Monday, November 1, 2010

Lunchables: A Review

This post will be heavier on pictures than my usual. If you've been transported back to 1997 and you're on dial-up, I'm sorry - this will take forever.

In 21st century America, we lack a guiding cultural mythos; the Transformers, Power Rangers, Teddy Ruxpin - these are the foundational truths upon which our ad hoc society runs. In fact, shared nostalgia is the only glue holding things together. If the memory of Family Matters was wiped from our cultural consciousness tomorrow, the great cities of man would burn.

Did I do thaaaaaat?

Lunchables - boxed lunches for kids distributed by the Oscar Meyer corporation - are a keystone tenet for the sad civilization we inhabit. They're everything about America that we love and loathe, conveniently packaged in a brightly colored box.

I've not had a Lunchable since elementary school, but I remember the feeling. Walking into the cafeteria with one was like walking into a pawn shop with a handful of blood diamonds - you were a king among men, lording your yellow scepter over the legions with bag lunches, leftovers, school food, and that one kid whose parents packed magazines instead of food.

I wanted to know how well modern Lunchables would stack up to my lofty, almost reverent memories of them. One day I was running late to work and didn't have time to make lunch. I stopped at Kroger, and they beckoned me from their gilded seat in the refrigerated case.


join us come with us we will teach you

With a grin and a wink, I decided it was time; I should have known I was once more getting on the Ferris wheel of failure, the one named "Expectations".

BOX
Here's the packaging you know and love, branded yellow and red because Oscar Meyer knows these are nature's danger colors.


If you show this picture to a deer, it will run until its heart explodes.

The back of this particular box advertises a contest that allows kids to make a video game, and it inexplicably features a cel shaded Evan Matthew Cohen, best known as one of the Krelboynes from Malcolm in the Middle.



It's a neat contest until you realize kids are unaware that their ideas, and any revenue generated therefrom, become the sole property of Oscar Meyer upon submission. This information is tucked away inside the box, and looks like this:


which every child sees as this:


and then this:


They should have called it the Lunchables: Life is Suffering contest.

I opened the Lunchable from the wrong side because I possess adult man strength, and also as a warning - when the police find the box with the "easy open zip strip" still intact next to the body of another dead hooker, they'll know who they're dealing with.

"We found another one, Chief. I think he's mocking us."

Here's the basic setup that hasn't change in two decades: crackers, cheese, meat, dessert, and juice.


Oscar Meyer didn't add a toy, they didn't create a mascot; they know you're a parent buying MRE's for children, or an adult eating them between reruns of Night Court. You need them.

JUICE
I already knew the Capri Sun would be the most fulfilling part of the experience.

In the household I grew up in, my younger brother was the unilateral arbiter of Capri Sun flavors. His constant decree was "Bring me Wild Cherry! More and more Wild Cherry! Now kneel!" I'd suggest we liven things up with a Citrus, or a Pacific Cooler, and maybe not do the kneeling thing, but he'd always bring his iron fist down. To this day I'm excited when I get a Capri Sun that doesn't taste of acetophenone, which is what science thinks cherries taste like.


Capri Sun, you don't need to tell us how much sugar the other leading juice brands have.


You sound like the kid in the back of the room who tattled to the teacher about the other boys having spit ball shooters; focus on you being good, and let us worry about the other leading juice drinks.

Did anyone else know Capri Suns expired?



I thought if you put something in a shiny silver package it lasted forever, which is why I've been wrapping my hopes up like baked potatoes since high school.

Don't tell me what to do, Capri Sun.

You're not my dad!

Once I'd jammed my straw into the pouch like an individual, I was left with a problem I've struggled with since childhood - the Capri Sun tail.


This vestigial sleeve of plastic will doggedly scrape your chin while you try to enjoy your all natural, no artificial flavors 10% juice beverage.

how does that work, exactly?

FOOD
I accidentally purchased the less-fat Lunchable, an option I didn't even know existed. This revelation came on black wings, feasting upon hope, for I was not only eating a quasi-novelty food stuff, I was eating a low-fat quasi-novelty food stuff. This did not bode well.



The first thing I noticed was that the ham sported lumps of some sort.


On closer inspection, I realized they were tiny clumps of shredded ham. Was the advertised "40% water added" in fact added to cardboard shavings to make the discs? I dubbed these blobs "ham fluff" and studiously ignored both them and whatever blasphemy of a meat rendering process was responsible.

Despite the dubious quality, I was able to create the tableau from the box front with a high degree of success. It's a point in the Lunchable's favor that they actually look like their picture, unlike all food everywhere else.



Meanwhile, I pondered - have Lunchables always called themselves "Lunch Combinations"? How many possible combinations can there be? Let's find out!

the classic

the sandwich replacement
 

the vegetarian

the double down

the Wisconsin
 

the OCD

the dagwood

the "my package was tampered with"

the "I don't know how food works"

When I finally ate my playthings, I was struck by the horror of it all.

Rather than ham, crackers, and cheese, they tasted like the idea of ham, the possibility of crackers, and the suggestion of cheese; I wouldn't be surprised to learn there's only one Lunchable - a proto-Lunchable, if you will - and the others are only imperfect copies of that template, assembled by the mom-robots at Oscar Meyer. 



What I am trying to say is that you will be motherfucking hungry when you are done with your shadow meal, and you will be angry in direct proportion to how much you loved them as a child.

DESSERT
At first glance the pudding wasn't appetizing.


It looked like a muddy pot hole, or the cross section of a hobo's lung. Nevertheless, Jell-o was proud of their creation.

It's fat free! Free fat free! Free fat in the pudding! Wait, no! Fat free free fat free fat  EAT THE PUDDING OR THEY'LL KILL MY WIFE!

Calm down, Jell-o. Don't go all "Capri-Sun" on us. We get that you made pudding with no fat. We're all excited about it too, but I think the Nobel committee might overlook your achievement for another year.

I gave it a stir it and it looked measurably better, glistening in all the right ways. I even tried to smooth the pudding into a tiny, perfect mirror so I could scry on Snow White, but I had mixed success - I ended up watching one of the dwarves put on all of her clothes for awhile. It made me feel dirty...but excited.



I initially grabbed a white office spoon to eat the pudding with, not trusting in Oscar Meyer to provide me with one. When I found red spoon enclosed, it was like pudding cup's old boyfriend was meeting up with new boyfriend.

While red spoon luxuriated in pudding cup's embrace, self satisfied smirk on his ruddy face, white spoon gazed on, envious, wishing he had arms to cross.




Meanwhile, I looked at them both and hoped no one at work with visited the back corner of the library to see me drawing faces on spoons. That's the kind of thing that shows up on an annual review, then on a psych eval. 

FINAL VERDICT
The Lunchable stared down at himself with an expression usually reserved for the gut shot.


The pudding was smeared around his irregular face hole, the scraps laid at his box bottom; he'd been greedy and he'd gone too far this time. He'd gone too far.

Would you eat me? I'd eat me. Hard.

He could hear the sirens in the background, growing closer. The lunch police were on their way. He knew he couldn't do hard time in the 'fridge - he was too soft, too full of post-consumer waste. Before he could talk himself out of it, he grabbed the scissors and recycled himself between the eyes.


Are Lunchables worth eating? I don't doubt that the whole fat versions are exactly how you remember them, only less filling and delicious because you're not seven anymore. The Capri Sun is a quenching draught, and Jell-o's much touted fat free pudding closely approximates real pudding. Furthermore, the product line has noticeably expanded, and you can find Lunchables in pizza, chicken nugget, even sub sandwich varieties. Steer clear of the low-fat option, however, unless you want to eat like an Oregon Trail family on grueling rations.

But if you're an adult, there's no way to eat a Lunchable that doesn't leave you feeling hollow inside, like you're watching from the platform while all the good things in life leave on a train, forever.

I did the review like you told me, Oscar Meyer. Where's my coupon?

12 comments:

  1. Once I had a lunchable lunch-date in which someone gave me an entire pizza (if you recall, the pizza creation kit was the holy grail of lunchables). It tasted like despair on a stale-yet-chewy crust.

    It was also roughly a week ago.

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  2. If anyone ever asks me on a "Lunchable lunch date" I'm pretty sure my next step is shopping for a ring.

    Does Oscar Meyer make engagement rings?

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  3. And to think these boxes of delight were what I liked as opposed to the bad tasting cafeteria food, except for the school where I could get taco bell for lunch. That had it's own horrors. To be honest, being a frequent sandwich eater, any time there is lunch meat involved, I check to avoid low fat, food encrusted with cardboard and walrus vomit versions of meat. It was the first thing I noticed on the box.

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  4. Of course oscar meyer makes engagement rings. They come with every ham and cheese lunchables kit. Except they aren't made of metal, or ringlike. Actually they are made of ham and you have to cut the hole yourself. See if you still want to marry the girl who's been wearing that ham ring for a week.

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  5. I'm going to drag my broken body down to 7-11 because I must have a lunchable now. Damn you James

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  6. What beautiful bon mots - "walrus vomit" and "ham ring"! I'll see if I can work them into everyday conversation. Wish me luck!

    Julie - Perhaps you could save yourself time and money by swallowing a sock and falling down the stairs?

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  7. Oh my gosh I love your blog haha

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  8. You are hilarious! I laughed so hard at this. You should be a comedian alongside being a blogger.

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  9. OMG I have tears of joy this is so funny! Thanks for the laugh :)

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    1. I am so glad my review of subpar lunch options for children and unemployed thirtysomethings has made you laugh. My doctor informs me that chuckles are an acceptable recompense for a sky high LDL cholesterol and a foreign body he called the "Capri-Sun gland".

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  10. Here I am coming from the future. This was an amazing gem that I was lucky enough to stumble across on my trip back through time. Beware of 2020 people of the past.And make sure to stock up on TP, sanitizer, gloves, N95 masks, and riot gear.

    Oh and this was funny as hell. I love the pizza ones, you just have to eat like 5 of them.

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  11. Thank you for the compliments and the tips, time traveller! It sounds like 2020 is a scary place full of *checks notes* coorsvirus? And *checks notes again* assassin bees? None of that sounds right, but what do I know? I'm busy watching season five of Dexter. Man, I bet this show has a great ending.

    And thank you for helping me to realize I might have lost access to this blog forever! Google won't let me login even though I have the password because it doesn't recognize this device. And I no longer have the verification phone number I used. And I no longer have the library card number I used as an answer to a security question. And I no longer have the backup recovery email I created. What a pickle! Almost as bad as *checks notes* the Yellowstone caldera erupting? My bad, this note is from 2021.

    Safe travels!

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