Songs at my funeral…

When I look at this video at some point I usually ask, “How could we not love her (Diana Rigg – Mrs. Emma Peele).” And the character of Mrs. Peele was so ahead of her time. She didn’t wait for John Steed to step in to save her, and quite often she saved him. She did her own research and came up with her own conclusions. So much about the character was a guiding light on how young girls should grow up to be women. “I want a girl with a short skirt… and a long jacket.” I also want some clear Paulson Bubble Goggles so that I can wear them when I watch “THEM.”

Suzy Bogguss was so damned sexy in this video and I love the feeling of this song. Her outfit and especially the hat was perfect.

I was in an IGA grocery store several years ago (in Benson, NC), walking up and down the isles shopping and I stopped when I heard this song start playing. I couldn’t have told you who it was, but it was just rock-n-roll that took hold of me that day. Since I’ve listened to a bunch of ELO and Jeff Lynn and I also like his concert where Rosie Vela was backing him up. She was also, so damned sexy singing and swaying in that long dark dress. *I’ve only been to that IGA a few times (2 or 3) and I bought Honey Crisp apples for the first time there going away from Fayetteville that day, and stopped and bought 4 more Honey Crisps on the way back home later that day. The apples were gigantic and I bought four of them. I get to the check out counter with only the four Honey Crisp apples. The clerk rings it up and says to me, “That will be $10.25.” I stopped for a brief second and then handed her the money. But I immediately calculated that it was more than $2.56 for each apple. That price, per apple in today’s economy, might not cause a pause, but this was probably just before Covid and that was an outrageous per apple cost. But, they did have an exceptionally distinct and delicious flavor. For fried apples, I almost always buy Galas and am completely satisfied.

You can see St. Pauls Cathedral in the background and you realize that the Millineum Bridge would be built right here, years later, and the band must have been facing the Tate Modern Museum as they played. The base violin player always reminds me of Bocephus – Hank Williams, Jr., even though I wasn’t a Williams fan. **One bit of info about Rosie Vela that has stuck with me was that her boyfriend in college died of a terminal illness. It might have been cancer. So when I’m looking lustfully at her singing and see her beautiful face, I usually think, “Yeah, but there is a great deal of pain in her eyes. She’s suffered.” And that’s even though I can’t really see her eyes that well in the music videos.

I think it’s probably true. That you look at a beautiful woman and you forget briefly that she’s a person like everyone else. She’s not a goddess. She’s suffered the little and big things in life that come to us all. But maybe that makes her even more special because even, in spite of great pain, her physical appearance is much like Dorian Grey. Most of the scars do not appear on her physical appearance.

For some reason the above comment reminded me of some personal wisdom that I haven’t adhered to most of my life. The wisdom is, in any competition, you should try to come in first place or very near first place every time. Why? Because getting there first, in almost all situations, grants you more & varied choices for later. I’m not sure if a less stressful life, or having to make less stressful choices during your life actually makes you live any longer, or even live better, but given the choice of living life poor or living life well off, I’ll choose “not poor.”

A Short Trip to Asheboro, North Carolina

From Fayetteville, the trip takes about an hour and thirty-five minutes mostly on Highway 24 and 705. Odd to see places named with the 705.

What instigated this trip? Much like my trip to Asheville on August 19-20, this trip was in response to Longhill Pointe Apartments Management’s notice that apartments would be inspected for termites & new filters added for the air conditioning units. *The previous trip was because there was going to be partial repaving of the apartment’s parking areas. As I left home, shortly before 9 am, my intent was to drive to Lexington, NC and “look around.” Lexington would have been about 2 hours, one way. I was also planning, not to eat breakfast in Fayetteville. Already 9 am before I was anywhere near a restaurant, I began to think that I might even skip breakfast (unusual for me) and have an early lunch somewhere.

I don’t recall exactly where, but probably before Carthage (maybe even Cameron), I recalled that there was a restaurant in Asheboro that Jeff & his family had enjoyed a couple of years ago. I had even travelled through Asheboro some time after his positive review. It was about 2 pm on the day I came through, a late lunch possible, but as I passed the restaurant their parking lot was still full, so I decided not to eat there.

I thought to myself, “Was that restaurant called ‘Davids,’ and it was. I asked, “OK Google, is there a Davids restaurant in Asheboro, North Carolina.” And in asking, somehow David’s was added to my navigation route on my phone’s GPS. The phone asked if I wanted to add this restaurant to my trip, but the question disappeared before I could respond in the affirmative. Later, when I was attempting to find the opening time for David’s, the phone asked if I wanted to remove David’s from my navigation. I didn’t know it had already been added. I found that the restaurant opened at 8am. *I didn’t think about it at the time, but 8 am seems kind of late for a breakfast restaurant to open. Still, when I actually arrived at David’s after 10 am, I saw a sign that said they served breakfast all day long. Great, so I went in and ordered breakfast.

David’s Restaurant in Asheboro, North Carolina Burge Flower Shop is located next door, and “Our State” Magazine has an article including Burge this month.

I may have already decided not to go all the way to Lexington by the time that I was sitting in David’s eating my breakfast. I ordered one egg, “over medium,” patty sausage, hash browns, and one pancake (although the menu said I could have two pancakes for the same price). I also had coffee and some ice water. I asked for some sugar free syrup and hot sauce (Tabasco was one option), ketchup was already on the table.

The food had good flavor. Everything tasted fine. The sausage patties were gigantic. I used some pancake for a savory bread to sop up some of the runny yellow of my egg. There was plenty of crispy crust on the hash browns. I think the Tabasco might have been a little off, but not completely and combined with the ketchup, it was okay. I finished the meal by eating the other half of the pancake with some sugar free syrup and a little butter.

My waitress was personable. All the staff were Hispanic. Sometime during our conversation, I asked if the restaurant had a change in ownership in the last couple of years. The waitress responded in the affirmative. I asked her how she would categorize some of the food choices, which included tacos & quesadillas. “Hispanic or Mexican?” She thought a moment and then responded as “Mexican.”

After travelling about Asheboro and visiting the Library, I returned to David’s around 2 pm for lunch. There were just a few cars in the parking lot and few customers inside still eating lunch. I ordered their Taco Special which also came with soup. I asked about the soup and later another waitress came out with a small sample of a tomato based soup (a light broth, with orzo noodles). and a creamy spinach soup. I liked the flavor of both soups, but asked for the spinach, and also because the meal came with two tacos, I asked if I could have one taco with beef and the other taco with chicken. The waitress thought a moment and then said, “I don’t see why not.” And sure enough, when she brought my tacos, I had one of each. The chicken was hidden by a copious amount of shredded ice berg lettuce and shredded cheese.

I preferred the beef taco, but both tacos had good flavor. I would take the chicken taco with me, in a small ‘to go’ box, and finish eating it one the road. I enjoyed the creamy spinach soup. *The waitress from breakfast passed by my table and recognized me from earlier. We both laughed.

After breakfast, I had determined that I wasn’t going to continue on to Lexington, but was going to explore Asheboro and then return home. It was a sunny morning. I looked for the Little Lending Libraries in the area and saw that there were four of them. Eventually, I found one LLL in a high end neighborhood. I left two books (one Bosch & one Agatha Christie) and took one ’78 Stories…” a children’s book.

On my way back into downtown from this LLL, I stopped at a convenience store to purchase gas. The price was under $3 a gallon, but paying with my VISA it was 10 cents more per gallon, but still under $3.



I found the local library and stopped in to look around. The Library was across the street from the Courthouse. As I walked inside I saw a tall, double stairway, that led up to the main Library floor. But, I also saw that there were signs to an elevator. I navigated the narrow hallway and found the elevator just around the corner. I got in and pressed “2.” Out the elevator to my right, and then the checkout counter was to my left. There were a couple of people at the counter. There were many colorful books on display and I was quickly drawn in to pick some of them up and peruse their pages. One book was a pink themed Margot Robbie Barbie book and another was a Caribbean cook/story book. There were many other books on display and many had “interesting” titles. If I were younger, I might even be enticed to become an avid reader.

I made my way around the library floor. Eventually I found a small magazine section, a man sitting reading close by. I reached for the latest “Our State” magazine and walked to a nearby chair and started to read. There were a few pages selling items for Christmas, with North Carolina themes. One I liked was a Tree ornament that had several images included that were NC focused, a lighthouse and an outline of North Carolina being two of them. The only two I can recall at the moment. I do recall another item. It was an oyster board that had carved indentations for 12 oysters. This was for sitting and eating fresh oysters in the half shell. Although, I guess you could actually stand and eat them.

Before leaving the library I stopped to ask the Reference Librarian a question about donating a Bosch novel. I commented on the interesting book titles they had on display. She was also the Main Librarian for Adults. Downstairs before leaving, I stopped in a Local History section and struck up a conversation with a couple of these librarians. *I had seen a street sign stating that the home of Governor Jonathan Worth was a short distance away. I recalled that this just Post Civil War governor had a paddle wheel steamboat named after him. This boat would later become the “Rockledge” and carry President Cleveland and his bride on their trip to Rockledge, Florida during their Exposition visit. This vessel would also follow the railroad as it was being built down the length of Florida. It would end up in Miami, first as a gambling establishment, and later as a early hotel for those building the first Miami hotels. Years later, in 1913, the derelict vessel would be towed out several miles into the Atlantic Ocean, and sunk. Although there are copious lists of sunken vessels off the coast of Florida, and their locations, the location of the “Rockledge” remains unknown. **Governor Jonathan Worth would die in 1869, years before his namesake vessel would travel down to Florida.

After leaving the Library, I did stop to take a few pictures of the Courthouse. I took the pictures from across the street, sitting in my car, at an abandoned bank drive thru.

I found my way to McCrary Park & Stadium, home of the “ZooKeepers,” baseball team of the Coastal Plain League. I suppose their season is over for this year and I saw no one at the park. I think I found this before lunch at David’s.

There appears to be a large Hispanic population in Asheboro.

This was an enjoyable trip to and visit of another North Carolina city. Asheboro is only 30 minutes from Greensboro and about 45 minutes to Winston-Salem (an hour & a half to Raleigh).

My Amazon order of 48 glass spice jars, lids and sifter filters was waiting at my door when I got back home. I had finished my chicken taco on the way back.


[NOTE 09/12/24]: I’ve already transferred 12 spices/herbs to my new spice jars and placed “3 Letter Codes” for each e.g. CUR-curry, MAR-marjoram, TUR-turmeric. For most spices I won’t have a problem with a 3 letter code, but how about “Coriander” when it’s whole seed, or ground? Or “FEN” for fenugreek, or fennel seeds. Maybe FEG for fenugreek and FEN for fennel. I haven’t added the “warm” spices yet that I use when I fry apples.

Still, the consistency and orderliness of these glass vials makes everything line up so nice and neat. The jars were packed using a plastic matrix for the top & bottom of the jars. I may be able to just put all the jars in either the top or bottom matrix, or cut smaller matrices for “fried apple” spices, or the “hot pepper” selection.

[end NOTE]

And by now, after midnight, almost 3 am, I have filled 34 of the new glass vials with spices I already had and a few I bought last morning. I now have one jar of ground mustard, and one of whole mustard seeds. I have Tamarind powder and Garam Marsala. *I also decided to have a separate, and slightly larger jar of the “warm” spices that I use when I fry apples: ground – cinnamon, cloves, ginger, mace, nutmeg, coriander & pumpkin spice which is a mixture of some of the already listed spices. I’m not sure if All Spice is included, but it might fit in with the others. And thinking now, the Tamarind might provide an interesting addition too. A little sweetener and those spices make for a delicious fried apple, and add to that, pepper bacon for a deliciously savory juxtapostion.

[NOTE 09/16/24]: I was looking for one of my electric hair trimmers yesterday and happened to find a shoebox of empty/recycled spice jars. These were like the jars I just ordered from Amazon but most did not have lids. I’ve found the lids are subject to rust or corrosion.

The Amazon jars came packed in a box with a flexible plastic matrix on the top and bottom in which each jar fit snuggly. I decided to use one of these to house my spices on my counter top. It fits almost perfectly, however I still have some items that I don’t quite know where to put. [end NOTE]

I’ve moved my plastic sandwich bags which were against the counter wall, right next to the stove. They are handy there. But, I also have a Tupperware container for butter. I keep the larger Country Crock plastic container in the refrigerator and fill the smaller container periodically as needed. I found if I left the larger container out for a long time eventually the margarine starts to mold. I also have a salt container in which I keep my salt mix. I take regular Morton’s Salt and I grind it with the Pink Sea Salt. This ends up as a fine grained pinkish salt that I use for everything. *It doesn’t taste any better than regular salt, but I just like doing it this way.

My predicament is that I have two bamboo spice racks that are tiered and fit next to the counter wall, and I need some of those for the spices that don’t go into the new jars. I have three grinders for pepper, and I mix two of those with black, green, white & red (not really a pepper). One of the mixed peppers grinds super fine, and the other grinds coarse. The third grinder is specifically for my Indian Long Pepper. I think it was a couple of years ago that I was cleaning out a few items. I will buy some new spice or curry or other food flavor enhancing item and then not use it… and not use it… and continue to not use it for years sometimes. So, I came across a plastic pouch that had some Long Pepper in it. I had never tried this and when I opened it, the pepper was indeed long and gnarly. This pepper didn’t fit in a standard grinder so at first I used a small. grey stone mortar & pestle that I have. This worked to grind the Long Pepper and I found this pepper very pungent and exactly what I wanted in a ground black pepper. But the mortar & pestle wasn’t ideal for grinding because some of the pepper would hop out over the edge and I would have to cover the pestle, with my hand, as I was grinding. So, I went online and found a grinder (not specifically for the Long Pepper) that had a microplane at it’s base. You could grind nutmeg or other hard spices, but I think the hard nutmeg nuts are too much for this grinder. However, this grinder is a well thought-out piece of kitchen equipment.

This grinder has a storage compartment in the top (handle) part. This is the part that you turn when manually grinding. But, that is the one flaw that I have found with this grinder. The screws for the storage compartment are plastic (the whole grinder is a sturdy black plastic) and they have frozen together so that I cannot open the storage compartment. Not a game ender, but just minorly annoying, and every once in a while they unfreeze, but I haven’t found a way to stop the freezing. I’ve put on olive oil but they still bind together. The grinder works fine. I have a glass jar nearby that has the whole Indian Long Peppers and periodically I take out a few and put them in this microplane grinder and grind as needed. I need to fill it up about every couple of days. I can’t control the size of the grains and all come out fine grained, but this pepper is pleasantly pungent. *How did I put up with McCormick’s Black Pepper in that one metal container that we kept for years & years… & years. And, that is NOT exaggerating. I guess it was made of steel and painted red & white and eventually, after years of use rust would appear in the corners of this little box. I know now that freshly ground pepper is pungent at first but quickly loses it’s pungency (my word) so using the “store bought – already ground” McCormick’s Black Pepper seems an act of idiocy for someone that appreciates the taste of their food.

I don’t do it regularly, but quite often I have ground (verb not adjective) pepper at home, put it in a plastic sandwich bag and taken it with me to a restaurant to put on my eggs or potatoes. Normally when I do this, I add several other spices & salt to make a spice blend to enhance the flavor of the food. I like curry powder, dulse, celery seeds, thyme, marjoram, and oregano. *This started years ago when I ate at Burger King regularly. I put this spice blend on my hash rounds, and added some ketchup or their honey mustard sauce. At some point Burger King started charging an extra 10 cents for each honey mustard container. *I’m not sure why I stopped going to Burger King for their breakfast (a Croisandwich Value Meal with Ham). but it has been a long while, and just writing about it here reminds me of how long.

That takes me in a different direction. I was reminiscing the other day (to myself) of the various places that I used to eat at regularly through most of my working years. And, let me preface this with, “Covid ended many buffets, which I enjoyed eating at for lunch.” I would eat at Golden Corral once or twice a week. Golden Corral is still in town but I haven’t eaten there in a couple of years. I would eat at Wendy’s once of twice a week. I liked their basic hamburger, and their chili, and their baked potato. At some point, I stopped liking their hamburger and then I realized (after going online) that they had changed how they made their basic burger, and it wasn’t for the better for me. I think they steamed their buns and this moistness in the bread made the burger more delicious to me. I think their buns used to have sesame seeds on it. I liked those buns. *At some point I realized that their Chili gave me indigestion, although I really did like the flavor. And the baked potato became anathema because of my Type 2 Diabetes. It’s not that I don’t eat baked potatoes any more, but the ones I fix at home are smaller (or halved larger ones). And when I do eat a baked potato I still like to add butter & sour cream. **I just bought a bag of small Russet potatoes. I mention “small” because they were ALL small potatoes, and just the size I now like, but rare to find in a bag because most bags of potatoes contain a mixture of various sizes of potatoes. And these Russets had a darker brown skin. I haven’t tried them yet, but their smaller size is actually a positive selling point for me.

I moved to Fayetteville in 1995 to work at Fayetteville State University. A few years later, they built a new Golden Corral near the Lowes (Home Improvement, not high-end grocery) on Ramsey Street. This was perfect for me because it was “on my way” between home and FSU. But normally I would only eat at Golden Corral for lunch. However, I recall that the Golden Corral near the Mall would have a breakfast buffet on Saturday mornings that I loved to go to. Oh, all the glorious breakfast foods… think of me dancing and twirling about as I view all the choices. Something special for breakfast would be some corned beef hash, and add a little bacon with that, and some scrambled eggs, and maybe some of those sauteed onions & peppers, and a biscuit, with maybe a little sausage gravy. Some milk & some orange juice and maybe even hot tea. I’m through, I think I’ll go back for a second helping of all of this. And, I would quite often, but maybe leaving out the biscuit on the second go through. *DeWayne was a long-time favorite waiter at GC for me and he did move to the new GC once the Ramsey Street location was abandoned, but he seemed rushed and not having time to be friendly. And, I don’t think it was his fault. Management. Yeah, I think it was management’s fault.

The new GC wasn’t as inviting. The buffet counter was straight, not undulating as the old one had been. This meant that as you moved about for food, you always had someone coming at you (another customer), another useless confrontation, whether you turned left or right along the long counter. And the new GC was loud. Sound bounced off the walls and wasn’t pleasant. And, in a couple of places the aisles between tables were just a bit too close to each other, which meant that staff and other customers passed by uncomfortably close, or someone had to wait for others to pass before they continued on. *You could probably write a small volume on “How to Not Improve an Eating Experience” from this one location. “Gosh, how many years has it been since I ate at the new GC?”

But after years, they tore down the Golden Corral by the Mall and rebuilt it. *I actually remember riding by the destroyed building (I have a picture or two of the remains.) and being shocked. I had to turn the car around and ride through the parking lot. I didn’t know if the building had burned down, but later found they had intentionally demolished it. And not too long after they had the new Golden Corral, they left their building on Ramsey Street. They didn’t tear down the Ramsey Street building and so there eventually were two other restaurants that found their home in that building.

I don’t recall the order in which the new restaurants inhabited the old Ramsey Street GC location, but one was an oriental restaurant and the other a country cooking (Chaisson’s Grandson’s). Before the oriental restaurant (a buffet) opened, I remember thinking “why would you want another oriental restaurant this close to an already existing one.” The existing Chinese restaurant may have been called “China II” or as I see it on Google Maps, “Little China.” But, I was a regular customer. They had a small buffet, and they had some items (which I don’t recall specifically now) which I really liked. The irony? After the new restaurant came into the old GC location, I became a regular customer and rarely, if ever, visited Little China. That is until the newer Chinese restaurant (after several years) went out of business. Then I visited Little China once again, but I think they no longer offered a buffet, and there was no reason to return.

And for a while, there was a Chaisson’s Grandsons restaurant (country cooking buffet) in the old GC location. They had good food and I liked going there also. Maybe I just liked eating at this location no matter what type of food was being served. And then whichever restaurant finally closed up shop and left the location empty, it remained empty for a while and then one day I was passing by and they had already demolished most of the building. I think I got a picture of one little corner wall standing alone. The signs went up that there was a new 7-11 Convenience Store coming to this location, and eventually it did. And, I buy gas there often but not regularly as there are other locations in town that offer better gas prices.

Cracker Barrell, the one next to I95, was a regular breakfast stop every Sunday for several years. It was too far away from where I lived and worked to visit on weekday mornings, but sometimes Saturdays and almost every Sunday I was in town I would ride across town to eat at the Cracker Barrell. There were several waitresses I liked. I don’t recall the older waitress’ name, but her husband had a beautiful deep speaking voice. I think he was a mechanic, or worked with trucks, maybe drove them. And there was a younger “country” girl named… Brandy, was her name Brandy? I must have been completely oblivious to her before she changed her hair style. I recall her mentioning this once or twice, so it was probably true. But after the change, and I don’t recall what she looked like previously, she was quite a physically attractive woman;-) She had a pretty face and she was “round like I like ’em.” But, she was “country,” and I’m not “country.” My childhood, in the country of eastern North Carolina, but with copious amounts of TV watching on which I gravitated not to “country” but to other worldly environs, made me a different character than a country boy. I’m not sure if TV was the sole contributor. I’m sure there is something inside each of us that determines the choices we make and the paths we choose. Is that question, “nurture or nature?” Environment does play a part on who we become. If the TV or the personal computer hadn’t been invented before I came along, what choices would I have made? I don’t think I would have become a doctor or a lawyer. I’m not committed enough. “Committed” isn’t the right word, but the right word is not within my grasp at the moment. Perseverance or persistence? Formal structure? Yeah, I don’t like formal structure, although I do like structure.

Even in my chosen profession, my education, knowledge, talents and experience all were fraught with holes or gaps. Like Swiss cheese. I understood some basic programming, but I wasn’t good enough to make my living programming. I didn’t comprehend all the concepts to become a network administrator. It wasn’t just a lack of knowledge, it was an ability to gain and keep knowledge in various areas. I might even understand, briefly, a concept or idea, and then it would fleetingly disappear. I’m not sure if that is a flaw or just a human personality trait. Oh, but I also couldn’t manage others. What I am saying is that if you are really good at managing people you can make more money. If you can program well, you can make more money. If you organize well, you can make more money. I made enough, or so far it seems, even with the holes. However, one of the really big holes was in myself, and that meant I could never commit to another (woman, or man). Not sure of what all was lacking, but even at 70 years old, I do not know, do not have “it” and never will, or there is no point at the end of my life to go, “Oh, there it is!”

,

Step N Store, Step Stool Tool Box 20″

I ordered a “Step Stool Tool Box” two days ago and it was supposed to arrive by today, Saturday, but I now see on the Amazon site that it should arrive by tomorrow.

Several days ago I was thinking that I needed a stool so that I could sit on it and clean my floors with a scrub brush or sponge. I had this thought several months ago too, but never found anything that I wanted to order. But, as I was looking through my online images on Amazon Photos recently I saw a picture of a metal stool I had taken a couple of pictures of while in Walmart. It was a well used blue painted metal stool that an employee had left out on the floor and I even turned it on it side to get a better second picture. I think this stool may have been on rollers that when you sat on it, it locked the stool in place.

So a couple of days ago I had been shopping in Publix, perhaps for bread. The nice thing about Publix is that they will let me buy a half loaf of bread or a half package of ciabatta rolls. This is nice because sometimes when I buy a whole package, some of the bread molds before I eat it all.

I was walking out the door and heading toward my car when I happened to see a black woman, who actually looked at first like a “street person.” She was sort of dressed like a street person, and she was carrying a toolbox, or something that looked like a tool box with legs on it in her right hand. My focus immediately went to the thing she was carrying. I realized what it was and so I stopped her to ask about it. I said something like, “Excuse me. May I ask about the box you’re carrying? Is it a stool also?” She was nice enough to stop and answer my questions. It was a stool. It was made of sturdy plastic. She had bought it more than five years ago (and seems like less than 10 years). Part of her telling me how old this purchase was was that she also told me how much it cost “back then,” but that it would probably cost more now. This also told me that it was sturdily constructed. She had bought it at Lowes. She even opened the metal latch and opened the stool top to show the tool box area inside. *I don’t recall what things she had in the toolbox, but I began to think that she might be coming to Publix to perform some maintenance work.

I thanked her for her time and information and she walked toward the store’s front sliding glass doors, and I headed on to my car. Seems like I had purchased two items, but I don’t recall what they were. I think one of them was something I intended to buy, and the other was… and with this rehearsal in my mind, I think I just recalled the second item. I had passed a BOGO display which had Duke’s Mayo on sale. That’s what I had bought. Two jars (plastic jars) of Duke’s Mayonnaise and I probably paid about $2.50 for each. I think most places sell this size of Dukes at about $4.67 per jar.

I put my small plastic bag of groceries in the car and sat down on the seat and closed the door. I immediately went online on my phone. Even though she had said she bought her stool/toolbox at Lowes, I went to Amazon and found several listed. I even found one that looked almost exactly like the one she had been carrying. *I would think that if you make a good product with all the necessary features, then you don’t have to re-create the wheel and the basic design works for a while. What I found, that looked good to me was, “Step N Store, Step Stool Tool Box 20” and the price was $57 plus tax. I ordered this immediately from my phone, which I normally do not do. Most products I order from Amazon are ordered from my Windows laptop (and my easy chair at home). So from the time I had first seen the woman carrying her stool/toolbox and the time I had finished ordering it on my phone, from my car, was probably about 15 minutes or less. And, it was supposed to arrive by Saturday, which I just saw has been postponed till tomorrow, Sunday.

I just watched a couple of reviews of this product on Amazon and one person used it as a step into their camper. Another used it to reach items in higher cabinets in the home. I looks very well made, and the reviews seem to confirm this thought.

**I had thought of getting rid of my old Craftsman toolbox and had said something to Ray about him taking a look and keeping what he wanted and getting rid of the rest. He said he would be willing. If the size of my new stool/toolbox is large enough I might just keep the few tools that I might still need in it. I’m thinking that I might still need a hammer, a wrench or two, a screw driver or two (flat & phillips head).

One tool I purchased several months ago, and have found very useful is a small pen-like box cutter. They came 4 to a pack, in four different colors. I keep one in my car. One beside my easy chair, and one in the kitchen drawer with my can opener, vegetable peeler and apple corer. Not sure, but I may have given one away as a gift. **One nice thing about these cutters is that they have a little locking mechanism that allows you to slide the blade out to a certain length and then, with the same hand, lock the blade into position. You can unlock it with one hand also. They are so handy for opening various packages. A box is delivered from Amazon and a cutter slices right through the sealing tape. I can make four quick slits in the plastic packaging holding bacon, and peel the plastic back to easily remove the bacon.


I made a good number of German Noun Cards with various images on each card representing each noun. In German, it is important to assign the correct “definite article” to each noun. In English we only have one definite article and it is “the.” No matter what we are focusing on we always say “the cat,” “the lawn mower,” or “the reward,” but in German there are three definite articles based upon assigned gender. Masculine nouns have “der” as their definite article. Feminine nouns have “die” as their definite article and neuter words use “das” as their definite article.

I thought that if I needed to learn the specific definite article for each noun individually, that would be almost impossible for me, so I came up with a learning trick. My trick, and it worked for me, was to create noun cards and create a collage of images representing the different nouns on each card. But that’s not the whole trick. What works is to just put nouns on one card that have the same definite article. Only nouns that have the “der” article go on one page, another card only has nouns that have the “die” definite article and on another card only “das” nouns are shown.

The better the image I used for each noun represented that noun “for me,” the more chance I had of remembering it. And, if I laid those nouns out in a pattern that helped me remember them in a certain order, that was also better. But the idea was that I am a visual learner, and I remember images, and so if “die Katze (the cat) image was on a page, and I remember that “die Auster” (the oyster) image was also on that page, and others such as the picture of a lime (die limette) then when I needed to remember a noun, the other nouns on that page helped me remember which definite article they all used. I remembered that card had a cat, an oyster, a lemon, a lime, a scale, a tomato, a shovel, a wheelbarrow, etc. and if I remembered the German noun for each I then remembered that all of those nouns took the feminine definite article, “die.”

It worked and I managed to learn 767 German nouns and their correct definite articles and I had a high retention rate over time. If I could visualize the separate noun cards and remember a key noun’s definite article, e.g. I put “die Katze” on every “die” card, and I put “der Apfel” on every “der” card and I put “das Buch” on every “das” page, and then if I could picture the other nouns that were on a page with a cat, I knew they all had “die” as their definite article. All the nouns that were on a card that had an apple, had “der” as their definite article, and all nouns on a card that were showing a book had “das” as their definite article.

So, for the German noun for the word “catalog” (der Catalog), I found a picture online of the Sear’s Christmas Catalog for 1964. The cover was mostly red. But, I also found images for several of the inside pages of this catalog, and one was a toy page and it included the “Rock’em Sock’em Robots.” I happened to see these catalog images just before I started to write this posting, and one thing I noted was that the inside pages were basically black and white. No color, or at least the toy page I am referencing was a cheap black & white page.

*And, that’s a major difference between 1964, when I was 10 years old, and 2024, when I am 70 years old. You didn’t go online to look at all the toys you might want for Christmas. But, it was fun looking through those black & white pages of the Sear’s Catalog for those items most wanted that Christmas. Maybe a small “Stirling Moss” slot car track & cars for your kitchen table. Or maybe a “Marx Mystery Spaceship” which actually included a gyroscope. A football? Well I usually didn’t have anyone to throw the ball back and forth with, but it was still fun to throw it up in the air and catch it myself. Not sure where or when I bought my Globus Stamp Album and started trying to fill it with used stamps.

As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, TV was totally different back then. It was analog and not the beautifully detailed, crisp digital images on the large screens. And, it wasn’t even in color until maybe 1968 for the Gibson family. We had a Zenith Black & White portable TV that was fairly heavy. There weren’t all the Cable channels that we are bored with today. There were three major networks, and where we lived we were able to receive ABC and NBC, but CBS which was in Greenville, NC, we couldn’t quite get, so I missed out on “Gun Smoke” and “Bozo the Clown” (after school). TV didn’t run all night. It ended at 12 midnight, and started back up at 6 am each day. And while it was off the air, they ran a “test pattern.” However early on Saturday mornings WRAL Channel 5 would start the first of two Sci-Fi movies at 6 am, and they would run back to back until 9 am. The problem was that about 15 minutes before 9 am, the sun was high enough to start affecting our TV reception from this distant channel. Many was the morning that at about 8:45 am, I would run outside, on our front porch, to adjust our TV antenna. I would then run back inside and this might work for a few minutes, but almost always I would miss the last few minutes of the second movie. That’s a minor frustration when you don’t know what happened to the hero, or the girl, or even how the monsters died or were defeated.

Christmas was special because it didn’t start in October each year. Preparation for Christmas started shortly after Thanksgiving day. And, there were certain shows that played every year, and you knew it was Christmas because they only played briefly before Christmas. Burl Ives would be singing “Have a Holly Jolly Christmas, it’s the best time of the year,” or Charlie Brown or Rudolph the Red Nosed Rain Deer would be saving Christmas once again. Our family didn’t celebrate the religious events and reasons until I was a little older and only seriously after 1977 for me.

So, being able to buy a stool/toolbox from the front seat of my car and looking at the color photos of the item from a web site is very special. Sears is gone, and Amazon is here. But, then one day, Amazon will be gone, and who knows what will take it’s place. I guess life as we know it in 2024 will seem as old fashioned as life in 1924 seemed to us. Well, us being “me” because mom was born in 1915 and she would have been nine years old in ’24.

I have a couple of the “Marx Mystery Space Ship” toys that I bought online several years ago. None of the gyros still work and they each have at least one clear plastic astronauts canopy that is cracked or broken. I also bought a complete set of “The Golden Book Encyclopedias,” several years ago and the set included about 5 atlases, which I did not originally have. But these thin books had tons of color illustrations. Not color photos, but drawings illustrating the various topics. There might be a few color photos but most would be black & white photos. Still, there was something magical about these books that contained so many ideas, and the covers alone were worth the price of admission.


My “Step N Store Toolbox” arrived on Tuesday. Not much to say but that it appears to be “as advertised.” The construction is simple and sturdy and there appears to be adequate space inside to carry necessary household tools or cleaning supplies. There is a plastic insert tray that fits inside and sits at the top, providing a little space on one side for a tall spray bottle. There is plenty of room beneath the tray insert for other storage. The stool is sturdy, and I both sat on it and stood on it. In the kitchen, I used a nearby counter to stable myself as I stepped up on the stool, but I would need my extra “Stepper” exercise step as a pre-step if “I was positioning myself to change a light bulb in the middle of the room.”

I think this is one of those “excellent purchases” that will prove to be worth the small cost.

Feeding a Hungry Boy at College…

It has been a long time since I attended college and I am probably severely out of touch with what a student’s life is like at college during the present day, but let me suggest some things regarding food that would have been helpful when I was attending college those many years ago.

Braun makes a multi-tool for the kitchen which includes a food chopper, a whisk, and a stick blender. Maybe not in a college dorm, but the stick blender can be used to puree various soups while the soup in still in the hot pot. I originally bought a Braun multi-purpose tool because I wanted the stick blender to help me make my “Curried Apple” Soup. The Braun equipment I originally bought was not very powerful, nor was the chopper container very big. In fact, I could not even process a whole can of garbanzo beans when trying to make hummus. Later I would buy a more powerful Braun system that had a bigger chopper container and the motor could handle blending a whole can of chick peas.

Homemade Hummus

If you like hummus, you can easily make hummus at home, and cheaply. Get a can of garbanzo beans and throw those into your chopper bowl. Add some cumin seeds (or ground cumin), some lime or lemon juice, some turmeric and some salt and blend this mixture. If you like tahini (fermented sesame seeds) you can add that also. Although tahini is is the original hummus recipe I had, the hummus I make is just as satisfying without it. Maybe some roasted garlic would blend well with this too.

Turmeric provides an interesting taste and color to making pickled sweet onion, bell pepper and tomatoes. I guess I might call it an acrid flavor, but marinate those veggies in this vinegar mixture and they become addictive.

The nice thing about hummus is that it becomes the base for all the other flavorful veggies and other ingredients you might want to eat with it. I like sweet onion, colored sweet bell pepper, chopped tomatoes, and carrots, but I also like Smoked Oysters. I like celery, but for some reason I don’t like it with hummus, and it seems to be perfectly suited for scooping up hummus. I could see making a whole meal, without meat, around hummus and veggies.

Homemade Salsa

Buy the chips and make the salsa in a food chopper:

You can start with fresh chopped tomatoes, but I like the diced fire roasted tomatoes, or those in a can flavored with roasted garlic. Add some sweet onion and sweet, colorful bell pepper to this also. I like the flavor and heat from a premade salsa called “Salsa Ranchera” which is made by the Herdez Company. I think this is ground Chipotle peppers, which are roasted Jalapenos. So, you could add any type of hot peppers to your desire, or maybe some fresh jalapenos or poblanos. Here are three peppers I tried last season that had a distinctive flavor and I don’t recall any of them being too hot: Biquinho, Trinidad Perfume and Brazilian Starfish. One of these looks like little yellow tear drops and one is bright yellow, and one looks like a tiny bright red “patty pan” squash. It doesn’t taste anything like squash, but the shape is almost exactly like those squash which are an ivory white. Oh, I almost forgot, you can roast your peppers and onion before blending them. Adding cilantro leaves would provide extra color and flavor. Ground cumin or cumin seeds and S&P are interesting.

I don’t know what the dorm policy is, but if you are not allowed to cook in your room, I would think that being able to make hummus and/or salsa should still be allowed, and you can store all the necessary ingredients and finished product in a mini fridge. Put a chopping board on top of the fridge with any kitchen tools (sharp tomato knife) and plastic storage containers you may need.

If you are allowed to cook in your dorm room (or have an apartment later) I would suggest that getting an electric wok would be the best investment you could get. Cooking with an electric wok is perhaps the easiest way to cook that I know of. You can chop up the ingredients for a “stir-fry” quickly, cook them quickly and clean the wok very quickly afterwards. You do need a fire proof spatula for moving the cooking food around in the wok.

I would get a can of Toasted Sesame Oil and some olive oil for cooking in a wok. Toasted Sesame Oil provides the classic flavor for fried rice.

Soy sauce is another classic flavor and even some lime or lemon juice.

Most meats like chicken or pork you chop up into bite sized pieces. You don’t have to chop shrimp or ground beef. And then the veggies: Asparagus, Bell Pepper, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrots, Cauliflower, Mushrooms, Onion, Tomatoes and even Zucchini. Maybe add some sesame seeds, or buy a can of mixed Stir-Fry Vegetables (bamboo shoots, baby corn, bean sprouts, water chestnuts) or buy individual cans of those you especially like. White rice is probably traditional, but fried rice would be good also with some diced carrots & garden peas.

Multi-Bean Salad

If you’ve never had it, a variation of 3-Bean Salad can be delicious and filling. I would have never thought to mix beans with sweetened vinegar. But, when I think of sweetened vinegar, I usually tell myself, oh, that’s just pickle juice. So imagine marinating various beans in a sweet pickle juice.

The surprise for me was the variety of beans you could use to provide both color, flavor and texture. Black, cannellini, green, garbanzo, kidney, navy, pinto, and wax beans all work well in this concoction. For simplicity sake you might just choose three of the above listed beans, but feel free to add to the number if it works for you. But this isn’t just beans and sweetened vinegar. You can chop up some sweet onion, or get some pickled peppers. Basically anything that is sweet pickled would probably taste good in this salad. I’m not sure if beets (and I like beets) would work because they might discolor the rest of the white beans, but conceivably “pickled beets” are in a sweet vinegar.

If you can have a toaster oven:

Ciabatta Roll Pizzas

A basic pizza sauce is easily made at home from about 7 ingredients and then can be stored in the fridge for several days. The ingredients include: tomato paste, oregano, thyme, white vinegar, garlic powder, olive oil & salt. How simple is that? And it tastes like one of those pizza sauces from my past.

I’m talking about making personal pizzas using split ciabatta rolls, but you could buy a prepared pizza dough and just slather on the homemade sauce before adding your favorite ingredients. But, ciabatta rolls will fit in a toaster oven easily whereas even a small pizza might not.

If you have a microwave:

One item I would buy would be an microwave onion cooker. What’s that you ask? Well, they (some manufacturers) make plastic looking onions that have a top and bottom. You can put a whole onion in one of these, put the top on and heat it in the microwave for say 5 minutes (maybe more if necessary, the power of your microwave can determine cooking times) and you get a deliciously sweet baked onion. The phrase to remember about cooking any onion is that, “Any onion is sweet, once it hits the heat.” There’s just something about the sugars in an onion that are enhanced by heat. Even a bitter or hot onion will sweeten when you cook it. So, save your Sweet Vidalia Onions for salads or to slice for burgers or chop for hot dogs, and microwave regular onions or cook them on the stove top or in soups.

But, having said all that about using an onion cooker for onions, there are at least three other things you can put in one of these that can turn out delicious: bake a sweet potato, a regular potato, or create an egg omelet. I’ve found that adding a little water when cooking a potato helps keep them from drying out.

Beat one or two eggs in a bowl and add some olive oil (both to the onion cooker & in the beaten eggs to avoid sticking to the plastic cooker), with S&P. I like to add some other things like dulse (a salty seaweed), celery seeds, and garlic or onion powder. You might also add some cayenne or red pepper flakes. If you are going to add chopped onion or jalapeno peppers I would roast them first. It may take about a minute or a little over to completely cook the eggs in the onion cooker, but if you want to add some shredded cheese blend, or the roasted onion/pepper then I would cook the egg first for about 30 seconds. This will start the egg to solidify on the bottom of the cooker. Stop the cooking process and then add the extra ingredients to the still uncooked egg. Put the top back on the onion cooker and finish cooking your egg(s). Check to see if it looks like your eggs are done. If so, you can dump them out on a plate. The nice thing about using this cooker is that the cooked eggs look like the rounded egg patty that comes in an Egg McMuffin. And, if you have an English Muffin (toast it) you can put the cooked egg on the muffin. If you have some Canadian bacon or regular bacon you can add this to your breakfast muffin sandwich also. If you haven’t already put cheese in your eggs, then you can put a slice on top of your egg.

I cook all my bacon in my microwave. I cut my bacon in half, but you don’t have to, but it seems to fit better on a dinner plate. I have a splatter guard that I can put over the plate to keep the bacon splatters from messing up my microwave. I then cook the bacon one minute at a time. Usually about the third minute, I pour off the bacon grease that has drained from the cooking bacon. I put the hot grease in a little bowl because this can be used later for flavoring other things I am cooking. If I have a small Ball Jar, I let the bacon grease cool down, put a lid on the top and put this in my refrigerator.

Corn on the Cob

If you have a grill, you might like the extra flavor of cooking your corn on the cob on the grill. If not, I’ve found that I can cook corn on the cob in my microwave easily. I normally buy unschucked corn because I’m going to use the microwave to steam the corn in the husk. If your corn is already schucked, you can wrap each ear of corn in a wet paper towel and then cook it. The paper towel will help keep the heat in next to the corn and steam it (like the husk does). *Here’s a trick I learned a short time ago, but it works usually. Corn still in the husk had what is called silks. They are those little inedible strings that stick to the corn on the cob, and you have to rub them off before eating the corn. The trick? You cut a little bit of the stalk end of the corn off, exposing the ring of corn kernels. Then cook the corn. When you first remove the corn it might be extremely hot. After all, there has been steam involved in the cooking process. I start cold running water from my sink, change it to spray the water, and then pinch the silk end of the corn cob. As you squeeze the cob, the cooked corn will begin to squeeze out the cut stalk end and the silks (miraculously) will remain with the husk. You won’t have to peel off the husk and then rub the silks off. Who knew? Not me and I’m an old man. *Sometimes you can’t squeeze the corn out using the above method. If not, then remove the husks and rub the silks off and there is no loss.

If you have a toaster oven:

Pastrami Reuben

Basic Ingredients: Seeded Rye Bread, Swiss/American Cheese, Pastrami, Sauerkraut, Thousand Island Dressing, Margarine.

Homemade Thousand Island Dressing

Basic Ingredients: Dukes Mayo, Ketchup, Hot Sauce, Chopped Onion, Pickle Relish, Minced Garlic, White Vinegar & Salt.

Construction:

Butter the outsides of the bread and toast them. When the butter is melted and the outside is toasty, flip each slice of bread over and put on your cheese to melt it. Swiss is traditional, but I like White American Cheese also. I think of the cheese as forming a protective layer for the bread in case your sauerkraut or Thousand Island Dressing is too watery. When the cheese is melted I would put a few slices of pastrami on each slice of toasted cheesy bread. Then put on some sauerkraut and mix a little dressing with it. **I like using this Sauerkraut & Dressing mixed as a side dish. You can change the order of the ingredients within the slices of bread, but done in this order, the wet items are in the middle. Maybe not classic by having a large hunk of sliced meat in the middle of your sandwich, but a thoughtful choice to make it a less messy meal.

Oh, and a classic Reuben sandwich has Corned Beef, but I’ve heard that if you use Pastrami then you call this sandwich a Rachael. ***I like to have some wavy potato chips & a Ranch Dill Pickle spear with this sandwich.


[09/03/24]: I made a really good green beans, potatoes, and bacon side with a little chopped onion (starting with some bacon grease) and then I threw in some small polenta wedges (they remind me of little cornmeal dumplings). I did add S&P, some garlic powder and a generous portion of margarine. *These turned out so good that I ate all of it instead of having two or three meals from it. However, I didn’t sautee the fried okra I had planned, but I did microwave an ear of corn.

While at my doctor’s appointment yesterday, the check-out receptionist told me about Anne’s Old Fashioned Flat Dumplings (pastry). It comes in a red package and can be used for things like chicken & pastry or lima beans & pastry. [end]

[NOTE 09/14/24]: I finally bought a package of Anne’s Pastry. It comes frozen. The pastry dough is very thin and there are three pieces per “sheet” with a divider sheet that helps you peel off a layer of pastry. I happened to see that I had a Tupperware container of garden peas in the fridge. I had used some of those peas in tuna salad a day or so ago. I thought that sometimes garden peas can have pastry so I started to make a helping. I had put the pastry in the garden peas, and had added some Chicken Broth to a little water in the pot. But, then I also remembered that I had some country ham and I sliced a few bits of that and added it to the peas & pastry. I think I also chopped up a little onion for this also. This turned out well and I ended up eating the whole helping instead of dividing it into two helpings. I was planning on fixing some steamed cabbage, but ate the extra garden peas instead.

[end NOTE]

El Catrin Mexican Kitchen in Swansboro, NC.

I had a good little trip to and from Jacksonville, Hubert, Swansboro, New Bern, and Havelock last Friday. I like to get back down to visit with my cousin Mary Ann on the Carolina Coast every couple of months. I might like to make the trip more often, but at 70 years old, the round trip is taxing to me. Two hours each way.

It has been a couple of weeks since I made a quick (very enjoyable) trip to Asheville, and I still see evidence that the energy I spent making that trip has not completely returned for use in my daily life. *Not just the use of energy, but “packing up” all the necessaries for daily life (even on the road) are a hassle to return for use in daily life. What? Hearing aid recharger not where it needed to be. The nightly mouth guard still packed in the suitcase.

One note, among the many, is that I made the trip to Asheville and forgot to bring along either my Windows laptop, or my Chromebook. Fortunately, my smartphone will do most of what I need done while on vacation. I can pull up Google Maps and get a “best route” to various locations. I can check opening & closing times for restaurants and other businesses. Heck, as I was sitting in El Catrin restaurant waiting for Mary Ann to arrive, I was able to google on my smartphone about the name “El Catrin.” I pulled up its menu (looks as good online as it does in the restaurant – why not? Its a PDF document.) on my phone.

The good points of the Asheville trip: pleasantly cool morning mountain air as I cruised about downtown Asheville (saw two copper colored turkeys in a neighborhood), enjoyed a short ride up the Blue Ridge Parkway (seeing two Black Bears cross the road), a wonderfully pleasant stay at the (remodeled) Quality Inn, “looking good, feeling good.” Enjoyed my trip to the WNC Farmers Market, and even found and bought Dulse at the Earth Fare Market. Unfortunately, the East Village Grille no longer has a Pastrami Reuben on its menu, but I had a good Philly Cheesesteak there this time. Also on this trip I meandered on the way there, and I meandered on the way back home. I refreshed my memory of many places (Maxton Airport, Laurinburg Library, Gibson, Seaboard Station Restaurant, Hamlet Library, Rockingham Library, passed near downtown Charlotte, Weaverville & the Mangum Gallery, the New Morning Art Gallery, Food Matters) and I added several cities/towns that I’ve never visited previously (Morganton, Mocksville).

My visits to Hubert usually start with breakfast at Helen’s Kitchen for a country ham (biscuits, sliced potatoes & egg over medium, with coffee). After a two hours trip down, I’m ready to eat. They usually give me more than enough country ham so that I am able to slice one of the biscuits open and make a ham biscuit for later. I ate that biscuit for dinner, after stopping by Hwy. 55 in Kenansville and finishing off an order of onion rings (with ketchup) and a Diet Dr. Pepper, while driving. *After breakfast I normally drive over to the Onslow County Library to see if there are any books I want to buy. I think I bought six or seven hardback books this time, a couple of cook book for Mary Ann and more Connelly novels that will go to the Little Lending Libraries that I visit.

After my OCL visit I will usually try to drive up to New Bern and then on to Minnesott Beach and get on the ferry there to cross over to Cherry Branch (and then either back to Havelock and probably Hubert, or on the Beaufort & Morehead City – the back way). I was running about 30 minutes late and although I made it to New Bern (the back way, for the second time recently) I realized that I couldn’t get to the ferry to make the 20 minutes crossing, so I went directly from New Bern to Havelock and then back to Swansboro to meet Mary Ann for lunch at El Catrin.

I had never been to El Catrin before, but Mary Ann had said they had really good food, and this was directly across the road from the Bamboo Asian House, which I knew was also a favorite eatery of hers. I got to the restaurant shortly before Mary Ann and Ray arrived and had time to look at their menu and to google for the name “El Catrin” while I sat waiting. As I picked up the menu. I was immediately impressed. It was a vivid purple, and inside were several magazine quality menu pages with color photos of some of their dishes. I didn’t pay much attention to the prices, although later I might say, they are “a little pricey.” But I justify the higher prices because of the extra attention to their environment. Purple is one theme and the El Catrin character is displayed on the welcome rugs, the walls in drawings, logos, and large wall photo murals. They have a bar area and several large screen TVs playing various sports events, etc. We ended up sitting in a half booth/half table setting near the bathrooms. *I think the place looks great, but it is too small for the number of customers I think they are going to generate. There may be other good looking restaurants in Swansboro, but this place is “inspired” and successfully “accomplished.”

I enjoyed my food as did Mary Ann and Ray, and they both had a Flan dessert, which they said they enjoyed. Flan doesn’t “float my boat,” and I didn’t need a dessert (Type 2 Diabetic).

I had books for Mary Ann, and flavored olive oils & vinegar, & pepper grinders and Dulse for Ray and Jacquelin. I also had a couple of books for their kids. The C. S. Lewis Space Trilogy (in one book) and an Inventions book that was a pictorial on how things work.

I left after 6 pm for my trip back home and it began to rain, and got progressively heavier rain as I continued & there were several instances of impressive lightening. The rain stopped completely before I finally arrived home.

I had an order of onion rings and a Diet Dr. Pepper at Hwy. 55 in Kenansville. This is a normal stop, although I rarely go further and stop at Smithfield’s Chicken -n- Barbecue where I40 and Hwy. 24 cross. *There is a State rest stop at this crossing and if I need, they always have clean restrooms. I even had an unexpected play date one time when there were a couple of vans of young children on a field trip. They were from Rocky Mount (a church group I think) and I playfully interacted with them as they were getting ready to board their vans after their bathroom break. I asked in an animated voice, “Are you all from Rocky Mount.” They gleefully affirmed that they were from Rocky Mount. But the really special part of this trip happened at the end when the last little girl in line was waving at me, and I am glad that I saw her. I waved animatedly at her. She hadn’t been close enough during the earlier playtime for me to address her with any attention, but she was appreciative enough to be waving at me as I left. I hope my waving back to her was special to her also. She was just as important as the rest of those kids & their teachers.


Mary Ann mentioned later that there were other restaurants in the Swansboro area that had just as much flair as El Catrin. “Flair” was my word and interpretation of what she was trying to say. I do not go out to eat a whole lot, and those places I go to are “old standards” for me. Still, El Catrin was the flashiest restaurant I have been to in a long time, if ever. For its size, no other restaurant has been as impressive. Maybe Miami Vice meets 2024?

Rotisserie Chicken, Bean Salad & Corn on the Cob

I had bought a can of mixed beans (Black, Kidney, Pinto Beans) from Whole Foods (about $1.27 for a 15 oz. can) and then, when back in town (Fayetteville) I had bought a Rotisserie Chicken from Harris Teeter. I currently think that the HT roasted whole chicken has better flavor than the Publix version, and HT is about a dollar cheaper at around $6.88 plus tax. I had bought several ears of corn on the cob, but I don’t recall from where.

I went to Farm Fresh and got some red, pickled Peruvian peppers (small bright red tear drop shaped peppers), and some of the multi-colored Peppadew peppers. I added these along with a half can of wax (yellow) & half a can of green beans, to a half of the 365 Bean Trio from Whole Foods and some chopped sweet onion. I poured in a little white distilled vinegar, some red wine vinegar and some Apple Cider vinegar and some Splenda sweetener. Even with using the half cans of beans, I still ended up with enough bean salad for three helpings.

I think I first enjoyed a bean salad at Ryan’s in Fayetteville some years ago. They had a good buffet and were over near where the current Cracker Barrell is located, next to WalMart. Ryan’s was a chain and eventually went out of business in Fayetteville, leaving suddenly, with little warning to their employees. Not sure I would have come up with combining various beans in a pickled vinegar base, but I liked it. Through the years I’ve made it, but always have made too much (using a can each of the various beans) and ended up throwing away more than I’ve enjoyed eating. *Not sure if I would like adding garbanzo beans to this mix, but might try it some day.

For my meal, I pulled off a drumstick with some white meat attached. I microwaved one ear of corn which takes about six minutes total. *I’ve found that I can put the corn, in husk, in for two minutes and then cut off the stalk end and cook for four more minutes and it’s done. This corn was sweet and tender. And, I had a helping of the bean salad.

The vinegar in the salad cut some of the fattiness of the rotisserie chicken and the corn was just a delicious “comfort food” addition to the meal.

And, this was so good that I had it again the next day… and I think I still have at least one more ear of corn to make it a delicious three meals.

So what’s the approximate cost of this meal? Let’s say 50 cents for the ear of corn. $1.45 for the roasted chicken.

Divide the bean salad by 3 (for three helpings) .75 for half of the Bean Trio, .65 for half the green beans, .85 for half of the wax beans and approximately $2.25 for the Peppadews, Peruvian peppers and the chopped sweet onion. .25 for the Splenda and .60 for the three types of vinegar used. So, $1.45 for the bean salad.

Approximate total would be $3.40. That’s a damned good price for a delicious meal.


[NOTE 08/28/24]: I made chicken salad from some of the rotisserie chicken I had bought at Harris Teeter earlier in the week, and I still have enough for another, or another helping of white meat chicken. After I made the chicken salad, I read some of the ingredients that I had added in a previous concoction and I had left out garden peas & pasta shells. I think either of these would have enhanced the salad, but it was still good.

Yesterday was the day I scheduled to have my blood work done. The young black woman was surprisingly gentle, even though she couldn’t locate the vein in my right arm and had to go to the left to be successful. She was also very quick. It seemed like she had hardly put the needle in when she was removing it. I said something to the effect, “You’re quick too. You used to have to take two vials of blood.” To which she said, “I did.” She had taken two vials and was labelling each. *I didn’t sense any loss of time from when she put the needle in my left arm, but now that I think about it, it went too quickly for it to have actually been done that quickly.

So on my blood work days, I don’t eat anything after midnight and only drink water until the test is performed. I went to JKs after for breakfast. There were not many customers when I sat down. I ordered an egg over medium, link sausage, home fries, whole wheat toast and hot tea. *I forgot to bring a tea bag so I used theirs. I did bring some seasoning from home that had a little curry powder in it. **The food was really good. [end NOTE]

a Day & a Half

[ADDENDUM 01/22/25]: Little did I nor anyone know that just five weeks after my visit to Asheville, that Hurricane Helene would come through Western North Carolina & Asheville and devastate the area. I had such a wonderful visit. The last place I visited in Asheville before starting back home was the New Morning Gallery in the Biltmore Village area. The flooding covered this area with a great deal of mud and destroyed many buildings. This was a high end shopping area, that was, and then wasn’t. I think the New Morning Gallery is still closed, and it has been about four months since the Hurricane. [end]

Gosh, what didn’t I do in the last day and a half?

I scheduled a one night stay at the Quality Inn at 180 Tunnel Road in Asheville for Monday night. At first I had looked at a different Quality Inn further down Tunnel Road, but then I saw a couple of negative reviews so I looked at the other Quality Inn. It seemed nicer, but for just a little more money, and still not $100 a night. *I had stayed at the other Quality Inn several years ago, and it had been a pleasant stay, but I’ll have to admit that the room was much better this time.


I guess I should mention my reason for my brief jaunt to Asheville, North Carolina on Monday & Tuesday of this week. I got a notice last week that they would be repaving and repairing various parking areas where I currently live, and that certain areas would need to be vacated, by 8 am, on selected mornings. I decided to make a quick trip, out of town, so I wouldn’t have to deal with parking in another area. I’ve done this at least once previously, several years ago. I also ran away once when a hurricane was coming through, back in 2018. I ran all the way to Milledgeville, Georgia that time, and ended up having to stay at a cheap hotel for a week because flooding had made it impossible to return to Fayetteville for that length of time.

The Milledgeville trip was fantastic. I didn’t have to worry about food, or the hassles of being homebound in Fayetteville, because Milledgeville was sunny and comfortable, and there were loads of places to eat. I did try to return to Fayetteville a day or two before I should have, and ended up having to stay at another cheap hotel in Siler City, NC for a couple of nights. Eventually, I found the one way back into Fayetteville but I had to drive from Siler City to Pinehurst/Southern Pines and then up toward Raeford, and then back into Fayetteville. This was the first route that the flooding had subsided to make it possible to return home.

So, that was my reason for my impromptu trip.


At the moment, I don’t recall what I had for breakfast on Monday… oh, I just remembered. I had a tin of Amour Potted Meat, which I had bought at WalMart. I had also bought a half gallon of regular milk for about $1.99 but only drank about a third of it, but that would still be worth the cost. *Because I didn’t refrigerate the milk, leaving it in my car overnight, I poured it out Tuesday morning in the toilet in my room (#125).

Old Perfect NW Airlines Logo

I didn’t want to eat a lot for breakfast because I was going to have lunch at the Seaboard Station in Hamlet, NC. But, on the way to Hamlet, I first drove by the Maxton Airport and was surprised to find that the retired NW Airlines jets that ran along the fence line from the airport terminal were all gone. ALL gone. I did see a few large sheets of slightly curved metal, one of which I think still had red paint on it. I’m guessing these might be the few remaining pieces of the old jets. Maybe broken down for scrap. *Recall that I think the Northwest Airlines logo, from a few years ago, was the “perfect logo” for English speakers.

U.S. Army Parachute Team Annex (Maxton, NC)

But, as I continued to drive around the end of the airport, nearest Maxton, I looked in the sky and saw a couple of sky divers rapidly descending. They were coming down fast and spiraling almost horizontally. I even questioned if they were actual sky divers *Not sure what they would have been if they weren’t real men with parachutes. Two came down and disappeared on the ground, and then I saw two or three more, one at a time coming down. They were all down as I came around the end of the field and I honked, but was away from them, so not sure if they were even aware of me. I never saw any airplane from which they must have jumped out of.

I headed back into Laurinburg via Hwy. 74. I stopped by the Scotland County Memorial Library and ended up buying about 10 hardback fiction novels to prime the Little Lending Library pump. They were only a dollar each, and I think I also left a $2 donation. The librarian helped me bag the books in a couple of plastic grocery bags and as I walked out the door I met a woman coming in. She let me go through the door first and made a comment that “Anyone that reads that much, deserves to go first.” I laughed to myself thinking that I wasn’t planning to read any of these books, but wanted them all just for the LLLs.


It’s Thursday afternoon and I’ve already dispersed all the $1 hard back fiction books that I bought on Monday. I also got rid of about 8 “Our State” Magazines leaving one magazine with each book (or one with a couple of books). *I did buy a couple of large cookbooks at the Northwood Temple Thrift Shop (Thursday 22nd) this morning. I had never been at this store before yesterday, when I was allowed inside, on a day when the store was actually closed, but the workers were friendly and let me look around. They were open today and I went in to shop. I paid $4 for one book (Americas’ Test Kitchen) and $1 for another large book. *Amazingly, having lived and worked in Fayetteville since 1995, and retired here about five years ago, and as many times as I passed this thrift store, I had never actually gone in. Through the years, I had seen people’s donations sitting beside the building. I guess it was the years of working & administering the efforts at the Hem of His Garment in Onslow County, I just have little or no interest in a thrift store. **I did buy some old Craftsmen screwdrivers for a couple of bucks each, several years ago, but that was in some other town I was visiting while on one of my vacations.


On the way to Hamlet, I made a detour to Gibson, NC. I’ve been to and through this little town many times over the years. It has a nice old train depot that has been painted yellow. There is also an old bank building that, when I first saw it, had a keystone that had a date written on it. I think it might have been in the 1920s, but that was removed by someone who bought the building several years ago and then painted the outside walls in a couple of bright, gaudy colors. I think maybe a burnt orange and an aqua. Don’t recall exactly, but they ruined this building and now the outside has been painted a light gray. *I say ruined because I had an idea that this little town would be perfect for filming a TV series or movie about a small town. There is also the G.V. Pate building which I think was probably a large hardware or agricultural supply store in the past. It’s was closed before I ever visited Gibson the first time. Oh, and the railroad tracks almost magically curve around back of the town after leaving the colorful depot.

After all of my meandering, I still arrived a little early, just before 11 am, at the Seaboard Station Restaurant. This was about 30 minutes earlier than most visits, but that was because I still was going to have to drive to Asheville after lunch.

For lunch, I had a couple of pieces of fried chicken, and a thin pork chop, some steamed cabbage and black eyed peas with some sweet onion. I sat at the same location that I had the last visit.

Seaboard Station in located in an old multi-story home, painted white. The dining area is located in several rooms on the first floor, and they have even added a room that must have been an “outdoor” porch at one time. This is all inside now, but there is a large opening, between rooms, that was once a window. Now it has no glass, and you might even be able to reach through this opening and take something off another diner’s table.

There was a man, Russell, sitting at the same table that he had sat the last time I was there. He is a retired cabinet maker, who’s wife died in 2016, and he has found that making knives is now fun. He is a Type 2 diabetic and wears one of those 14 day devices that records blood sugar levels without finger pin pricks. I think he said he was taking Wegovy, which was also a single shot a week, and needed to be refrigerated, like my Trulicity that I used to take.

After lunch I rode over to the library in Hamlet a few blocks away. Looked at the books for sale, but nothing there of interest for me.

A little after noon I left the library but stopped next in Rockingham at the Thomas Leach Memorial Library. No books there for me either. Later, I stopped at a Circle K, just past Monroe, before reaching Charlotte, to fill up on gas.

I chose to navigate through Charlotte instead of going around and paying a toll. Interesting about Charlotte, there was one sky scraper that had a large horizontal fixture at the top of the building. This reminded me of some of the fictional large buildings shown in the Westworld series, but this was real. *I looked this up on Google Maps when I returned home. I think it is just from certain angles that this cross bar appears.

The rest of this trip was long and boring, up the Interstates.

I made it to Asheville about 4:30 pm and went directly to the Folk Arts Center to see if they knew about the “space ship” mug and who might have made it. I had asked the last time I was in Asheville, and they still had no idea. After the Folk Art Center, I went directly to the East Village Grille,. It was late afternoon and the sun was brightly shining through the large westward facing window.

[NOTE 02/28/25]: Today, after about seven years of trying to recall or find out where I bought this mug, and who was the potter that made it, I finally caught an online thread, found an image similar to my mug, followed the artist’s name and even found a YouTube video by the artist, Claudia Dunaway, and even more surprising, the video showed several steps in how she made my mug (or one of thousands like it). Go here for more info on the mug, the potter & her husband, who drew the cartoon spaceship. [end NOTE]

They had updated their menu so that it is much smaller than the first couple of times I ate there. The original menus might have been twenty pages, dual sided and covered in heavy plastic. Now there are only about 5 pages, which each might be printed on a thin plastic.

I looked but saw nothing about a Pastrami Reuben. I asked the waitress if they still served a Pastrami Reuben and she said they had stopped serving pastrami some time ago. So, I ordered a Philly Cheesesteak with steak fries and a diet drink. The cheesesteak was delicious, but I only ate half and took the rest, along with some of the fries for a snack later. **So, they no longer serve a Pastrami Reuben. Yet another example of a past pleasant culinary experience disappearing over time. I am 70 years old, so I guess out with the old and in with the new. No “Sticks-n-Stones” pizza, too? Damn.

On the other hand, I do know how to make a delicious Pastrami Reuben at home, with homemade Thousand Island dressing, served with wavy potato chips & sauerkraut (on the sandwich, and as a special side). Mix some sauerkraut with the thousand island dressing and it makes a good side dish, maybe not just for Reubens. Would probably work for a fried pork chop, or even a hamburger.

I think I went to the Quality Inn directly after dinner and then went for a ride on the Blue Ridge Parkway later. It was about 7:13 pm and the sun was going down, but some areas along the road were well shaded. I looked ahead and saw something in the shadows, large and black, meandering across the road. I said to myself, “That’s a black bear.” And then moments later, a smaller black bear followed the first across the road. I slowed my car down, because I didn’t want to crowd them. Moments later a couple of cars came up behind me. As I passed the two bears, they were walking slowly up the side of the mountain disappearing into the undergrowth.

I drove along the Parkway for several more miles, passing a few overlooks, and going through at least one tunnel (maybe two) before turning around and heading back down to town. I get off the Parkway at the entrance to the North Carolina Arboretum and then headed back into town passing the WNC Farmer’s Market.

I had decided to park my car at the front of the motel and not at the side nearest my room. I figured that with no one being around at the end, it would be a good place to try to break into a car. I did notice an outdoor camera this morning. *The room had been renovated with nice fixtures & a quiet flush toilet.


This morning as I drove around downtown Asheville, I drove through the downtown tunnel and then turned around and came back through it. As I exited the tunnel, I made a sharp left turn and headed up a road that took me up one side of this mountain and then over it and beneath a stone bridge (Which I did not drive around to find if I could cross it.). From Google Maps & Street view, I think this overhead bridge is just for foot traffic.

As I came back down the mountain, on the side nearest downtown Asheville. I approached two wild turkeys. As I passed the house, there was only one of the turkeys still visible and it had that beautiful bronze, almost metallic looking plumage. *So last night I saw two black bears in the wild, and this morning I saw a couple of wild turkeys in downtown Asheville.

I went to the WNC Farmers Market just as it was about to open at 8 am today. I took with me, my Cara’s Corner bright yellow shopping bag that I had been given a couple of years ago. Cara’s Corner is still in the upper corner of the Market. The man was most helpful. They had no Gumbo File, but I did buy some lentils @$2.29 lb. and another type of bean I had never tried, Anasazi @$4.89 lb.. Anasazi beans are also called “New Mexico Cave Beans,” a heirloom variety related to kidney beans. *The man said he liked these beans and apparently they form a tasty gravy. My thought, about which I did not ask him, was that he might just be a vegetarian & that is why he didn’t season these beans with some kind of meat. I also bought some Danish Blue Cheese. This cheese looked good in the display case. And somewhere in the past I’ve bought & ate Danish Blue. Later at home, this was a good flavored blue cheese.


I just came across this Anasazi bean recipe online: Anasazi Beans and Rice with Kielbasa Looks like I have everything that goes in this recipe at home already. Kielbasa, celery, onion and sweet bell pepper, yum! I see from the photo of the finished dish that the beans turn a solid light brownish color, losing their distinctive burgundy & white mottled raw color in the cooking process. *I think it was the October Beans that I tried from Cara’s which were shaped like limas, but also had the mottled burgundy & white uncooked coloring which was lost after cooking. And I think the October Beans took on a kidney bean flavor. I have said it elsewhere in this blog, why buy October beans when you can get a can of re-fried beans, that are mashed up kidney beans.

Well, I made a small batch of the Anasazi beans with the Kielbasa (but no rice as per the above recipe) this morning. It looks like the burgundy part of the bean sloughs off and you are left with a brownish, kidney bean looking and flavored bean. Nothing to write home about. If I wanted a bean with a kidney bean flavor, I would fix kidney beans. So, out of the four unusual dry beans I’ve bought at Cara’s Corner, none of them are worth fixing a second time. As I said elsewhere, the Yellow Eye has a mild Black Eyed Pea flavor and that is probably why the Black Eyed Peas became the more dominant bean.


I went to Earth Fare after the WNC Farmers Market and they had the dulse I have been looking for for quite some time. I bought their only two containers for about $7 each. *Funny, but as I was passing through Morganton, I looked over and saw a Food Matters Market. I did a double take because I knew of only one other market with this name, and that was in Brevard, NC. **I checked with an employee and sure enough there are only two of these. She didn’t know why this one was in Morganton. ***And, what? They didn’t have Gumbo File either, but they did have the dulse so I bought another container for around $7. Now after a long draught, I have three packages of Maine Coast Sea Vegetables Dulse. I think I also bought a couple of jars of Minced Ginger. Well, I either bought the ginger here or at Earth Fare. I think I bought the Andouille Sausages at Earth Fare because I had an extended, friendly conversation with the butcher, who was having a minor problem with a gentleman as I walked up to the counter.

I came back to the Quality Inn and got some ice to put in a small container (a plastic Bento Box container that once had a couple of smaller plastic side containers that fit in the bigger box) and put the cheese and a couple of Andouille Sausage links in it. The ice had completely melted by the time I got home and the water had turned a brownish color. Not sure if the sausage was ruined, but I put both links in the freezer. I think the cheese is okay and plan to try it shortly. *The cheese was still good. I had a little with a few of the black sesame rice crackers about midnight.

You’ve got to understand that I might never be on Hwy. 18 going through Morganton, NC again, but I just looked over and saw the name. I had a vague memory that I knew this grocery (health foods store) from having visited one near Brevard, NC several years ago. I think I had been to the Brevard location at least twice, but really don’t know why I was passing through this area. I still had time to kill so I turned around and pulled into the Food Matters Market parking lot and went in.

After Earth Fare I headed up to Weaverville and stopped in the Mangum Gallery in downtown. One nice thing is that there is a small parking lot across the street. No charge, free parking, and just walk across the street to several of the shops. There were several “artists” around this parking lot painting, but facing in different directions.

There was a young man, in the Mangum Gallery, working on some of the pottery and I ended up asking him if he had ever seen or knew who created my “space ship” mug. I showed him a picture from my phone. He didn’t know who, but directed me to to a guild gallery that also had a school for students. It began with an “O” but I don’t recall if it was Odyssey or not. I didn’t go there. *Checked online and it is the “Odyssey Clayworks.” Odyssey Center for Ceramic Art

After the gallery, I drove over to the Blue Ridge Parkway. I have a back route that leads me up the mountain and I come back down the Parkway, past the Folk Arts/Crafts Center, and then out onto US70. This time, I drove past the East Village Grille, on my left, and turned right at one corner of the VA Hospital. This road goes past the “staff/bus” entrance for the Folk Arts Center and under the Parkway. I then headed back to US70 which ends up below where the Parkway entrance/exit is located on US 70.

I then headed back to the New Morning Gallery and managed to get a parking space on the street at the very end (or head) so I didn’t even have to worry about leaving the parking space.

You enter the Gallery on street level and there are a bunch of stairs that lead up to the display area. But, I know where the elevator is located and I now take that up. They have blocked off one corner that was used for display, but now is used for storage. I looked at quite a few mugs and bowls and asked a female clerk about my “space ship” mug. She didn’t know it either. A gentleman also working there said there was a Guild location around the corner, and across the street, but I did not go there afterwards.

I did buy a cheap green Mangum soup bowl. It is a little deeper than the couple of bowls that I already have. The others might be shallow salad bowls. I say cheap because this bowl was only $34 plus tax. This is an old price because I see that most new items are now priced in the $60 – $80 range. Or at least they were at the Folk Art Center.

After the New Morning Gallery I headed out on I40, but pretty soon meandered back over to US 70. I did this because I needed to kill about an hour and a half. The actual driving time to Yadkinville from Asheville was about 2.5 hours.

I meandered through several towns on the way to lunch at 3:30 pm at the Yadkin Valley Seafood Restaurant in Yadkinville, NC.

I rode around Morganton for a short time, not finding their library although I saw the Library turn signs from several directions, but never saw a building labeled “Library.” Actually, I just checked with Google Maps and Street View and I drove completely around the Library but any signage was so small I did not see it. I do recall the parking lot across the street but didn’t know it was for the Library.

The cute blonde waitress with the nice behind wasn’t at the restaurant today. Probably long gone. I wasn’t even sure back then of how old she might have been. She might have still been in high school, or maybe in her early twenties.

Yadkin Valley Seafood Restaurant (Yadkinville, NC)

I asked my waitress what diet drinks they had and I thought she said Diet Coke and Diet Dr. Pepper. I said, “Oh great! I’ll have Diet Dr. Pepper.” Later when she brought my drink, it looked light in color and when I tasted it I wasn’t Dr. Pepper. I asked her about this and she then said, “Oh, we don’t have Diet Dr. Pepper. I thought you said Diet Mountain Dew.” I told her it would be okay, and it was, but as I ate and thought about this, I wasn’t the only person who didn’t hear well, because I know I said “Diet Dr. Pepper” in my reply. If I had heard her as she stated, I would have chosen Diet Coke.

My waitress charged me correctly for my meal but it seemed to be about $3 higher than I thought it should have been so I only gave her a $2.50 tip on a $20 meal. I checked on my phone later and saw that she had charged me the extra price but then I realized I had ordered scallops, popcorn shrimp and flounder, and the scallops were one of several items they charged extra for in their combos.

So after my lunch, it was about 4:30 pm and my GPS was suggesting the quickest route back home was through Winston-Salem and then just south of Greensboro. I decided that going through those cities in rush hour traffic would not be best so I made my own navigation. First I drove from Yadkinville to Mocksville.

From Mocksville to Lexington, and then from Lexington to Asheboro.

I turned around in the Davidson Funeral Home parking lot to get my GPS directions to Asheboro. There were some Hispanic kids (boys & girls) walking across town and I passed them or they passed me a couple of times because I had gone in the opposite direction to see a little more of town and then turned around to get back on track.

Each of these three segments took a little less than 30 minutes. After Asheboro, I headed south, but turned off to come through Seagrove and Robbins, NC, and this segment I had driven before. *I thought I had been to Lexington before, but maybe not. I had been through Lincolnton, NC several years back.

Robbins, NC (I’ve bought gas at this store before, but not during this trip.)

I do want to return to my stay at this Quality Inn in Asheville. The motel was obviously older, but I asked and they had started renovations in 2021. Everything was superb! The toilet had a quiet flush. The shower and the sink had good fixtures and there was plenty of hot water (although I did shower close to 6 am). There were all the amenities: mini fridge, mini microwave, TV with at least 80 channels and a remote, an iron & ironing board (which I haven’t used in probably 25 years) and a blow dryer for your hair. I got ice in the ice bucket and had my “Bill’s Drink.” I had carried my empty carafe and several packages of the dry flavored drink mixes and even had a bottle of mixed orange juice and cranberry juice. So, I wasn’t lacking at all with my personal drink as I normally have at home. I also had a medium avocado which I cut open with a metal spoon I had brought with me, and then scooped all of it out a little at a time. The avocado was perfectly ripe, but I had no salt and that would have made eating it perfect.

The bed was comfortable and had maybe five pillows on it. I think I registered that the pillows were a little hot during the night. The room had been renovated perfectly. Perfectly modernized and for the nightly price worth it. I saw nothing in the room that was a negative. No negative smells or stains, etc. The air conditioning worked fine. Locks on the door. Water pressure in the shower fine.


This morning I decided to go out for breakfast and I got dressed and headed over to J.K.’s. On the way over, I remembered that this was Wednesday and that J.K.’s is closed on Wednesdays. Instead of going on to Zorba’s, I passed by there and went to the Harris Teeter to fix a breakfast from their breakfast bar. I had scrambled eggs, cheese grits, a biscuit and sausage gravy, a small dollop of corned beef hash, and a couple slices of bacon. The total for the breakfast was a little over $9. The items on this bar had good flavor and I would try this again. *Recall that I had enjoyed the Harris Teeter lunch bar many times before I got something “bad” from that bar and my throat started to close up. Since I had tried everything previously, I’m thinking that maybe someone used some chemical cleaning solution and that remained on an item causing the allergic reaction. I stopped eating the lunch buffet there for several months and later tried it once again, with no problems, but never went back to it on a regular basis.

This morning the air was cool in Fayetteville and it reminded me of how the air had been fresh and cool as I was driving around Asheville the morning before. Asheville was a pleasant change.


I fixed some Anasazi beans yesterday and now have a pot of Andouille & Lentils on the stove at 2:01 am Thursday morning. I can already tell that the lentils are going to provide a much better flavor. And, the Andouille seems to be better than the Kielbasa, although I like the Kielbasa for my Kielbasa/Shrimp/Zucchini dish. I’ve also added Savory to the lentils, which I didn’t put in the Anasazi beans.

And yes, I have just tried them and they are really good.

It was the worst of times. It was the best of times.

My favorite job:

My worst job:

I would have to mention two different jobs as being the “worst job” I ever had, and they were for different reasons.

When I was still in college, but on break during one summer, I got a job “on Base” (Camp Lejeune Marine Corps Base). My mom was working, as a clerk typist, somewhere on base. This was late in her career. I got a job with a “maintenance” company that was cleaning & repainting an old cafeteria building. She drove me in to work that morning (she ended up being within walking distance, but several blocks away).

The job I was given was mopping down the ceilings with a caustic solution (maybe Clorox and water) to remove any old mold. I think this would have been in preparation of repainting the walls & ceilings. The ceiling was very high up. Think of it as a two story building, but no second story, just a really high ceiling on the single floor. Well, they had a really tall wooden ladder that swayed a little when I climbed it because it was really tall, but narrow. There was a bucket with the cleaning solution, and I was give a mop with a wooden handle and sent up the ladder.

So, I dip the mop into the liquid and then lift the mop head up and scrub the ceiling. Almost like mopping a floor, but in the opposite direction. Well, I didn’t like being high up on this ladder, but the clincher was that I had no work gloves and as I mopped the ceiling, the cleaning solution would run down the wooden mop handle and onto my hands and arms. I did this work for about four hours, until it was time for lunch. I realized that the cleaning solution was “eating into my skin,” so I told the boss that I was going “home for lunch” and was going to buy some work gloves. But, I ended up walking several blocks and found my mom. I took the car to drive into Jacksonville (NC) and home. I didn’t get any work gloves, and I didn’t go back to work after lunch. I drove back later to pick up my mom after her work (probably 4:30 pm).

I never went back to that job. I only worked four hours. But later that night and possible for a couple of days, I was washing my hands in the bathroom sink (at night because the light was on), and I looked down and could press the skin on my fingers and small air bubbles would come up through the pores of my skin with the water on my hands. The cleaning solution had eaten down into my skin, and yes, they were raw for several days.

I think it was several months later that I got a check in the mail paying me for the four hours I had worked. I don’t recall how much I was paid, but I thought it was good pay for such a short time of actually working.


In my twenties, and after college, I got a job as a house parent for emotionally disturbed children. This was a State (of North Carolina) funded job and was located in Elizabeth City, NC. I was still living down in Jacksonville, NC but the scheduling worked like this. I worked from Sunday afternoon until Friday at lunch and lived in a “half way” house during that week. There was just one other “parent” staff person, and when I was working she was a pregnant white woman. And we only had two children to look after.

These children were “emotionally disturbed.” They both happened to be boys. One a teenage white kid, and the other a little black child about 9-11 years old (I don’t recall his exact age, but I don’t think he was a teenager yet.).

Here is part of the rub. I said we worked from Sunday to Friday, not even a full week. But, then we were off for 9 days. Work five days and then take nine off, making the full two week period. Oh, and the State provided all the perks that you might need to be happy. Color TV, games, food, a nice house, and even money to go out for ice cream and/or a movie. The problem was that these kids were an emotional drain on the staff (us). In reality, it took a couple of days to prepare yourself to work in this environment, and then it took a couple of days to recover after working just five days under that strain.

The little boy could not take orders from an adult, and would physically react. I recall having to wrap my arms and legs around his arms and legs to keep him from hitting or kicking me (and biting would also be a possibility) during one of his “tantrums.” It was sort of like he was demon possessed, and would lash out, but after a while he would calm down. *I normally protected myself pretty well, except for one time. The child was “acting out” and I was trying to protect my pregnant co-worker and in so doing the kid managed to kick me in the face (more like running sandpaper over my cheek, instead of a punch, but only because the kick missed most of me).

We would try to reward these kids when possible. I they behave, we all go out for ice cream and a movie (their choice) at the end of the week. And, they would be good for a while, but they “always” found a way, just before the reward was to come, to “act out” and spoil the possibility of a reward. They always found a way to “shoot themselves in their foot.”

I said the little boy couldn’t take orders from an adult, but here is the funny thing. One time (during the summer) we went to a local school where they were having some kind of youth program. These children were from the community . This wasn’t just for emotionally disturbed kids. So the two boys were down on the gym floor with a bunch of other kids, all milling around, playing. The other staff person and me were up on a raised area next to the gym floor, talking to other adult staff from the school/program. At some point, I see a big black kid run into our little boy. The other boy didn’t do it on purpose, and he was much bigger than our kid. I saw our boy turn and look up at the bigger kid with that demon-like anger in his face and his body tensed. I was helpless to step in because I was so far away from either of them. And then it happened, instead of our boy jumping on the big kid to fight him (as he would have with us), his facial demeanor completely changed, the anger went immediately away, and he untensed and walked away. When I saw this, I knew the little kid could control his anger but chose not to (with adults). In that brief encounter, he had realized that the bigger kid would have “kicked the shit out of him” if he had started a fight, and so, he chose to “let it go.”

I don’t recall how long I worked at this job. Perhaps for a summer. But, and I haven’t met one in a long time, you can recognize people who work with emotionally disturbed children easily. They are laid back, and that is for their own personal protection. So, it would take me two days to prepare to go to work. I would work five days. It would take me two days to recover from the stress, and then I would have five days to enjoy before the whole cycle started again. And, I would imagine that although the State of North Carolina was probably paying a pretty good chunk of change to fund this merry go round, the general public would be completely satisfied that they didn’t have to face the angst and anger of these children.

Wholesome Agave Nectar 44 oz. $12.99 at Wegman’s

Currently at Amazon, two 44 oz. bottles of the Wholesome Agave Nectar costs $33.16. That would be $16.58 per bottle, so it is quite a savings at Wegman’s ($3.59 per bottle). Wegman’s White American Cheese runs less than $4 per package (pre-sliced). *But, I don’t think of Wegmans as being less expensive, except for these two examples, and the $.99 ICE drinks. *Wegman’s also has the “Raspberry Royale” tea from Bigelow.

Part of my jaunt up to Morrisville, via Apex, is to stop first in Cary at the Golden Hex (a European grocery). They have a fantastic variety of deli meats, salamis and sausages as well as various cheeses and a bunch of other grocery items from European countries. I’ve found a green seaweed there that I can “doctor up” to replicate the side dish that I had enjoyed several years ago at different restaurants. I think the additions included toasted sesame oil & seeds, soy sauce, vinegar, and some sweetener. *I think there was also some hot pepper flakes.

So I buy some sliced Estonskaya and maybe one other sliced salami. I take this to Wegmans, where I buy a ciabatta roll for $1.10. I either take a couple of slices (or buy them there) of the Wegman’s White American Cheese. It is both cheap and flavorful. *I take a sandwich bag with a couple of dill pickles & maybe some grape tomatoes and/or some olives (Castelvetrano). **I have been taking some sweet mustard flavored with horseradish cream, but after today I think I might simply prefer Dukes mayo. Oh, and I’m also thinking that a couple of slices of sweet (Vidalia) onion and/or some sliced Campari tomatoes. If I have some wavy potato chips (IGA has a small bag with about 3 good servings per bag at about $1.38), I take them too. Take a bottle of ice to use with my bottle of flavored ICE drink. This has to be a relatively cheap lunch, but with a lot of enjoyable flavors. ***Oh, I did actually buy a whole head of Iceberg Lettuce at Wegman’s today and included it in my ciabatta roll salami & cheese sandwich. My dill pickle spears were the “souped up” version with the Ranch flavoring.

I buy the cheap jar of dill pickle spears at WalMart, and the even cheaper packet of Ranch Dressing mix from either WalMart ($.60) or Food Lion ($.50) and add the packet’s contents to the dill pickle jar. After this first combining, I re-use the Ranch dill pickle juice in subsequent jars of dill pickles. The juice doesn’t appear to “go bad,” and I just pour off the plain pickle juice first. *I bought some whole dill seeds to try and sprout them, but the sprouting didn’t work. So, I ended up putting some of the dill seeds in the “Ranch Dill” jar. To my surprise, this kicked up the flavor of these pickles even more.

If I am fixing some Ranch Dressing chip dip, I do buy the more expensive Hidden Valley Ranch Seasoning at a little less than $2 per package. I add cream cheese (the cheap brand is okay), some sour cream, diced sweet onion, diced red bell pepper and S&P. *The chip dip & wavy potato chips are a “splurge” that I seldom enjoy because of the fat & threat to my blood sugar level.

I find that including “cheats” or “splurges” to the foods I eat make life more palatable & enjoyable. And, if you don’t cheat often or regularly, any move in the wrong direction is quickly re-adjusted in a day or two. The blood sugar level may spike higher than you would want on a daily basis or you may gain a pound or two by eating a lot of ice cream or spaghetti at one sitting. But, going back to the rule and not making the exception(s) the rule, the body quickly readjusts and the bgl or weight return to acceptable norms. *I just realized that it has been a long time since I ate a half gallon of ice cream in a day, or ate a large plate of spaghetti noodles w/ homemade spaghetti sauce as a cheat. I no longer have those desires. **Having said this, today for the first time in a long time, I stopped by a Wendy’s (Exit 319) and got and consumed a small Triple Berry Frosty (normally I would prefer chocolate flavored). I had never tried this flavor (it is new) before today, and it was a familiar flavor and I enjoyed it, but don’t think I would prefer it over a small chocolate Frosty.

In the past, I might buy a cheap Rocky Road flavored half gallon of ice cream at Food Lion and at home, would take a soup spoon and add some chocolate flavored syrup before scooping out and devouring the ice cream. After I’ve indented the ice cream, I would like to either add some Half-n-Half or regular milk in the ice cream container. Yeah, I haven’t done that in a while, or even desired to do so.

In 2019 I think I had eaten some Pistachio ice cream before 10 am, on a holiday Monday, and had just returned the half gallon container to the freezer section of my fridge, when I sat back down in my easy chair, watching a new episode of the new, new Outer Limits (or was that the new Twilight Zone) and in moments realized that something was terribly wrong with me. I was having a seizure due to low blood pressure, but I didn’t pass out completely. No, I just sat in my chair watching the TV show through a reddish filter and pissing on myself. My body providing the tinted filter. *I quickly recovered, but sat for a while trying to regain my composure and to determine my next steps. I called Jeff Mitchell to let him know what had happened. While talking to him I decided to drive myself to the Cape Fear Valley Emergency Care facility that is about a quarter mile up the road from my apartment. I showered, dressed, and drove there. And, as I have rehearsed elsewhere on this site, I was providing a urine sample there, when I passed out completely. And within the hour, I was transported over to Cape Fear Valley Hospital (across town) and three days of intense testing begun. **They didn’t come up with a definitive cause of my seizure and passing out, but my cardiologist had an idea I think. About a month later, when I passed out while getting a new CPAP machine, I was taken again to the hospital and within a few days had a new device in my body, a pacemaker. I think it was six weeks for the heart surgery, and my fractured knee to heal. Once I could get my behind in the driver’s seat, AND my leg (in a brace) into the car and my foot on the gas I was self-sufficient once again. I still wasn’t supposed to raise my left arm above my head until the electrode connections had healed. The only time that I might have raised my arm was when I was sleeping and awoke with my arm above my head. But, this only occurred once or twice, and I guess I could have tied my left arm to my body to stop this.


Just tried some of my sweet mustard & horseradish cream sauce on some smoked oysters. Good flavors together!


[NOTE 08/15/24]: I bought a small tin of Riga Cod Liver at Golden Hex (I think.). I’ve never eaten Cod Liver before, and I am 70 years old. I had a strange reaction to even opening the tin container. I guess I was afraid that I would be repulsed by however this food tasted. It wasn’t the flavor, which was slightly fishy (maybe like a hint of tuna), but the texture which was probably like foie gras, and I’ve never had foie gras either. Duck fat. I could tell this was a extremely fatty food. Not sure how I would enjoy this. I think I read that you could spread it on bread, and that you might want to eat it with something that would “cut the fatty” flavor. Citric juice or maybe a vinegar. I’m thinking that you could add cod liver to tuna, or smoked oysters to deepen their flavor, but I’m not sure it would be worth the extra cost.

Actually, I just noted a picture of a package of Duck Pate that I had tried some time ago. I recall that this also had a slight flavor that wasn’t as pleasing as the Nueske’s Liver Pate that I buy sometimes. I think this liver pate is reminiscent, but not exactly the same as Potted Meat.

I tried some Sprat’s Pate that I also bought at Golden Hex some time ago. I did not like the flavor.

[end NOTE]

[NOTE 08/25/24]: One of my regular morning breakfasts consists of hot tea, egg salad, bacon, & polenta. Sometimes I add grape tomatoes, if I have them. I currently prefer the Scottish Tea by Taylors, which has a “heavier” flavor. In fact, the first time I tried this tea, I didn’t like it, but when I tried it a second time, I began to like it, and after a while, I prefer it. Now I still like Bigelow’s “Constant Comment” and “Earl Grey” (longtime favorites, maybe since the mid-1980s) and another favorite, “Raspberry Royale,” since I first tried it at a Quality Inn in Lynchburg, Virginia about 2017.

Today, I came up with two additions/modifications that worked well. I had a small amount of some homemade pizza sauce (only 6 ingredients) and I put that on two thin slices of polenta which I heated in the microwave. This had good flavor. I also cut a couple of slices of English cucumber and put a little salt on them. These two modifications worked well and I might do either again.

I had another Ciabatta roll pizza with the homemade pizza sauce yesterday, but I forgot to add jalapenos to it. It was good still. This is a consistently satisfying pizza, and just enough. So, I can make a satisfying pizza at home, and I can make a very good Pastrami Reuben on rye. Oh, and the Kielbasa/Shrimp/Zucchini dish I make, is consistently pleasing.

I do not make it often, but I enjoy a multi-bean salad. Its not something that I want to eat every day, or even once a week, or possibly even once a month, but I do like it and it is a nice addition to my food rotation. Sometimes I buy the beans in separate cans, but this time I found a can of 3 mixed beans: kidney, pinto & black beans from Whole Foods. To this I added some wax (yellow) and some green beans. I also added the little red pearl peppers, and the multi colored medium pickled peppers and some chopped sweet onion, and orange bell pepper. I used three types of vinegar: white distilled, red wine and some apple cider vinegars with some Splenda. You could add pickles, pickled beets, pearl onions, garbanzo/cannellini/navy beans to this too.

I made my bean salad yesterday and still have enough for two more meals. I had bought a whole rotisserie chicken at Harris Teeter so I had a drum stick and a little white meat, and I steamed a medium sized ear of corn in the microwave (it was sweet & tender). *Harris Teeter sells their whole cooked chickens for under $7 compared to Publix, which sells them for about a dollar more. I had bought the Publix chickens for a while and then realized I didn’t like their fatty/mealy textures. I tried HT and liked them better. Still either one would be a good deal because you can get about five good meals from a whole roasted chicken. The last meal being a chicken salad with a good portion of chicken.[end NOTE]