Consider bolt. It fastens shut, clamps down, locks up. Bolt secures the sentence: "Bolt the fridge so no one steals the cheese." Of course, the same low-scoring collection of letters also means dash. As in: "That guy in the toque grabbed the cheese and bolted." A word that says both stay and go has some issues to work out.
Hardly better than those cranky couples that seem to be at odds but actually agree on everything. Such as ravel and unravel — both handy for teasing apart a string. Or flammable and inflammable, each up in flames. Or void and devoid, equally empty.
Exasperating the ordinary word officer, who expects enlisted words to demonstrate clarity, brevity and work ethic.
Fortunately in this great land, rich in excess verbiage, there's always backup vocab willing to step in and sort out. Which is why when we grind winter pesto, we shun the coy shelled walnut, uncertain if this nut is dressed or undressed. We opt for straight and to the point: naked.
Winter pesto
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 15 minutes
Serves: 6 as a first course
Note: Summer pesto is all sunny basil and creamy pine nuts. In winter, sturdy parsley and rich walnuts stand in. It's decidedly different and equally delicious.
Ingredients:
1 cup naked walnuts
3 cloves garlic
Coarse salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 cups (loosely packed) parsley leaves and tender stems
1/3 cup finely grated Parmesan cheese
1/2 teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
