Monday, February 15, 2016

Lunch at the General Denver in Wilmington, Ohio


          Good food, good service, and a reasonable price.  That's what I found the day before Valentine's Day this year at the historic General Denver Pub at 81 W. Main St.; Wilmington, Ohio.  This past Saturday seemed like a good day for me to get a date and try out the pub for the first time.  We decided to try the noon meal.

          The four story General Denver was built in 1928 and was named after General James William Denver, a hero of the Civil and Mexican Wars, and the namesake for the city of Denver, Colorado.  The brick Tudor Revival style building was originally built as a full service hotel and had a formal restaurant with a dining room, and a pub/bar.  All three areas are still in use today, but the food is mostly now served in the pub, along with a wide selection of drinks.  A friendly atmosphere is accentuated by the friendly, prompt service, dark wood framed walls, traditional old wooden bar and shelves, and toasty fireplace on the far wall.  American style pub cuisine is served every day of the week except Monday.  The menu leans heavily on sandwiches, mostly burgers, but also consists of the usual salads, pasta, seafoods, and steak.  With a few exceptions, most meals range from $7.00 to $15.00.   

          My date ordered the "Lamb Burger", consisting of ground lamb, feta cheese, roasted red peppers, herbs, fresh arugula, remoulade, mozzarella cheese, and fried green tomato, all on ciabatta bread. She loved it.  She thought her sandwich was flavorful, with just the right ingredients, and was the right size for her appetite.  She was particularly impressed that she could get onion straws as her side dish without having to pay extra for them.  Some people are not hard to please.  I tasted her sandwich, and I liked it too.  The taste of the lamb meat was a welcome change from a regular beef hamburger.

          I ordered "The Dirt Bag" burger, consisting of 1/3 pound of ground beef, a sautéed pepper blend, sautéed onions, mushrooms, bacon strips, bleu cheese crumbles, provolone cheese, pickles, lettuce, raw onions, and tomatoes, all on a multi-grain bun.  I found my sandwich to taste perfectly adequate, but I couldn't say that it was exceptional.  My biggest complaint was that the spicy jalapeño peppers overwhelmed the myriad of other tastes available in the sandwich.  If I were to ever order this sandwich again, I would ask them to leave off the jalapeños.  I ordered regular fries with my sandwich.  The fries were crisp, hot, fresh, and satisfying.  What more can you ask from fries?                
          My date said that she would definitely like to go back to this restaurant/pub again.  I liked it well enough myself to return someday, and from the number of local patrons that dined at the same time we did, other people obviously feel the same way.  On a zero to five scale, my date said that she would rate the pub at a 4.  I think I would go with a healthy 3 myself.  I recommend that you try out this restaurant yourself, and see what you think. 

Sunday Buffet at Golden Corral in Chillicothe, Ohio.

         Endless buffet . . . enormous variety . . . outstanding hospitality.  That's how Golden Corral restaurant chain describes itself in its web site.  My date Susie and I ate at their Chillicothe, Ohio restaurant Sunday (2 February 2016), and I can say they are not too far off.  Nothing is endless, including Golden Corral's buffet, but the exaggeration can be forgiven because they actually do have an enormous variety of food dishes.  They have so many dishes, in fact, that I hold them, and my many trips to their restaurants, as partially responsible for my excess weight gain over the past few years!  Managers, cashiers and table attendants are efficient, polite, and attentive for the most part, and do much to make sure that the buffet dining experience is satisfying.  Golden Corral is of one of my favorite restaurant chains for casual, sit down buffet dining.           
         You can usually find a Golden Corral just about anywhere in this part of the country (Ohio) nowadays.  I like that they have almost all of the American style meats, sides, breads, salads, and deserts that I could want from a casual restaurant.  I especially like that I can get a grilled-to-order, all-you-can-eat steak at a reasonable price (currently $11.59 for seniors) with the evening and weekend buffets.  I usually start my excursion through the buffet line by first picking up my medium rare steak from the chef at the hot grill, and then by going from one end of the buffet to the other while I put a small bite of all the meat dishes and seafood on my plate.  I then take that back to my table to eat before I go back again to fill another plate with equally small spoonfuls of whatever sides, fruits, and deserts that I want.  I love the salad buffet too at Golden Corral, but I'm a carnivore, and with so many of the other good meats and foods on the buffet, I don’t always make it to the salads.  I like to finish my meal with some fruit to aid digestion and a taste of ice cream from the self-serve machine to satisfy my sweet tooth.  I usually unsuccessfully try to avoid the desserts, as good as they are, in order to cut down on my sugar intake.                                                                    
        The Golden Corral in Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio is a very popular spot for families to eat on weekends.  We arrived at 2:00 p.m. this past Sunday, usually a slow time, and found the restaurant stuffed full of customers.  The cashier moved us politely, quickly, and efficiently through the check-in line, and we found a table right away.  Getting my steak hot off the grill and surfing the buffet went quickly, and well.  My date met me back at our table where we were able to enjoy our food and each other's company just as if we were in a less crowded restaurant.  The food was delicious, and, was, with a couple of exceptions (my steak had a lot of gristle and was more rare than I had asked for, and the Bourbon Chicken tasted like it had chemicals in it), everything we hoped it would be.  I would rate this particular visit to the Chillicothe Golden Corral on this particular day a 4 out of 5, and recommend it to those who like to eat at buffets.

The New Star Wars Movie - Nothing New!



        A friend and I saw the new "Star Wars - The Force Awakens" movie today (20 December 2015).  I was disappointed with the movie.  My friend was too.  It seemed to me to just be a second class remake of the very first Star Wars movie to come out.  Two people meet in the desert, join up with a smuggler and his Wookie, meet the princess/general, and lead a resistance rebellion against a death star in order to save the universe.   Father and son fight.  Been there, saw that  . . .  in the first Star Wars movie!  Didn't really need to see it again.  Sure they added a few characters and had a wonderful family reunion the next generation, but the basic plot was still the old same-o, same-o.  In addition, the acting was pretty wooden, and the spirituality written into the original movie as the "Force" was sadly lacking.  Moving a few things and reading a few thoughts hardly imparts the original wisdom of the Jedi and the "Force" that was inherent in the original movie.  

Terrorism Spreads Like a Disease



          Originally written 16 December 2015:  Like everyone else, I’ve thought a lot lately about terrorism and the reasons behind it.  Terrorism seems to stem from frustration, anger, and hatred, and/or mental disability.  Ignorance, misinformation, greed, and power hungry villains are its enablers.   Violence, pain, fear, and suffering are its results. 
          People get frustrated and angry when economic conditions and educational opportunities are so unequal that others live in luxury while they themselves can’t even get a job to feed their families.  They learn to hate when others hold their hardships and situation over their head and deny them the opportunity to advance themselves.  Many such victims turn to terrorism in their feelings of hopelessness and frustration.  And, of course, there are always the mentally disabled, those who are disconnected from reality, the ones who hurt in ways unimaginable to most of us, and who want others to notice them and feel the same kind of pain that they do.  Some such mentally disabled people want an out, any kind of out, from the world in which they find themselves, and many don't mind taking many others with them when they go.  Such people make perfect terrorists.              
          Pseudo religious leaders who teach and lead a perverted form of religion rather than spirituality,  power hungry tyrants who will do and say anything to claw their way to the top of the heap, and the greedy, self appointed aristocrats who want the riches of others because they think their money gives them control and makes them better than others, are the ones who enable the conditions, frustrations, and insanities that lead to terrorism.  They use others to practice terrorism and self destruction while they themselves sit back and reap the results.
          I've noticed that frustration, anger, and hatred, whether expressed through terrorism or other means, are spread very similarly to a communicable disease.  Whomever these things touch, they infect.  Anger, hate, fear, and violence beget anger, hate, fear, and violence.  That is the way diseases operate too.  They are communicable.  They spread to others, through their victims and the ones in contact with their victims, and then reproduce.  
          Think about it.  Terrorists attack other people like a lethal disease attacks the body (think Ebola, for example).  Their victims either then die, or they survive with injuries and psychological damage from which they may or may not ever recover.  Such damage can be irrational fear, hatred of the attacker, and an uncontrollable desire to strike back at the thing that hurt them.  The same feelings can also infect the victims' family members, friends, and group members.  These victims and secondary victims then take on the same anger, hatred, fear, and desire for violence that the original terrorists displayed, and redirect it toward those that they feel has attacked them.  Thus, the disease (terrorism) spreads back and forth, from victim to victim, from crowd to crowd, and nation to nation.  Eventually, when the disease has reached enough people and has done enough damage, it becomes an epidemic that affects everyone in one way or another.  
         Since terrorism is like a disease, then applying the principles for the control of communicable diseases should be useful.  In controlling an infectious disease, we identify the source, find the method of transmission, isolate those infected, develop and apply treatments, prevent further transmission, and destroy the cause if possible.  We are already employing many of these ideas in our fight against terrorism, some of which are working, and some of which are not.  I am not going to explore those things now.  They are for discussion at another time.  After all, I'm just writing a blog post, not a book. 

Introduction and Copyright Notice

         My purpose in creating this blog is to provide an outlet for the thoughts that arise from my observations, opinions, and life experiences.  My hope is that you will find this blog to be interesting, entertaining, and enlightening.  If you agree with me . . . great!  If not, then let's agree to disagree.  If you don't agree with me, I don't mind a bit. Life doesn't require everybody to always see eye to eye.                                                                      
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