Feasting on Asphalt Wedding Anniversary pt. 3

Leaving Shreveport Louisiana on Tuesday the 6th of November I decided that I was not quite done with our little adventure and because you usually get kicked out of your hotel room about 11am or noon I asked Stephanie if she wanted to stretch our normal less than 2-hour drive back to East Texas into a little extended trip running thru Longview, Mineola, Grand Saline, and Van Texas on the way 'home'. Sure, ok...but let's eat some of those yummy rolls from Ralph and Kacoo's because I am starving!

Longview - after a little shopping trip to a Lifeway Christian Book Store and The Cooks Nook (where I bought one of those cheap $5 dollar waffle fries cutters! Who doesn't love waffle fries? Especially when you can make them yourself...) We saw a place sitting off of the road a bit called The Butcher Shop & Bakery. Inside they had fresh baked goods, bread, and a fresh meat counter to order your own cuts of meat...then you could move on over to the extensive menu of steaks, burgers, and BBQ and order food to eat in the Restaurant which had nice seating. Kinda like that 'Logan's Steak House' interior decorator style. We ordered a turkey burger because of Stephanie's beef allergy (prior post pt.2). Stephanie was skeptical because they were always dry and tasteless, or of an undesirable texture that cooked ground turkey sometimes has...but it was good, had a slight crunch because of that high temp sear on flat-top grills using butter or oil when they started cooking the patty. Remember Burger Chef? (Google it, because it may have been before your time) Burger chef used to have a 'fixins bar' for dressing up your burger, The Butcher Shop has an extensive one of these with different cheeses, jalapenos, sautéed onions...etc. Tasty.

From Anniversary

Mineola - we took a nice little stroll around town and tried to visit two places, the La Waffaleta (which was closed) and the East Texas Burger Company where the inside was old country style nostalgia of pictures and papers of a bygone era with frames over booths of napkins signed with personalized 'thank you's' and notes over the years of their existence. The menu was painted on chalkboards mounted high on the walls to make it easy for you to order at the register (and then they brought it out to you, sometimes the cook would even bring it out to you himself!). Here we enjoyed some sweet potato pies and Stephanie had to restrain herself from ordering the Peanut Butter Pie. Eating just a little at every stop sometimes doesn't really allow you to get hungry and we don't like eating till were miserable.

From Anniversary

Grand Saline - couldn't really find anything that caught our eye, a Sonic, a Bodacious BBQ...nothing really of note. Not saying there isn't anything, just we didn't know about it or see it while traveling thru. What they are known for is salt, salt mines, a tiny salt museum made out of salt bricks/blocks (?). Later while leaving and on the outskirts of town, I found a Morton Salt factory/mine (what do you call it?). Hopefully, I can later go back and get a tour, note to self.

From Anniversary


From Anniversary

Van - good ole Van Texas! Home of the Dinner Bell & Hubcap Burgers! And Stephanie swears the pies are excellent as well. We have ate here before but we just stopped in so Stephanie could get a slice of pie and I could take a picture of the Restaurant and the Mural on the side of the wall. Inside is like a big box, the ceiling is tight fit sheetrock/drywall decor with dots of dark-colored screws that are holding them up...everything else seems to be that light country-style wood color and grain. A small plate dispatch rectangle hole (framed in the same wood) where all your dishes come out of the kitchen and a possible 50+ seating arrangement that may find yourself seated with folks you don't know during lunch and dinner. They have all kinds of stuff on the menu, including a Philly-style sandwich made of chicken (which Stephanie got last time), a Hubcap Burger (about as round as your head), waffles, BLT (I can recommend this for the bacon crispness and good taste), Mexican breakfast burrito's, or was it omelet?...anyways quite a diverse menu. Not a good choice for multiple eats before a cholesterol check at the doctor's but tasty all the same.

From Anniversary

Join me next time as I wrap it all up and deliver it ala carte. (which, for the French impaired -including me- means: from the menu)

Feasting on Asphalt Wedding Anniversary pt.2

After a nice 'corporate' lunch in Shreveport and 2 movies at the cinema (yes 2 in a row, that the kind of crazy wild stuff we do when we have the time!)...we rolled on down to Bossier city just looking at the cluster of buildings close to each exit ramp to see what looked like it was Restaurant populated.

We found a spot that looked like the usual, but with a few hometown 'favorite' places thrown in for good measure. If a local restaurant can survive between the corporate and franchise outlets then it's a good sign the locals keep it alive because really, besides crazies like us who do you know that eats mom & pop while traveling without worrying about the repercussions on their stomachs? Yep, everyone wants to play it safe.

We decided on a seafood place called 'Ralph & Kacoos' only later did I find out they have several restaurants in Louisiana and Texas, but otherwise it's a 'local' regional place. It was good. Although I felt our waiter memorized the 'special' without really comprehending what he was saying. How is that you say? I had some kind of special called tilapia voodoo or vise versa, and I asked him to blacken my fish (which he said was a choice during the mundane rundown of a memorized specials list in his head, but unfortunately, that was the only special) only he responded that the special only comes one way and that is wasn't blackened? Ok.

The dish tasted fabulous and the bread rolls were outstanding, kinda like a lighter yeast roll with a buttery garlic parmesan like topping. Delicious. Stephanie had a shrimp plate (with several different preparations of shrimp, broiled, grilled, fried...) but Stephanie also has a food allergy to beef and beef products that include soup base and stock. You may ask, 'what does that have to do with shrimp?!' EXACTLY!!! That's what I was wondering...unbeknown to me (or, I did not know) that their version (because I know a few versions, but not like this) of cajun rice has small hamburger pieces in it! What?

Anyway, our meal was delicious and they promptly removed the rice and cooked more shrimp to replace all the ones that were touching the rice (yes, the allergy is that bad...she had stomach problems from the small spoonful she had before realizing what was in it).

We readily agreed for more rolls when asked then packed about 4 of them away to take them back to the hotel refrigerator to put right alongside the other food. Our 'banquet of leftovers' was looking pretty good for getting back on the road the next day (which would be Nov 6th).

Ralph & Kacoos has apparently won the following awards:

2006-2007 AWARDS:
'BEST OF...' LUFKIN, BATON ROUGE,
NEW ORLEANS, AND BOSSIER CITY
'BEST BANQUET FACILITY'
'BEST STEAK'- LUFKIN
'BRIDE'S FAVORITE'- BATON ROUGE

Although it's not apparent (at the website) exactly WHO awarded them? Interesting. And what kind of award is Bride's Favorite? What's the criteria?

Well, folks, that's all I have time for today...



Church Under the Bridge (photo album)









From Church Under ...

Click on the picture or link under the picture to be able to see all the pictures in the album on Picasso...over 100+ pictures.

Gary and I made everything from scratch (as we usually always do) and there was not a crumb left. We were told to prepare for about 150 and we prepared for 200. Everyone that was supposed to eat did, and sometimes twice and a little for the road!

We had fun, it was a great time. Menu:

  • Grilled Chicken Salad Sandwiches on Focaccia bread

  • Marinated & Grilled Sliced Flank Steak Sandwiches made w/soft homemade roll

  • Red Skin Potato Salad

  • Chili

  • Fresh Baked Cookies


Each sandwich individually wrapped and stored in coolers. Potato salad was in 4 inch hotel pans kept in cooling box. Chili was stored in two 10 Gallon coolers used as warmers (does the same whether insulating hot or cold items, same as boxes for storing hotel pan food in). Hot chocolate in a 5 gallon cooler with valve, 10 gallons of coffee in thermal drink containers, and individual bottled water iced down in cooler.

All chili and drinks (besides water) were still scalding hot after the almost 3 hour trip down.

Just a little tip for any of you who are supplying the dinner for Sunday service in the future...there getting tired of soup.

Church Under the Bridge

Just a quick blurb to let you know we (Gary and I) signed up (months ago) to supply the food for the 'dinner' at Church Under the Bridge in Waco Texas along with members of Gary's Sunday School class at CCF (church right next to Mercy Ships IOC) and I will be posting pictures ( as soon as I can devise the best way to do that and have time ) shortly along with the menu we used (which held well for the 3 hours it takes to get there) with no cooking facilities on-site, we where literally under a bridge!!! Under I-35 and S. 4th & 5th streets.

It would be easiest (and best) to go to their website to understand what CUB is...but in my paraphrase, it is this:

Church for the poor, unwanted, homeless, addicts, misfits, mentally challenged, physically challenged, outsiders, outcasts, normal people (if there is such a thing), the curious, middle and upper-class people who are ready for a change and venture outside of their own comfort zones to see what life they are missing, and people who are tired of 'church' as they know it...it is, in essence, an unpretentious, non-denominational experiment in love. As Jimmy Dorrell said yesterday at the service, a laboratory of love.