| Some things we learned about getting dinner on Christmas Day. 1. All fast food places are closed (as I think they should be; they work hard enough on regular days, why take away their holiday), 2. All Bob Evans', Perkins', Applebee's, Frisch's Big Boy's, Golden Corral's, La Rosa's, Steak & Shake's, and Texas Roadhouse's are closed (those are the restaurants within one to two miles from here. 3. Too many bars are still open. 4. The roller rink is open. 5. The movie theaters are closed. 6. Meijer and Kroger are closed. 7. Gas stations are open. I told Bill that if we couldn't find anything else we could go to a gas station and get the cuisine there (ha ha). 6. All the Chinese places are open, of course, but we had Chinese food on Christmas Eve after the UU service that we helped accompany. 7. And, ta da, what eateries are open are Gold Star Chili, Waffle House (and it was crowded), and The Spinning Fork (a local Italian icon in Fairfield that is a nice and inviting sit-down place to enjoy a full dinner). And that's where we stopped.
The parking lot was fairly full but it wasn't overcrowded inside. It was a very pleasant surprise to come across. We were grateful that we didn't have to succumb to going to Waffle House. It makes me wonder how many other restaurants may start staying open because there is quite a business out there to draw in. There are people who are traveling, or people who couldn't make Christmas dinner for some reason or other, or people with no families or friends to spend the evening meal with or the whole day with, or people who had to work at the bars or gas stations and didn't have time to make a meal or were too tired to make one once they got off work, or people who have unexpected company and not enough food at home to go around. There are lots of reasons that people will go out and cruise the streets on Christmas night to try find a meal they don't fix themselves. I had planned to make lasagna for dinner for everyone (as I mentioned in yesterday's entry) but I got out to the kitchen too late to make it in time for the young ones. They were too hungry to wait. So, Todd put some pasta on to boil and made a quick pasta for all of them. Thus, that is why Bill and I headed out the door in search of hopefully finding an acceptable, to us, place to eat.
We never go all out with lights on the house. The Muckheads put colored icicle lights on the house the past two years. They didn't put them up this year. When Bill heard I was going to weave a string of big lights around the railing, he took it upon himself to do it instead. Wah... I have this large candle light that I always hang up in our bedroom window, or the largest window in the house, and it went up again thanks to Bill. And the last touch were three twinkling snowmen on posts that I put by the sidewalk that leads to the porch. Not fancy but welcoming to us when we come home. Okay, I must do it. Bill wrote this poem last night on his blog but I'm going to put it up here, too. He is known as The Grinch or Scrooge around here. Xmas Wrapup'Twas the night after Christmas and all through the dayThere were signs that the children had done more than play. Of the living room rug we had long since lost sight As its burden of paper grew, morning till night. And the ribbons and bows that had graced every gift Lay scattered and splattered, too many to lift, And to tell who gave what we were no longer certain Except when a label popped out from a curtain. To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall There was plastic and paper and boxes and all. With his motions impeded by oceans of plastic He no sooner had vowed not to do it himself, It was good while it lasted, but far from complete, |