Texas Barbecue

We completed our end cap cleanup Wednesday.  It took longer than expected; the work was more exhausting than I had imagined possible, and we surely couldn’t have done it without son Bret’s help.  Turns out we didn’t nickname him Moose for nothing.  Now that the clearcoat is gone from the endcaps  we will have to re-polish the Airstream every winter, but each job supposedly gets easier.  What a fine word, ‘supposedly’.

 

Kat's Cradle with Sunburn (Before Polishing)
Kat’s Cradle with Sunburn (Before Polishing)
Sunburn, Up Close
Sunburn, Up Close
Shined Up in Full Sun
Shined Up in Full Sun
No Surnburn, No Faded Letters:  The Clean Look.
No Surnburn, No Faded Letters: The Clean Look.
After!  No Sunburn and No Faded Out Letters
After! No Sunburn and No Faded Out Letters
Or This?  Kinda Looks Wally Byam-ish, Huh?
Which Bumper Sticker Looks Better?  This?

 

 

Or This?  Kind of Wally Byam-ish, Huh?
Or This? Kind of Wally Byam-ish, Huh?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To celebrate our group achievement we drove to Driftwood, Texas for barbecue at The Salt Lick.  Their mottoes are “You can smell our pits for miles” and “Barbecue Like No Other”.  They serve old style hickory and oak fired ribs, brisket, and sausage with the traditional sides of cole slaw, potato salad, and baked beans.  For reasons unknown to me they cannot vend birra or vino, but you are encouraged to bring your own.  Just don’t try to smuggle in no Cokes with that ice chest:  they’s a dollar apiece and your server will bring ‘em to your table.  In other words, between barbecue and BYOB, this is my kind of place!

Chelsey, Our Server                                                                            Chelsey, Our Server

Salt Lick's Pit and Pitmaster.  Ribs and brisket are on the grill.  Sausages are up high.
Salt Lick’s Pit and Pitmaster. Ribs and brisket are on the grill. Sausages are up high.
Chopping Up the 'Cue
Chopping Up the ‘Cue

The food was wonderful.  Kat’s rib and brisket plate featured perfectly smoked meats and solid sides.  My beef sandwich, billed “Big as Texas”, came on an 8” X 8” square bun with a cup and a half of cleaver-chopped brisket and  a choice of hot or medium sauce.  Everybody’s plates were loaded to maximum capacity, and I soon realized it would have been wiser to have fasted the previous 48 hours.  But there’s Styrofoam go-boxes even way out in the country.  Kat and I later made a fine lunch off the remains of my half-eaten brisket sandwich.

 

Our Hosts, Allison and Bret
Our Hosts, Allison and Bret

The food was excellent, the company was even better, and then came the grand finale.  We all worry about our kids for so long, even after they marry and leave home.  Maybe it was those trips to the principal’s office in K-5, or speeding tickets, or internet book reviews.  We worry about their industry of choice in its down times.  We worry about all manner of things, but our kids turn out fine, probably better than we did.  I realized the time had finally come for us to stop worrying when Bret grabbed the check a tenth of a second ahead of me.  He and Allison are doing well, and don’t it gladden the heart!

 

6 thoughts on “Texas Barbecue

  1. Until I got to the second part of the story here, I thought Texas Barbecue was referring to your sunburned Airstream. 😉 🙂

    The Kat’s Cradle is looking quite spiffy. Excellent job.

    Of the two bumper stickers, I like the sleek HBDC one.

    It makes people have to stop, and think. 🙂

    Sounds like a fine time at the restaurant.

    “You can smell our pits for miles.” Hilarious. I like branding with wordplay, and a sense of humor.

    Sweet finale. 😀

    Like

    1. Mssr Moncler, tonight I am cleaning out my spam. I read some of them, and you did not ask for anything. Maybe you are, as we say over here, legit? (I caution my readers NOT to go to your website; I had to delete 200 other real spammers, but I hesitate to do so, as mistakes are made all the time by software … try the spell checker in Word. Merde!)

      My webhosting service figures you for a spammer. But your English is as good as mine, and you must correctly suspect that I can’t read a word of your website. Therefore I must caution my readers to not trust your webpage. If it’s in French or Laotian or Arabic, it’s Greek to me and most of us. I shall endeavor to keep providing you and the world excellent reads. Thanks for checking us out.

      Jackson

      Jackson

      Like

  2. Thanks, Jackson.

    FYI, when in doubt, I always run a check on these two sites to find out if a site is safe.

    http://safeweb.norton.com/

    I realize that one cannot see the actual name of a site “hidden” under a person’s name here in the comments section, but the above can help when one has the full URL.

    That’s a lot of spam. 😛

    K.

    Like

Leave a comment