Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: literature (Page 35 of 39)

Second helpings of a good thing…

Better the second day? That’s what several guests have told me about their home-cooked stews. What about stew-reviews?

Maybe not better, but getting a second helping of Mr Cherry’s restaurant review tastes pretty good this morning. Since I usually miss the paper on Sunday, I didn’t realize that he has a regular “Second Helpings” column that recaps the columns in the Weekend section of Thursday’s paper.

It was equally fitting that the Irish Stew headline appears in the St. Paddy’s Day edition of the Tulsa World. If you missed the review, you can click on the image to read the recap.

I have mixed feelings about this year’s celebration. In the past, when St. Patrick’s falls on a Sunday, it became a weekend event that kicked off Friday evening and ran through Sunday afternoon.

On the one hand, I love the St. Paddy’s party, the wearing o’ the kilt, the Irish music, parading bagpipers, and – of course – the green beer. On the other hand, running the shop as a one-man-band makes those sorts of things a little tough. The telephone rang just now. Another caller wondering if I’m open and selling corned beef and cabbage.

Nope, sorry. Closed on Sunday, trying to get restocked for next week.

My plan at this point, is to plan for next year.

When I was younger, I often jumped into the middle of things, figuring I could talk or work my way out of whatever outcome resulted. There is some fearlessness in an attitude like that. I’m old enough now to realize that fearlessness isn’t always a virtue. I’m not encouraging caution, just recommending solid planning.

Wouldn’t want to throw a haphazard party and have it go off badly.

The shop is still on track, with long-term plans in mind and a definitive picture of the end result. It’s a step by step project. I don’t have a committee to consult or a project team to assign tasks for carrying out. It’s more a matter of trudging my way along the business roadmap, marking off the miles, and stopping at scenic turnouts when necessary.

There will be some corned beef orders tomorrow, I know. Some guests are more interested in the spirit (and the flavor) than green beer on the actual day. I’m okay with that.

But it won’t be leftovers or second-day Irish stew. After the hectic schedule last week, the pantry was nearly empty by the week’s end. The potatoes and onions are laid in now, though – and the Irish fare tomorrow will be freshly made, as always.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Parties and the table.

There were three of us. We sat down at the only open table, the one with four chairs over in the corner. I’m sure we looked like tourists, because we were.

The talk was about the day’s itinerary and – of course – what we were going to order for lunch in the little café. It was a roadside place on the west coast of Ireland. Nothing fancy, but looking it over as we were, through visitor’s eyes, it seemed extra quaint and cozy.

A man sat down in the open chair at our table.

I have to admit, I was startled. Barging in on a group’s lunch is frowned upon, at least in my circle of dining-out acquaintances. If we’d invited him to sit down that would have been another thing. I hadn’t even noticed him until he joined us.

He was smiling, anyway. Kind of an infectious grin. Maybe that impression was also due to my tourist eyes. He didn’t look like a nut, particularly.

As it turned out, he was a sportswriter for one of the area’s newspapers just popping in for a bite to eat. He saw an open chair and sat in it. I later learned that’s the custom in Ireland and Europe.

In retrospect, I think I would have paid cash money for the experience. Bought a ticket for the dine-with-a-local excursion and looked forward to it, just like the medieval dining night in a local castle. I realized then that it was a shame that Americans are so set apart by our zones of privacy and comfort.

Today is catch-up with bookstacks, but yesterday was another busy day at lunchtime. At one point, three separate parties were looking for a place to sit. There were two ladies who came in independently, and a woman with her husband, who were out to celebrate his birthday.

“We were just looking for a little adventure,” she said.

“I’ll bring out the rhinos,” I answered. (Just kidding about that part.)

One table was open, the four-top (that’s our secret restaurant code for a table that will accommodate four chairs). By the time I arrived to welcome them, they were all settled in and smiling, and I assumed they were all together.

It was well into the experience before I realized three groups had seated themselves together, European-style. Ironically, another guest and I had talked about that very thing earlier in the week, how Americans would turn away rather than share a table with strangers. And here it was, happening.

When one of the ladies excused herself to return to work, I overheard the group saying their goodbyes, using first names, with promises to “call you soon.” Maybe astonished is a little strong, but I was certainly amazed.

There is a bit of coziness amongst the tables here. I have noticed guests speaking to each other from table to table, which I rarely see when I dine out. Of course, there aren’t any booths or wall dividers here. One table is slightly set apart from the others. Perhaps that can be the designated privacy section. Or not.

After getting over the surprise at having the Irish gentleman sit down at our table, I truly enjoyed the chance to learn something about his world and his experiences. It was an opportunity to have a conversation with someone with a different perspective on life, a person I would never, ever, speak to again. A chance encounter.

Here in Broken Arrow, I suppose the odds are better that you might later run into someone you’d spoken to in the little bistro area of McHuston Booksellers. But that’s not a bad thing, is it?

We can all use another friendly acquaintance or two, in my book. And books are what I do.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Sitting on the dock of the bay (leaf).

Things said in passing – to be embedded in memory forever, seemingly. My dear Mum read the restaurant review in this morning’s Tulsa World.

“I can’t believe you remembered Esther talking about shanty Irish,” she said. “How old were you anyway?”

It seems to me I was about five or six years old.

“So you remember the conversation too?” I asked. “How old are you anyway?” (Just kidding about that last part. I would never ask my mother her age. I already know it.)

I’m indebted to Mr Cherry of the World for his kind comments about the shop and the lunchtime fare. It was a nice article and I was only slightly mortified over his noting the retrieval of a bay leaf from his stew. Bay leaves are deceptive. You think you have them fished out, and yet there is another one – lurking in the bowl of Tulsa’s most influential restaurant critic.

Oops.

Maybe it serves as proof that I make the stew myself.

The article (which I’ve attached in the click-able image, not so much out of pride, but to let you read it for yourself – in case you don’t have the paper tossed on your porch these days…) – the article also mentions my Shanty Club sandwich, the poor cousin of the traditional sandwich. It has no bacon, you see.

Shanty Irish was a pejorative phrase back then that isn’t heard much anymore. It described (mostly in the Irish community) someone from the “other side of the tracks” or the poorer side of town. It could be spoken in a mean-spirited way the way “white trash” is sometimes used. There were plenty of Irish in Parsons, Kansas – a Katy Railroad town where many immigrants found work during the laying of the rail line across Indian Territory to Texas in the late 1800s.

The review created enough interest that I was making stacks of Shanty Club sandwiches at lunchtime today, along with the many, many bowls of Irish Stew dished up and served. Enough of these busy lunches and I may dwindle down to a shadow of myself, running to and from the kitchen. (Like THAT would ever happen.)

Five years old and overhearing the grownup talk, also called gossip, going on in the kitchen – a conversation that stuck with me for some reason for more than fifty years, and wound up on the bistro menu. I realize now Grandma Mimi could afford a little gossip about the shanty Irish. She lived near enough to St. Patrick’s church that should could lean out the window and say a prayer of contrition, and another on Esther’s behalf. (Like THAT would ever happen.)

Plenty of new visitors found the shop today, most having mentioned that they had seen the article in the newspaper, and many of them ordering Shepherd’s Pie and Irish Stew.

I made a particular point of fishing out the bay leaves…

Come visit!

McHuston

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

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