All in the interpretation:
I've really been enjoying the quips on various blogs this week about Donald Rumsfeld's claim that he doesn't think he has a mojo.
Whenever I think of 'mojo', instead of the voodoo charm that I used to connect with the word, now I think of Cuban mojo (pronounced mo-ho), that wonderful sauce that makes pork and chicken and other foods taste great. It's made mostly from lime (well, sour orange juice -- naranja agria-- but that's harder to get) and garlic (how can you go wrong?) with various other ingredients (oregano, olive oil, etc.).
So 'get your mojo on' is a phrase that just makes my mouth water.....
I've really been enjoying the quips on various blogs this week about Donald Rumsfeld's claim that he doesn't think he has a mojo.
Whenever I think of 'mojo', instead of the voodoo charm that I used to connect with the word, now I think of Cuban mojo (pronounced mo-ho), that wonderful sauce that makes pork and chicken and other foods taste great. It's made mostly from lime (well, sour orange juice -- naranja agria-- but that's harder to get) and garlic (how can you go wrong?) with various other ingredients (oregano, olive oil, etc.).
So 'get your mojo on' is a phrase that just makes my mouth water.....
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