Deep-Fried Samoa Girl Scout Cookies Ready For Texas State Fair Debut

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Deep-Fried Samoa Girl Scout Cookies Ready For Texas State Fair Debut
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In honor of the Girl Scouts of America's 100th birthday this year, the Girl Scouts of Northeast Texas are introducing another treat to the State Fair of Texas' lineup: deep-fried Samoas.

The Samoa, a vanilla cookie coated in caramel and coated with toasted coconut and chocolate stripes, is the second-most popular Girl Scout cookie behind the Thin Mint. The fair isn't until September 28, but the web is already heating up with talk about the deep-fried treat.
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deep fried samoa

The Dallas Morning News spoke with Girl Scouts of Northeast Texas's chief executive officer, Colleen Walker, about how the idea came about.

“The cookie is a Girl Scout icon,” Walker said. “Why not have some fun with it and tie it into the State Fair? … Fried items are part of the State Fair history. They get a lot of fun buzz.”

Christi Erpillo, a deep-fried food veteran at the fair and a former Girl Scout, decided to take up the challenge. The Thin Mint wouldn't survive the fryer, but the Samoa could. Even then, it required tinkering.

She tried making Samoa cake balls, then others with a batter made from graham crackers and panko crumbs. Nothing worked, until she discovered wonton wrappers.

Erpillo says that the wonton wrapper fries up crispy and light but doesn't mask the taste of the cookie. She'll top the fried treats with a chocolate drizzle, caramel and more toasted coconut.

A local NBC affiliate reports that Erpillo and her family plan to fry up some 100,000 Samoas during this year's state fair, an order so big she had to place it through two different Girl Scout cookie bakeries.

Watch NBC's story on the cookies below.
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:cool:
 
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_...ck-at-heart-attack-grill-in-las-vegas-report/

Man suffers heart attack at Heart Attack Grill in Las Vegas: Report

(CBS) When the Heart Attack Grill opened its doors, the restaurant playfully said its oversized burgers were a "taste worth dying for." Now that a man has suffered a heart attack while eating a "triple bypass burger" at the Las Vegas branch of the restaurant, Fox 5 News reported, nobody is laughing.

"The gentleman could barely talk," the restaurant's owner "Dr. Jon" Basso told Fox News. "He was sweating, suffering. Anyone with an ounce of compassion would've felt for him." There's amateur video of the man in his 40s being taken from the restaurant.

The Grill is known for its fatty fare, and contains menu items like flatliner fries and double-bybass burger, HealthPop reported in May when the restaurant opened up a Dallas chain.

At the time, the restaurant offered free eating to people who weigh more than 350 pounds and justified that with a tongue-in-cheek mission statement: "Doctors agree that continually cycling body weight up and down is one of the very worst things a person can do to themselves. That's why our program is focused upon keeping your weight in an extremely stable, gradual, and constant upward slope."

Even the restaurant's owner, who jokingly calls himself "Dr. Jon" even though he has no medical training, recognizes the danger of overindulging in fatty fare on a regular basis and said at the time, "don't come here every day. If you do, you're going to die."

What does the owner think now?

"I actually felt horrible for the gentleman because the tourists were taking photos of him as if it were some type of stunt," Basso told Fox News. "Even with our own morbid sense of humor, we would never pull a stunt like that."

According to the report, diners were back eating at the Las Vegas restaurant when it reopened Tuesday.

Needless to say, a diet like this can over time raise the risk for obesity. Obesity carries all sorts of health risks, including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, cancer, high blood pressure, stroke, liver disease, sleep problems, and osteoarthritis.

CBS Sunday Morning profiled the restaurant's original store opening in Chandler Arizona in 2008. That chain closed down in June of 2011, two months after the death of its 29-year-old 575-pound spokesman, CBS News reported.
 
Don't know if I would try the fried version, but I loves me some Samoas. I'd work out for a month and eat a whole box of them muhfuhkahs. Girl Scouts in B'more always got one sure sale at my crib...:cool:
 
Deep-fried Samoas...:puke:

My favorite Girl Scout Cookies. I avoid those scouts like the plaque when I see them because I'll end up buying about $20 worth of Samoas. Luckily the folks at Keebler have come up with an alternative...a much cheaper one.
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They have the same calorie count, at 140 calories per 2 cookies; Coconut Dreams have more fat and Samoas have more carbs. Coconut Dreams contain 18 cookies (8.5 oz) per box and Samoas have 14 cookies (7.5 oz) per box.
 
Deep-fried Samoas...:puke:

My favorite Girl Scout Cookies. I avoid those scouts like the plaque when I see them because I'll end up buying about $20 worth of Samoas. Luckily the folks at Keebler have come up with an alternative...a much cheaper one.
Keebler+Coconut+Dream+Wegmans.jpg

They have the same calorie count, at 140 calories per 2 cookies; Coconut Dreams have more fat and Samoas have more carbs. Coconut Dreams contain 18 cookies (8.5 oz) per box and Samoas have 14 cookies (7.5 oz) per box.

:roflmao:
 
Family Dollar and Big Lots sell Samoas for less than $2 a box. Taste better than that nasty Keebler shit.

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