Clark’s Restaurant Redux

On my Columbia, SC quick-trip last weekend, I returned via Santee, SC and stopped at Clark’s Restaurant before heading up I95 to Fayetteville.

I was seated at a table for two.  To my left and behind me they had opened the curtains which revealed a large double door and although it was late in the day, the light from outside still was distracting from the darkened dining room.

I ordered the Shrimp & Grits, with tea, and for my two “sides” I ordered a baked sweet potato (especially mentioning that I would like sour cream with that) and dirty rice (I think.).

When the entree arrived, there was a large bowl of grits on which were sliced Kielbasa sausage, shrimp and green bell pepper slices.  The waiter went away and a short time later came by close enough for me to ask about my two sides.  He at first started to say that because of the large portion of shrimp & grits, that the meal didn’t come with sides.  I provided my quizzical look, and although slower than in my earlier days, began to ask about why he hadn’t said something when I had asked about the baked sweet potato with sour cream.  The waiter left for the kitchen and soon returned with the two sides, saying something about having left them on the serving shelf.

I had several times heard my waiter tell both me and another customer that the “Soup of the Day” was a roasted red pepper bisque.  I thought this was odd since another female waitress told two other customers that the soup was a tomato bisque.  I heard my waiter later tell another customer that the soup “tasted like” roasted red peppers.

For about $21.95, I got a large bowl of grits.  The flavor was good, but a good value would have been half the grits for about $5 less.  There is no way that anyone would feel good about taking home a large amount of “left over” grits, having probably eaten the sausage, shrimp and peppers.


As I re-read the above posting, I realized what poor service I had, and another time I had an older waitress that actually reached between my arms and the menu I was holding and reading, and placed my drink order in front of me. I thought that action was “terribly rude,” and something that a mature waitress should have known not to do, unless she was intentionally trying to be rude.

I have stayed once, overnight in the hotel, and the stay was comfortable, but honestly the meals are pricey.

Winston-Salem, Reynolda House – Spring 2011

I will be glad when the Economy improves to the point that the middle & cheap hotels can afford to replace their old analog TVs with some 32″ (or larger) flat-panel digital screens.  Why should I stay in a hotel when I have better at home?  Flat-screen HD TV, high-speed Internet, etc.

So, I’m making day trips and returning home to sleep in my own bed.  Besides the NCAA Semi-Final games (Butler vs VCU & Kentucky vs UConn) were starting a little after 6pm tonight.

It was a beautiful Spring day, with a little wind, but nothing biting and really uncomfortable.  I rode around Winston-Salem for a while, criss-crossing the streets.  A little before noon, I googled for W/S restaurants and scrolled down Burke Street Pizzafinding a pizza place called “Burke Street Pizza.”  I put this into my phone’s GPS and the sultry voiced navigator began to direct me to my pizza.  I turned into the parking area beside and back of the restaurant, got out of the car and walked around to the front door.

As you enter the building there is a row of stools for individuals to eat their food while facing out to Burke Street.  They were all empty when I first came in, but before I left a group of about 5 guys had entered, placed their orders and all had come to the front and sat to eat and talk.

There were, I think, a few two-seat tables, and then 4 booths.  I ended up sitting in one of these although the “fat-bellied” man was wedged into one side.  A couple of young women were sitting in front of me.  A couple of women came in after me, both wearing at least one pink garment, ordered and then came and sat beside me.  Eventually, two couples came in, ordered and then sat diagonally in front of me.  *I finished eating, went to the Men’s room and left before any other group came in and might have wanted the booth.

There are two seat booth (tables) on the outside wall as you walk to order.  The drinks are at the back next to the bathrooms.

Burke Street Pizza - Voodoo ChickenA young woman was ordering as I walked to the back, and I saw three large pizzas (gigantic) sitting behind a large glass.  If you order a slice of one of these, they pop it into the oven to reheat it.  I didn’t know what it was, but there was a colorful pizza that looked like it had “everything”.  That ended up being the “Voodoo Chicken Pizza”.  It had beef, chicken, and three types of peppers.

As I waited to order, a young latino cook was speaking Spanish to a customer on the other side of the counter.

I ordered one slice of pizza and a medium drink.  I think I paid a little less than $6 total.  I walked to the back and poured about half a cup of Cheerwine with a little ice.  I still had about half a large cup of Hardees’ Iced Tea from breakfast.

As I said, the booth was small and my fat stomach was wedged to the edge of the table.  I took a couple of pictures of the pizza and a flyer.  The pizza was good, but not too spicy.  However a few hours later, the peppers began to haunt me.

I finished the pizza and left.

Several years ago, Jeff Mitchell and I had gone to Winston-Salem to see a couple of Pro Tennis matches (the US playing against Spain – Nadal).  We had found the W/S Visitor’s Center and had eaten lunch at a little restaurant just up the street.  I found the Visitors Center and went up to the door.  The sign said that they were open Monday thru Friday, but I still tried the door and it was open.  There were a couple of hosts inside that welcomed me immediately.

Apparently, the budget crunch had affected the Center.  It no longer had several displays and was basically limited to several W/S informational brochures.  There was an ornate crystal (glass) piece of art rotating on display with a flat-panel monitor playing a story about the author.

NC Arts Incubator in Siler City, NCI had a couple of Moravian cookies, the ginger ones that are paper thin, as I talked to one of the docents (I guess they are docents.).  I had my iPad with me, and the WIFI from the hotel next door got me on the Internet.  I showed my blog entry from earlier this morning regarding the NC Arts Incubator which was in Siler City.  I also showed the gentleman what a QR code was and how my phone could read the info from it.  He was interested when I showed him my GoAnimate presentation from the pictures I had taken when down at Fort Macon several years ago.

The gentleman suggested that I would probably like the Reynolda House.  I said that I probably wouldn’t have time because I wanted to get back home.

I left the Center, and continued to ride around the city.  I made some twists and turns, and found Bob’s Big Gas ?? Restaurant on a corner.  I went past it and soon found that I was near the Reynolda House.  I decided to turn in since it was supposed to be free.

I’m not sure what the free part was, but I paid $10 for the day tour.  I went downstairs first and looked an the current exhibit of black & white photos of old steam trains.  The photographer had put great time and effort in staging many of his images, with an emphasis upon lighting to tell a story.  Norfolk & Western trains mostly (perhaps all).

I then came back upstairs and picked up an audio unit for the home tour.  The hostess at the desk had emphasized that I should be careful about not touching the furniture that was behind the ropes.  I should have told her that I would be “as careful as a bull in a China shop.”  *You have to understand that a few years ago,  I watched an episode of Mythbusters in which they created a mock China shop out in a field.  They put glass and pottery objects on shelving and then let a bull out to roam about and between the shelves.  Surprisingly, the bull performed a most delicate ballet while weaving between the shelves, and did not break (or even turn over) anything.  The animal was totally aware of it’s environment.  *This led the Mythbuster crew to make the point that to the contrary, “Like a bull in a China shop,” should mean the opposite of what it has come to mean.

I placed the lanyard for the audio device around my neck and headed into the house.  I noticed the little floor tile insets which had various animals and insects including a rooster, squirrel, and a rabbit.  I later found sea turtles, frogs, snails, etc.

The sun room had a nude painting done by the Fayetteville, NC artist, Elliot Daingerfield.

In one small room there were many intricately painted porcelain birds behind glass doors for viewing.  I thought Russ & Deborah Savage might like this room since I believe they like bird watching.

A corner of Reynolda House in SpringThe house, it’s paintings, and other objects d’art, was very enjoyable.  Reynolda is perhaps a mini-Biltmore.  It has a pipe organ with an intricate mechanism for producing musical sounds.  In the basement, there was a wonderful indoor recreation area which included a billiard table, shooting gallery, bowling lane, swimming pool and a bar area and the floor was rubberized for indoor roller skating.

Mrs. Reynolds made sure that her daughters knew how to cook, in case they should marry a husband that couldn’t afford to pay for a chef.

I left Reynolda House about 4pm and followed my GPS to get back on 40/421.  The GPS didn’t direct me to the by-pass and I followed 40 all the way until turning off on 222 and then 421.  Still the trip was quick, and I made it back to Fayetteville before 6:30 pm.  The Butler vs VCU game was well underway, but it was a wonderful match.

I’m mad as hell,…

 

4 YR

5 YR

6 YR

   

BOTHALF

 

%BLK

UNC-CH

0.77

0.89

0.92

   

0.01

 

0.08

NCSU

0.43

0.71

0.77

   

0.01

 

0.09

Applachian State

0.41

0.70

0.76

   

0.08

 

0.03

UNC-A

0.35

0.65

0.72

   

0.05

 

0.03

East Carolina

0.34

0.59

0.66

   

0.19

 

0.14

UNC-C

0.30

0.57

0.66

   

0.15

 

0.16

UNC-G

0.33

0.57

0.65

   

0.14

 

0.21

UNC-W

0.30

0.54

0.61

   

0.06

 

0.04

WCU

0.30

0.54

0.61

   

0.25

 

0.06

ECSU

0.25

0.44

0.50

   

0.76

 

0.79

UNC-P

0.20

0.39

0.45

   

0.36

 

0.31

NC A&T

0.19

0.37

0.43

   

0.65

 

0.85

NCCU

0.19

0.36

0.43

   

DNA

 

0.79

WSSU

0.17

0.35

0.42

   

0.45

 

0.74

FSU

0.14

0.30

0.38

   

0.49

 

0.70

 

Above… Graduation success rates for the UNC schools at the 4, 5 and 6 year terms. Percentage of incoming Freshmen accepted at the various institutions that were in the Bottom Half of their High School Class Ranking. And, the % of black students at the schools.

If I were an African-American politician, educator, pastor, or any other type of community leader, these stats would appall me, and I would be yelling out every chance I got, that, “I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take it anymore.”

If a change is going to be made, then you probably need to tell all black students, male or female, that, “you’re not going to graduate from high school in the bottom half of your class.”

Secondly, it’s not equitable that 60% of black students attend a third of the UNC-System institutions. It’s racist, even if they are proud to be attending an HBCU. If a group of white guys decided that all black students were going to be grouped into a few schools, and that those schools were going to consistently graduate many fewer students, taking much longer to do so, if at all… shouldn’t someone be saying something?

Apparently, African-American students are doing far poorer in our secondary educational system than their white counterparts. As a result, the HBCU institutions are accepting a much greater percentage of “under-achievers,” just because they are black.

We will accept you into college, but you will be guaranteed to graduate at a far, far, far lesser rate than if you were accepted at a “white” institution. That is, if you graduate in even five or six years.

Because “white” institutions don’t have to suffer, to the degree that “black” institutions do, regarding the remedial education process for a large number of their students… just to get students to a point where they are ready to start taking college courses, there is no incentive to actually correct the underlying problem… a failed secondary educational system.

If Bill had a restaurant…

If Bill had a restaurant these items would be on the menu:

Entrees

  • Shrimp & Grits (or, baked polenta cake)
    • Shrimp
    • Alligator sausage
    • Onions (green)
    • Green bell pepper
  • German Potato Salad (mod)
    • Potatoes
    • Kielbasa
    • Onion
    • Celery seeds
    • Rice wine vinegar
    • Brown sugar
  • Cajun Jerk Pork Chops (or Boneless Chicken) (Served over rice)
    • Cajun Jerk Spices (Whole Foods)
    • Pork chops
    • Black beans (rinsed & drained)
    • Onions
    • Red bell peppers (sliced)
    • Pineapple (chunks)
    • Brown sugar
    • Lime juice
  • Curried Chicken (or Pork Chops) (Served over rice)
    • Pataks curry paste (Harris Teeter)
    • Carrot
    • Onion
    • Green bell pepper
    • Brown sugar
    • Lime juice
  • Spicy Mexican Chicken (Served over rice)
    • Onion
    • Carrot
    • Green bell pepper
    • Ranch Salsa (Hot)
    • Lime juice
  • Spaghetti, angel hair, linguini (red sauce)
    • Spaghetti sauce (onion & garlic)
    • Ground beef (browned)
    • Italian sausage (mild)
    • Mushrooms (pieces)
    • Onions (red or white)
    • Tomatoes (chopped or diced, fresh preferred)
    • Green peppers (sliced)
    • Anise seed
    • Celery seeds
    • Onion flakes
    • Olive oil
    • Brown sugar

Sides

  • Steamed Broccolini
  • Steamed Carrots
  • Safron Rice & Garden Peas (bright yellow & green)
    • White rice
    • Garden peas (frozen)
    • Spanish Saffron
  • Sauteed Tomatillos & Onions
    • Tomatillos (sliced thin)
    • Onion (red or white sliced thin)
    • Rice wine vinegar – or – lime juice (fresh)
    • Brown sugar (or Agave Nectar)
  • Black-eyed peas & ham hock, w/ Vidalia onion
  • Potato Salad (American)
    • White or red potatoes (cubed)
    • Vidalia onion (medium chopped)
    • Celery
    • Pickle relish
    • Celery seeds
    • Mustard
    • Mayonnaise
    • Coriander (fresh ground)
    • Brown sugar
    • Boiled egg (crumbled)
  • Corn on the cob
  • Hummus (roasted red peppers, olives)
  • Turmeric veggies (sweet onion, red bell pepper, tomato, turmeric, cumin, ground pepper, red wine vinegar, [sweetener or without], & salt – allow to marinate in fridge)
  • Roasted veggies (carrots, cauliflower [w/curry], onion)
  • Tomatoes (sliced)
  • Simple Cabbage Slaw
    • Sliced cabbage
    • Vidalia onion
    • Mayonnaise
    • Celery seeds
    • Sugar (or lime juice)
  • Sliced cucumbers & Vidalia onions
    • Rice wine vinegar
    • Brown sugar
    • Celery seeds

Tapenades, Sauces, etc.

  • Parsley-Garlic tapenade (served with steak)
    • Italian parsley
    • Garlic cloves
    • Anchovies
    • Capers
  • Curry Remoulade
    • Curry paste
    • Capers (small)
    • Mayonnaise
  • Horseradish
  • Curried Potato Seasoning (dry)
    • Curry Powder ( McCormicks hot or mild)
    • Onion flakes
    • Celery seeds
    • Salt & pepper (fresh ground)
    • Marjoram
    • Thyme
  • Mild Tomatillo Salsa

Salads

  • Mandarin Orange Salad
    • Mandarin Orange slices
    • Assorted salad greens
    • Red-Seedless grapes (halved)
    • Candied walnuts
    • Dates (optional)
    • Raspberry vinaigrette
  • House Salad
    • Mixed greens
    • Sun-dried tomatoes

Soups

  • Curried Apple Soup (good cold or hot)
    • Granny Smith apples
    • Carrots
    • Onions
    • Tomatoes
    • Curry Paste (Pataks)
    • Brown sugar
  • Tarragon-Pea Soup (good cold or hot)
    • Garden peas (frozen)
    • Leeks
    • Tarragon
  • Avocado-Chicken Soup (hot)
    • Chicken (cubed)
    • Chicken broth
    • Chipotle peppers (remove peppers after heating broth)
    • Avocado (sliced)
  • Vegetable – Beef Soup (hot)
    • Ground beef (browned)
    • Succotash (okra, tomatoes, corn)
    • Potatoes (white or red, diced)
    • Garden peas
    • Carrots
    • Green beans
    • Sugar
  • Tomato Soup (hot)
    • Tomato paste
    • Basil (fresh preferred)
  • Andouille & Potato Soup
    • Andouille sausage (diced)
    • Potatoes (white or red diced)
    • Onion (white or red)
  • Seafood Soup
    • Crab meat
    • Shrimp (small)
    • Clams (chopped)
    • Ham (diced) – or – bacon (crumbled)
    • Potatoes (white)
    • Half & Half
    • Butter
    • Olive oil
    • Onion flakes
    • Smoked paprika

Bread

  • Home-made white bread
  • Pan-fried corn bread

ADDENDUM [07/14/21]: I recently found that I could use Roma Tomatoes and cook them in a pot on the stove top and they would turn out just as well as baking them in the oven. Quarter the tomatoes, add Balsamic vinegar, red wine vinegar and some sweetner. You might also add Basil at the end. The tomatoes cook down and are sweetened with the vinegar.

Bringing the Draft to College Education

 

In 2006, about 2% of UNC-Asheville’s incoming Freshman Class came from the “bottom half” of their high school class ranking (13 students out of 464). 45% of Fayetteville State University’s incoming Freshman Class, for that year, came from the “bottom half” of their high school class ranking (341 students out of 751).

At that time, (FSU) Graduation rates, for Fall 2000 Freshmen, after 4 years, was 14.2% This percentage increased to 31.8% after 5 years. UNC-A: Graduation rates, for Fall 2000 Freshmen, was 30.0%, after 4 years, increasing to 49.7% after 5 years. UNC-G: Graduation rates, for Fall 2000 Freshmen, was 29.7%, after 4 years, increasing to 48.3% after 5 years.

FSU full-time faculty with doctorate or first professional degree was 207/249 (83%).

UNC-A full-time faculty with doctorate or first professional degree was 154/206 (75%).

UNC-G full-time faculty with doctorate or first professional degree was 546/736 (74%).

If you wanted to provide an intentionally racist and biased system for education, could you come up with a system that is much better than what we currently have? And, how convenient that the lower achievers are willing to group themselves together for racial pride, such as HBCUs… As a system, the numbers don’t look as bad as when you look at the individual institutions.

If I am in the bottom half of my high school ranking, then I might as well not apply to UNC-Asheville because it is highly unlikely that I’m even going to be accepted (2 out of every 100). So, by applying to FSU, I have about a 50-50 chance of being accepted, even though I am in the bottom half of my high school class ranking.

*If I’m in the bottom half of my high school ranking, why would I even apply to college?

Sometime in my life I determined that, “If you want things to change, everybody has to suffer.” Maybe it’s time to “spread the wealth” of our poorly educated students to all UNC-System institutions. I know that’s not going to happen, but if the premier institutions had to start accommodating the “least and the more poorly educated,” then that would be a motivational factor for things to actually change.

You know what I’m saying. If UNC-Asheville started with more than 2%, or UNC-Greensboro started with more than 13%, of their incoming Freshmen being ranked in the “bottom half” of their high school class ranking, then the retention and graduation rates for UNC-A and UNC-G wouldn’t be anywhere near as high as they are. And, if FSU started with less that 45% of their incoming Freshman class being ranked in the bottom-half of their high school ranking, then FSU’s retention & graduation numbers would begin to rapidly improve also.

How about setting a UNC-System standard that no less than 20% and no more than 25% of incoming Freshmen can be from the bottom-half ranking in any of the UNC institutions? That means that UNC-G would take about 135 more low-achieving students and UNC-A about 79 more under-achievers into their Freshmen classes.

Where does the change need to take place? Not by waiting until after the 12th Grade, to provide remedial tutoring to those who have a high school diploma, with hardly the ability to read and understand the words written upon it. If you failed to educate someone in 12 years, you are facing a daunting task if you expect to “catch them up” in 4 or 5 years, plus provide them with a college degree.

Institutions like FSU are not examples of failed college education, but show the fruits of a failed secondary education. If you want to increase retention and graduation rates at FSU, then you need to start with a Freshman class of students who are mostly in the “top-half” of their high school ranking.

Why are the results so difficult to understand? A sports analogy is simple. Would you choose the less talented and motivated individuals for your team, and then expect to win the Super Bowl, or the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship? Well, not unless you are a moron. Even Davidson’s basketball team from a couple of years ago, who displayed probably the best example of “team work” I have ever seen, eventually failed to win the game before reaching the final game. Pro-leagues attempt to spread the talent across teams, by “biased” player drafts based upon the previous year’s low team performance.

Something to watch for in the next 10 years will be the results of the Wake County School Board’s decision to go to Community Based Schools.  Specifically, the not quite finished “Walnut Creek Middle School,” where a large percentage (80%) of the student body will come (it is planned) from low-income families.   “The General” has already said that if you “get in front of the problem” it is possible to have a positive outcome.  Riiiight!?!

The Secret to Good Black-Eyed Peas

My friend, Deb, recently celebrated another birthday. Our rushed society has come to think nothing of combining into one celebration, the birthdays of several friends or relatives. It is more convenient and less of a strain upon our limited time. Due to missed communication, I only left her birthday present, upon her doorstep, and then returned home without actually seeing her, on Her day. Later that night, I called to leave a birthday message, only to have Deb answer the phone. It was then that I learned that she had phoned and left a message notifying me of her change of plans on her birthday. She would not be home late that night, but would be home most of the day (apparently, except for the brief time that I stopped to leave her present).

So, I sent Deb an email, and then later called, and we arranged to spend most of the day together, a week later, in honor of her birthday. One of the presents I had left upon her doorstep, were a couple of small jars of one, a salad dressing, and two, barbecue sauce, which were recipes from “Mama Dips.” Both of these had been purchased at the Museum Shop of the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh. I had stopped by there in hopes that I might find a book that Deb would like, but when my eyes had lit upon the name “Mama Dips,” I knew I had a small something to add as a present.

Deb had met Mama Dip at a speaking engagement. I had thought that she and her husband, Russ, had visited Mama Dips Restaurant in Chapel Hill, but on Saturday I found that this wasn’t the case.

In my email, I had suggested that we might eat at Mama Dips. Deb thought this was a very good idea, but it was only on Saturday morning that I realized that the Duke / Carolina basketball game was to be televised that night at 8pm. I couldn’t recall where the first game had been played, but soon googled and found that the game was going to be played in Chapel Hill.

I could not imagine a worse time to visit Chapel Hill, in order to eat at Mama Dips Restaurant. Could there be more people in Chapel Hill than on “game day” for the most important game of the season? The second meeting of the two basketball teams this season? Wouldn’t there be long lines at all restaurants, and impossible to find parking?

I eventually agreed to at least try to eat at Mama Dips, although, as we drove to Chapel Hill, I couldn’t imaging not having to backtrack and finding a less crowded restaurant along the way. And, as we went, Deb expressed that she was getting extremely hungry.

When we neared Chapel Hill, I started the Sprint Navigation app on my phone. I clicked on the “speak destination” option and when prompted, said, “Mama Dips.” I did not add the words, “restaurant,” nor “Chapel Hill,” but the app understood what I said, and came up easily with the location and directions to Mama Dips Restaurant on Rosemary Street in Chapel Hill, NC.

We made the suggested twists and eventually, as we turned into Mama Dips parking lot (running around and back of the restaurant), I saw several empty spaces, and no lines of any type waiting to enter her establishment. We parked, got out of the vehicle and walked around to the side of the building and up the steps.

As we entered the door, there was a couple waiting on a bench, but then it became obvious that there was no line for waiting to be served, and the maitre-d took a couple of menus and guided us into a crowded room and to a table for four.

The walls of the room amplified the noise of the people, with a door to the kitchen just off to my right.

A tall, thin, black waiter came to our table and we ordered sweet tea. Later, Deb ordered fried chicken, green beans and (I don’t recall, and apparently did not try some of it.), and a biscuit. I ordered the barbecue pork ribs, potato salad and black-eyed peas (with some chopped onion) and cornbread.

Two women sat at a booth in front of me. One had a baby boy.

At some point, there was a small commotion behind me as a group of guests came to their table and began to sit down. I first noticed a tall, bald, black man whose face was familiar, although my first thought was that he must have been a former Carolina ball player that I had seen on TV. I then recognized the face of a white TV commentator, and then I realized that the black man was also a basketball commentator. It was then that it made sense that college basketball commentators have to eat, just like the rest of us.

My first thought was that the white commentator was Jim Lampley, which I almost immediately knew was incorrect. Eventually, I was able to google and find that this was Jim Nantz. It was only at game time, later that night, when both Nantz and his co-anchor appeared on the TV screen, that I was able to say, that’s “Clark Kellogg.”

Nantz and the others began to talk about the game and players. Eventually, as Deb and I continued our meal, I realized that I could hear Nantz’s distinctive voice above the loud drone of the other people in the room. I told Deb that it was like leaving your TV on in the room, tuned to some program that you weren’t interested in, but wanting to have that familiar drone in the background.

I tried some of Deb’s fried chicken. The meat was moist and tender and had a very good flavor, and the breaded skin had good flavor. *Often, you can taste the oil in which the chicken was fried, but this wasn’t the case.

Deb tried some of my barbecue pork ribs. They were tender, moist and there was a good amount of meat on each bone. However, I did not think they had any barbecue sauce on them. The sauce was brought in a small plastic cup. The sauce had an unusual flavor, and a high vinegar content. I added some sugar to “turn” the vinegar, and later asked for another cup of sauce.

The potato salad was good, and included celery seeds, but it was not something that I would say was exceptional.

I asked for some chopped onions for my black-eyed peas. I thought the peas were under-cooked making them a little mealy, and too lightly seasoned for my taste, but then probably many people would not like the peas if they were more highly flavored. The cornbread was of the light cake type and did not detract from the rest of the meal.

Deb ordered Coconut Cream Pie for desert, and we both had coffee. The coffee was hot, and good. I tasted her desert. The pie reminded me of Pecan Pie, without the pecans and chewy coconut added. This definitely wouldn’t be something that I would order. Coconut cream pie should be light, hmmm… and creamy.

We left the restaurant, stopping outside the door to get several “free” magazines. As we drove around the back of the restaurant, Jim Nantz was getting into his vehicle with several other men. *I later would say that we had lunch at Mama Dips with Jim Nantz and left together. True, but subjective;-)

[NOTE 01/06/25]: Mama Dips has been closed for several years in Chapel Hill. The best fried chicken is on the buffet at Seaboard Station in Hamlet, North Carolina. [end NOTE]

The Secret to Good Black-Eyed Peas

My favorite simple food might be “a mess of” cooked black-eyed peas, ham hock, and some chopped Vidalia onion. I could possibly enjoy a whole meal of nothing but this, and perhaps some cornbread. I like cornbread that is almost like a light cake, but I also like the flat fried type of corn cake.

I found that cooking black-eyed peas and ham hock is easy if you use a slow cooker. Use the dried beans, and add plenty of water to cover them (and allow for the absorption of much of the water into the beans). I like a ham hock with a good bone and several knots of good meat that will eventually “fall off the bone.” Add a little ground pepper. Let them cook slowly for at least 4 hours. Taste them at the end of the 4 hours period, looking to see if they have fully cooked (and are not mealy) and are tender.

Once the beans are tender, you might mash some of the beans up, which will help the broth thicken.

Now, the “secret” is to pull the beans off the heat, let them cool, and then put them in a bowl and cover them and let them refrigerate overnight. The next day, re-heat the beans and ham hock, chop up some sweet Vidalia onion and serve. The flavors will break down and meld together overnight (or perhaps by the refrigeration), and what are good beans will become great beans. I have several times tried to speed the process, but the beans are “always better the second day.”

If you have a surplus of the cooked beans that last into the 3rd day, then you might boil some white or small red potatoes, quarter or halve them and add them to the beans.


INSTANT POT VERSION

Black-Eyed Peas & Seasoning Meat — Half Recipe (Instant Pot)

Servings: 1–2

Ingredients:

  • 1 heaping cup dried black-eyed peas (this equals 1/2 lb)
  • 2–3 oz seasoning meat (diced uncooked bacon, ham hock, fatback, or smoked turkey)
  • 1/4–1/2 medium onion, diced
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 2 cups water or broth
  • 1/4 tsp salt (add after cooking if needed)
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • Optional:
    • Pinch crushed red pepper,
    • 1/4–1/2 tsp smoked paprika,
    • 1/2 small bay leaf

Instructions:

Press Sauté. Add the seasoning meat and let some fat render. Add the diced onion and cook 2–3 minutes. Add the garlic and stir 30 seconds.

Add the black-eyed peas and the water or broth. Add pepper, optional spices, and bay leaf. Stir and scrape the bottom of the pot.

Seal the lid. Cook on Manual/Pressure Cook for 15 minutes. Let the pot naturally release for 15 minutes, then quick-release any remaining pressure.

Stir and taste. Add salt only if needed. If you want a thicker broth, use Sauté for 2–3 minutes to reduce.

Some of What Was Beach Music for Me

Some of this may not technically be considered Beach Music, but for me, growing up a mile from the North Carolina Coast in the 1960s & 70s, these were part of the mix:


Tell me that this wasn’t a surprise.  I always thought that this was a black group.  As I listened to the YouTube video the first time, I thought, “Now these guys could have been from North Carolina,” and then I found that they were from NC.  *”Girl Watcher” may be my No. 1 pick for Carolina “Beach Music,” although “My Girl”, “May I”, or “Up on the Roof”, are all close challengers.

So, this reminded me of WMBL 740 AM radio station from Morehead City, NC.  Craig Webber, Jay Cobb, and Duke Roberts were some of the DJs that I listened to in the late 60’s and early ’70’s.

*I lived in Hubert, NC with my ‘Aunt Sis’ (Carrie Kellum) and attended Swansboro High School (the one on Hwy. 24).  The “love of my life” was Debbie.  She lived in Cape Carteret.  There was just “Cape ‘C’ Shopworth” there at the time.  A convenience store.

I recall on one date, I drove from Hubert to Cape Carteret and picked Debbie up.  We drove all the way back to Jacksonville (which is about the same distance, in the opposite direction from her house) to see what was going on… only to decide to drive to Morehead City and see a movie there.  I’m thinking we might have seen Barbara Striesand in “Funny Girl.”  The movie Old movie theater in Morehead City, NCtheatre was new then, and still exists today, but not as a movie theatre.  *Debbie was a GREAT kisser!”