Tool of heretics


i-34b48995a5829cdc0fc06f5bdfa455f2-octodog.jpg

I have been informed of the existence of this device.

Do not be fooled. It transforms an inelegant tube-shaped dense paste of chopped chordate parts into a crude, inaccurate semblance of that pinnacle of molluscan evolution, the cephalopod. What next? Will Steven Spielberg take a mound of hamburger, call it George Clooney, and give it a starring role in his next movie? Shall I put a pot of alphabet soup on the stove and call it lyric poetry?

It is blasphemy. When the Great Old Ones come, I know who will be eaten first.

Comments

  1. CMOT Dibbler says

    Not to worry, mate, a proper tube steak is likely to contain bits from any old phyla that happen to be handy…

  2. Theo Bromine says

    I had a similar tubesteak trick I used to do for my kids – not a cephalopod, but still nicely spineless. If (before cooking) you slice the hotdog longitudinally into quarters, starting from each end, but stopping about 1 cm from the middle, the cooked hot dog ends up as a reasonable facsimile of a spider with 8 curly wiggly legs. And, just to be even more iconoclastic, such a creature will not fit in a hotdog bun, so you have to use a hamburger bun instead.

  3. says

    I first read “chordate” as “chocolate,” and thought it didn’t sound too bad. The reality is something of a letdown.

  4. Bayesian Bouffant, FCD says

    But it’s a very high quality tool. The ad says so.

    Shall I put a pot of alphabet soup on the stove and call it lyric poetry?

    Yes, you should.

  5. says

    Will Steven Spielberg take a mound of hamburger, call it George Clooney, and give it a starring role in his next movie?

    You mean this hasn’t already happened?

  6. Christopher says

    But… Octo-dogs are the Tick’s favorite food! Ain’t no way the Tick is going to lose to some elder god thing.

    Still, though, I feel that true octo-dog artistry can only be created by hand.

  7. Kristjan Wager says

    It is blasphemy. When the Great Old Ones come, I know who will be eaten first.

    Don’t you mean “be eaten last”?

  8. D. Sidhe says

    I have one, got it at the local Aquarium when they were having Octopus Days. It actually is pretty high-quality. All the bits are made of very heavy plastic, and it’s pretty easy even to wash. It’s also just plain cute, and has a place of honor on my kitchen counter.
    My theory is that my many varied cephalopod toys and art and t-shirts will spare me from anything *too* awful. Plus I don’t eat cephalopods.
    Who’s the *real* blasphemer here?

  9. Roger Bigod says

    There’s a discussion of octopoid personality in the NYT Magazine section today. You will be disappointed that there’s no picture of the winner of the Miss Congeniality Award.

  10. says

    I was actually thinking of you when I used that link in a DVD review post I did Saturday… I saw it on Food Network’s “Ham on the Street,” it’s available in Brooklyn at the Aquarium, and I’m actually thinking of getting one (except hot dogs tend to be sodium-laden)…

  11. Eclogite says

    That’s cool! My oldest loves hotdogs – cold hotdogs. He’d probably love this thing.

  12. Bayesian Bouffant, FCD says

    My sources tell me the Octodog is very common in Japanese households with children.