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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Ice Cream

(This was one of the first posts I made on here way back in winter.)

Those swollen summer nights, thick with insect buzz and firefly flashes, the stew of humid air, sitting on a splintering picnic table on the edge of the green cornfields. The nights my dad didn’t have to work, we would leave around dusk. We kept the windows rolled down. We sweat.

Longacres Dairy
“Beginning in 1920, John S Longacre would rise with the sun, milk his herd of dairy cattle by hand, and begin his daily deliveries of milk to neighboring homes in the Bally, Bechtelsville and Barto areas. Traveling by horse-drawn wagon, John would sell up to 22 quarts of raw milk daily, dipped directly from the large metal cans on the wagon. Refrigerators did not replace cold cellars until the late 1920's making it essential to have milk delivered two or three times daily.


John's son, Daniel E., followed in his father's footsteps and operated LONGACRE'S MODERN DAIRY, INC. in Washington Township along with his wife, Kathryn (Treichler), and their children (Daniel T, Newton T, Timothy T and Kathryn T) until several years before his death in 2001. John's son, Paul E., continued farming on the family farm and Daniel built the dairy on the corner of the property. The original dairy was built in 1942, with several additions added over the years. The business has seen extensive changes since John's humble beginnings -- in diversity of products as in the process, regulations, packaging and the sale and distribution of these products. Changes began as early as 1928 when the department of health ruled that only bottled milk could be sold.

Longacre's Dairy began making it's unique brand of ice cream in the 1940's which has said to be unparalleled by the competition . . . but you decide for yourself. Longacre's also introduced both hard and soft ice cream mixes some time later which is distributed to soft-serve ice cream stands, ice cream parlors and ice cream companies using hard ice cream mix to produce their own hard ice cream.

John's business was strictly a retail operation. In the 1970's retail deliveries started to diminish until they were totally stopped in the 1980's. Under Daniel's leadership, the dairy delivered to independent grocery stores, mini food marts, educational institutions and nursing homes. In addition, it expanded its product line to include ice cream, ice cream mix, fruit drinks and iced tea.

During 1996, Longacre's found it more difficult to compete with the larger dairies and at that time, decided to enter a niche market and process and package ORGANIC MILK.

In the beginning, an attempt was made to package both conventional and organic milk, but as the organic milk market grew, Longacre's sold some of the wholesale milk routes and devoted more time to the organic sales.

Longacre's originally packaged for Sunnydale Farms in Brooklyn, New York under the "Natural By Nature" label. During the next several years, Natural Dairy Products of West Grove, PA became more in charge of the organic processing because of the sale of Sunnydale Farms to Parmalat and Farmland Dairies. The "Natural By Nature" organic milk is bottled "fresh" and is not an ultra-pasteurized product. The organic milk is from the Lancaster Organic Farmers Co op.



Longacre's Modern Dairy Inc also operates a dairy bar ice cream parlor and retail outlet adjacent to the plant, and serves all-natural "homemade" (in every sense of the word) ice cream and light lunches. We also sell organic products which include milk and bi-products such as yogurt, etc. The dairy bar ice cream parlor features more than 40 flavors of hard ice cream and frozen yogurt. The "GARBAGE SUNDAE" is a combination of 10 ice cream flavors and 10 toppings and has been enjoyed by many families. The dairy bar is open year-round with shortened hours in the fall and winter months.

Longacre's Modern Dairy is still owned and operated by the third generation Longacre Family.”

http://longacresicecream.com/

The drive to Longacres from Allentown was long and it seemed interminable in the summer heat and in the throes of frozen anticipation as a child. The dairy bar was old fashioned. It still had the tiled floor and bar stool set up of a soda fountain. They had bins of penny candy. Outside, I have no idea what they are called but they had a row of those animals with springs attached to the bottom of them that sashayed back and forth when you sat on them. The placed smelled like milk and vaguely but not grossly like cows. I remember the drive back stuffed full on ice cream and sweets and barely being able to stay awake in the tamed August heat.

There are places scattered across the countryside like this around Allentown. Some have changed their names since I was a kid like the newly christened Parkland Drive In in Schnecksville. Others had lavish décor and mountains of toppings placed on the countertops like statuary in a dairy cathedral. King Kone and the Jungle Kafe in Whitehall immediately comes to mind. It sits on top of a hill that overlooks the entire three city belt of the Lehigh Valley. You can sit there with your cone of dripping soft serve and literally look into the heart of Bethlehem, Allentown and Easton.

Those summer nights provide me with many of my fondest memories of childhood. I was sick often then and being a sick kid there aren’t too many untainted memories to recollect. I was never sick on an ice cream night.

As I write this I realize that these drive ins and dairy bars may be passing into history; to be replaced by Cold Stone Creamery and Maggie Moos. I read on CSCs website that they are in the business of making people happy. That they are the sole providers of happiness inside their generic corporate caves of think-tank created ideal settings. There is no neon light to buzz with the insects on August nights just the slow drone of central air and the occasional forced singing of staff when they are tipped. It is a sad place without character and certainly not a place one should want memories made in.

I can see now the pink horizon under the yellow sky of real summer heat. I can remember my CMP or a mysterious powdery Rocky Road dripping on my pant leg and my mother chasing me with napkins. I remember the disappointment I would feel when my mother would make me have my ice cream cone served upside down in a bowl to prevent a mess. The red splintering picnic bench on the side of the cornfield was a sentinel of refuge and of pure unadulterated enjoyment.

There was no plastic. No Muzak. No central air. No forced singing. No flair. No banners advertising new items.

There was however memories to be made.

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Friday, June 12, 2009

Pa Dutch Hamburger Barbecue

Trying to determine a definition for barbecue is as difficult as trying to discover the theory of everything. Here in Pennsylvania, there has been no storied history of brisket or pulled pork. Most of what we would consider local barbecue is made from hamburger and lurks in a crock pot or Dutch Oven.

Traditionally “PA Dutch” barbecue is usually made following this recipe:

1 pound ground beef
1 medium onion (3 3/4 ounces), diced
1/2 cup (5 ounces) ketchup
1/4 cup (2 ounces) water
a pinch each of salt and pepper
2 tablespoons (1 ounce) vinegar
2 tablespoons (1 ounce) brown sugar
1 teaspoon mustard, yellow or golden
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

In a large frying pan fry the hamburger and onions until browned, stirring often. Drain off the fat. Add the other ingredients and stir until well-mixed. Simmer mixture for 20 to 30 minutes, stirring frequently. Serve hot on a bun. Yield: enough for a family of four.

I make hamburger barbecue frequently and my recipes have varied from that many times while trying to stay true to its “Dutch roots.” The great thing about the sauce is that using a little more or less of some of those ingredients can add many different regional spins to its flavor. A bit more mustard and you can get the vibe of the various mustard base barbecues in you can find in Alabama. Throw a little molasses in there, a little less vinegar, and a little liquid smoke and you can make something similar to Kansas City Barbecue.

The way I make it, I start with half an onion and three cloves of garlic:

(I bought those yesterday from a local farmer at the market for 1.25$)

Render in a pot with a bit of butter and olive oil until translucent:


Add ketchup, mustard, apple cider vinegar, Worcestershire, a dash of hot sauce, and the dry ingredients. You can adjust the ratios from that base recipe however you like. I use hot chili powder, cumin, ground mustard, dried Mexican oregano, Brown Sugar, and allspice as the dry ingredients. Again, as much or as little as you want. If you want to add any at all.


Once it is all in there make sure to salt and pepper and taste it. You can change the sauce in any flavor direction from this point one by adding more of any of the ingredients.


In a frying pan, brown two pounds of hamburger. I season the hamburger with more hot chili powder, cumin, salt and pepper.


When all the pink is gone, drain excess fat and then add the sauce.

Serve on a potato roll (the only roll if you ask me). And I recommend a couple bread and butter pickles and diced raw onions on top.


That is my twist on Pa Dutch hamburger barbecue for Friday morning because it rained yesterday and I couldn’t get out to the parks.

If you haven't seen out latest Allentown from The Ground Up update, check here. I hope you can make it out to our events.

And if you missed last night's Pool Wildlife Sanctuary Part One.

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Saturday, June 6, 2009

With a little help from my friend... 10 great Allentown Restaurants

I asked my friend Capri who writes a wonderful blog called: Nothing like the pants , to help me create a list of the top ten best places to eat in Allentown. I consider myself to be an amateur foodie but she is by all means much more of one than I. She is also a vegetarian and I am not, so she has a different and unique perspective on local eateries. Here is her list:

"Aladdin
This is hands down my favorite Allentown restaurant. The decor is just a toe over the line of "obnoxiously kitschy," but the food is fresh and delicious, and the menu is huge. The belly dancing on weekends also make this the best place for date night or a birthday party.

Syb's Deli
For a long time, this was the only place to get a real bagel in this city. Its still a great place to stop for a breakfast or brunch.

Charlie K's
Of all the pizzerias in Allentown, this is seriously not even close to the best. I don't even know if it is fair to call what they make Pizza, but the slices are cheap and tasty in a way that concerns me (I'm never sure if the cheese is real or if its some kind of approximation), and to eat it, you have to visit the Allentown Farmer's Market, one of my favorite places to shop and people watch. Definitely get a slice along with a PA Dutch (that's the brand) Birch Beer, which they have on tap.

Robata of Tokyo
I think hibachi is a little bit weird, but every once in a while I'm in the mood for Japanese food, and this is the best spot. The food is consistently good, and the service is great. If you are vegetarian, they have many dishes that are easily made vegetarian, don't hesitate to ask - they are very accommodating.

The Bay Leaf
The most underrated Allentown restaurant, possibly the most underrated in the LV. This is a restaurant often overlooked by people looking for an upscale night out, probably because it is so low-profile on Hamilton Street. The vegetarian options are limited, but everything I've ever ordered has been extremely delicious and perfectly prepared. Actually, this is the first place I ever tried tofu and liked it. Get reservations because even though it is overlooked, Allentonians with good taste still come here on a regular basis.

Kow Thai Takeout

The only Thai food that is worth the prices on the menu in the whole Lehigh Valley. Forget all of those ridiculously overpriced Thai restaurants with white linen on the table. Take your food to go and have a picnic in West Park. The papaya salad is the best I've had anywhere, and the pumpkin stir fry is pretty bangin' too.

Morgan's

Great "countryside" spot for breakfast only, as far as I'm concerned their lunch/dinner is pretty unremarkable. The breakfast menu however, includes such deliciousness as German Apple Pancakes and homemade Quiches that are quite tasty.

Asia
Overlooked pan-asian restaurant on the east side. The food is ridiculously fresh and trends towards gourmet rather than pedestrian, but the prices are reasonable. The menu is creative but not frightening, and the dining room is quiet and welcoming. A great spot for a date or dinner with a small group of friends.

Grille 3501
I wavered about putting this one on my list, partly because I think its a bit overrated and also a bit overpriced, but that said - the food is good. The vegetarian options are plentiful, especially in the appetizers and salads. There is only a "vegetarian plate" for the entree, but in my experience they never have brought me a plate of steamed vegetables and called it a meal. The food is pretty great and the dining room at Grille 3501 is surprisingly relaxed.

La Mexicana Grille

This isn't Allentown's best mexican restaurant, but its the best one for vegetarians. I highly reccommend the flautas and the veggie fajitas. Also the avocado & red onion salad with the lime dressing is outstanding. At lunch they serve a sandwich called "molletes" which I could eat every day and never tire of."


To her list, I can offer:

Wert’s Café
: Hands down best onion rings in the world and best burgers in the Valley.

Yocco’s: Well, like it wasn’t going to show up.

The Brass Rail: See above. (Steak sandwich and mini potato pancakes for the win.)

O’Brien’s Really Good Food Inc: Capri included Syb’s on her list (and it is great) but I think the best Reuben in town is actually offered here.

It is great to know that despite the ever present invasive presence of chain restaurants, that there is still some great restaurants to check out in Allentown. Another thank you to Capri for providing a great insight here today; check out her blog!

Did we miss anything readers?

I didn’t want to hit on best Chinese food or best Pizza yet. That will be another rainy day post. It is always one heck of a debate among my friends.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Chow Chow


There isn’t much left of the PA Dutch tradition that was once a major defining characteristic of the Lehigh Valley. Sure, there are a few hex signs hanging around here and there and Martin’s potato rolls are still in supermarkets; but the restaurants are gone and the Dutchies themselves are almost gone too.

There is a lesson to be learned from them and it is one we should take very seriously. The old PA Dutch society here was “green” before “green” was the hip way to be. They grew their own food, ate in season, and preserved what could not be immediately consumed or what they needed to save to survive the winter. You see, the real lesson here is in a bottle of chow-chow.

I am going to assume that the majority of you have at least encountered chow-chow at some point living here in the Valley. Just in case though, chow-chow is a mix of vegetables (normally “end of the season”) covered in a sweet and sour brine and sealed in a jar. It isn’t pickles folks, but it is preserved in the pickling tradition.

Chow-chow is perfect fodder for vegans and vegetarians and with a little willpower, very easy to make yourself. The reason it is an example of old school “greenery” is because the farmers and farmer’s wives that made this product did so to preserve whatever they could from the end of the harvest. They weren’t going to have fresh green beans or wax beans so they needed to save what they already had.

My grandmother used to buy chow-chow all the time when I was a kid so I sort of grew up eating it as well as things like apple butter (which has nothing to do with butter but is a long slow cooked version of applesauce with cider to make it velvety and dark brown).

As the Lehigh Valley moves away from the Dutchie traditions for better and for worse; there are still lessons to be learned from them. A general awakening is occurring across America during this recession about the importance of local, sustainable food and if there is one positive we as a society take away from this firestorm of financial degradation; it is that beyond the walls of corporate food exists a country of farmers that is slowly fading away and it is that country of farmers that makes us who we are.

We are not separate from the food tradition that has defined generations before us. We do however separate ourselves increasingly from the tried and true process that respects the soil, preserves the eco-system and generally makes our bodies healthier.

I say today, remember. I titled this blog that when I first had the idea to write a blog back in January. Eating locally, and in season can help change you as a person. You will learn new and exciting ways to cook and hell if nothing else, you can begin to free yourself from the plastic food of the chain restaurants and find that local culture that is so quickly evaporating.

Related Posts:
Italian Salad
Ice Cream
Swine Flu Shenanigans

And, I will be announcing a meet-up for all those interested as soon as a theater announces a showing of Food Inc.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The bam man kicks it up a notch


Emeril Lagasse has made headlines in the Lehigh Valley recently by announcing he is going to open a restaurant in the new shiny casino in Bethlehem. Local chefs were questioned by the Morning Call on what impact Mr. Lagasse’s presence was going to have on the dining scene in the Valley. As a matter of fact the arrival of Mr. Lagasse has been trumpeted across the Valley by all media outlets.

I enjoy his ridiculous TV programs and I would be lying if I said I wasn’t at least slightly excited by this news.

The real headlines were made today though. In an interview with the Morning Call, Mr.Lagasse was asked about choosing the Lehigh Valley and the factors that weighed on his decision. Turns out, the bam man liked the local agriculture and intends to use a significant amount of it in his new restaurant. That is some freaking awesome news.

Just a few posts ago I called out my readers and asked them to buy local as much as possible. Mr Lagasse is in. I’m pumped. Bam. Check out that post down there if you haven’t yet. I still would like to organize a meet-up to see Food Inc..

After the restaurant is open for a few weeks I am going to give them a call and see if I can't find out if the bam man lived up to his word.

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Sunday, May 10, 2009

Swine flu Shenanigans

So, swine flu might be blamed on industrial farms eh?

Well, are you surprised?

The terrible Dark Age practices of factory farming have been well documented at this point. There aren’t many informed Americans who don’t know what is going on behind the scenes of modern agriculture. Rivers and lakes of animal refuse brimming with hormones and steroids are commonplace in states like Kansas. The corn subsidies that have been in place since the seventies have laid waste to the “amber waves of grain” across our Midwest. Modern Americans are fatter and sicker than at any other time in our countries history.

Swine flu? I am surprised something worse hasn’t happened before.

Around the Lehigh Valley the counterculture of sustainable farming practice is growing. In Emmaus, Macungie, Easton and Allentown exists established Farmer’s Markets that serve as places for local sustainable farmers to sell their harvests. Over the summer, I will visit these markets and as many of these farms as I am able to and I will report back on this blog.

In the meantime, please go and visit them yourselves. I also encourage you to find local restaurants that serve food made by local farmers. Chain restaurants not only serve as the purveyors of factory farmed meat and produce but are so homogenized that they erode and ultimately destroy local food culture. The park logs will continue but check out this trailer in the meantime:



I would happily organize a meet-up at a theater around here that shows that film. Let me know if anyone is interested and I will post an update in a week or two. The film opens in June so there is time to get this going.

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Italian Salad

I received the delivery from Salvatore’s Pizzeria in Macungie Pennsylvania. I had ordered a salad and garlic knots. The knots were unremarkable; cooked cylinders of pizza dough doused in olive oil and a few spoonfuls of the ready minced garlic easily bought in any grocery store or supermarket. My surprise came with the salad.

1. The Dressing

No balsamic vinaigrette here. Hell, it may not have even been red wine vinegar. It was probably vegetable oil and white vinegar. It was also made with a hearty dose of dried Italian seasonings. It might have been a hoagie dressing as well.

2. The Red Onion

Sliced in that thin and circular sort of way that leaves the flesh of the vegetable wet and stringy. There was an abundance of these and with each bite they seemed to stick in my teeth more frequently.

3. The pickles and pepperoncini

Obviously just jarred and placed on the salad. The pickling brines added flavor to the aforementioned dressing.

4. The Lettuce

Shredded iceberg. Nothing more. Nothing less.

This may have been the best salad I have had in years.

This was a no pretense bullshit free salad. It was designed to distract hungry diners from the wait before their main course of pizza or spaghetti and meatballs or eggplant parmigiana arrived. It was greasy and delicious.

It is however what this salad conjured that made it so remarkable. With each bite, the old corner pizza joints lived again. I know that they are still out there. Penn Pizza on 19th Street in Allentown is an outstanding example. These places make no frills, genuine, mostly unhealthy and entirely appetizing Italian immigrant food. There menus are all but identical. Each one has a dedicated following claiming that their joint has the best pizza or the best clam sauce of the best steak sandwich. They all might be right.

These places laid the foundation for the romantic , expensive, rustic and much more sophisticated candle-lit Italian restaurants and ultimately the cloying chains of The Olive Garden, Carrabba’s Italian Grill, and Buca Di Beppo.
The corner joints have a fridge of cans and bottles of beer. No wine. There are no candles on tabletops.

They do have paper place mats with maps of Italy and pictures of The Leaning Tower of Pisa on them. They certainly have the steel carafe of glass shakers of dried Parmesan cheese, crushed red pepper and oregano.

They do have character.

I remember on Fridays (especially during Lent) going to these places and they would be packed with diners. There would be a long line from the counter with people waiting for take out and oftentimes the floor would be wet with footprints from outside. In thick Italian accents you could hear the cooks and servers yelling and working and trying to answer the phone in order to deal with the dinner rush. It would reek like garlic inside and plate after plate of pasta and bright red tomato sauce and pizza would fly by in the servers hands as the hungry eyes of waiting customers would grow wetter.

The salads came first.

They were always the same;just like the one I had from Salvatore’s last week. I didn’t expect it when I ordered it but it probably was the best salad I’ve had in years.

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Ice Cream



Those swollen summer nights, thick with insect buzz and firefly flashes, the stew of humid air, sitting on a splintering picnic table on the edge of the green cornfields. The nights my dad didn’t have to work, we would leave around dusk. We kept the windows rolled down. We sweat.

Longacres Dairy
Beginning in 1920, John S Longacre would rise with the sun, milk his herd of dairy cattle by hand, and begin his daily deliveries of milk to neighboring homes in the Bally, Bechtelsville and Barto areas. Traveling by horse-drawn wagon, John would sell up to 22 quarts of raw milk daily, dipped directly from the large metal cans on the wagon. Refrigerators did not replace cold cellars until the late 1920's making it essential to have milk delivered two or three times daily.


John's son, Daniel E., followed in his father's footsteps and operated LONGACRE'S MODERN DAIRY, INC. in Washington Township along with his wife, Kathryn (Treichler), and their children (Daniel T, Newton T, Timothy T and Kathryn T) until several years before his death in 2001. John's son, Paul E., continued farming on the family farm and Daniel built the dairy on the corner of the property. The original dairy was built in 1942, with several additions added over the years. The business has seen extensive changes since John's humble beginnings -- in diversity of products as in the process, regulations, packaging and the sale and distribution of these products. Changes began as early as 1928 when the department of health ruled that only bottled milk could be sold.

Longacre's Dairy began making it's unique brand of ice cream in the 1940's which has said to be unparalleled by the competition . . . but you decide for yourself. Longacre's also introduced both hard and soft ice cream mixes some time later which is distributed to soft-serve ice cream stands, ice cream parlors and ice cream companies using hard ice cream mix to produce their own hard ice cream.

John's business was strictly a retail operation. In the 1970's retail deliveries started to diminish until they were totally stopped in the 1980's. Under Daniel's leadership, the dairy delivered to independent grocery stores, mini food marts, educational institutions and nursing homes. In addition, it expanded its product line to include ice cream, ice cream mix, fruit drinks and iced tea.

During 1996, Longacre's found it more difficult to compete with the larger dairies and at that time, decided to enter a niche market and process and package ORGANIC MILK.

In the beginning, an attempt was made to package both conventional and organic milk, but as the organic milk market grew, Longacre's sold some of the wholesale milk routes and devoted more time to the organic sales.

Longacre's originally packaged for Sunnydale Farms in Brooklyn, New York under the "Natural By Nature" label. During the next several years, Natural Dairy Products of West Grove, PA became more in charge of the organic processing because of the sale of Sunnydale Farms to Parmalat and Farmland Dairies. The "Natural By Nature" organic milk is bottled "fresh" and is not an ultra-pasteurized product. The organic milk is from the Lancaster Organic Farmers Co op.



Longacre's Modern Dairy Inc also operates a dairy bar ice cream parlor and retail outlet adjacent to the plant, and serves all-natural "homemade" (in every sense of the word) ice cream and light lunches. We also sell organic products which include milk and bi-products such as yogurt, etc. The dairy bar ice cream parlor features more than 40 flavors of hard ice cream and frozen yogurt. The "GARBAGE SUNDAE" is a combination of 10 ice cream flavors and 10 toppings and has been enjoyed by many families. The dairy bar is open year-round with shortened hours in the fall and winter months.

Longacre's Modern Dairy is still owned and operated by the third generation Longacre Family.”


http://longacresicecream.com/

The drive to Longacres from Allentown was long and it seemed interminable in the summer heat and in the throes of frozen anticipation as a child. The dairy bar was old fashioned. It still had the tiled floor and bar stool set up of a soda fountain. They had bins of penny candy. Outside, I have no idea what they are called but they had a row of those animals with springs attached to the bottom of them that sashayed back and forth when you sat on them. The placed smelled like milk and vaguely but not grossly like cows. I remember the drive back stuffed full on ice cream and sweets and barely being able to stay awake in the tamed August heat.

There are places scattered across the countryside like this around Allentown. Some have changed their names since I was a kid like the newly christened Parkland Drive In in Schnecksville. Others had lavish décor and mountains of toppings placed on the countertops like statuary in a dairy cathedral. King Kone and the Jungle Kafe in Whitehall immediately comes to mind. It sits on top of a hill that overlooks the entire three city belt of the Lehigh Valley. You can sit there with your cone of dripping soft serve and literally look into the heart of Bethlehem, Allentown and Easton.

Those summer nights provide me with many of my fondest memories of childhood. I was sick often then and being a sick kid there aren’t too many untainted memories to recollect. I was never sick on an ice cream night.

As I write this I realize that these drive ins and dairy bars may be passing into history; to be replaced by Cold Stone Creamery and Maggie Moos. I read on CSCs website that they are in the business of making people happy. That they are the sole providers of happiness inside their generic corporate caves of think-tank created ideal settings. There is no neon light to buzz with the insects on August nights just the slow drone of central air and the occasional forced singing of staff when they are tipped. It is a sad place without character and certainly not a place one should want memories made in.

I can see now the pink horizon under the yellow sky of real summer heat. I can remember my CMP or a mysterious powdery Rocky Road dripping on my pant leg and my mother chasing me with napkins. I remember the disappointment I would feel when my mother would make me have my ice cream cone served upside down in a bowl to prevent a mess. The red splintering picnic bench on the side of the cornfield was a sentinel of refuge and of pure unadulterated enjoyment.

There was no plastic. No Muzak. No central air. No forced singing. No flair. No banners advertising new items.

There was however memories to be made.



Directions from 15th and Chew in Allentown:

View 15th and Chew to Longacre Dairy in a larger map

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