Last night I was mesmerized into thinking of old days.
My mom scooped up everyone she recognized into her plan du
jours. From the time I introduced her to
the Burton Fire Department’s annual pancake breakfast, it was her pancake
breakfast, and we could count on it being the plan du jour some Sunday, some
March.
When my oldest daughter, Beth, went to college, it was
essentially on the same plan as I used. Once on campus, don’t go home. She
picked the same school, Case, but I never went home, and finished in three
years. She never came home, either, but she was sidetracked by working.
By her second year Beth abandoned the dorm, moved in with
her boyfriend and his five roommates. This motley crew, together with her
regulars, were herded by mom to the Burton Fire Department’s annual pancake
breakfast in 1983. For the record, mom’s regulars were the beloved cornmudgeon,
my brother, Walt, his three boys, ages twelve and down, my daughters Beth and
Shelly, Mom and me.
And, for the record, the college boys with Beth were Rich,
Jimmy, John, Tim, Fred and Pat. Pat is now our very own Pat who is married to
my dear friend Ann, who I visit in Wisconsin as often as possible. I remind Ann
I knew Pat before she did and she asks why did I not warn her. We love Pat,
too. In fact, he is a crux of this story.
College fellows, young boys and Walt being bottomless, the
all-you-can-eat servers were pretty much assembled at our table. “Table” is
misleading; we sat for many feet along several tables assembled end to end.
Eventually there was a server behind Walt, one behind Fred, one behind Pat.
They took the pancakes from runners and refilled the three afore mentioned
plates.
Age took its toll; Walt said he must back out. Fred looked
Pat dead in the eye and announced, “It’s a throw down between you and me,
friend.” Pancakes kept coming. People for tables around were involved. Sides
were chosen. Cheers went up when one took more pancakes. “Pat, Pat, Pat!” and “Fred,
Fred, Fred!” filled the hall.
Pat was cute, but Fred was cuter. Like every cool guy in ’83,
Fred's hair was long and curly and tangled. He wore the right, nerdy engineer
glasses and a week old dirty shirt. He beat Pat’s crew cut hands down,
regardless of the age of Pat’s sweat shirt. And his server passed him reject,
tiny pancakes. Pat’s server slipped the plate sized, oversized numbers. I’m
sure the Pat and Fred shouts resonated in the kitchen, too, and the chefs were discriminatory
in what went on each platter for the servers.
It went on and on and on, pancake for pancake, until Pat’s
fork crashed to his plate. His eyes were glazed. His lips murmured “I have
stomach lock.” Fred held his fork on high, and said nothing.
It was a fine day.
Hari OM
ReplyDelete...I got bloat just imagining this!!! But I also now am craving pancakes... great little reminiscence my friend! YAM xx
Went to quite a few pancake breakfasts when I was young. All the bacon, scrambled eggs and pancakes one could eat. These days, I'd settle for one perfect pancake. High rise, no brown, slightly underdone in that it is the perfect golden color.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great story! But no fair on the size differential of those pancakes!
ReplyDeleteGreat story, Joanne. 🙂
ReplyDeleteGreat memory. Well done Fred!
ReplyDeleteShe rather looks like what I would you would look like at that age.
ReplyDeleteLovely story. Precious memories.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great post. I enjoyed it. Those are fun memories.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Firehouse pancakes (along with their doughnuts) are the best and your story shows that the memories shared with friends and family are the best also.
ReplyDeleteI love this story. What a wonderful memory.
ReplyDeleteAh.......memories.So precious. Makes one wonder where those young men put all that food. One of my brothers was so skinny but he could anyone under the table. Sadly he is not so skinny any more but he had a good run, lol.
ReplyDeleteYour daughter looks so pretty in the photo.
Never heard of that term "stomach lock" before, but I can imagine finally all the starch and dough of the pancakes caught up with him. Great memories (and now I too want a pancake though haven't had one in years).
ReplyDeletebetty
My stomach hurts just reading this.
ReplyDeleteWow. I am impressed. I can eat two 7inch pancakes and that's my limit. I used to eat three.
ReplyDeleteNothing can beat an American pancake.
ReplyDeleteoh, what a hoot!
ReplyDeleteThat was an amazing story, Joanne!
ReplyDeleteI haven't had a pancake in years, but David likes to order them when he dines out for breakfast.
ReplyDelete