Last weekend, a good meal came together.
Lindz and I hit Costco like a ton of bricks, so we had lots of food in the house. We drank a very good bottle of
pinot noir, Sanford Santa Rita Hills.
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I skewered a bunch of scallops and seasoned them with my handy-dandy Trader Joe's lemon pepper grinder. I grilled them.
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The salad you saw up there featured, in addition to roasted sweet peppers and toasted pine nuts, these marvelous little
beasties of
Lindz's creation:
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They are balls of goat cheese, coated in
panko crumbs and fried. Yep. Luxurious. Good-ass crap, as we like to say around these parts.
And now, how about a jarring transition to a different subject? I bought these shoes six or seven years ago at Carlsbad Company Stores (an outlet mall that was home to a Starbucks where I used to work):
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That's where and roughly when I made the brilliant decision to start smoking. Good times. Anyone who has spent time working for Starbucks knows that working at a mall store is a highly concentrated version of the unrewarding, hectic and demeaning experience that
typifies a regular neighborhood store. Yes, I know it's my own damned fault for working retail in the first place, but that's another story. Anyway, combine the shitty job with a couple of shitty relationships, and smoking cigarettes on your ten minute break from Busloads-of-Asian-Tourists-and-Rude-Americans-
Frappuccino-Ass-Rape starts to make sense.
These shoes are the ones that I wore running every day when I tried to get into the army (this was after 9/11 and before Vietnam II, uh, I mean the Iraq War). I failed to get the security clearance necessary to get the assignment I wanted, which probably saved my life. I was crushed at the time.
I still had these shoes when my life was saved again. I fell in love with
Lindz, and I asked her to marry me. She said yes, but it was never in doubt that she would not actually marry me until I quit smoking. So I did.
These shoes were on my feet, if I recall correctly, when I drove across the country. It's silly to attach too much sentimental value to material things, and yet I do. They were good shoes, and a lot of water has gone under the bridge since I've owned them. Today, I threw them away. I take comfort from their successors, a pair of
Merrell Moab Ventilator hiking shoes.
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Cigarette ashes will never float down upon them, and I doubt they will pound the gravel of the train tracks at Del Mar.