Don’t Worry. I’m injured.

I can’t believe this. I only send that e-mail out to 20 or so people and two people replied yesterday that they were disappointed that I wasn’t injured!

You folks are sick. I won’t even tell you one of them was my mother. Sick, I tell you.

I mean, I do have plantar fasciitis, so I am limping around today. Six blocks was just this side of crazy for an old cripple like me. If, someday, I could extract that plastic insert in my shoe and melt it in the backyard like my old Star Wars action figures, I’d be the happiest man on Earth.

But, I want to make you all happy, so I’m bringing you a tale of woe.

Well, I’ve told this story once before, but it never got captured on the website (http://timkretschmann.blogspot.com)so I thought I would get after it. And German Fest is right around the corner, and that’s usually a good opportunity for me to be completely injured.

A couple of years at German Fest, I cooked Spanferkel. For the three of you that read this outside Milwaukee or without a German background, spanferkel is roast pig. Generally done on a spit. Not spit on. On a spit. C’mon, people, work with me.

Anyway, one year, the brain trust at German Fest decides to make a new menu selection: the Spanferkel Sandwich. This, ladies and gentlemen, is a roast HAM SANDWICH! That people were willing to shell out $6 for a bun with roast ham on it continues to mystify me. But people do what they do.

I was given an actual grill rig. A carousel with 6 trays rotated within it. Four removable drawers were along the bottom. You could fill these drawers with charcoal and a grate kept the coal from being from top to bottom. This kept air flow and maximum heat. We would get a BLUE FLAME on that coal fairly often. And blue flame is no joke.

A similar grating system was on each tray so the oil and grease would collect in the bottom of each tray and keep that really exciting ham out of that lard. Oh, yummy.

They still sell this by the way. I suggest the Rollbraten. I suggest the Schnitzel. I suggest if you want a Spanferkel Sandwich to buy $6 of ham, grill it and you’ll have 20 sandwiches for what this thing is. It tastes fine, mind you, but I just don’t get it when we have such good food.

Don’t believe there’s good food? Check out the previous post and my bouts with weight.

I digress.

So I’m shoveling this nasty charcoal into the drawers. And it’s heavy and filthy. It’s that charcoal that looks like wood–not the nice chemically treated briquettes. I get that into the drawer, start the fire and let it begin to cook. I then wash up (I would wash up like thirty times as I went between meat prep and shoveling coal. Necessary evil, I suppose.) and I would start to cut the slabs of meat. Everyone told me to cut “with the grain of the meat.”

I went with the “perpendicular is good enough” approach. Grain of the meat, my hind end. You go look for a butcher you want that crap. I cut the meat in half. There you go. Don’t like it? Hire a butcher.

I was so tough when I did this because I had a really big, sharp knife. By the end of the day, it would be as dull as a rerun of “Night Court” without John Larroquette and my hands would have grooves from where I applied pressure to chop the meat.

I’d place the meat on the trays and it would cook for approximately one hour. Halfway through, I would turn the meat over, so a nice grating pattern would grace both sides. Didn’t really need to, I suppose, since the meat would be sliced deli style afterwards, but I thought it cooked more thoroughly that way.


When a load was done, I’d take the meat off the grate and the grease would bubble away in the bottom of each tray. I’d take the meat in, shovel new coal into the drawers, and start the process over. After stoking the fire, I went inside to wash up and I came back to this.

The grease had caught fire.

I’ve never encountered a grease fire before and this baby was hot!

I was going to wait a while to see what happens, but it takes a long time to get a hot fire going and I needed at least one more load for the day.


So I commence to thinking. This is where things always go REALLY, REALLY wrong.

I really need to get going, so I decide to go over and take a look at things. Only a little flame spilling out the side. What I really ought to do is open the cover and take a good look.

At first, it was sort of surreal. A little flame danced on each rotating tray in the grease. I thought, well, that ain’t so bad. I’ll just take these out, restock and let that fire cook it. Maybe we’ll get a load in forty-five minutes this time. I’d have to put the little tray fires out, I suppose.

So I grabbed a pail and went inside.

Filled the pail with water.

Went outside.

Poured the water.

Stepped back and watched flames rise up with a mighty whoosh!

Slammed cover back down.

Opened cover up to take another look:


Okay. Not good.

I can tell. I can tell it is not good because a crowd is forming. Someone said, “You did not put water on a grease fire, did you?”

Was that wrong? How the heck was I supposed to know? Not a lot of fires over in my cube at work. Grease, electrical, paper–never had many fires over there. Now I’m a fireman? Not bloody likely.

My mother was so concerned when she saw this, her natural instincts went into action. She grabbed the camera and took these pictures here.

I wasn’t terribly injured but I did eat some smoke. The fireman on the German Fest grounds came in and blanketed the grill with so much foam that a fire would never start in the grill again. Well, until it had a through washing. I remember people being critical of the firemen foaming the heck out of it, because it was, afterall, a little fire. I always supported their choice since I knew had the grill been even slightly recoverable, we would have thrown another load in and cooked away. This way, we had to pressure wash the whole thing.

I should mention that German Fest volunteers on the whole are better at cooking than me. Afterall, not everyone is . . .

Captain
Catastrophe

The Captain Catastrophe Diet Plan

It’s been a while. So I’ll keep it short. Captain Catastrophe has been busy. My radio show keeps getting interviews with really exciting guests, German Fest is celebrating 25 years, and I spend hours every night working on the radio show website. (Not the Captain Catastrophe one, which you can visit for past stories at : http://timkretschmann.blogspot.com/ –Hey, I’m adding new people all the time, so this is the best way to catch up.)

Anyway, as you know, I’m still not riding my bicycle because of the hideous implications—and by that I mean the very near death experiences the last times I went out. So tonight, with that wonderful 80 degree weather, I decided to take a walk.

Most people engage in exercise to keep their weight in check. Well, I checked my weight and I’m plenty heavy. I’m not trying to lose weight anymore; that hasn’t been working. My new goal is to grow seven inches. I figure that would proportion the weight a little better. Maybe eight.

So, I leave the house—and computer—behind and go out the back door. I go out the back door because the front door is perpetually locked in position this time of year. The wood swells and it tightens to the point that should you ever manage to open the thing with anything short of a blast of dynamite, you sure wouldn’t get the darn thing closed again.

Who needs deadbolts?

I decided to go on an errand my maid had sent me on. Apparently, I was out of Soft Scrub. I can hardly imagine why. That bottle lasted me darn near seven years with nary a complaint, and now I have to get ANOTHER one? What is she doing with the stuff anyway?

So I start walking and I go past the house with the gigantic dog. Could be a doberman. Might be a dragon. Can’t tell, but it makes a heck of a noise behind the eight foot tall tight picket fence around their yard. And it scares me half to death. See, dogs love to eat German boys. Want to know why?

Taste like pork. At least, that’s what someone told some of the earliest dogs. And dogs are real gullible. Everyone knows that Germans really taste like a spinach/cauliflower dip with a dollop of sour cream, but like I say, dogs are real gullible.

I have a theory that the 1970’s Energy Crisis was simply the panicked conversations of Collies and Golden Retrievers. Y2K bug smells of the Dachshunds and Irish Setters. That has a lot to do with how much time Setters set in front of the computer. They still love to play Pac Man, even though we all know Asteroids is the better game.

I digress.

I get to the grocery store and there’s Jerry from work. Eight o’clock at night and he’s wearing a three piece suit. He just came out of a meeting at an office building nearby. He commenced to tell me about Bruno (that’s another guy at work) and his new diet.

Understand now: Bruno always has a new diet. I’ve known him like three years and he has to have been on two dozen diets by now. He’s a dieting machine. He gets on the diet. Loses 10-12 pounds. Decides to celebrate his success at DiMarini’s or Mama Mia’s or Buca’s or something like that. Return to the start. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.

I really think I may be on the right track. Much better to grown the seven inches. Or eight.