I’ve made chicken souvlaki at home for a long time, and I occasionally get it when eating out, like at Med Deli in Chapel Hill. However, while I was working in Herrenberg, Germany, for several weeks, one of my German coworkers was a local and made several excellent restaurant recommendations during my visits. One was for a Greek restaurant serving pork souvlaki. I’m not sure if it was the fact that I hadn’t had souvlaki in a while, that it was pork instead of chicken, or just the proximity to Greece that made it so good, but it was an eye-opening meal.
Author: Joey
Partial Pandemic Reading List
A sample of some of the books I have read since February, 2020. Favorites in bold.
- Going Postal, Terry Pratchett (2004) – Discworld novel 33: A con man revitalizes the Ankh-Morpork post office after being conscripted as postmaster general.
- World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War, Max Brooks (2006) – A collection of perspectives on a zombie plague caused by a virus.
- He Crashed Me So I Crashed Him Back, Mark Bechtel (2010) – No pandemic connection: Just a great title. Story of the 1979 NASCAR racing season–although that season did start with a snowstorm in the Northeast, leading to good ratings for the first televised Daytona 500 with people cooped up at home.
- Station Eleven, Emily St John Mandel (2014) – An acting troupe tries to keep art alive after a flu pandemic wipes out civilization.
- Shut Up, Legs!, Jens Voight (2016) – Memoir of a German former professional cyclist, rider in 17 Tours de France, and NBC Sports commentator for the Tour de France. Also namesake of our dog, Jensie. Also not directly pandemic related, but I did ride my bike over twice as many miles this year as usual.
- The Fireman, Joe Hill (2016) – Different approaches to a plague of spontaneous combustion caused by a spore.
- Dune, Frank Herbert (1965) – One change of worlds followed by a drastically changing world, literally and metaphorically, for Paul Atreides in the sci-fi classic.
- A Gentleman in Moscow, Amor Towles (2016) – A Russian aristocrat spends 32 years under house arrest in a Moscow hotel upon returning after the Bolshevik revolution.
Certainly not a definitive or complete list of either my reading or of pandemic-related books. For more pandemic fare, try the following (or Google):
https://www.elon.edu/u/academics/arts-and-sciences/english/about/elon-english-pandemic-reading-list/
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/12/books/coronavirus-reading.html
6,000+ miles in 2020
I hit two milestones in 2020 on my bicycle: 1) First year¹ with over 6,000 miles ridden and 2) first year¹ with over 200 rides–specifically 6,053 miles in 201 rides–both of which are significant increases over my prior highs:
Previous records were 4,380 miles (140 rides) in 2016 and 143 rides (4,121 miles) in 2019. Thus, this year I shot right through milestones of 5,000 mi./150 rides straight to 6000/200. Furthermore, my average total mileage from 2001-2019 was 2,485 miles in 91 rides, so my 2020 totals are over double for each.
Also, while there’s an upward slope in the graph, the years prior to 2001 were probably flatter, more resembling 2002-2005, 2009-2011, and 2015: Hovering around 50-100 rides and 1,500-2,500 miles. 2001 was a particularly low year as I took a job with long hours in a year when we had two toddlers and moved twice.²
I don’t have my average speed in my personal cycling log database, but Strava says I averaged 15mph. My Strava statistics (see gallery below) also say I had 368,000 cumulative feet of climbing. For reference, riding around Chapel Hill, I usually have 50′ of climbing per mile; in the NC mountains, it’s closer to 100’/mi. In the flat coastal plain in SC where I grew up, it’s 10’/mi. With a mix of mostly riding in Chapel Hill and some mountain rides, I averaged 61’/mile.
On my hilliest ride of 2020–the 3 Mountain Madness (“3MM”) route near Mt Airy and going up Hanging Rock (twice), Sauratown Mtn, and Pilot Mtn in 73 miles–I met a guy whose 2020 goal was 7,000 miles with an average of 100’/mile, which sounded far-fetched at the time. Given where I ended up, I can see maybe if I (a) lived in the or near the mountains and (b) had a lot more free time to ride (e.g. retired), that goal might be achievable–especially in a year like 2020, when there was hardly anything else to do to get out of the house–whence my own records came, of course.
Back when my kids were smaller and there were more activities competing for my time–maybe 2012 or 2013–I was feeling good to get 3,000 miles in, including 2-3 100-mile rides, or centuries. Around that time I a met a (retired) lady who said she usually rode around 5000 miles a year, including 4-5 centuries. Since then, I thought to myself, “Well, maybe when I’m retired…”, but here I am with 6,000 miles this year. However, 3MM was also my longest ride of the year, with all my other rides being 65 miles or less, which is the farthest I could go with four water bottles while avoiding stopping in stores for refills, as I would in a normal year for 80-mile rides. I also would have done 2-3 organized century rides this year, where there are designated rest stops to refuel. For 2020, I bought another water bottle holder that goes behind my seat so that I could carry two water bottles³ there rather than in my jersey pockets, where two full bottles felt quite heavy, tugging down my jersey. My average ride for the year was 30.1 miles, which is probably pretty close to the mean, since there aren’t any very long rides (or very short rides) pulling on the average.
Here is my Strava 2020 summary. I missed recording at least one full and two partial rides by failing to start my Garmin watch, hence the discrepancy between the mileage I recorded in my log and Strava’s numbers. Also, I have a few hikes/walks recorded in Strava, including at least two on days that I did not ride my bike.
¹”First” year since I started keeping digital records in 2001. Probably also first year ever for over 6,000 miles and possibly for over 200 rides. I was in high school when I first started riding seriously, and my rough estimate was that I was doing 4-5 rides per week at 20 miles/ride my senior year, and so around 5,000 miles total and also 200 or so rides per year. However, I was probably overestimating my consistency.
²Moved once to an apartment for a gap between selling our old house and buying another one.
³Plus two on the bike frame, for four total.
Rearranging bookshelf
Today our family went through the bookshelf in our den, removing books that we no longer wanted to keep. Several of the shelves were two-deep, and there was a lot of clutter–books that either had never been read or would never be read again. The initial process was to take everything off the shelf and replace only those we wanted to keep, so there was initially a lot of disorganization: nonfiction by fiction, pop fiction by classics, etc. Our kids, Katie Rose and Pete, took the books they wanted, and somehow our daughter, Katie Rose, ended up with all the Carl Hiassen in her room in exchange for returning The Hobbit and Memoirs of a Geisha to the den. Earlier, however, she had also returned about 7-8 of my Calvin and Hobbes books, including the first two–Calvin and Hobbes and Something Under the Bed is Drooling, and therein lies my tale for today:
In June, 1988, Debbie and I had our first argument: Which comic strip was better?–Calvin and Hobbes or Bloom County. I argued for the former; Debbie, the latter. Calvin only debuted in 1985–even later in our local papers–while Bloom County had been around since 1980, so, to be fair, she wasn’t as familiar with Calvin and Hobbes, but she could not believe it could be better than Bloom County. Also at this point, we had only just met as counselors at a summer camp and were still a year away from dating.
Since she didn’t have ready access to the Bill Watterson oeuvre, I came back from a break between camp sessions with my copy of the eponymous first collection of Calvin and Hobbes strips and loaned it to her. While she was reading it, she accidentally creased the back cover. Her initial thought was to replace it with a new copy, but the second collection of strips, Something Under the Bed is Drooling, had recently been published, so she got that instead and gave it to me when she returned Calvin & Hobbes. I was already becoming smitten, but this display of integrity, responsibility, and clear thinking impressed me. (Also, she did not read the second book before giving it to me.)
While I liked Calvin and Hobbes better, I also did like Bloom County–my second favorite comic at the time. Which meant that our combined library had two copies of Berke Breathed’s first collection–one much the worse for wear after 32 years, which was culled today. Fortunately, Debbie’s copy is the one that survived.
As I alluded to earlier, it took another year for me to impress her sufficiently for us to start dating, but nine years after that first argument, we had Katie Rose. Around six years after that, Katie Rose became engrossed with Calvin and Hobbes–our collection had now grown to ten of Watterson’s books–and she, along with her brother, inflicted more damage on the covers and pages of the books than Debbie did on the first one. Nothing too bad, fortunately–mainly just wear and tear from reading and re-reading and re-reading until Harry Potter came along to obsess over.
Generation Gap
Joey knows him as lead singer for– |
Pete knows him as Top Gear’s ‘Star in a Reasonably Priced Car’ who owns a– |
|
Steven Tyler |
Aerosmith | Hennessey Venom |
Brian Johnson |
AC/DC | Morgan roadster |
Devil Went Down to Georgia: First Rap Song?
The first rap song I can remember is “Rapper’s Delight” from 1979, which Wikipedia and Google mostly agree with. However, after listening again to “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” and checking Wikipedia again, I think it might have a good claim on the title of first (popular) rap song:
- It was released May 21, 1979. “Rapper’s Delight” was not released for almost another four months, on September 16, 1979.
- Charlie Daniels is speaking more that singing–could be rapping.
- It features sampling–“Fire on the Mountain”, “Granny, Does Your Dog Bite?”, etc.
- Most tellingly, it has cursing on the album version that is not heard in the radio-edit version:
… I done told you once you son of a [gun] /Â I’m the best there’s ever been …
Best Pizza
The House of Pizza (that is, the “Original House of Pizza” on John C. Calhoun Drive) in Orangeburg, SC, is definitely my favorite. I’m not any kind of pizza connoisseur, but this place has consistently delivered pizza that I loved growing up: Granted, it is thus probably a sentimental favorite. It was a fixture for birthday dinners treated by my aunt and uncle when I was a teenager. It has a large Greek house salad that is good for sharing before the pizza comes. The Coke is exceptionally good (sweet–lots of syrup?). There are a lot of other interesting things on the menu (e.g., souvlaki), but every time I go I have to order a pepperoni and mushroom pizza, which I never regret: It always has lots of cheese and a thin crust. I don’t usually eat the edge of a pizza crust, but I do here. When my wife, who grew up in Orangeburg, and I return home to South Carolina, this is one of several spots we like to visit regularly.
(The others, for other posts, are Dukes BBQ by Fire Station No. 2 and Sub Station II. Also, my wife liked to get boneless chicken from the Chinese food restaurant that used to be an old Hardees across from McDonalds further south on John C Calhoun Dr. With four “must-have” meals out plus whatever my mother had planned to cook for us–hopefully fried chicken–we had to start rotating where we went when we only came down for a weekend.)
Best Fried Chicken
There are three nominees for my favorite fried chicken. In chronological order, they are as follows:
1970s – Rachel’s in Ehrhardt, SC. Â My family sometimes went there after church on Sunday when I was little. It was a family-style restaurant in a beautiful, white, old house with a wraparound gray porch. I remember in particular two things–one was once chasing a lizard around the concrete steps to that porch, and the other is the fried chicken being the highlight of any visit. I once went back to the kitchen and saw it being cooked on the stove in huge cast-iron pans. It was a long time ago, so I don’t recall what made it so good, but I do remember it was delicious.
1980s – Zach’s cafe on the campus of Wofford College, Spartanburg, SC. On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, lunch could be a tight fit for any student who had one class ending at 12:20 and another starting at 1pm. To relieve some of the pressure on the cafeteria during that lunch crunch, they started offering lunch at the small cafe across campus near the (now old) football field. One of their dishes which I tried not to miss on the days it was served was fried chicken. The chicken breasts were large, juicy, and remarkably flavorful. I wondered for a couple of decades how they got such a good flavor throughout the meat, which was good not just by the skin but well on down to the bone.
2000s – Home. When I was growing up, my mother always let each child pick what he or she wanted to eat on his or her birthday. For a while my choice was always steak, particularly when Dad started marinating them in Italian dressing before grilling them. As a teenager, quantity became more important and I switched to Mom’s spaghetti. After I moved to Boston for grad school, though, I started requesting Mom’s fried chicken. Mom had given me her old electric frypan when I moved away. I used it in our first apartments mostly for French toast, pancakes, and fried chicken. I did most of the cooking, but on my birthday, my loving wife Debbie would oblige me with fried chicken, even though she didn’t like how grease splattered all over everything, made the apartment (later, house) smell greasy, and required a lot of attention and time for turning and adjusting the temperature while it cooked in several batches. We started with my mom’s recipe, who had in turn gotten it from her mother-in-law (with the addition of garlic salt, courtesy of my grandmother’s cook). Somewhere in the 2000s, I started using brine for some pork and chicken recipes on the grill. This led to brining the turkey I roasted for Thanksgiving as well as the realization that this was probably the source of the flavor I had enjoyed in the fried chicken from Zach’s at Wofford. In addition to this leap in the flavor of the chicken, my wife also purchased a large Fry Daddy, in which she could deep-fry a whole chicken all at once, more quickly, with less splatter, and without any need for turning and temperature adjustment. Whereas before having Debbie’s Fried Chicken was a once-a-year occurrence on my birthday, now sometimes I come home from work or a bike ride to be delightfully surprised by the aroma of chicken frying–e.g., simply because chicken was on sale at the store. Between the flavor, the frequency, and the availability, I have to give the nod for the winner to DFC.
As an aside, I note that Debbie making fried chicken is certainly an exception to the “10,000-Hour Rule”. Making chicken on average only about 1.1 times for 15 years (maybe 20-30 hours) in 2006, she was definitely an expert by then.
Song titles #005 – Do’s and Don’ts
(Semi-)Consecutive excerpt of my largest playlist when sorted by song title:
Do I Do – Stevie Wonder
Do It (Let Me See You Shake) – The Bar-Kays
Do Right Woman, Do Right Man – Aretha Franklin
Do the Funky Chicken – Rufus Thomas
(Do The) Mashed Potatoes, Pt. 1 – James Brown
(Do The) Push and Pull, Pt. 1 – Rufus Thomas
Do You Love Me – The Contours
Do You Love Me/Mother Popcorn – The Blues Brothers
Do You Wanna Get Funky with Me – Peter Brown
… [i.e., Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? – Chicago; The Dog – Rufus Thomas]
Doing It To Death – James Brown
Don’t Ask Me No Questions – Lynyrd Skynyrd
Don’t Be a Dropout – James Brown
Don’t Go No Farther – Muddy Waters
Don’t Leave Me This Way – Thelma Houston
Don’t Let His Name Go Down -Â First Independent Holy Church of God-Unity-Prayer
Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight – James Taylor
Don’t Let the Green Grass Fool You – Wilson Pickett
Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying – Ray Charles
Don’t Mess with Bill – The Marvelettes
Don’t Mess with the Messer – Koko Taylor
Don’t Stop the Music – Yarbrough & Peoples
Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough – Michael Jackson
Don’t Take Your Guns to Town – Johnny Cash
Song titles #004 “Baby-Backs”
Consecutive excerpt of my largest playlist when sorted by song title:
B-A-B-Y – David Porter
Baby Be Mine – Michael Jackson
Baby Elephant Walk – Henry Mancini & His Orchestra
Baby Got Back – Sir Mix-A-Lot
Baby I Need Your Loving – The Four Tops
Baby I’m A Star – Prince & the Revolution
Baby It’s Cold Outside – Ray Charles
Baby Love – The Supremes
Baby You’re Right – James Brown
Baby, Baby Don’t Cry – Smokey Robinson & the Miracles
Baby, Come to Me – James Ingram and Patti Austin
Baby, I’m for Real – The Originals
Baby, What You Want Me to Do [Live] – Etta James
Back in Black – AC/DC
Back in My Arms Again – Diana Ross & the Supremes
Back in the Saddle – Aerosmith
Back in the U.S.A. – Chuck Berry
Back It On Up (Sho’ Ya Right) – Chuck Brown
Backfield in Motion – Mel & Tim
That’s 13 Baby’s and 6 Back’s.