Thursday, March 28, 2019

“Breakfast, Buddha & Mansfield Place”



c. 2019 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(3-19)




Comfort food. Dad’s elixir and sustenance.

A recent southern trip let us reconnect with Mom, at the Mansfield Place nursing home in Philippi, West Virginia. In the beginning, she gave us life with her body. Now, widowed and displaced from the family household, her wellness had become our charge. But while visiting with my sister and nephew, a familiar disposition took hold. I could hear the voice of my father echoing from eternity. Helping us relieve the worry.

“You need to eat!”

We followed this admonition in a timely manner, by purchasing pepperoni rolls at the local Shop ‘n Save. In particular, a variety baked with spicy and delicious hot-pepper cheese. This snack kept us fed well, during the visit.

At the long-term-care facility, Mom’s stories were plentiful. A mixture of childhood memories from the 1930’s, seasoned with modern characters from church, and fellow residents of the home. In her mind, everything existed in harmony. Yesterday and today, here and there, darkness and light. In a sense, she had gained the enlightenment of Buddha, that all things are undeniably interconnected. We had learned to negate fear and sorrow with joy in the moment. To listen and take comfort in her wellness. To occupy our spot in the continuum.

As a net is made up of a series of ties, so everything in this world is connected by a series of ties. If anyone thinks that the mesh of a net is an independent, isolated thing, he is mistaken. It is called a net because it is made up of a series of interconnected meshes, and each mesh has its place and responsibility in relation to other meshes.” - Gautama Buddha

Dad had cared for her over the years, during his own physical decline. Fortified with study material in addition to coffee and bologna sandwiches. His resolve to remain focused was bolstered by the simple tastes of rural cuisine and love itself. Now, our turn had come.

After hearing more tales of the bygone McCray household, and chattering away about grandchildren and pets, we had retired to our motel for rest. But then, the sunrise captured our attention with gleaming hope for another day. Golden rays sparkled over the roof of a nearby eatery, the Philippi Inn.

I could hear Dad once again. “Let your appetite guide the way!”

Their menu boasted many traditional options for the morning. Steak & Eggs initially sounded appealing to my grumbling belly. But then I spotted their ‘Country Breakfast.’ A generous plate of biscuits & gravy served with another platter carrying eggs, bacon or sausage links, hash browns and toast.

Sister chose the biscuits and gravy, alone. But my nephew decided to accept this culinary challenge with gusto. He also ordered the out-sized breakfast. When our waitress had brought everything to the table, it made a banquet worthy of Instagram. I took a few iPhone pictures, before lifting my fork. Then, our feast began!

Back at Mansfield Place, several residents were playing a balloon game, with foam ‘noodles’ for bats. Mom was more interested in the television. Yet when we arrived, our conversation from the previous day restarted. She spoke about advice given from her father, who had passed away in the 1950’s. Remembering each word as if he had just uttered them in another room. I attempted to capture the moment with my iPhone. Finally, my sister took the device to get a selfie.



As she looked over Mom’s shoulder, I was struck by a mood of patience and calm. As if Dad still protected his bride through us, his heirs and helpers. 

On the way home to Ohio, I still felt full from breakfast. I reckoned that Dad would be proud of our meal and the visit to Mountaineer Country. A tribute to family traditions that had endured over many years. Where the kitchen remained a chapel of sorts, a place to celebrate life, one plate at a time.

Mom had graduated into a twilight world where here and the hereafter were united. Where those who had passed over remained real and connected, as were those of us who shared her day. This vantage point seemed curious and strange at first. But with a bit of philosophical awareness, and a taste of sausage gravy over biscuits, all was well in our world.

Comments about ‘Words on the Loose’ may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Write us at: P. O. Box 365 Chardon, OH 44024


Thursday, March 21, 2019

“Cars: 2019”



c. 2019 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(3-19)




The Setting: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. ‘Oval Office’ boardroom & headquarters of Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States.

The Participants: Rolf Sprtizer, Concerned Cable News correspondent. Mr. Trump, General Motors, Fiatto T. Chrysler, Henry Ford XVI, Nicky Tesla.

Rolf Spritzer: “Welcome to CCN viewers around the globe. Tonight we are live in Washington, D. C. with the captains of America’s auto industry! We bring you news, information and views you can use!”

Donald Trump: “Welcome to our meeting. I am glad everyone could attend today. Really glad. Very much glad about you attending. Glad you could attend to talk about our automotive manufacturing.”

General Motors: “Ten hut! It is a privilege, sir! MAGA!”

Henry Ford XVI: “You only talk like that because government money kept you from begging in the street.”

Fiatto Chrysler: “Ciao, Donald! Haha, I gotta agree with Henry. General Mo would be homeless without the bailout money. Fuggedaboutit!”

G. Motors: “At ease, pilgrim! You’re talking nonsense. Besides, Chrysler, you got plenty of lira in that deal. Don’t pretend it never happened!”

Ford XVI: “He’s right about that!”

F. Chrysler: “Heyy, I gonna knock you in the head. You talk too much!”

D. J. Trump: “Let’s get back on track here. We want to be on track. Really on track.”

Nicky Tesla: “You guys are word hogs. Can I get a chance to speak?”

(Silence fills the Oval Office.)

G. Motors: “Who is this soldier? I don’t remember him wearing the uniform before!”

Ford XVI: “I agree. Tesla? Wasn’t that a band in the days of 80’s Hair Metal?”

F. Chrysler: “Hey heyy, you make a good joke there!”

N. Tesla: “I am a real automaker! I deserve a seat at this table.”

(The group bursts into a fit of laughter.)

F. Chrysler: “Pipe down. You here with us, be grateful, already!”

G. Motors: “Mr. President, I want to salute your leadership on the issue of bringing jobs back to America...”

Ford XVI: “Here he goes, kissing ass again.”

N. Tesla: “If you had better ideas, you wouldn’t have to kiss ass.”

G. Motors: “Hey, grunt! You’ll be peeling potatoes for a month! Better shut your trap!”

F. Chrysler: “Bada bing! He’s right, General. You no have good ideas. You have a Silverado four-cylinder that gets worse gas mileage than the V-8! Heyy, how you do that??”

D. J. Trump: “Fake news!”

Ford XVI: “Nah, it was in a story by Eric C. Evarts, in Green Car Reports. Look it up, sir.”

F. Chrysler: “Hahaha, that’s what the bailout got you? Give me billions, I bring you a better return. You get a nice Jeep. Guarantee!”

D. J. Trump: “Anyway, the bailout was before I won the White House. A big, big win! Huuuuge!

N. Tesla: “He’s right about that...”

G. Motors: “Never mind that, soldier. We are bringing jobs back for you, Mr. President. MAGA!”

Ford XVI: “Actually, you just put a lot of people out of work, by closing the plant at Lordstown, Ohio. Your new Blazer is slated to be built south of the border. Was that ‘Make Mexico Great Again?’”

N. Tesla: “If you want a wall, Mr. President, maybe it should be one that stops our companies from shipping jobs to foreign countries...”

D. J. Trump: “Your attitude is sad, Just sad!”

Ford XVI: “I have no trouble building vehicles right here in the USA!”

G. Motors: “Hah! Get in line, pilgrim. All you make are SUVs and trucks!”

Ford XVI: “That’s all people are buying. SUVs and trucks.”

F. Chrysler: “Hoo boy, it’s true I tell you. I can’t give away anything but my Jeeps and Ram trucks. Maybe some minivans for the Soccer Moms. Heyyy!”

N. Tesla: “The smart money is on what I make!”

(Laughter echoes once again.)

D. J. Trump: “Anyway, the economy is doing really well. Really, really well. That is why I asked all of you to attend this meeting. We are doing really well and I wanted your ideas on how to keep booming. I really think we are booming in America.”

Ford XVI: “I don’t know. If the General keeps laying off workers here and in Canada, there won’t be anybody left with a job to afford one of his cars.”

G. Motors: “Wash that mouth out with soap, grunt! I’ll have you doing a five-mile hike for talk like that!”

F. Chrysler: “Heyy, you testy today. Who pee in your Cheerios, General?”

N. Tesla: “When enough drivers think about the environment, you’ll all be out of work.”

D. J. Trump: “It’s a hoax! More fake news!”

Ford XVI: “Nicky has a point. We are all working on electric vehicles.”

F. Chrysler: “Heyy, you can charge your Dodge Charger. Hahaha!”

G. Motors: “We’re working on that, too, soldier!”

D. J. Trump: “However you slice it, the jobs are rolling back into America. Rolling. Rolling, rolling. So many jobs. We are winning. Every day.”

G. Motors: “I am proud to salute you. Commander in Chief!”

F. Chrysler: “There you go, kissing more butt.”

N. Tesla: “I am proud to be ahead of the curve!”

G. Motors: “Out front of your curve, grunt? I’d say that was my Chevy Volt!”

Ford XVI: “Yeah, for 38 miles. Then it’s either gas like a regular car or plug it in somewhere. Woo hoo.”

F. Chrysler: “Whaaat, that don’t make me yell for more. Who wants to buy a rig like that?”

N. Tesla: “Nobody. That’s why production ended in February.”

G. Motors: “Drop and give me 20 push-ups, soldier!”

F. Chrysler: “Kiss my culo, idiota!”

Ford XVI: “Better luck next time, General.”

G. Motors: “Keep your helmet on! Now I got the Chevy Bolt. With EPA estimated 238 miles on a charge. Run that up your flagpole.”

Ford XVI: “Adjusted for weather conditions, wind, loaded weight or driving uphill...”

F. Chrysler: “Heyyy, what comes after that? The Chevy Dolt? You are being a joker.”

N. Tesla: “I own the electric market. Who would you trust? Me or General M. and the old guard?”

D. J. Trump: “I trust the American people. Legal people. People here legally. My people. Whatever kind of car they drive...

(A loud argument ensues with everyone around the desk.)

Rolf Spritzer: (Interrupting) “Thank you to our viewers from coast to coast and around the world. This is Concerned Cable News, information and views you can use!”

Comments about ‘Words on the Loose’ may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Write us at: P. O. Box 365 Chardon, OH 44024

Sunday, March 17, 2019

“Menudo Moment”




c. 2019 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(3-19)




St. Patrick’s Day.

Most Americans celebrate this point on the calendar with green attire, snacks, or beer. Some consume Guinness or corned beef and cabbage. Others watch the ‘Leprechaun’ movies in a marathon session. Those holding a loner’s disposition may react with odd indifference to regular celebrations of any kind. But no one, no one, no sane individual, celebrates with leftover Latin tripe stew, commonly referred to by the curious designation of ‘menudo.’

Except for this writer, of course.

During a recent shopping trip to my local grocery emporium in Geneva, I discovered a stash of honeycomb beef tripe among their ‘Deals & Steals.’ The sight of that pale, tough meat wrapped carefully and displayed in a refrigerated case made me pause. It was not a common encounter. Though distracted by turkey drumsticks, bacon, sausages and frozen shrimp, my attention remained on the cow. I could visualize only one dish, bubbling away in my small Crock Pot.

Menudo!

I had first encountered the dish as a teenager, in New York State. When a recipe appeared in one of the motorcycle magazines that passed through our household, my father became inspired. He filled our largest kettle with particulars that included not only bovine stomach, but also lemon wedges, pigs feet, coriander seed, hominy, and stewed tomatoes. The cauldron simmered until our entire first floor was permeated with this pungent aroma. No one else ventured near the kitchen. It became a father-and-son rite of passage. The two of us feasted on leftovers for at least a week.

Now, I made the concoction alone, beginning at 8:00 in the morning. A tribute of sorts to my late father. The recipe varied somewhat from his primal concoction, but paid homage in spirit. I used what was on hand. My own preference for the tangy taste of banana peppers had become central to this interpretation. By the dinner hour, it was ready to receive a splash of cayenne sauce, and be savored with fresh Italian bread.

My Black Lab seemed to be puzzled by the beggar’s bouquet that filled our kitchen.

Icehouse Menudo (Latest Version)

Ingredients:

¾ lb. beef tripe
1 can (15 oz.) pinto beans
1 can (15 oz.) garbanzos
1 can (15 oz.) diced tomatoes
1 cube, chicken bouillon
1 jar (12 oz.) banana peppers
1 package of dry taco seasoning
2 potatoes, sliced
Dried onion
Garlic
Cumin

Directions:

Precook tripe after cleaning and cutting into strips, in slow cooker for four hours on high. Rinse and place back into cooker with the other ingredients. Add water as needed, and spices. Cook another four hours. Menudo is best after sitting in the refrigerator for at least one day.

I finished the meal with a toast of beer. Then, relaxed with my iPhone and the Facebook app. But the mellow mood went awkward when reading posts about our coming weekend. It was almost St. Patrick’s Day!



Somehow, I had confused the cultural vibes. My personal timeline was shattered. Tomorrow, I would be thinking of Guinness, corned beef & cabbage, or festive anthems and blessings from the Emerald Isle. But in the fridge was something wholly disconnected from that tradition. A Mexican staple not tuned to the vibe of high-stepping dancers and verdant green.

A friend from Ashtabula County fractured my focus once again, by posting her regimen for easy chicken tacos. The prospective meal sent my culinary view careening into yet another inappropriate direction.

Shredded Chicken Ranch Tacos

Ingredients:

1 ¾ lb. Boneless chicken breasts
1 packet taco seasoning
1 packet ranch dressing mix
1 can (15 oz.) diced tomatoes
12 hard taco shells
1 cup grated cheddar
¼ cup diced cilantro
¼ cup hot sauce

Directions:

Place chicken, tomatoes, taco seasoning and ranch mix into a slow cooker. Cover and cook on high for 3-4 hours or on low for 5-8 hours, until meat is easily shredded with a fork. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Arrange taco shells in a 9x13 baking dish. (Use two dishes if necessary.) Spoon meat into shells and top with cheese. Bake for 10 minutes. Top with cilantro and hot sauce.

I reckoned on making my own version with western-style, soft shells. A Colorado habit learned from my first wife. Fresh, instead of baked. But the imaginary taste was already in control. Causing my mouth to salivate. A damned tasty taste. Or perhaps, a testy taste in view of my desire to stick with some semblance of Irish grub. Appealing and inviting. Unavoidable. Not a proper compliment for my pint of seasonal stout.

As they might curse in Dublin, “Feck!”

Eventually, I made coffee around 4:00 in the morning and pondered a meal at Mary’s Diner with my friend Janis. Would she be wearing green? I guessed her rainbow, hippie garb was more likely. But it did not matter. We would dine and celebrate and chatter away with our friends in Geneva. And I would be secretly pondering the vittles left in my home icebox. Still waiting in their cooled crock.

Sopa de tripa. Menudo. Demented and delicious. Like the offering of a drunken reveler, no longer fixed on the holiday. Hangover cure and traditional center of a wedding feast. Reputed restorer of sexual stamina. A friendly filler-of-bellies.

Damned menudo.

Comments about ‘Words on the Loose’ may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Write us at: P. O. Box 365 Chardon, OH 44024

Saturday, March 9, 2019

"Swindle, Humbled”



c. 2019 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(3-19)




Friday.

For most people, the arrival of this day carries a mood of celebration. Cause to embrace a weekend about to bloom with liberty and possibilities. But for this writer, lost in early retirement, the effect has been muted by circumstance. Reduced to a faint echo of voices long gone silent.

I pondered this shift, yesterday. During the winter, I had rummaged through old cassette tapes in my green footlocker. Revisiting projects from days in New York State. During the late 1970’s I had been smitten with Punk Rock in general, and the Sex Pistols, specifically. Excited and anxious, I took the surname of ‘Swindle’ as a tribute to the trash-classic film that immortalized the chaos of their adventure. I wanted to kick up my own rebellion, like crude axeman Steve Jones, thrashing his Les Paul guitar. But at the time, I could only afford a $14.00, Japanese relic from our local pawn shop. My compositions were not so catchy, or timeless. Still, the ‘Swindle’ kept me eager to try.

People said we couldn’t play
They called us foul-mouthed yobs
But the only notes that really count
Are the ones that come in wads

They all drowned when the air turned blue
Cause we didn’t give a toss
Filthy lucre ain’t nothing new
But we all got cash from chaos...”

Later, while pursuing career goals, I was able to afford a real Gibson guitar. A black Les Paul model, sleek and stylish. And, heavy to play. One that would fit well in any Pistols performance, Cook & Jones side project, or incarnation of their later group, called ‘The Professionals.’ But the instrument gathered dust as I worked long hours. With my time divided between professional writing and retail management, moments to pluck away were few. Finally, after being sidelined by health issues in 2016, I returned to the quest for Punk experimentation. Opening the old footlocker unlocked a wealth of memories, captured on cassette tape.

It was time to chord-slam my way to forgotten glory!

I dug out my Les Paul, with broken strings interrupting the daydream. The resulting pause matched my own awkward struggle to scatter the dust and cobwebs of 40 years gone. Eventually, I ordered a replacement set on eBay. Then, a friendly Friday arrived.

Perched on the edge of my bed, I took out the guitar and began to add new strings. Squinting for a clearer view of the tailpiece, because my eyesight had grown less sharp over time. Then, I wound the tuners backwards. It had been years since my last session. I huffed for breath like a has-been geezer about to take the stage. My fingers fell across the fretboard and… suddenly, there came a din of atonal clatter. The Les Paul was far out of tune.

EMI said you’re out of hand
And they gave us the boot
But they couldn’t sack us just like that
Without giving us the loot

Thank you kindly, A&M
They said we were out of bounds
But that ain’t bad for two weeks work
And 75,000 pounds...”

I took out my iPhone for guidance. The Garage Band app provided a virtual guitar set to standard specs. I matched each string to its e-companion. Filled with hope, I fretted the first chord of Mr. Jones’ glorious theme, ‘The Great Rock & Roll Swindle.’

Then, I fumbled, fretted and flopped. And cursed out loud. “What???”

In 1979, I played nearly every day, despite not having a quality twanger for my teenage exhibitions. Now, the album sides had been reversed. Armed with a product of Orville Gibson’s brood, I sat in a spotlight of quiet, personal humiliation.

I could barely play. My chops were shit. Chord by chord, I struggled through the song.

The time is right to do it now
The greatest Rock & Roll Swindle
The time is right to do it now!

The time is right to f*** it up
The greatest Rock & Roll Swindle
The time is right to do it now!

Rock & Roll Swindle
Rock & Roll Swindle
Rock & Roll Swindle
Rock & Roll!”

My Black Lab was stretched out, facing the closet. Seemingly unimpressed with my performance. I balanced the Les Paul on my leg, strumming and re-tuning for a second try at the anthem. But my hands were already cramping.

I was out of breath.

Days of anticipation had brought me to an unwelcome epiphany. I preferred the feel of a Fender guitar, like the others in my collection. A middle-aged paunch had grown in the way of my star-stance when playing. A nuisance from getting fat. And arthritis only made my lack of skill more obvious.

Still, a glow of satisfaction warmed my face. The offering had been given.

In recent posts on Instagram, I noted that Steve Jones was now playing a Fender Stratocaster. Something I never witnessed when following his career through the 70’s and 80’s. As the host of ‘Jonesy’s Jukebox’ he had become visibly weathered, wobbly and worn, just like the rest of us from that bygone era.

I reckoned he would give absolution for my sin of guitar failure. With a blessing for future noodling of a melodic nature. But before I could continue with a bit of overdue practice, one purpose took hold.

I had to write the story.

Comments about ‘Words On The Loose’ may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Write us at: P. O. Box 365 Chardon, OH 44024