When Matt Denn followed John Carney as the lieutenant governor, Denn inherited a fitness-promoting program called the “Lt. Governor’s Challenge.”
Fitness was going to be challenged as Denn made his way last Friday to the Delaware State Fair in Harrington. The nutrition component was about to be taken out by the friendliest of fire.
It was coming from Paula Deen, the Butter Queen and Southern Fried Charmer.
Denn, a first-term Democrat, was assigned to go to the fairgrounds as the state’s official host for an appearance from Deen, a food sultan whose television style and recipes are so flamboyant and so laden, it is like Mardi Gras meets the Running of the Bulls.
Deen’s recipes are things like “Not Yo’ Mama’s Banana Pudding.” The bananas are kind of an afterthought in a list of ingredients that also includes a container of frozen whipped topping, a package of cream cheese, a box of instant French vanilla pudding and two bags of Pepperidge Farm Chessmen cookies. Two bags!
If Deen wanted, she could have catered to the home crowd by whipping up something with chicken, as essentially Delawarean as beaches and legal fees.
She has her recipe for “Buffalo Chicken Po Boys,” a conspiracy of leftover chicken fingers, butter and blue cheese, not to mention mayonnaise, milk and a loaf of French bread.
Also four humiliated romaine lettuce leaves, going quietly.
This is not just cooking. It is food porn. Do not even ask about the “Peanut Butter & Jelly Ice Cream Sandwiches” meant for children. Someone should call in a battalion of fitness trainers to police this, and the vice squad, too.
What is a lieutenant governor to do?
The first step, of course, is to rope the governor in on it, too. The second is to come up with a little of that old political black magic.
Denn decided to propose a joint governor-lieutenant governor proclamation pronouncing Deen’s food to be healthy in Delaware for 24 hours surrounding her visit. The key was getting Karyl Rattay, the public health director, to go along. So Denn called her, as he explained on his blog.
“At first I thought I heard Dr. Rattay doing a spit take with the brussel sprout and bulghar wheat smoothie she was drinking for lunch, but she gradually warmed to the idea,” Denn wrote.
A proclamation was born.
Whereas, the state of Delaware wishes to encourage its residents to eat healthy foods and to live active lifestyles; and . . .