Today we picnicked at Binghamton’s lovely Otsiningo Park, bringing Boar’s Head bologna and liverwurst, since it is one of my short-term missions in life to consume as much of these products as possible given price and availability. Since the “good bagel place,” according to my father, closed, he suggested we buy bagels early in the day at Giant. Where else, since Giant seems to have the market wrapped up in this area. Sitting on an old shower curtain that my dad has expressly for the purpose of going to the park, we ate our lunch and did the crossword puzzle in the Press & Sun-Bulletin. The bagels were not bad, but the liverwurst didn’t hurt. Dinner, oh, dinner! We went back to New York Pizzeria in Binghamton and had Buffalo wings, pizza and a chicken parmesan hero. Good Buffalo wings are in plentiful supply in these parts, and NYP cranks out some contenders. They are made to order from real chicken wing sections, so you are eating something with flavor and texture, not a sodden mess that came premade from a supplier to your plate via microwave. The chicken parmesan hero was what I had been craving. A big, juicy chicken breast cutlet — breaded and fried — on Italian bread with decent sauce and massive amounts of mozzarella on top, all toasted up together in the pizza oven. When I come to New York this is one of the things I try to get my hands on early and often. Sure, I have an allergy to tomatoes, particularly when they are concentrated, but these heroes are so damned good I don’t care.
Monthly Archives: August 2006
Sidney NY hospitality
We drove out to Masonville, New York, today to visit a friend, Tony, from the days we might have had a chance of being considered interesting or hip. In the 1980’s Tony and Steve were players in the East Village — as opposed to being players in Upstate New York and Albany, California, respectively. Tony moved “out to the country” some years ago and then, when his partner passed away, moved even further out. The directions Steve had were sketchy. Something like, “pass the blinking red light and make a left on the next block. Then it’ll be easy to find Tony’s trailer.” City slickers. Even I know there is no such thing as a block out in the woods. There are two-way winding roads, no sidewalks and very little signage. I ask, “Did he give you an idea of how far we go once we pass the light? Is it 200 feet or three miles?” No idea. After driving around for awhile, finally being accosted by a junkyard dog as we attempted to turn around by some rotting equipment in a clearing, we asked for directions at a gas station and located the correct dirt road. It was not so easy to find Tony’s trailer, however, because Tony was not the only individual on that road who thought a trailer might make a nice home. Another irritant was Steve and Matt continuously directing me to really steep and rocky driveways each time they spotted a fifth wheel. Of course, when Tony said “trailer” to me, I pictured something not quite as nice as a modular home, but something in that line. Steve and Matt, having never lived in the country, must have been picturing something else. Once we established what kind of a trailer people live in as opposed to hitch to a car and pull to a campground for the weekend, I no longer had to tempt fate with the rental car. At long last we knocked on the right fiberglass door. Tony thought we should make tracks to Sidney, six miles away, and eat. Sidney, as he explained it, is a real town with a restaurant. Several, it turns out. There is a lovely little main street with a number of business establishments and, although Sidney is part of an economically challenged area and was hard hit by the recent flood, it retains all the charm that is so typical of small towns in this part of the country. Clearly everyone knows everyone in Sidney and no one knew us. Glen “Whit” Whitaker, president of the local Chevy dealership, saw us walking by his showroom and tracked us down up the street to introduce himself and find out who we were and why we were taking pictures. We chatted for quite some time and found out that his family started the dealership in 1912 selling buggies. Nice man. Lunch was comfort food — good and inexpensive — served up at Trackside Dining. I had a what was called a cold plate, with ham and turkey slices and chicken and tuna salads over iceberg lettuce. The sliced meats were real, not processed, and the salads were chunky. The only downside was the Miracle Whip used in the salads. I enjoyed the salad plate, and it reminded me of the combo plates I used to have with Mutti and Tante Margaret in the Gertz department store restaurant in Flushing, Queens, when I was just a little chowhound in the 1960’s. They would give you a scoop each of shrimp, tuna and chicken salads in tomato cups and rim the plate with toast points. The restaurant was really a glorified lunch counter, and would become almost overcrowded with white-gloved women shoppers by early afternoon. Chicken salad always makes me remember that.
Tour of Binghamton plus Lupo’s
Steven, Matt and I took a self-guided tour of downtown Binghamton, snapping pictures of some of the interesting buildings. We also happened upon the Binghamton Walk of Fame. I put together a separate photo album, but I’ll include the attractive Perry Building here in the blog, used in the film Liebestraum. Not the best movie of all time, but interesting in terms of being filmed in Bingoland and for its creepy feel.
The only early-in-the-day food related note, other than the usual trip to Denny’s for coffee, involved some overripe peaches purchased at the farmer’s market. They got mushy sitting in the hot car, but weren’t such great shakes to begin with. What’s with the lousy peaches this year?
Steven wanted spiedies for dinner, so my dad said, “Go to Lupo’s. They’re crazy with this Lupo’s stuff around here. They’re the really famous ones.” OK, well, sold. We drove over the Chenango River to 6 West Water Street and ordered up. Steve and Matt both got large pork spiedie subs and I the large Italian. It’s a casual place plastered with posters of spiedie fests gone by.
Lupo’s lighting is almost fluorescent, so no matter what time it is it feels like 3 a.m., you’re drunk, and you wandered over to eat your way sober before heading home to bed. The subs were good, though – particularly mine. Matt was so enamored of my sandwich that I thought his eyes were going to drill holes into it. I finally handed him some cash and suggested he get his own and to leave me in peace, which he happily did. Lupo’s does turn out a moist pork spiedie, which is not without merit given how easy it is to overcook pork loin, so don’t be misled by all this talk about the Italian subs. I almost forgot about the salt potatoes! We ordered something called “salt potatoes” but did not know what they were. Matthew and I had seen these advertised at the spiedie fest, in fact. They turned out to be small potatoes in their jackets, boiled or possibly steamed with plenty of salt, and then rolled in lots of butter. In Germany there is a potato dish called salt potatoes (Salzkartoffel), but it is nothing like this. I will have to do a little research as said taters were quite salty and savory from skin to center.
WTC movie stunk, we thought, but TastyKakes were good
First we went to that nasty-wasty Lourdes Oncology unit for my dad’s blood work. Then it was on to the movies to see World Trade Center. Matthew liked it, my dad and Steve couldn’t stand it, and I thought it wasn’t worth any discussion one way or the other — too sappy and manipulative. The events are moving enough; Hollywood needn’t have hit us over the head with a sledge hammer. We three moved back to Motel 6 and were glad of it. We made sure to transport our food stash, which had a goodly supply of TastyKakes, something hard to come by for us.
Park Diner in Binghamton
Hooray! Steven arrived in Binghamton today to spend a week with us. The first place he wanted to hit was a diner, so we took him to the Park, at 119 Conklin Avenue, right on the water. This is somewhat of an upscale diner, with floor to ceiling windows that look out onto the Susquehanna river. It was late, so there were slim pickens, but Steven ordered the chopped steak with onions and I had a cheese omelet with home fries. Matt chose the fried fish special. The standout: the home fries. They were sublime, all brown and crispy with bits of caramelized onion. If you don’t know what to order at a diner, the breakfast is usually a good bet. The one annoyance was the ladies’ room – which was a single stall affair! For such a huge place this is crazy. Maybe there are additional rest rooms elsewhere, but I could not find them.