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DINNER 195: Friday, July 14, 2006

DINNER 195: Friday, July 14, 2006

We joined Dave & Robin at the Old Spaghetti Factory this evening for a quiet dinner. Wendy & I had been out most of the nights this week, and were anxious for some downtime. Dinner and conversation was just what the doctor ordered! I had…

Reading: The Nasty Bits

Reading: The Nasty Bits

I’ve started reading THE NASTY BITS by Anthony Bourdain. I particularly enjoy reading his writing not only because he’s got a great take on food-related subjects and a conversational tone, but because his writing has progressed tremendously since his obnoxious, over-testosteroned memoir called KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL. I’ve…

Life on the Road

Life on the Road

Karin & LinfordI asked my friend Karin, lead singer for the band Over the Rhine, how their recent tour was. I specifically said, “How is the road?”, and she replied as follows… 

the road is:long, bumpy, sometimes smooth and straight, but every now and then a slow curve is welcome. it is lonely and yet overcrowded, always interesting and different and still somehow familiar, narrow and harrowing, deadly and alluring. addicting and intoxicating. stimulating and mind-numbing. always going to be there, impossible to ignore, harder to run from, and in my blood.

that was more than you bargained for? =)

damn writers.

I think she summed it up very nicely! I’m glad they had a good tour and made it home safely. If you get a chance to see Over the Rhine, I strongly suggest that you do so.

DINNER 194: Thursday, July 13, 2006

DINNER 194: Thursday, July 13, 2006

I had a flurry of activity before me this evening when I got home from work. I had to do laundry, take care of the animals, be interviewed over the telephone for an article (to be published next week), cook my dinner (nothing special — just a Stouffer’s French Bread…

DINNER 193: Wednesday, July 12, 2006

DINNER 193: Wednesday, July 12, 2006

This evening, I joined Wendy’s family (Mom, Dad, and Ted) as they welcomed Frederick and Michael. Fred and Wendy’s mother have been friends since they were in school — a long, long time. Fred and Michael were in town and spent the evening catching up…

DINNER 192: Tuesday, July 11, 2006

DINNER 192: Tuesday, July 11, 2006

This evening was spent at Great American Ball Park in downtown Cincinnati. I was there because some of my students asked if I wanted to participate in fundraising for student groups in my college, which of course I did. They make money by staffing concession booths at baseball games. Sounded reasonably fun to me, so I went down for training. From 6:00 until 11:00pm. That’s 5 hours of training — to pour beer and burn hotdogs.

Great American Ball Park

The training was, in a word, ridiculous. Sure, I’m a foodie and probably know more about most of the equipment than the average trainee, but it was aimed at an offensively lowest-common-denominator level. And it was 5 hours long. It could EASILY have been completed in 2 hours.

We spent time in alcohol training (not as fun as it sounds) learning about identifications, our requirements, and other guidelines. Then we went to various ‘spokes’ to learn about different booths at the park — fryer, grill, register, cleanup, trash (a class in trash!), and more.

But the classes that absolutely took the cake were the 75 minutes we spent learning about Delaware North Hospitality Management company from their drones, complete with PowerPoint presentations, over-produced videos of rockets shooting to the moon and people kayaking down rivers and stuff. They put us through their arbitrary (“always gesture to guests with an open hand, never pointing”), overly-bureaucratic, and policially-correct “GuestPath” training methodology (think Scientology indoctrination). They even introduced us, via PowerPoint slides, to their board of directors! I cannot adequately describe how silly this was; other trainees were complaining that “all we want to do is pour beer!”, “we’re not making this our career!”. The facilitator-drones were unapologetic and without a sense of humor. We also learned about Delaware North’s 10-part “Universal Service Standards” in two parts and with a 13-minute video.

Somewhere during these classes, I ate a bratt and a ‘gourmet’ pretzel (it was doughy), washed down with a cup of Pepsi.

Once the program was finally done (only 4.5 hours — more quickly than expected, but easily 2.5 hours longer than it needed to be) and we’d picked up our official badges (with dreadful photograph), I left the stadium to find that we’d been let out at exactly the same time as a country music concert next door. Traffic in the immediate downtown area added to the overall frustration of the evening, though once I got a small distance away from downtown, it opened up nicely and I made it home by 11:15.

DINNER 191: Monday, July 10, 2006

DINNER 191: Monday, July 10, 2006

Tonight, we went to dinner with our friend Paul to commemorate a significant event in his life. We dined at TAJ MAHAL, somewhere we haven’t been in months, and it was really good. I had the Chicken Taj Special, which is chunks of chicken, cheese,…