Nutty Stuffer31 -
The Nutty Stuffer knows that the joy is not in the eating. It is in the getting . It is the half-hour spent with a lobster pick and a sigh, extracting a single, perfect cashew from its honeycomb prison. It is the little pile of empty hulls that grows like a monument to futility. It is the way your fingers smell of iodine and earth for the rest of the evening.
To be a Nutty Stuffer is to accept the mess. You don't just eat a pecan; you excavate it. You wedge the silver cracker (the one that looks like a torture device) into the seam of a shell. You squeeze. The crack is not a sound; it is an event —a small, violent geology that sends shrapnel skittering across the tablecloth. Nutty Stuffer31
It begins with the bowl: a ceramic dish passed down from a grandmother who believed that a mixed nut set was the height of exotic hospitality. Inside is a chaotic geology of walnuts, Brazil nuts with their strange, oily seams, almonds like tiny wooden canoes, and the dreaded black walnut—a medieval weapon disguised as a snack. The Nutty Stuffer knows that the joy is not in the eating
And then, the stuffing.
There is a specific kind of hunger that only arrives in the deep twilight of December. It isn’t for a full meal—not for turkey or roast—but for something awkward . Something that requires a pin, a pick, or a patient, chipped tooth. It is the little pile of empty hulls
Then you eat it, dust off your hands, and reach for the macadamia. That one looks angry .