Buffalo wings are the crack of food.
For one, they are cheaper byproduct that makes good
use of the somewhat cast off pieces of a chicken. Two, they are as addictive as crack: in a gut
wrenching, center of your stomach, can’t think about anything else until you
get them kind of way. When I am not
eating wings on a regular basis, I don’t really think about them or crave
them. But, as soon as I have a basket
and get them in my system, it becomes an addiction that needs to be filled on a
regular basis.
I don’t tend to eat at many chain restaurants and tend to
think of their food as soulless and generic, but I do love Buffalo Wild Wings’s Tuesday Wing Night. It is quite astonishing the amount of beer
you can drink and wings you can eat without breaking the bank. Throw in buffalo chips, ranch dressing, and some
celery sticks, and you have one of every food group and a well-rounded
meal.
I also really enjoy the fun of Buffalo Wild Wings. My
boyfriend can watch sports on any one of the over fifteen screens in the
place. I can play trivia or Texas
Hold’em. I don’t think of myself as a
competitive person, but a little smack talk and team bashing sneaks out in the
moment. For a while, I had a pretty fun trivia nemesis
and nothing goes better with sports bar wings than a little competition.
I’ve played around with several wing sauce options. I tried the low key the mid range and flirted
with the high end. Mango Habanero is my
spicy sauce of choice, but a couple weeks ago I decided to climb Mount
Everest. I had worked my way up from Mango
Habenero to Wild. I figured if I can go Wild
then surely I can go all in with Blazin.
If the law of degrees between the top three spicy sauces meant anything,
this should be a challenge, albeit a doable one. What
I did not expect is that the highest was more of a balls-to-the-wall, show no
mercy kind of hot. I knew I was in
trouble after the first wing.
With Mango Habanero and
Wild, the first wing isn’t but so bad and you think you have them
mastered. Then, slowly, the heat builds
and by the second or third, you realize the full gravity of the situation. With Blazin it was bad from the first wing.
Bad . . . try throbbing, agonizing, burning.
For the first time ever, a spicy food really made me cry. Not just a couple of drops eeking out because
of swelling nasal passages, but good uncontrollable tears. I also felt pain. So much pain that I had to keep myself from
drinking the ranch dressing to help sooth my ever throbbing taste buds. After wing three, I had to pause for a moment
of truth and remind myself that eventually, endorphins would kick in and that
no spice pain is permanent. After a momentary
breather and a regrouping with beer and water (which do nothing but offer
mental comfort), I finished the last two.
Was my moment of triumph slightly marred by the delirium I felt? Probably.
Was my ability to play trivia affected by the huge amounts of fluid filling my head? Definitely.
Was my moment of triumph slightly marred by the delirium I felt? Probably.
Was my ability to play trivia affected by the huge amounts of fluid filling my head? Definitely.
For better or worse, I did it. Will I do it again? Never. No need to keep proving myself. Once you climb Mount Everest, you don’t have
to do it again. Right?
i have been pining for some BW3's! So good. Honey Barb is my fav. And a basket of wedges.
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