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an everyday life

an everyday life

Author Archives: Janell

A Birthday in Stills

22 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Birthday, Everyday Life

Lights, Camera, Action -  Lunch at Paseo Grill

Lights, Camera, Action - Lunch at Paseo Grill

Paseo Grill Sets the Mood & the Table

Paseo Grill Sets the Mood & the Table

A Fancy Smacy Hamburger

A Fancy Smacy Hamburger

A Slice of the Paseo Arts District

A Slice of the Paseo Arts District

A Trip to an Urban Pumpkin Wonderland

A Trip to an Urban Pumpkin Wonderland

An Adopted Pumpkin Snowman for our Front Porch

An Adopted Pumpkin Snowman for our Front Porch

An Out of this World Dinner

An Out of this World Dinner

At Hideaway Pizza -- The Gazette Headline Says it All

At Hideaway Pizza -- The Gazette Headline Says it All

Happy Hamburger to Me

22 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Birthdays, Dairy Bar in Lake Jackson, Everyday Life, Great Hamburgers, Hamburger King, Irma's Burger Shack, Jeff at the Jetties, OKC Dining Out, Oklahoma, Paseo Grill, Shawnee

I’ve no need to be coy.  Today is my fifty-fourth birthday.  And life is grand, something to celebrate everyday, whether there’s a birthday or not.

But in our family, birthdays are treated as special affairs.  Life stops to honor another year of life in one held dear.  So today, my husband is the one hitting the pause button on his ordinary week; He’s taking a day off from work to spend it with me however I choose to spend it.  Already, he’s treated me to his special scratch biscuits and later, he’s taking me out for lunch, anywhere my heart desire’s to go.  

Oh, decisions, decisions.  Where should we go?  At least, being a gal of simple tastes, I”ve no pesky decisions about what to eat.  For me, there’s nothing in the world quite like a good hamburger.  And as I pause to reflect on the great hamburgers I’ve tasted, I realize I’ve enjoyed some really fine renditions in my lifetime.

The first hamburger joint I fell in love with was the Hamburger King.  Even today, I can walk through its doors and find myself back in the land of my childhood.  But I don’t just go there to savor the nostalgia; this quaint place with quick service and retro red phones, for placing orders, really lives up to its name.  The hamburger is king here and whoever drops by to consume one is treated like royalty.  Born in the town that also gave birth to Sonic Drive-In and  Brad Pitt (Grandma Pitt is still a resident and like the good grandson he is, Brad still comes calling), the Hamburger King has been a Main Street fixture in Shawnee, Oklahoma for as long as I can remember — 1928 unless my memory fails me.  If you’re ever nearby, stop and drop and slide into one of their booths.  I do ever chance I get.

The Dairy Bar - A Blast From the Past

The Dairy Bar - Serving Up A Blast From the Past

My twenty years of Texas are anchored by two wonderful hamburger places.  The first opened its doors for business in Lake Jackson in the 1940s.  Still in business, it serves up its famous jalapeno cheeseburger and banana milkshake (with real bananas diced in the cup filled with home-made ice cream); even writing about these makes my mouth water.  Our children were raised on Dairy Bar.  In the days when both my husband and I were working and our children were not quite ready to join the world of dining out, we did a lot of takey-outey in consideration of other diners.  Dairy Bar was one of our weekly staple stops.  Even today, the girls fondly reminisce about the time they no longer had to share their steak finger basket; it says a lot that the Dairy Bar Menu is a rite of passage milestone in our family’s life.

Jeff's at the Jetties -- Watching the Shrimpboats & Dolphins

Jeff's at the Jetties -- Watching the Shrimpboats & Dolphins

The  second place was an honest-to-goodness dive.  But what it lacked in amenities it made up for in atmosphere and name:  Jeff’s at the Jetties, home of the famous Jetty Burger.  Blog_09_1022_2This hamburger joint built on stilts rested just next to the jetties — separating Surfside Beach from Quintana Beach — a water highway where shrimp boats and tug boats and big oil tankers traveled to and from the busy Port of Freeport.  With my husband’s help, if I looked close, it was easy to spot a dolphin or two trailing the wake of the shrimpboats.  And always, always, saturating the salty air, there was music streaming form the jukebox:  a little easy listening tune complements of Jimmy Buffett or the big beautiful haunting voice of Whitney Houston.  Oh and I can’t forget the hamburgers: big and juicy with some sort of secret special sauce, served with hand cut french fires in an old fashioned oblong plastic basket.  We always sat on the deck, where the heavy breeze ruffled our hair and relaxed our cares.  But unless it’s been recently resurrected, Jeff’s at the Jetties is no more; it was just one  of casualty of  Hurricane Rita in September 2005.   

The Jetties -- A Good Place to Stop, Refill Your Tank & Get Your Bearings

The Jetties -- A Good Place to Stop, Refill Your Tank & Get Your Bearings

Closer to home in the now, there’s no shortage of good hamburger places in Oklahoma City.  My favorite everyday burger is made by Irma’s Burger Shack.  And then there’s the Theta Burgers with Cheese at Johnnies.  But today, I’ve decided to go out for a fancy mushroom cheese burger at  my favorite restaurant.  After all, it’s my special day and during this phase of my life, nothing is more special than eating out at Paseo Grill.    

Happy Hamburger to You.

A Lingering Fall

21 Wednesday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Mesta Park, The Great Outdoors

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Fall Foliage, Parents

Yesterday I noticed dramatic change in the color of the Autumn trees lining the two lane highway between Norman and Tecumseh.  Last week the bright red Sumac tree caught my eye; yesterday it was the glorious orange foliage of one continuous stand of native Oak trees. In a week’s time, the sumac red had faded to a wallflower rust.  I wonder how many more weeks will pass before this vintage of Sumac will cover the earth and lull the tree to rest. 

BLOG_09-1021

Outside my Mesta Park Window

Closer to home, our Chinese Pistache tree is turning orange, from the inside out.  And the Shumard Red Oak is also beginning to ripen on its outer tips.  But, as it does every year, the massive American Elm just across the street begins the Fall leaf parade on our street.  To my surprise, last month it began dropping its yellow ticker tape leaves with autumn’s arrival.  Yet still today, it’s covered with more yellow leaves to drop.  I guess this American Elm likes to linger rather than bid a quick goodbye.  

Not so with the Sycamores, which cover the width and length of our old neighborhood.  Here and there, the tall Sycamores with their huge leaves are beginning to drop in mass.  It’s almost like the leaves are green one day, and brown on the ground the next.  The Sycamores remind me a lot of the autumn behavior of deciduous trees  in south Texas — it’s a hurry up and be done with it — Fall in one fell swoop — an Autumn in a mad hatter rush like the Alice in Wonderland hare who is late for an important date. 

BLOG_09-1021_2

The Sycamore begins piling its leaves

I’m glad Oklahoma trees linger through the days of autumn before whispering their sweet goodnights.  Just as I’m glad that Daddy is taking time to linger before falling into his winter sleep.  Yesterday Daddy surprised me by pulling my head down close to his ear and whispering ever so slow and sure his ….I…..love….you.

No two ways about it, whether tree or human, lingering Falls produce priceless gifts to the senses.

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© Janell A West and An Everyday Life, January 2009 to Current Date. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

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