasurable protein.
You're right about that timing because they have the burnish of health upon them
and sort of like lightness. And they're kind of like the snack wells of proteins. Yes,
I agree with you. No good. I have a chicken related buzz marketing I'd like to offer.
Sure. Well, Judge John Hodgman listeners know that I'm an international influencer on the subject of kitchen appliances.
Yep.
Having already popularized high-end toaster ovens across this great nation for their monumental utility that until recently I had no idea of.
It was only a few years that I've been using one, and it's completely transformed my cooking life.
I have a product that is significantly less expensive
but will have a similar impact on the lives of egg lovers
in the Judge John Hodgman audience.
Are you ready for this, John?
I am prepared.
This comes to me via my colleague Casey O'Brien,
who's the producer of Switchblade Sisters
and Hushacha, Maximum Fun's movie podcasts.
Mm-hmm.
And also a room I rented in Marin County
when I was visiting my in-laws that had one in it.
It is called a Dash Rapid Egg Cooker.
It's a little plastic appliance that costs $15.99
and produces perfect hard-boiled eggs so quickly and easily
that it seems like a genuine miracle to me.
A guy who likes hard-boiled eggs but often cannot be bothered to hard-boil them
because you have to time it to get it right so that it's the right consistency on the inside,
but also the outside peels off and there's like all these systems that you can go through to do it.
Very close timing.
Yep.
It turns out this little $15.99 steam machine makes incredible, perfect hard boiled eggs.
And now I eat hard boiled eggs all the time because I really like them.
And they are now officially incredibly easy to make with one of these things.
It costs $15.99.
If you go on a popular e-commerce website, $15.99.
What's the name of the product again?
Dash Rapid Egg Cooker.
It's small and lightweight.
You can throw it in the back of your cabinet when you're not making eggs.
It is a genuinely miraculous machine.
Transformed my life.
I don't mind people making good hard-boiled eggs.
I don't mind giving them some free advertising on the podcast for sure.
John, I've been trying to make deviled eggs by boiling them first.
And you know that when you are making your own hard-boiled eggs,
every time half of them have that thing where the shell peels off,
but it pulls just a little bit of egg white.
And then you're like,
this isn't pretty enough to serve to guests.
And then you just end up eating it right there,
standing over the sink.
And this,
this has saved me that entirely.
I can make as many deviled eggs as I want because every single one comes out
perfect.
I have to take a moment here just to address the judge,
Sean Hodgman listeners.
Look,
you guys,
I understand you're probably vomiting right now.
We've been talking about chicken and eggs a lot.
It's a lot of food talk.
And if you're a vegetarian, you probably have smashed that unsubscribe button five times now.
So I apologize.
But John, what if they're an ovo-raptor?
Then they're loving it.
There you go.
Well, I mean, people like what they like.
But I do, I must beg your indulgence a moment longer just to say two things about making hard-boiled eggs.
If you're not going to get the fast, rapid, super-dash steam machine or whatever.
First of all, the most important thing to do is after you cook them, you put them in ice water right away.
Cool them down.
That stops the green from forming around the yolk.
Second of all, and Jesse, this can be helpful even with your steam machine, easy peeling eggs are
old eggs. Fresher eggs, harder to peel. Yeah, eggs that are a week old, those are
the ones that are going to be easier to peel. The albumen in the white
pulls away from the shell, makes it much easier to make an easy peel hard-boiled egg.
That's all we got.
John, I can hear across this great nation hundreds, if not thousands,
of Judge John Hodgman listeners sending me Kenji Lopez-Alt's Serious Eats recipe
for perfect hard-boiled eggs every time.
And I will grant you I have used it many times, and it works.
But there are a variety of steps involved
and that put me off of making eggs
unless it was really important.
And this little dumb machine
that is made of garbage plastic
works so perfectly
that I just make them whenever I feel like it.
And it's no big deal.
I'm with you on that.
I want to try this thing out.
I think they should sponsor the podcast
so no vegetarians will ever listen again,
or vegans anyway. You know what they're thinking podcast so no vegetarians will ever listen again. Or vegans, anyway.
You know what they're thinking right now? What?
That we're gross. Why buy the chicken
when you get the eggs for free?
I'm sorry, vegans and vegetarians.
I love you, too. Let's move on.
Sarah says, my friend sometimes secretly
records conversations between himself
and elderly relatives, friends, or
acquaintances to keep for his personal
memories.
He does it when the older person's telling a story he may never get the chance to hear again.
He says he won't share the recording with anyone else. He doesn't want to ask permission to record them because he thinks it would sound weird and interrupt the flow of the story. I think it's
creepy and he should ask first. Who's right? I have to say there's something a little,
something seems a little creepy about Sarah's friend.
What's he sneaking into nursing homes?
I mean, I get relatives and friends, but acquaintances?
He's just wandering the halls of nursing homes with his cassette recorder waiting for stories to pour out?
No, he's probably doing something really nice.
He's probably helping older friends and relatives and acquaintances and giving them time and attention.
I shouldn't I shouldn't ascribe creepy motives to that.
Here's my feeling about it.
What your friend is doing, Sarah, is allowed.
I was a little surprised is allowed by federal law.
But before he presses record, he should check which state he's in, because there are 11 states, I mean, this is just technical legality. There are
11 states that require the consent of every party to a phone call or an in-person conversation
in order to make the recording lawful. And in all states but these, if you want to record a phone
call or record an in-person conversation, you only need one party consent. And that party could be
you, right? So the other person doesn't have to say yes. They don't need to know.
This legal principle is known as the why they made cranky anchors in New York and not Los Angeles.
Right. Because, absolutely so, because the two-party consent laws where both parties
have to knowingly consent are California, for example, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Montana, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington.
So if your friend is in any of those states, Sarah, and he's pulling this stuff, he's
secretly stealing elderly people's dreams and thoughts, he's a dream thief, then technically
what he's doing is illegal.
he's a dream thief, then technically what he's doing is illegal. But I don't think anyone would ever actually prosecute your friend Sarah because he's not really doing anything very terrible. And
arguably he's doing something really, really nice because everyone wants to be remembered.
Everyone wants to tell their stories. And especially when they're older and a lot of
people just aren't paying attention to them. Now, the nicest and most morally virtuous thing to do would be to specifically set
up a time to interview an elderly relative, friend, or acquaintance. Say, I would like to
get your life story and I'd like to tape it. And then they know. And then you just set that thing
rolling, whether it's your phone or your video camera or whatever it is,
and interview them and take a real-life history.
I mean, I'm ready to do that right now, and I'm not that elderly.
That's what my father did when he videotaped his interview with my great-grandmother.
That was the mother of my grandfather.
my great-grandmother. That was the mother of my grandfather. And my family, my grandfather was known as, on my mom's side, was known as Pop-Pop. And my grandmother was known as Nan. And my great
grandmother was known as Big Nan. And she lived to be 108. But sometime in her 90s, he sat her
down and said, I would like to record all of your memories. And he interviewed her and recorded it on VHS tape.
Where is that tape now?
No one knows.
Probably my cabin.
Right.
With my TV VCR.
Yeah.
It's somewhere, right?
I would rather know that it's in a basement somewhere than all of her memories went down into her grave.
And I also remember that her memories were halting.
She was easily
confused. Sometimes she needed time to put her thoughts together. Talking with very elderly
people is an act of kindness, but also of patience. And if there are times when your
friend's judgment is that asking permission or saying, hang on, let me get my phone out
would break a delicate chain of thought, I have no problem with this. And it's really none of your business either. My father sat his parents down maybe 20 years ago to talk to them about family history and
genealogy and so forth and recorded them on cassette tapes, which I have no idea where they
are. Yeah, they're somewhere. My dad recently, I was talking with my dad and he was telling me
about some cousins that had been born in his mom's side of the family, the Chivalo family.
The Chivalo family originated in Udine, northern Italy.
And I was like, you know, I'm kind of not up to speed on the Chivalo family tree.
I kind of lost track.
Can you send me some information?
And he said I would be glad to.
And he sent me a letter.
And you know what the letter said? What's that? It was just one sentence. I've decided I prefer chicken thighs to chicken
breasts. No, he gave me, he gave me this wonderful family history of this whole side of this family
that I had known at one point, but had kind of forgotten and about how, you know, his grandmother had come to the United States
and settled in Fitchburg, Massachusetts from Udine, Italy.
And it was totally fascinating.
It's great.
It's great to get the family history.
So don't discourage your friend, Sarah, with legalities.
Encourage him to steal those old people's dreams.
Let's take a quick break.
More items on the docket
coming up in just a minute
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
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Welcome back to Judge John Hodgman. This week, we're clearing the docket. Here is something from Annabelle.
I'd like you to please issue an injunction to stop my husband, Michael,
from diluting homemade food with store-bought food.
For example, Michael keeps trying to mix
store-bought chicken stock into homemade chicken stock.
He uses robot words like efficiency and optimization
to justify this mix-up.
And also to turn me against him.
I feel like our new show is just called Robot Words
and it's just a list of robot words.
Is Robot Words going to be a list of robot words
or is it just going to be the sound of a dial-up modem?
Michael also says that homemade chicken stock
will last longer if he mixes it with the store-bought stuff.
I think he's completely ruining something that someone, me, just spent several hours making for him.
Another less offensive example of homemade food dilution is that Michael will often mix homemade granola with store-bought cereal like sugar-free wheat squares.
I like to make a cocoa granola with coconut, ginger, and fennel, and it pains
me to see it topped with a bunch of bits of cardboard. Fennel? Wow. That's a big flex for
granola. I mean, I like fennel as a spice. It's got that licorice-y. You know what I mean, Jesse?
Licorice-y. I feel like Annabelle is really overstating the amount of work it takes to make
stock. As a stock maker myself, I know for a fact that the way you make stock is you have one of
those gallon Ziploc bags in your freezer. Yeah. And then whenever you have trimmings or whenever
you finish eating a piece of chicken, you just throw it in that bag. Hey, we're back on chicken,
everybody. Just a little content warning for vegetarians and vegans out there.
You're not safe yet.
Sorry.
So, all right.
You're putting in the dead bodies of chickens into a bag.
Yeah, you just toss them in that bag in the freezer.
And then eventually when the bag is full, you just dump it into a pot and you just leave it simmering on your stove for a few hours.
Saying I make it, it takes me hours to make it.
for a few hours. Saying I make it, it takes me hours to make it.
I mean, like in a literal sense
that it isn't complete for hours,
but it's not like you're sitting there stirring it
so it doesn't clump up or something.
You don't put any aromatics in,
you don't put any onion or garlic or-
Yeah, that's in the trimmings.
That's what's great about saving your trimmings.
You got the stumps of your onions.
Oh, I see what you're saying, yeah, yeah.
Pieces of garlic, like cloves of garlic
that are getting
close to being done and you bought new garlic. And so you just take the old ones and toss them
in the bag in the freezer. Yeah. Celery, carrots, and then just whatever other trimmings you got,
and then whatever chunks of meat you got. It's a classically simple meditative recipe
that people enjoy doing because it is simple and because it adds a lot of character to other foods you might make in it.
And it makes you feel like you're not being wasteful.
And then, John, you put the stock into Tupperwares
and keep those in your freezer.
You put them in those like four cup-ish Tupperwares.
Yeah.
And not only do you do that,
but you have an extra ice cube tray
and you fill that with stock.
And then anytime you just need a little bit of stock for like making a sauce or something like that, you've got it in that little ice cube tray already all apportioned.
Listen to Cook's Illustrated quick tips here.
That's great.
Those are good ideas.
What do you think about Michael Robot Word's suggestion that, I mean, I don't even understand.
What do you think about Michael Robot Word's suggestion that, I mean, I don't even understand.
If she's making stock, whether she's overstating its labor or not, if she's making stock, why does he have store-bought stock hanging around?
And why does he think that pouring the store-bought stock into the homemade stock is going to make it last longer?
Well, here's the thing.
The store-bought stock, a lot of people don't know this about store-bought stock, but they make it. If you're making stock at home, you've got your aromatics,
you've got your meaty bones and so on and so forth. You've got some vegetable trimmings and you're boiling that up over a long period of time to extract the flavor.
The commercial stock is made in much the same way. The aromatics, the meaty bones, and the vegetable trimmings.
And then also they just add a little bit of bleach.
What?
So when you mix it with your homemade stock, it lasts longer.
Don't say that.
That's not true.
Just a little bit of bleach.
I don't want to be sued by big stock.
It's actually 409 with bleach.
Okay.
It's not just direct bleach.
They use a household cleaner that has a bit of bleach in it.
Yeah.
But that's why it's so antiseptic.
Let me say this about your situation, Annabelle.
First of all, I'm sorry you married a man who uses the word optimization.
But that's on you.
You made a choice. You didn't have to. You're the word optimization. But that's on you. You made a choice.
You didn't have to.
You're the one who married a robot lady.
Yep.
You married a robot.
I agree with you, Annabelle.
Even if my bailiff thinks you're overstating how much effort it is to make stock, I mean, you are still making it.
And that is something that you made on purpose.
For him to just dump a bunch
of store-bought stock into there is a violation and not cool. No way can he do it. That said,
he can violate his own wheat squares. You can put your crazy fennel granola on his wheat
squares. That's not ruining the granola. That's him using your good granola to make his food more interesting.
That's something that you should feel proud of.
But really, the main thing I need to ask is, why are you making stock?
And I'll put this to you as well, Jesse.
When Kitchen Basics is already making the best chicken and beef stocks, that's the best.
They're the best.
I've made stock.
It tastes like dirty water compared to this Kitchen Basics.
And yeah, I'm saying their brand name.
I like them.
I want them to sponsor this podcast.
But the Kitchen Basics stock, I had some of their Kitchen Basics bone broth.
And it was really good.
And there's no bleach in it.
That's free advertising.
Again, it's 409 with bleach.
It's not just straight bleach.
You do.
Look, if making stock makes you happy, and I can definitely see why, because it's a wonderful, slow, meditative way to spend some time in the kitchen with good smells.
There's nothing wrong with that.
Go and do it.
But yeah, Michael Robot, even if it's kitchen basics, keep your store-bought out of the homemade.
Come on, dude.
Know your lane.
It's making stock, taking stock with Judge John Hodgman.
Here's the thing, John.
I have one more stock hot take.
The reason that store-bought stock tastes good is because it's basically salt and MSG water.
I want to be clear that I am not opposed to either of those things.
I want to be clear that I am not opposed to either of those things.
But the nice thing about making your own is you can control on your own end how much salt and MSG you want to be in there.
All prepared foods, including prepared stock, have a ton of salt in them.
And that may be your taste preference.
And I think salt tastes great, too.
And I think MSG tastes great.
I always keep a can of Accent brand MSG handy next to my stove.
But it's nice because different recipes,
you might want to control the amount of salt and MSG that are in your dish.
And you could do that to some extent just by buying low-sodium stock and adding salt if you need it.
But for me, I like to make it without salt
and then add salt towards the end based on what other
stuff is in there and how salty it is and how salty I want my soup or whatever to be.
That's absolutely a fair point. And, you know, obviously homemade is best.
Obviously, the reason that the benefit of homemade stock is that you are
being thrifty and working with your hands. Those are two great things to do.
You got to really need
that stock. I just want some free bone broth. Come on, Kitchen Basics, get with it. I mean,
I'll take free bone broth if that's what we're talking about. Yeah, we're talking about free
bone broth. I'll turn against homemade stock in an instant if free broth is involved.
Welcome to our new podcast, The Broth Boys.
Here's something from Zoe. Often my boyfriend Nate
and I cook at my house. What, chicken? Do they
cook chicken? When we
use the stovetop, I feel strongly we
should turn the overhead fan on to reduce
the smoke and smell, particularly when
frying foods. He finds
the background noise of the fan to be grating
and disruptive to the social atmosphere.
He makes a show of turning it off
when we finish cooking with an eye roll and a deep sigh.
I'd like you to rule that we must always use the fan on high
when we're frying foods without any of his theatrics.
He would like you to rule that we only use the fan
if there's legitimate smoke,
and, as he puts it, an actual need for it.
My roommate Leah is equally perturbed by the fan
and agrees with Nate that it's disruptive
and unnecessary. An
eye roll and deep sigh. Boy
oh boy.
I understand it. I feel that way about the fan.
Alright, so you have a fan
in your kitchen? Here's the thing.
I have an open
living, cooking, dining
area. I know, I've been there. It's delightful.
And so any smells in the kitchen immediately suffuse most of the house. Right. And for that
reason, and the fact that I'm often, you know, whatever, searing food in a cast iron pan or
something, I have to use the fan. Right. But I have always resented using the fan because I hate the sound. It's loud.
And recently, I have learned from the experience of my children entering the educational system
about auditory processing differences. And there are people for whom a sound like that fan,
people for whom a sound like that fan, which is surprisingly loud and droning, is difficult to separate from the other sound in the room.
I think it may simply be that I am one of those people.
I am more sensitive to the sound of that fan than others in my family, my wife particularly,
are.
And so for that reason, it bothers me more.
And I often fantasize about saving money for a year
and buying whatever is the greatest.
I've spent an hour on the internet trying to figure out
what's the greatest, quietest, most powerful kitchen fan.
And it's actually really hard to find out.
It's easy to find out what's the most powerful,
but correlating it with the noise is much more difficult.
But that said, I remember when my mother and I moved into an apartment
that had belonged to a large family that did a lot of frying
and did not run the fan.
And I remember the literal days we spent getting grease off of the cabinets.
And for that reason, I am not someone who, as much as I hate the fan,
I'm not someone who just doesn't run it.
Right.
Especially when there might be particulates, when there's smoke or when I'm frying something.
Right.
More than if there's just steam or something like that.
Does your fan vent to the outside of your house?
I would think so, right?
It does, but I believe it was purchased by the previous owners of the home at a store known for flat pack furniture, which may or may not be known for powerful kitchen fans.
Right. But when it sucks up grease and vapor and smoke, it shoots it outside the house, right?
Yeah. Or at least the grease is it outside the house, right? Yeah.
Or at least the grease is caught in the grease traps in the filters.
Right.
And then the air is shot outside the house.
So I followed up with Zoe to ask her if the fan vented to the outside, because not all
of them do.
Like mine, for example.
You know, I live in a nice apartment in Park Slope that was an old clock factory that was derelict for many years and then turned into condominiums in 1999.
And they designed these things so that the kitchens are all in the interior of the building and there is no ventilation to the outside.
you have this fan that has a filter in it, but then just sucks up all the hot grease breath from the range, puts it through the filter, and then shoves it right back out into the room until the
smoke alarm goes off. And I hate it. I mean, I hate the sound of the fan for sure. And there are
times when the fan gets triggered automatically because it's just too hot over by the stove.
And when it does, I swear, I say curse words. I'm so
mad because it's so distracting. It's so loud. I get it. But you know what I don't like?
I don't like the smoke alarm going off. I want it to work. So yeah, it makes a lot of noise.
But a vent to the outside is a good thing to have in your life, Nate.
noise. But a vent to the outside is a good thing to have in your life, Nate. Now, Nate isn't wrong.
You don't, I don't think you need to use it all the time. If you are cooking at low heat,
if you are sauteing a stir fry or scrambling some eggs over medium low heat, if that's what you mean by frying, Zoe, then Zoe, you're wrong. But high heat stuff, and especially actual deep frying,
use of the fan is essential for both smoke and odor issues.
And that's why I'm coming to your house tonight, Zoe,
to make chicken fried steak tonight.
And I'm going to feed it to both chickens and cows,
because I don't care anymore.
Did you get the chicken fried steak when we were on tour, Jesse,
at that diner we went to?
I can't remember.
I think I got a corned beef hash instead.
I think I asked her if the chicken fried steak came from the freezer
or whether they breaded it in-house,
and they said it came breaded from the freezer.
That's sort of like my line. I really like chicken fried steak, but, um, but I would really like for
it to have been, you know, prepared from scratch on premises. It makes a big difference. It's the
same with onion rings. Like I love onion rings, but like the difference between the frozen ones
out of a bag and ones where someone has dipped in a ring of onion into some batter and then dropped it in a deep fryer. It's a big difference.
The chicken fried steak was frozen, so you didn't get it.
But I also remember that the diner sort of homemade newsletter had some extremely challenging Game of Thrones trivia questions on it.
I was pretty impressed.
They stumped me on a couple of things.
Yeah, I started reading them as a joke, and I saw your eyes get real clear and fiery.
Fire and blood.
Those are the words of the House Targaryen.
John, did you know there was a baseball player named Billy Butler?
Oh, of course I did.
It's a baseball player, right?
Of course I know the name of this baseball player.
Who was a designated hitter primarily for the,
most notably for the Kansas City Royals.
Sure. But he also played for
one of my favorite teams the oakland days for a couple of years and uh he was a husky man who did
not run particularly well uh and his nickname was country breakfast and i just thought that was the greatest professional athlete nickname.
And then I learned that after he washed out of the major leagues relatively early,
simply because while he had been a great hitter,
basically slow guys don't age well in baseball is a broad way of describing it.
He just went on to play immediately after having played in the major leagues and made
tens of millions of dollars. He went on to play like rec league softball. And just the idea of
being in a rec league softball game. And then just there's a guy who was in the major leagues last
year up to bat. Yeah. And you're trying to decide what underhanded pitch to throw him.
And his nickname is Country Breakfast. Country Breakfast. Okay, let's take a quick break. When
we come back, we'll hear about cold hands. Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience one you have no choice but to embrace because yes
listening is mandatory the jv club with janet varney is available every thursday on maximum fun
or wherever you get your podcasts thank you and remember no running in the halls
if you need a laugh and you're on the go try s-t-o-p-p-o-d-c-a-s-t-i
hmm are you trying to put the name of the podcast there yeah i'm trying to spell it but it's tricky
let me give it a try okay if you need a laugh and you're on the go call s-t-o-p-p-p-a-d-i
it'll never fit no it will let me try if you need a laugh and you're on the go try s-t-o-p-p-p-d-c-D-I. It'll never fit. No, it will. Let me try. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ugh, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket this week.
Here is something from Michael, known to his family as Country Breakfast.
My wife thinks it's hilarious to put her icy hands on my bare skin, causing me to jump and yell with surprise.
I 100% understand my wife's desire to annoy me.
However, on occasion, she will sneak up on me
and place her frozen appendages on me when I think that I am completely alone. When I think I'm
alone, my reaction can be much more instinctive, defensive, and violent. Just the other day,
I flung an elbow in response and missed her chin by only a few inches, throwing bows over here.
She found this hysterical, and it has only encouraged her
to try sneaking up on me more often. I love my wife, former New York Knicks forward Charles Oakley,
very much, and I don't ever want to hurt her. I acknowledge that in marrying her, I agreed to a
lifetime of ice hand attacks. I simply ask you and join her from doing it when I am unaware of her presence for her own safety.
Before we discuss this case, Jesse, can I tell you about my new nickname?
Yes.
It's Rudy Tutti Fresh and Fruity.
So what's the deal here?
This guy's wife is touching him with her cold hands.
Sneaking up on him and using her icy hands to surprise him.
Sneaking up on him and using her icy hands to surprise him. And he is reacting in a violent manner with his, for example, by throwing elbows, which, and this maybe is the most dangerous thing of all, his elbows are made of Valerian steel.
How's Targaryen callback? I appreciate that.
Sure. sure so here's the thing that struck me in his letter i acknowledged that in marrying her i
agreed to a lifetime of ice hand attacks people write their own vows now john i was gonna say
like unless that was one of your vows i don't think you agreed to that and i would say jesse
that even if it isn't it wasn't theirows, that's not legally enforceable.
I don't think.
I think it's kind of crummy what she's doing to him.
Do you disagree, Jesse?
I do it to my wife with my feet, but only in bed and only because I need her to warm my feet.
Right.
You're not doing it just because it amuses you that she screams
not just because of that no
here's the thing i got a letter recently
a listener was mad at me that happens people have a different point of view
or and you know the letter writer was mad at me because i had ruled in favor of a husband
in a heteronormative male female marriage and they're like how could you do this
and i appreciate there's precedent i often rule against husbands and their new systems of doing
simple things and the reason is that it's often the case that those systems tend to be unnecessary
illogical manipulative controlling and dumb often and dumb. Often, but not always.
This is not a podcast about punishing husbands.
It's just a podcast that occasionally punishes husbands on a case-by-case basis.
And in this case, in my opinion, the husband is being wronged
over and over again with his wife's icy hands.
Consent goes two ways.
Two-party consent, just like in California and Connecticut.
Even in marriage, it is inappropriate to touch another person's body in ways that clearly distress that person, especially if you know that it distresses that person. I think, as I told my
daughter when she was pulling the cat's tail when she was two years old, if it's not fun for everyone,
it's not fun at all.
I'm not fond of Michael's defense that he's afraid of hurting his wife involuntarily,
in part because it blurs an ugly line between defense and reprisal.
But mostly I'm not fond of it because it seems like a fearful cover story for what is a very simple and honest crux.
He just doesn't want her to touch his body in that way and scare him.
And I think Michael's wife needs to respect that if he's said it enough.
If he said it once, it should be enough. But I mean, by now, I mean, if the gender orientation
of each person in this couple was reversed, right? And it was a man with cold hands constantly
terrifying his wife by touching her body.
Cold hands spouse in that case would be immediately considered
one of the greatest spouse monsters ever appear on this podcast.
Sometimes a husband is right, everybody.
And I think that Michael really deserves to not be terrified with ice hands.
Cold hands is a character in Game of Thronesones did you know that jesse toy cold hands
i don't think they have cold hands in the tv show and in the book his identity is unclear he rescues
brandon stark and his and hodor and his other companions from the white walkers at one point
and i think there's some some speculation that he is the revived corpse of Benjen Stark,
the missing brother of Ned Stark, Eddard Stark of Winterfell.
It's been a while since I read those books.
Sorry, George R.R. Martin, if I'm getting it wrong.
Wait, was this a real thing, not a bit?
That's true.
Coldhands, that's his name.
Cool. He's got cold hands that's his name cool he's got cold hands and he's scary he's a scary i mean he's a good guy but he's scary you know your friend george rr martin
gave me uh an advanced galley copy of the next book in the series
and there's a character named frozy toesies
cold hand seems to be a brother
of the Night's Watch. He wears black and calls Samuel
Tarly brother. The dominant
theory is that Coldhands is a dead or missing member
of the Night's Watch. That's from the wiki
of Ice and Fire. Check it out.
I'm not lying. Michael, blink
twice if you need help.
You know, John, we're about to
finish, but I actually have a follow-up remark in response to a Twitter user who contacted me regarding tipping.
Tell me about it.
So I had tweeted in, you know, there was a recent viral article regarding saving for your future by tipping on the pre-tax rather than the post-tax amount of the bill.
You're talking about that video that that guy made on the website.
Yeah, on the website that will not be plugged here.
Right.
So, you know, I retweeted it with a remark that said something like, yeah, or you could just not do that.
Right.
You know?
Yep.
And generally the response was positive.
I think the Judge John Hodgman audience and by extension the folks who follow me on Twitter, they understand that, you know, they have a choice between sticking it to waiters, waitresses and kitchen staff or saving a dollar or two.
And they figure, hey, maybe I should just help these working people who are working
very hard for my enjoyment and pleasure.
And so mostly positive response.
One guy followed up, and I think it's material to note that he followed up like three days
later.
It was like days.
I don't even know how he found the tweet all these days later.
And he said, well, I think servers should be paid a living wage.
Sure.
Sure.
I saw a lot of those in response to that.
Sure. Sure. I saw a lot of those in response to that. Well, I think I, an occupant of the moral high ground, think that servers should be paid a living wage.
And I responded, I agree, but I don't know what that has to do with how much you should tip them.
And I just want to say that it's possible for servers to be paid a living wage and receive tips. And I think reasonable people could disagree about whether tips should at all be a way that people are paid. I think, you know, you could make an argument for tips should not exist and you could make an argument for tips should exist.
exist. I think we can all agree that everyone who works hard deserves to earn an amount of money that they can live on. And that the question of whether or not you tip is not a referendum
on that matter, except to the extent that whatever money you tip goes directly to the
people who are working hard. Here in Los Angeles, where I live, John, there is a living wage
ordinance. The current minimum wage is, I think, between $15 and
$16 an hour, if I remember correctly. And it applies to restaurant workers, including those
who work for tips. I also tip those servers. You have a very easy choice, which is I could either give some money directly to people who are working very hard or not.
And whatever legislative system you imagine could exist.
And I believe the specific response I gave to this guy was, I think you accidentally tagged John and me instead of your legislator.
I missed that one. Sick burn, broth bro. Whatever system you think could and should exist, great. Go for it. Advocate it.
In the meantime, we live within the system that currently exists. And the choice between
tipping generously and tipping parsimoniously or not tipping at all is a choice between supporting people who are working very hard for your pleasure and not supporting them when you have the opportunity to do so as directly as in any other part of our lives. There's no other part of our lives outside of tipping where we so directly have the
power to positively affect the remuneration of the people who are working hard for us as with
tipping. And so whatever system you imagine, continue to dream. Dream on it, friend. Dream
on it, dreamer. Yeah. Or as you say, work for it, advocate for it, fight for it, organize for it.
It's a good idea.
I too would prefer that service staff not be dependent on tips to earn a living wage.
And there are many states, not including California, where service staff are allowed
to be paid less than the minimum wage if their tips would, on average, get them to the minimum wage.
However, I don't think that's a good reason not to tip.
And frankly, at this point,
having done the number of Judge John Hodgman episodes
on this subject as we have,
and I am obviously speaking extemporaneously and passionately here
because I really care about this.
If you are going to at message me
suggesting that either people should not be tipped
or that advocacy for a living wage on Twitter
is a substitute for tipping,
then you will get muted or possibly blocked
if you're extra snotty about it.
I just don't want to hear about it anymore.
This is like yours is a hot dog, a sandwich, but with real life consequences.
Yes.
Like where people actually get hurt because of this strange and persistent philosophy
that it is justifiable to not tip because you believe the system should be different
and that somehow you're not tipping is going to make an iota of difference
compared to actual real world
advocacy for legislation if that's what you want as though restaurant owners are like you know i've
thought about going to a tipless system uh but i decided against it until i realized that my
employees were getting paid less by others.
Right.
There was one in that same conversation around that same video.
There was a guy who got up in my mentions who actually suggested that if everyone tipped less, it would finally wake up waitstaff and force them to unionize and demand a living wage.
You know what? If waitstaff get paid well, I think I've mentioned my best buddy from middle
school, Adam, his father was a career waiter. He was also an artist, a brilliant classical guitar
player and teacher, but he was a career waiter.
And he was able to do that in the city of San Francisco because here in California, you're
required to be paid the minimum wage in addition to tips. He was a great waiter. He worked in a
nice fancy restaurant and he made a pretty good wage being a waiter, which is a very hard job.
being a waiter, which is a very hard job.
If somebody gets paid extra because
of tips, great.
I would love for all of us to be paid
extra. I love it.
I think that's wonderful.
I'm glad that his very hard
work was well compensated.
There's nothing wrong with that.
That's
all I got. That's all I got that's all I got John
forgive me for saying it but it got stuck in my
craw. It got stuck in that craw
and you know what happens when something gets stuck
in my craw John
gotta get it out. Well
folks listening at home and in your
cars this has been
Jesse Thorne and Rudy Tootie
Fresh and Fruity wrapping up
another great episode of Broth Bros
and or Stock Taking and Talking Stock.
Tune in next week for Judge John Hodgman.
Maybe we'll talk less about chicken.
It could happen.
The docket is clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our producer is the brilliant Jennifer Marmer, who I saw the other day at the Rose Bowl flea market.
That was a lot of fun.
Along with her capable husband, Shane.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO,
and check out the Maximum Fund subreddit
to discuss this week's episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO
or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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