![]() ![]() For Val, this was not a matter of principle or loyalty to a famous puppet. She turned away and watched the TVs in the restaurant’s bar. I’m not resorting to that old, tired joke often applied to unconventional food. I ordered the frog legs with the same game curiosity with which I have tried other strange foods, such as eel, crickets and squid jerky, in the past.įor the record, the frog legs tasted fine, especially dipped in chipotle sauce. Therefore, you could say I folded and gave up my moral stance at the first opportunity. The truth is, until then, I had never seen frog legs on a menu, anywhere. Forty years of staunch adherence to principle, out the window.īig news in Sanford: Construction of 1.5-mile Mousam Promenade along Number One Pond to begin next year When I saw frog legs on the restaurant’s menu, I caved and ordered them. ![]() Valerie and I recently went out to dinner. By then, my thoughts on fried frog legs were long fixed and non-negotiable, based on a moral principle forged in the dark of that cinema in 1979. Later in life, I discovered they actually were a thing. When I saw The Muppet Movie, I thought the idea of frog legs as food was pure fantasy. Hopper, who is truly Evil Personified, fails in his mission, thank God.īut still. He wants Kermit’s legs – wants to cut 'em off, fry 'em, and serve 'em at a restaurant. A businessman named Doc Hopper spots Kermit and pursues him across America. But there is danger on those roads between the swamp and Tinsel Town. ![]()
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