The new “Copper Nickel!”

I can agree with getting rid of the penny, but that doesn’t go far enough. It currently costs 2 cents to make each penny, and 14 cents to make each nickel. Stop making the 1 cent denomination of coin, but use the same copper coated zinc coin (current penny) to make the “new” Copper Nickel. That way the new copper nickel would only cost 2 cents each to make, thereby saving the Government 12 cents for each new nickel.

Heck, make the new copper nickel slightly larger than the current penny, so that there would be less confusion between the old copper penny and the new copper nickel. And changing the size of the current penny slightly, making it a little larger, maybe 3 cents extra for a little more copper. Even if you raised the production cost by 2 cents, you would be saving 10 cents on each new copper nickel.

Now that I think about it, why coat the new coin with copper? You could just use Zinc for the new “Zinc Nickel.”

And AI puts in his “2 cents”: “Yes, a completely zinc coin is technically possible, but it’s not common practice due to concerns about wear and tear as pure zinc is relatively soft; however, the US penny is essentially a “zinc coin” as it’s made of almost entirely zinc with a thin copper plating, meaning the majority of the coin’s material is zinc.

The current U.S. Nickel is 75% copper, coated with 25% nickel, so… why not use a nickel plated zinc coin?

And because AI can’t keep her mouth shut: “A “nickel plated zinc coin” refers to a coin where the primary metal is zinc, but it has a thin outer layer of nickel plating, giving it the appearance and feel of a traditional nickel coin, while being lighter and potentially cheaper to produce; this is sometimes considered as a potential alternative material for coins in some countries, offering similar aesthetics with different metal composition.

Do we have any vending machines, telephones or other coinage operated machines that use nickels? If not, then changing the size and weight of a nickel to that of the current copper coated zinc penny is easily possible.

I did not realize how easy it would be to change our current coinage and cut production costs drastically. Our current nickel is 75% copper. What’s up with that? If you can coat zinc with copper to make a penny, you could make a copper nickel the same way. Or, can you coat zinc with nickel, and it be cheaper to produce a nickel?

Okay, the President does not control the U.S. Treasury which controls the United States Mint, so he can suggest, but not mandate. Still this would probably be a good idea for Congress to get the ball rolling and make a change within two years.

When Tombstones Were Made of Zinc

Tin Foil 4 London Broil

If “London Broil” is a term connoting cooking in the oven, fast and over high heat, then I just had an interesting experience using heavy duty tin foil to cover a thick cut pork chop I was cooking in the oven. I took a square of tin foil and placed it loosely on top of a pork chop that I was going to cook in my oven, on Broil – HI. I do this regularly and the meat cooks fast, and there is a little charring on some of the corners. But, this time something unexpected by me occurred. When I went to turn the pork chop over, the tin foil had protected the top surface of the chop, but the underside of the meat was “beautifully browned.” I had not noticed this when previously cooking pork chops in my new pan, so I equated the extra color to the tin foil, which I am going to try again.

Sanderson Farms


I’ve bought chicken gizzards at the IGA, in Eutah Village Shopping Center, several times, and just bought chicken livers there today. Both the gizzards & the livers were from Sanderson Farms. I guess with a processing plant & hatchery located in St. Pauls, North Carolina, the chicken is about as fresh as it gets, unless you have chickens in your back yard and kill them yourselves, as needed.

No.1 Buffet

I had a hankering to have some stir fried chicken livers along with stir fried green beans. I had this combination at “No. 1 China Buffet” in Asheboro, North Carolina last week. Actually, their chicken livers were combined with sliced jalapenos.

The stir fry green beans came together pretty quickly. First I steamed the beans for several minutes to help them tenderize before I put them in the wok to finish them. I added some toasted sesame oil, soy sauce, a little powdered ginger, a little Splenda sweetener, and white sesame seeds. Tonight I also added some chopped onion. The high heat of the wok causes the green beans to crisp up. They are a little salty, but with a slight hint of sweetness.

I questioned myself whether I should cook the green beans or the chicken livers first as I wasn’t going to clean the wok between whichever one I cooked first and then the second one. So my logic was, cook the green beans first, even though I was going to use the toasted sesame oil & soy sauce which both have distinctive flavors. I then added some canola oil to the wok and added about three large chicken livers and the chopped onion. I used a fork to turn the livers over several times to make sure they cooked through and there was a little blood red gravy on the plate at the last although they were cooked through thoroughly. I did not use any flour to coat them.

The stir fried chicken livers went very well with the stir fried green beans & onion. I used less than half of the container, but may cook the rest, the next time. I wish I could eat rice with this meal, but no. The rice, which I love, severely affects my blood sugar. But rice would round out the flavors, and the rice could soak up some gravy.

I think another item that would go well with this is the Asian Cucumber Salad. It is more sweet and includes Spicy Chili Crisp, toasted sesame oil, soy sauce, red wine vinegar and some sweetener. And if I make it far enough in advance, I refrigerate it, and the coldness contrasts to the warmth of the freshly fried livers & green beans.


Sanderson Farms, Inc.
St. Pauls, North Carolina

Our St. Pauls, North Carolina, complex is comprised of a fresh processing plant and hatchery.

  • Opened: 2017
  • Business Unit: Fresh
  • Weekly Processing Capacity: 1,300,000 birds


Carlie C’s IGA
Eutah Shopping Center
Fayetteville, North Carolina


No. 1 China Buffet
Asheboro, North Carolina


STORAGE CONTAINERS

Not too long ago, I was moving some items on a pantry shelf, dry beans to be precise, and I realized that there were live “mealy bugs” in the beans. Upon closer inspection I saw that several of the plastic bags in which the beans had been purchased (like black eyed peas, lima beans, green split peas) also included these bugs. I ended up throwing out several of these, and making up my mind to store any fresh dry beans in air tight containers. I realized that my old Dukes Mayo jars (made of plastic) would be perfect for this purpose. I also often buy assorted types of nuts at Food Lion, cashews, roasted pumpkin seeds, and elsewhere, almonds, pistachios & walnuts. These come in small plastic containers whose lids provide a vacuum seal, or enough to keep out the bugs… I hope. I also, sometimes, buy items at The Fresh Market such as Okra Chips, and Vegetable Chips. They come in slightly larger plastic containers, but also with the tight fitting plastic lids. *Just bought some more of these today, Thursday, May 22, 2025.

Hillshire Farms Deli Pastrami 7oz.

For a time, I was buying various deli meats from Hillshire Farms. I especially liked their Pastrami, which I would buy when planning to make my “Pastrami Reubens.” Very soon, I realized that the Hillshire Farms Deli meat containers (clear plastic bowl, with a red see thru lid) were intended by the company to be reused. These containers are microwave & freezer safe, and seal tightly. I currently have one of these in my refrigerator with hummus & black bean hummus in it. I also use these for storing my current uncooked bacon. A pound of bacon fits perfectly in a container. I just have to recall to take a package of bacon out of the freezer in time to use it for the next batch of bacon. But, they also work for storing leftovers.

And, I haven’t tried this yet, but I am planning to use my old Greek Gods Yogurt containers for storing my homemade chicken broth. I’ve only recently made some chicken broth using the carcass of the rotisserie chicken I bought at Harris Teeter. Now that is using the bird to the Nth degree. The price may have gone up with the recent Bird Flu problem, but before the price was about $8 for a whole cooked rotisserie chicken. This would provide at least four meals, if not the fifth being the remaining white & dark meat pieces which could be used for making chicken salad, or perhaps my Avocado, Chipotle & Chicken Soup.

I was pleasantly surprised by the quality (flavor) of the homemade broth because several recipes I used it in produced very pleasing results. I used an empty Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice bottle to store my first batch of homemade chicken broth and it fit very well in the refrigerator door.

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*I want to mention again, that I have been saving, and freezing my onion, carrot & celery scraps because of what was said in a cooking video I was watching a short time ago. When the chef mentioned that she saved the onion tops & bottoms that she cut off when preparing an onion for a recipe, and saved them in the freezer for when she next made homemade broth, it fell not on deaf ears, but willing ears.

My main problem is that I don’t have a lot of space in my freezer, but have been trying to clear it out. The process of saving scraps and using homemade broth should be symbiotic: scraps increasing & broth decreasing, and since I don’t buy a rotisserie chicken every week or even every two weeks, I should have a generous amount of vegetable matter for my next batch of broth. **I also am eating a whole container of Greek Gods Yogurt (Plain) about every four days, so I should have plenty of these empty containers next time. I’m thinking maybe four of these containers might hold all the broth I make.

So, I am trying to clear out some space in my freezer in order to store maybe 3 or 4 of the repurposed Greek Gods Yogurt containers. Just last night I re-used some Canola oil that I had stored in one of these GGY containers, and the oil had been kept in this air tight container successfully.

One final thought, if that is possible before my death, is that I’ve also recycled a sturdy plastic medicine bottle to use as a SHARPS refuse container. Doctors & hospitals use Sharps containers to store medical waste before it is thrown away. I give myself a weekly injection of Ozempic and each time I am left with a hypodermic syringe tip that needs to be thrown away. So, the thick white plastic medicine bottle is perfect for these sharp tipped devices. I don’t think Sharps containers cost very much, but free is even better.

I’ve kept several of the empty Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice bottles and filled them with water, for emergency purposes. I did this a couple of months ago, when we had a winter storm warning, with the threat of power going off (and perhaps water also). I fill them with water, and add a little vinegar or lemon juice to thwart bacteria growth.

AI says: “Yes, adding a small amount of vinegar or lemon juice to stored water can help prevent bacteria growth because their acidity creates an environment unfavorable for most bacteria to thrive in; essentially acting as a natural preservative.

Super Duty & Loadmaster Revisited


Why in the fuck dick yourself up like that?

I almost always follow that comment or thought, by adding the comment, “Life is painful enough without me going out and finding more pain by having a tattoo.” But, I also think of at least two examples of what I would have called, “beautiful blonds,” who had large black tattoos on their bodies. It has been several years ago but I was having lunch at “Thai Pepper” near the FSU Campus, and I was facing the cash register, so I was watching a steady stream of customers as they came up to pay for their meals. At some point there was “the beautiful blond” who came up in line. She was standing about 15 feet, directly in front of me, with her profile facing to my right. As I looked at her my eye did a laser focus upon the side of her lower leg, just below her knee, where she had a large, black, intricate tattoo. It wasn’t distinctively recognizable and reminded me of a large dark bruise on her leg. And, I don’t care how beautiful a blonde, brunette or black haired woman may be if she had a large bruise on her leg, or arm, or neck, or elsewhere that is visible, it isn’t attractive. *Which reminds me of a thought that I always have when I see a woman with an actual bruise on her leg or arm, especially if there are a couple of small bruises that look like a hand. Did her husband or boyfriend hit her?

I was checking in for my appointment with Dr. Norem last time and the nurse taking my information had a tattoo on her neck. It was just two black dots about two inches apart. I say dots, but they were about the size of the width of a rubber eraser on a pencil. My curiosity got the better of me and I asked her what it was. She said that they were vampire bite marks. It must have been how her face changed that made me ask if she had ever regretted having the tattoo. It appeared to be an odd question and she responded with “no.” I think I said that I had first thought it was missing the Smiley Face mouth.

The thought just came to me if she could have changed the color from black to red dots, representing blood. The AI response was:

Yes, you can tattoo color over an existing black ink tattoo, but it’s important to know that achieving vibrant colors over black ink can be challenging and often requires pre-fading the black tattoo with a laser to achieve the best results, especially for brighter colors; consult with an experienced tattoo artist to discuss your options and the potential limitations.

In another vignette, I had gone to the First Citizens Bank at Westwood Shopping Center to cash a check. It was a short wait, because no one was ahead of me in line and the teller finished her assistance of the person ahead of me. I walked up to the counter and presented my check, with my NC driver’s license, and told her, “My First Citizens account number is written in the bottom left of the check.” Since coming to Fayetteville in 1995, I have continued to use my credit union account for my necessary checking and have always written my FC# on my credit union checks. I guess that is one reason why I have my FC# memorized, and know that one day, when I forget that number, it will be a sign of my decline in my old age. But, not yet. And I have a trick for remembering my NC Driver’s License # and my latest telephone number. I do remember my Social Security Number, but I don’t have any trick for that.

She asked if I wanted to cash the check and I responded, “Yes.” As I watched her, I noticed a small 3 star tattoo on her hand, near the crook in the hand were the thumb and index fingers come together. I asked, “Does that tattoo mean something.” She told me that it was a symbol that was on every page of the Harry Potter books. She then went on to explain that she loved to read, and that set me off. I asked if she was aware of “Little Lending Libraries” where you could “take a book,” and sometime later should “leave a book.” She thought that was an exciting idea. But, then I also said that the Cumberland County Library was supposed to have it’s quarterly book sale in about a week. It was actually about three weeks, and now is 13 days on February 21st. *I’m thinking I might stop in to cash another check some time in about a week and see if she is still interested in the Library Book Sale.

I don’t care if you dress her in pink and put a tutu on her, she’s still a hoss.

Exploring Layer Salad Cups

I’ll call it a “Layer Salad Cup” until I find the proper name for this, but this is what it looks like. I especially liked this image because of how the plastic fork was incorporated into the meal.

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I could see a Mexican themed cup with the following or combinations of the following items:

  • Cilantro
  • Green Chilis
  • Jalapeno
  • Avocado
  • Corn
  • Tomato
  • Onion
  • Sweet Bell Pepper
  • Romaine Lettuce
  • Sour Cream
  • Black Bean Hummus
  • Guacamole
  • Cornbread (crumbled)

Or how about an entirely different route:

  • Hummus
  • Black Bean Hummus
  • Smoked Oysters
  • Onion
  • Tomato
  • Carrots
  • Olives
  • Sweet Bell Pepper


I came across this recipe while looking for things to serve with salmon.


I like the flavor of the following dressing and I have made it a couple of times, but I’m not sure of how it actually affects my weight & blood sugar.

Creamy Cilantro Lime Dressing

  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 cup lime juice, more to taste
  • 1/2 cup mayo
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 1/2 a jalapeno, sliced (more for more heat)
  • 1/2 teaspoon honey, more to taste
  • 1/2 cup cilantro, packed (tender stems OK)

Red Cabbage Slaw (variations)


I googled for recipes to serve with Polenta, and found the following Web posting: Wondering What to Serve with Polenta? Here Are 27 Ideas, from Hearty to Healthy(.) As I scrolled down through the list, each suggestion had an attractive image of that recipe. I then came to the following: Seared Scallops with Green Peas, Mint and Shallots (.) I was immediately entranced with the photo for this recipe. So much so, that I tracked down the cookbook in which it was included and ordered it from Amazon. But, I also found the recipe online and had actually prepared this dish before the book arrived. *I didn’t like the mint much and think it would be better with Tarragon.

But, and note that the recipe from the book did not include polenta as a side for this meal. I did, and included a polenta waffle with the meal. For some reason, I was attracted to a Red Cabbage & corn side dish that I also saw online, so I made that, and I cut up a few colored grape tomatoes.

I want to revisit this seared scallop, polenta & red cabbage/corn slaw meal. Oh, and the scallops & smushed garden peas also come with bacon bits, which from my photo, looks like I forgot to add.

Another thought I want to pursue is to use Greek yogurt instead of mayonnaise, although I do like Dukes Mayo for slaw. I’ve also seen a version of the cabbage/corn slaw that uses vinegar instead of mayo. Sweetener with either is my game plan.



🌽 Red Cabbage & Corn Salad (Optimized, 3 servings)

Ingredients

  • 2 ¾ cups shredded red cabbage (about 8 oz)
  • 1 ¼ cups corn kernels, thawed (about 6 oz frozen)
  • ½ jalapeño pepper, seeded and diced
  • 1 Tbsp diced red onion
  • 2 Tbsp fresh cilantro, chopped
  • 2 Tbsp mayonnaise
  • 2 Tbsp plain Greek yogurt (nonfat or low-fat)
  • 1 ½ Tbsp lime juice (about ¾ of a lime)
  • 1 ½ tsp water
  • ½ tsp taco seasoning
  • Pinch of sugar substitute (optional, to taste)
  • Salt & pepper to taste

Instructions

  1. In a medium bowl, combine shredded cabbage, corn, jalapeño, onion, and cilantro.
  2. In a small bowl, whisk together mayonnaise, Greek yogurt, lime juice, water, taco seasoning, sugar substitute, salt, and pepper until smooth.
  3. Pour the dressing over the vegetables and toss until well coated.
  4. Chill for 20–30 minutes before serving.

🔎 Nutrition (per serving, 3 servings total)

  • Calories: ~298
  • Carbs: ~36 g
  • Fiber: ~6 g
  • Net Carbs: ~30 g
  • Protein: ~6 g
  • Fat: ~16 g

Almost, but not quite.


As is my nature, it finally came to me that with all the good food that I have shown on this site, I should also show some of the things I’ve either eaten, or made, and for some reason, they just didn’t work out.

I’ve written about the Speckled Butter Beans, Yellow Eye Beans & October Beans elsewhere. I bought all three of these beans at Cara’s Corner at the WNC Farmers’ Market. I had never heard of them, nor tried them. All three were a disappointment. The Yellow Eye Beans were reminiscent of Black Eyed Peas in flavor but just weren’t as flavorful. The Speckled Butter Beans turned out too salty and the October Beans ended up reminding me of Pintos. No reason to fix October Beans when I could buy canned Pintos.

Several years ago when I was passing through Macon, Georgia I stopped in a “Ole Times Country Buffet” for lunch. One of the items I tried were called “Zipper” Peas (or that is what the waitress thought their name was). These peas were extremely good flavored for my first helping, but the second helping not so much. Don’t know why.

I made a lentil soup last night. It was a vegetarian version with fennel & Rosemary, but just wasn’t tasty to me. It was much better with the Spicy Chili Crisp.

I included a picture of one of the “To Be the One” pizzas that I had at “Sticks-n-Stones” in Greensboro, North Carolina. But if you look at it closely you should note the large uneven crust that circles the sauce. I’ve had great pizzas there, but this was one of a few that failed, and I think that Elvis may have left the building. A shame!

I tried Burrata and it just didn’t float my boat. But then Mozzarella isn’t anything to write home about either.

There is a picture of a Mexican Salad in a glass cup. It had all the things that I like, like corn, black olives, sour cream, lettuce, tomato & Bell pepper. Why oh why didn’t it work? I don’t know. But, maybe with the right sauce this might be a winner.

I was looking online and saw a picture that captivated my interest from the first moment. I was attracted to the seared scallops, the bacon bits, and the bright green garden peas. I think I had tracked down the cookbook that the photo came from and had bought it in the first 15 minutes. I even found the recipe online and had fixed it before the book arrived. The original recipe called for Mint, but I would prefer Tarragon. *I’ve also shown my version and there is hope. I added a red cabbage & corn side, a polenta waffle and some grape tomatoes. The cabbage & corn needed something, maybe vinegar & mayo, with sweetener.

The mustard sauce shown above included some flour with the yellow mustard. This didn’t work, but sometime later, I left out the flour, and may have added sweetener & even horseradish and it worked on steamed cabbage.

I had left over rotisserie chicken and tried the Fireside Stew. Just a basic stew, but not special. *The one good thing I got from this was that the chef mentioned in a video to keep all the scraps of onion, carrots & celery to add to the homemade chicken stock. I’ve been freezing these and may make some more stock at home in a week or so.


Things that do work:

Steamed Cabbage with mustard sauce.
Steamed Cabbage with Asian flavoring.

Nice Thought


The following images were from three different days of pizza at Sticks-n-Stones Pizza in Greensboro, North Carolina. These were all their Margherita Style pizzas which they call “To Be The One.” I also added Jalapeno peppers (not pickled).

Two of the three had really good flavor, but the first one shown was lackluster. One sign of the poor pizza was the irregularity of the outside crust. Look at that. Why would I want all that barren crust? I think if you were to determine the ratio of sauce to barren crust at least a third, if not more of the bad pizza had no sauce. I don’t want to pay for pizza and just get crust. The other thing might be less noticeable. I think they used cheddar cheese, or some yellow/orange cheese on the poor pizza. *Unfortunately, the last two pizzas I have had at Sticks-n-Stones have been nothing to write home about. And, since I have had a bunch of really good pizzas. The kind I said as I was eating them, “Now that’s a really good pizza,” I know a good pizza from a poor one.

Not That Good.
Good Flavor.
Really Good Flavor!

Safelite

I just saw a Safelite commercial. I think I’ve used Safelite three times in my life. I recall two of these times. One time the Safelite tech came to my apartment and the other time I was at work and they performed the fix in the FSU parking lot. I was happy with their work both times. They have a deal worked out with your insurance company so you don’t pay anything.

I was on vacation is South Carolina and I recall the moment, on the road, when I heard a stone pop against my front windshield. Because the crack was small and hidden by my rear view mirror, I did not see it until the next day when I was outside my car, getting gas. I think I was in Spartanburg, South Carolina. This may have been the repair that was made at my apartment (Longhill Apts.). The crack that was hidden was repaired with the adhesive that they pressure into the glass to fill the crack It worked fine until I gave the car away, and I haven’t heard of the windshield needing to be repaired or replaced since the fix.

I heard the other stone that had hit my front windshield, but did not see the result right away. I think I was leaving work late in the day and did not see the crack when it first occurred. It seems like I went to lunch the next day and only after lunch when I was returning to work, I saw the crack, called Safelite and they came and made the repair.

from crackers to slipperozin to dropsy to snide

from crackers to slipperozin to dropsy to snide

This phrase or something like it was what I heard a couple of friends saying to each other years ago, in high school. I didn’t question them further, but just filed it away. My impression, as they quoted this phrase back and forth to each other, was that it sounded like a sports announcer following the path of a ball (in baseball) from player to player as they threw the ball around the bases. I guess it should be written with some caps (for the names) as, “From Crackers, to Slipperozin, to Dropsy, to Snide.” And I guess you should expect someone to say, “and they’re out,” to complete the phrase.

So I had not thought about this phrase for many years, although it would come to me sporadically through the years. And tonight, because it is still a little before midnight, the phrase came to me again while I was in my bathroom. As far as I can tell, there is nothing that triggered me thinking about the phrase again.

This is an odd night because I usually do not go to bed this early. I probably went to bed before 9 pm, and then awoke to go to the bathroom. But, tonight after I thought of this phrase and repeated it to myself, I decided to google it to see if there was actually a phrase similar to this out in the Public view.

Almost immediately I realized the what sounded like “slipperozin” might be spelled differently, but I valiantly pressed on. The next question that came to mind was, “Does the phrase start with ‘from Crackers,’ or is it just ‘crackers to slipperozin.”

To my surprise the phrase, or something like it, actually came up in my Google search. And another comforting thought was that I saw “Mad Magazine” referenced in one of the search results.

Yes, “Mad Magazine” would fit. The two friends were also interested in motorcycles and I would hear them talking about a “Moto Guzzi.” And for the longest time, I thought the “Moto Guzzi” was just a made up name they had come up with. It wasn’t, it’s not.

And to solidify their quirkiness, these two were part of an intricate plot to confuse an elderly school librarian. Now this remembrance I was just reminded of recently. I came across a very old “high school reunion” pamphlet. In it, one of the above perpetrators recounted the group antics that got them all suspended from library use for a year. Seems that about five boys took it upon themselves to check out over a hundred books, using various names (some made up), over a short period of time… and then to finish the prank they brought all the books back in at the same time. The result was the confusion of the library staff, and the suspension of the boys.

Brian Glover as Lugg

Oh my gosh, this search just took an odd turn. “Magersfontein Lugg is a fictional character in the Albert Campion novels, written by Margery Allingham (1904-1966). Lugg, in The Fashion in Shrouds (originally published in 1938), is the originator of the curious sentence, “It’s crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide”. Mad Magazine just hijacked it.” — and another —  which is hardboiled British slang for “it’s crazy to bribe a police officer with counterfeit money.” However, this comes across as a total Word Salad in American English, and was used as a Running Gag in MAD for many years.

Without looking it up further, Campion was a fictional British aristocrat that had sleuthing tendencies.


Margery Allingham

“It’s crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide.”

The sentence means, “It’s insane to try and bribe a policeman with fake money.” But no one knew that. It was just a funny-sounding phrase that a Mad writer discovered in a British gumshoe novel. Margery Allingham wrote a series of books featuring detective Albert Campion. His trusty sidekick was Magersfontein Lugg, a colorful character who coined the phrase in one of the stories.


It’s crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide.

— meaning —

“It’s insane to try and bribe a policeman with fake money.”

02/24/25: Asheboro Trip


So, David’s has discontinued their breakfast special, but it still cost about a dollar less than many other breakfast restaurants.

I stopped by a health foods store, and then drove to Farmer. Yep, not much there. I then rode past the NC Aviation Museum and came back to Food Lion to buy some Apple Cider Vinegar and Splenda sweetener packets. The Ginger/Lemon/Honey drinking vinegar I bought just wasn’t vinegary enough, nor sweet enough. Then I headed up to Replacements, Ltd. to see if I could find the young woman who had given me a great deal of her time, my first (and only up to this point) visit. She left before I bought the Lennon Golden Julliard patterned seafood fork, so any commission she should have received was lost. In our brief visit, I got the impression that the young woman was divorced and that she had at least one child. But, she wasn’t there yesterday, even if she still works there.

I then drove directly back to Asheboro to No.1 Chinese Buffet and had lunch there. My first plate I focused on the chicken on a stick, the green beans and the wonton & egg drop soups mixed, with chopped green onion and fried wontons. And, I think I also had a small slice of banana, very little rice and some fried chicken livers. The livers had chopped jalapenos. One dish, maybe chicken had fried jalapenos, and the livers had fresh chopped jalapenos.

As I was paying at the counter, there was an older Chinese gentleman (perhaps the owner) and I got to thanking him for the good good, which I mentioned specifically: chicken on a stick, the green beans and the wonton soup. He thanked me, and we actually shook hands.

I then drove over to the Library. I had a strong desire to just drive home, but thought it would be a waste not to at least stop in to see what new things they had.

I took the slightly longer way back to Fayetteville, staying on Hwy. 421 from Sanford over to Lillington and then back down home. I did this because of the lateness of the day and that I knew there would be a bunch of traffic on Hwy. 87 around Spring Lake.

About four miles from Siler City, on Hwy. 64, they are furiously building the Wolfspeed manufacturing facility. They were paving some roads nearby but still working on the gigantic facility. The size of this complex is massive and impressive.

I stopped at the Food Lion in Lillington to buy 2% Milk and then headed home.


I made almost a quart of the Ginger/Lemon/Honey Vinegar, but instead of honey I used a combination of Splenda, Agave Nectar and Sweet n Low, and I used ground powdered ginger and reconstituted Lime juice. Still, it came out tasting surprisingly similar to the “store bought.” Oh, just thought, I used both Apple Cider Vinegar and Red Wine Vinegar. I like the flavor of Red Wine Vinegar and use it a lot in my cooking & eating. And for portions, I used two part of the Apple Cider Vinegar, about .25 Cup of Red Wine Vinegar and 1 Cup of water.