20081026

Where Real Men Eat: Cattlesmen’s Café



A faint hum of a neon sign fills the street as we emerge from a cab into the crisp fall night. Low two story turn on the century brick buildings proclaim the wares of the frontier from beneath deep shadows. Faded traces of advertizing clinging to brick walls whisper “western wear” and “cattle auction” as the brisk cold wind has driven every living creature from the wide streets seeking warmth as we move toward the door.

An unpretentious blond brick and plate glass exterior is covered by a simple awning awash in an eerie red glow providing a niche where the scent of searing red meat lingers before being escorted away by a blast of bitter wind. Reaching for the full length plate grass door I grab the longhorn of a silver steer head which marks the entrance of an dining institution which has served cattlemen, drovers, ranchers, cowboys and brokers since 1910.

Food critic Michael Stern noted “Surrounded by the largest livestock trading center on earth, Cattlemen’s is the consummate western steak house. The original dining area maintains its old lunch counter, where brokers, haulers, and buyers come for breakfast of steak or brains and eggs starting at six a.m. In the South Dining Room, which was added in the 1950s, there are spacious upholstered booths; one entire wall features an immense, illuminated panoramic transparency of a herd of Black Angus cattle with two men on horseback watching over them. Curiously, the mounted cowherds are not dressed in buckaroo attire. They wear suits and ties, apparently to distinguish them from common cowboys who work for wages. These gents are cattle ranchers who can afford a blue-ribbon steak.”

The dimly lit dining room is filled with dark mahogany walls and booths covered in white linen tablecloths as black and white sketched portraits of famous visitors festoon the walls. A drone of subdued conversation drift across the dining room as worn cowboy hats slowly hover above the high back booths as we are escorted to our own booth in the back dining room. Looking over the menu the focus is clear, red meat steaks and burgers supplemented with simple country cooking. Feeling the part I order bourbon which is delivered in an oversized simple glass tumbler sufficient to knock any cowboy off their horse. Apparently during prohibition the restaurant was well known for home-brewed “liquid delights” which could be enjoyed on premise or taken home in a simple brown bag.

The colorful history of the café is as rich as its customers. As the story goes “In 1945, Cattlemen's was owned by Hank Fry, a gambler of sorts. In a smoke-filled room at the old Biltmore Hotel in downtown Oklahoma City, Fry was running out of luck and money in dice game attended by a local rancher, Mr. Gene Wade. Fry put up Cattlemen's as the pot if Wade could roll a 'hard six,' otherwise known as two 3s. Wade put up his life savings, which was a sizable amount of money. With one roll of the dice, Gene Wade was in the restaurant business. The '33' brand on the wall of Cattlemen's Hereford Room became a well-known symbol of Wade's good fortune.”

As a culinary explorer I am seldom intimidated by any menu entry I stumble across. I even seek out the most unusual food offerings to expand my knowledge of cuisine, to educate the palette so to speak. I was somewhat surprised and a little unprepared to discover a delicacy on such a common county menu. I read the description a second time to make sure I understood the exact composition of “lamb fries”. As Michael Sterns explains it, “Lamb fries are testicles that are sliced, breaded, and deep fried. Gonads are a highly-regarded delicacy in much of the West; when young livestock is castrated on the range, it is traditional for cowboys to fry their harvest as a treat at the end of the day. Cattlemen’s lamb fries are served as an appetizer: a mound of them on a plate with a bowl of cocktail sauce for dipping and a half a lemon to squeeze on top. They are earthy-tasting inside their golden crust, the exquisite organ meat quivery and moist, with nut-sweet savor.”

Approaching the bottom of my tankard of bourbon my courage is welling wondering what this rare and traditional delicacy would actually taste like. In a moment of liquor induced madness I ask the waiter for an order of lamb fries looking closely to detect any indication of a smile or acknowledgement that the menu item is really an inside joke making city slickers eat gonads. As soon as the words pass my lips I realize the dilemma I had just created for myself. I stare blankly at the waiter looking like one of those moon-pie faced cattle just before being hauled off to the stockyard for execution. Sensing that our conversation is not finished my young waiter stands calmly waiting for my next request. For what seems like an eternity I finally decide of the exact phasing for my next question. “What type of wine would you recommend with the testicles?” Even as the words break the silence of the moment I realize that the discussion has just entered a new territory of which I had never experienced. Fearing that my young server would be at a loss to provide an adequate wine pairing with it then degrading into a public group discussion at the table with the restaurant sommelier, I decide on a heavy dark cabernet that would be robust enough to erase any evidence of testicles from my palette.



As the waiter heads to the kitchen I ask for another tankard of bourbon to accompany my red wine. The table conversation revolves around the anticipated dish. Halfway through the second bourbon tankard the lamb fries arrives mounted high on the simple white plate. We all stare at the plate for a while before lifting a golden brown morsel to our lips. The great secret of county cooking is that you can eat anything if it is covered with enough breading and deep fried long enough, as was the case with the lamb fries. My overriding opinion after finishing the last of the testicles was “been there, got the tee shirt, no reason to go back”.

As we straggle though the main dining room in a bourbon fog, I nod at a few of the remaining cowboys seated at the big mahogany booths knowing that I had the balls to eat balls where real men eat.

20081011

Capitulation of Excess

“One watches them on the seashore, all the people, and there is something pathetic, almost wistful in them, as if they wished their lives did not add up to this scaly nullity of possession, but as if they could not escape. It is a dragon that has devoured us all: these obscene, scaly houses, this insatiable struggle and desire to possess, to possess always and in spite of everything, this need to be an owner, lest one be owned. It is too hideous and nauseating. Owners and owned, they are like the two sides of a ghastly disease. One feels a sort of madness come over one, as if the world had become hell. But it is only superimposed: it is only a temporary disease. It can be cleaned away”.

D. H. Lawrence (1885 – 1930)

A small voice awoke me from a deep trance only to realize that I have not recorded my thoughts for far too long. At the point where you are convinced that it is impossible to travel more than what you are, you allow the world to crank it up another notch. The opportunities to speak and convey a message of hope, a solution to the madness, a future of balance are endless. As a result I attempt to reach every eager ear willing to listen. From Charlotte to Tampa to Toronto to Philadelphia to Seattle to Baton Rouge to Vancouver, I travel in an endless march with a sense of urgency for our time to prevent the tipping point is limited.

We have begun to enter the dark ages, a period of regression from an era of excess and greed. As a small boy I watched my father commute each morning to Wall Street and learned the arcane language of the stock market. As a system once entirely devoted to raising capital for an expanding economy, it has recently digressed into a manipulated arena of speculation and gambling. Without emotion I witnessed the total collapse of the system that provided my father a career for over forty years. My father would not recognize Wall Street today, with the bodies of power brokers and market makers smoldering in the flames of a conflagration unimagined. Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns were once the powerful barbarians at the gate, the piranhas that would strip a company of its flesh, discards its bones in the gutter. I had to admit some sense of retribution when the piranhas turned on the mighty Wall Street elite and erased billions of dollars of equity in a matter of weeks. The poor stockholders who reaped the rewards of years of greed and plunder cried for the government to protect them from their own imprudence. I do not weep over their loss, for they were a parasite feeding on the sweat equity of Main Street.

Where we not warned there will be blood? All of these troubles are attributable to the failure to exercise reasonable prudence. Why should I be responsible for paying to guarantee the sins of others? It’s ironic that the financial conservatives, who proclaim the loudest that a free market is essential to our way of life, are the first to beg for intervention from the government. I have no sympathy for the greed that motivated the couple to buy a house they could not afford. I have no sympathy for the banker that made the toxic loan in hopes of unloading it within 30 days. Even our sub-prime market became drunk with profits and greet. Staring into an abyss we may never see again the world we have become so fond of.

This small financial event is likely to be obscured by a global cataclysm of monumental proportions if we continue to fund our lifestyle on fossil fuels. Skeptics surround us chanting in hopes of convincing us to destroy more of our planet in search of the opium of commerce. They ignore the impending death of the fossil fuel economy with righteous indignation while the slogan “drill baby drill” is repeated as a bible quote. As climate change is advancing with mythological speed many sit idle in their comfortable live of luxury assuming that it was just some 10,000 researches have gotten it wrong. The threat of climate refugees will number in the millions if not billions. The global economy is in jeopardy of total collapse, just look at one somewhat minor weather event called Katrina. It turned the gulf coast into a third world country. A total break down of the tenuous and fragile concept of social order. We need to consider our options carefully and with a great sense of urgency. We have reached the capitulation of excess.


“One of the weaknesses of our age is our apparent inability to distinguish our need from our greed.”

Author Unknown

“If the world should blow itself up, the last audible voice would be that of an expert saying it can't be done.”

Peter Ustinov (1921 - 2004)