| |

GREASE BOMB @
THE RANCH HOUSE
After my last breakfast experience in DTC,
I decided to eat someplace a little more my
speed. A place that had a menu written in
plain English with good
ol' American fare: "Fried taters and
whatnot. Maybe even a little of that
there potted meat," I thought to myself
in true Billy Bob fashion. Where the
smell of fried something or other and
cigarette smoke hangs heavy in the air.
You might even meet a waitress named
Flo or a cook named Mel. A place with
a counter where you can smoke and cuss
while you eat. So I ended up on East
Colfax--surprise! It seems like every
time I go looking for something 'real' I
end up down there. Well, I was conceived
in a trailer park after all.
Anyway, as I walked into The Ranch
House I knew I was in the right place.
There weren't any trucks outside, but
this was a real truck stop café. Just as I
had imagined, the smoke hung in the air
like an entity unto itself. Everything
smelled deliciously of fried and more
fried. There was '70s decor
everywhere: faux rock
walls, dark panels here
and there, a nicotine
dependent potted
ivy ... all this place
needed was burnt
orange carpet and
a pole lamp!
"Yep, this here looks
purdy good to me,
umhuh," the sling blade
voice from within commented.
I sat down at the counter
between a couple of guys in plaid shirts
and baseball hats. I ordered a cup of the
strongest truck driver coffee I've had in
years. Let me pause here for a moment,
to impart a little coffee enlightenment.
See, frappe whosit and caffe bla-bla and
all those other overpriced overrated coffee
drinks--that's right I said coffee
drinks--have one thing in common:
strong coffee. It's called espresso. It's
such a special little drink that it comes
in a play tea cup and costs as much as a
pot of real coffee. If you go to a truck
stop at about noon, after the coffee has
been cooking for hours and hours, it
turns into syrup that will make your hair
move! For less than a dollar! With
refills! Mr. Espresso java can't say that!
And you probably won't have to wear a
beret or misspell your name to fit in.
Not that there's anything wrong with
wearing a beret, if you're in France!
|
*The editorial staff would like to pause
here for a moment and reassure our
readers that the views of this and or any
other writer employed by Go-Go
Magazine are not necessarily the views
of said magazine. We here at Go-Go
actually enjoy espresso drinks. I myself
own a beret though I have not been to
France. And per our long standing
E.O.E. policy we do employ the phonetically
challenged.
--The Editor (A. K. A. Edetur)
|
Uh, um, sorry, about the rant, anyway,
meanwhile, back at The Ranch House. I
was looking over the menu while
Hank Williams sang a course
of the lovesick blues.
Then I found it, right
in between the mustard
stain and the
cigarette burn, the
breakfast special!
Eggs bacon hash
browns and biscuits
and gravy,
served with a pot o'
dippin' grease. I sat
taking in the various conversations
around me--
"... and then that lousy so and so said--"
I heard to my left; "--and I'll be, if the
whole rear end just fell out from underneath
the dirn'd thing--" chimed in
from my right; "--then I told ol' Carl
that I didn't care if it was an accident,
he was going to clean it up himself!"
was the last thing I heard before my
meal came. I tried to shake off the bits
of conversation that were rattling
around in my head, because I knew if I
didn't my subconscious would be trying
to decipher them all day.
That's how it happens you know. You
hear something that doesn't make sense,
and you think you've forgotten it, but
you haven't. Your subconscious goes to
work trying to make sense of it, like a
computer trying to decipher pi. Then
before you know it, you're downtown
pushing a shopping cart yelling at traffic,
or you're waiting for a bus in the
produce section of Safeway. Yeah man,
I've seen it go down. There's a lot of
medically unexplained mental phenomena,
but I know the real story. There was
this guy I knew -- uh, well, sorry I got
on another rant there ... it's all true
though!
So anyway, my meal came. There it was
steaming with fried goodness, congealing
in its own greasy warmth. Then
down the hatch it went. This was real
power food. I could feel it marching
straight toward my heart, clogging
arteries on its way. Little cholesterol
soldiers pushed past the walls of my
heart into my chest cavity, trying to find
their way through my rib cage. Now this
was good eating! The kind of food that
is so greasy, if you cut yourself shaving
after a meal you'll bleed gravy. I took a
couple big gulps of milk (served in a
plastic Coke collector's glass--now
that's class) and washed down the last
of the greasy film, which had been
building up on my teeth. Then I tossed a
couple bucks on the counter and headed
for the door, when I heard a rumble
coming my way. No, it wasn't a convoy
of trucks pulling into the parking lot--it
was just my stomach's way of saying
thanks for the solidifying grease bomb I
had just forced it to deal with. All in all,
it was just what I was looking for, but
luckily I don't go a-lookin' for it too
often.
All Rights Reserved © 2001 Go-Go Media, LLC
|