Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: book stores (Page 93 of 113)

Sunday. That day of rest.

They look innocent, don’t they? Those little cubes of carrots resting in a holding container? Sure. They look that way, but they’re tricky. When you least expect it, they can hurt you.

Two important words:

1. Confidence.
2. Over.

Also important to remember not to put those two together.

As a matter of fact, I’m having a little trouble with my touchtyping as a result of that combination – Overconfidence.

Here I am, on my one day off a week, in the kitchen peeling potatoes and dicing carrots. (Actually, I’m NOT in the kitchen at this exact moment, but you get the work-on-the-weekend idea and the fact that I am now typing.) I thought I could invest a little time on Sunday afternoon and save myself some time in the morning. On these types of things, I work more efficiently in the PM.

Two types of cuts for the carrots. A bigger dice for the stew and a smaller cube for the soup. Pounds and pounds of carrots. So little time. “Hustle!” said Marshall Allen, my first boss, whose voice I still hear when working on any such projects. (He knew I was moving as fast as I could, but I believe he was trying to instill a work ethic in a fifteen-year-old.)

Cut the carrots length-wise and then begin the knife-work. If you’re in a hurry, change up your method and try to make that second cut without flipping the half that landed on the round side. (That’s sarcasm, aimed at myself. The rest of you in the kitchen: don’t really change up your habits when holding a sharp knife.) Confidence. Don’t think any more about it. (Overconfidence.)

Here’s a physics tip, too. Round things roll. After the first slice, one side of the carrot is flat, and the other – well, it’s curved like a half-carrot would be.

Hustle! said Marshall, somewhere in the back of my grey-haired head, from somewhere around four decades ago. Hustle!

Don’t need to flip that carrot onto its flat edge, just slice!

The carrot rolled.

You foodies know that it’s best to hold your fingertips under or curl them down when dicing. It keeps the fingertips intact for use over the rest of your life. Conversely, I should have had mine extended when making that particular slice. The carrot rolled and the knife jumped and the vinyl glove offered no protection whatever.

(I just now thought about one of my young cooks, years ago, and the cheese-grinder episode. My insides clinch, just remembering. I think I was more startled than she was. She was the picture of calm. Apologized even. That sort of coolness isn’t learned or inherited. It must be ingrained in the DNA, and in life-and-death situations, most successful outcomes depend on people like her being in attendance. I’m ashamed I never asked to see her finger, later. I couldn’t bear it then. The family of the work place and the empathy of pain: It turned out okay.)

My fingertip will recover. No guitar playing for a time, though.

As you know, mistakes beget mistakes. While I was fooling around with my fingertip, I scalded a pot and suddenly the kitchen has the aroma of burned popcorn, second on the offensive-smell list only to a roadkill skunk. I jumped up and spun around, trying to figure out what was burning, grabbed the pot and dashed it under the water.

Scrubbing is ahead, still. Tough scrubbing.
Priorities call. Books absorb odors. Readily.

I threw open the back door and propped it that way with a bungee snagged to the dumpster out back. At the front, I wedged a piece of wood to allow the breeze to move through the store. Front to back, McHuston Booksellers & Irish Bistro is a long and narrow location. With Sunday’s north wind, it was near-gale-force as it whips down the aisles between shelves.

Probably have a few minutes to write this, while it airs out.

Why am I suddenly shivering and sniffling? I trot back to the back hall, leaning into the wind that is tunneling through the building. How long have I been typing? Not THAT long! Oh, there was that thing about the firewall and needing to shut down computer security to move the carrot picture to the other computer and another change of the bandage on my finger. The thermostat’s thermometer says it is 53 degrees in the back of the store.

Back door: closed. Trot to the front, passing the front-of-store thermometer: 62 degrees. No wonder I’m a tad chilled.

Front door: closed.

Fingertip wound: closed.

Case: closed.

Happy weekend, almost over as it is. It is back to work as usual Monday morning, except we’ve all sprung forward to Daylight Savings Time and we’ll be starting out in the dark.

Let’s not finish that way, shall we?

McHuston Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
Broken Arrow, OK
122 South Main Street, 918-258-3301

Very Important Diners…

Served some VIPs in the bistro today. Several groups of them, as a matter of fact.

Two gentleman drove from their jobs north of downtown Tulsa, just to have lunch at McHuston’s… that makes them VIPs in my book. Two other fellows also drove over from Tulsa for no other reason than to have lunch here.

I can’t tell you how humbled and flattered that makes me feel.

After finishing their meal, a man and his wife confided that they were “looking to be adventurous for lunch” today, and made a twenty-five mile journey from west of Tulsa to try out the lunch fare. I was pleased to serve them a meal, and was especially happy they enjoyed it.

They have to be VIPs to make a commitment like that – a fifty mile round trip to try Irish stew and potato soup.

For that matter, the guest who brought in her book to read over lunch, who was obviously on a limited lunch hour – she’s important too. To me, it means that she was willing to take a leap of faith that I would be able to serve her a hot meal during that short period of time she was able to slip away from the office.

Oh, and there was another couple – a gentleman who works downtown Tulsa who stopped in with his wife for lunch. Another VIP.

Unlike the other folks, though, I knew this man’s name. I recognized his face from the picture in the newspaper, that section that does the restaurant reviews. Scott Cherry: Restaurant Critic – The Tulsa World.

It’s been busy at lunchtime for the last week and a half – and today, I was too busy to get too flustered. I was rattled at first, needless to say, but after my first screw up I figured it was a little like diving into the creek without knowing how to swim: just flap and kick and scramble until you reach a resting point.

I brought his wife a cup of soup instead of the cup of stew she had ordered. Did I mention I was a little rattled?

The Blarney kicked in and I kidded and cajoled, trying to work my way out of a red-checkmark, stay-on-your-permanent-record-for-life, bad report card. We’ll know how my efforts went when the article hits the newspaper next week.

Regardless of how it turns out, I’m certainly thrilled that people have gone out of their way to come in for some lunchtime dining. It makes it worthwhile, peeling all those potatoes and carrots, and chopping all those onions (that crying over the cutting board thing is no myth…).

The publicity has been both a blessing and a curse: I’ve not worked this hard in quite a few years (stocking books and punching buttons on the cash register doesn’t generate an aerobic workout, exactly…). It is fun, though. Adrenaline junkies will understand. There is something about having a deadline and a task that must be completed in a satisfactory way before it… when it goes well, there is a real sense of achievement.

Enough of the rationalizing over the flubbed service at the food critic’s table. I’m happy to serve any and all VIPs or otherwise during the lunch hour! Just remember, there are only a few tables and lately they’ve been filled early…

McHuston Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District, Broken Arrow OK
122 South Main Street
918-258-3301

Books: Rare, Antiquarian, & Otherwise

Big-time Religion.

I mean no disrespect – for NBC, the writer, or the Catholic Church for that matter. But this headline surprised me, just a bit.

From the website: NBCNews.com

Without a pope, who’s running the Catholic Church?

Really? Who is running the church? Like it’s a school bus barreling down the street filled with screaming children and the overwrought driver just leaped out? Not the same scenario.

Like a grocery store – at the express line maybe – and about a dozen shoppers with arms filled with merchandise watching in distress as the clerk peels out of his apron and abandons the cash register? Nah. I don’t think so.

Like the President of the US up and quitting and maybe North Korea or some other jumpy bunch thinking it’s the most opportune time to launch an attack? Well….. no. Who is going to fire up the rocket launchers and tanks to invade the Vatican? I’m thinking, no one.

The Pope changed the rules before he quit, so the Cards can elect a successor right away. They’ll get about their business and a new passenger for the Pope-Mobile will take his comfy and secure seat. Could be any day now, already.

Without a pope, who’s running the Catholic Church? What? They don’t have someone to sign the payroll checks, or lock up the doors at night? Without a pope, is there no one to put out the Papal cat? Was the Holy Father answering the Apostolic Telephone Switchboard?

The Church? Been around a couple of thousand years.

It will last through the intervening days, while the Pope-cape and top hat are resized.

Meanwhile, if you are looking for some heavy religious reading, you might consider the 1855 volume shown in the image. It weighs in at five-pounds, eight-ounces. Compare that to less than a pound for a typical paperback book.

This little one-owner (I can’t guarantee that…) was published before the US Civil War, and is still holding up very nicely, thank you very much. Typical of the more expensive books of that time, it has a quantity of steel engravings, which in the era before the invention of photography as we know it, allowed folks to see exacting reproductions and original works of art. Many were carefully clipped from books and framed, to be hung on the wall as artwork.

There are no pages missing in this book, though. Leather bound with gold embossing, it would make an impressive addition to any scholar or book collector’s library.

Unfortunately, my cellphone camera doesn’t do close-up photography that well (or perhaps it is better blamed on the photographer…), but you can click on either image for a larger view of the book and one of its plates.

Come see us!

McHuston Booksellers and Irish Bistro
Rose District, Broken Arrow, OK
122 South Main Street
918-258-3301

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