December 2020
I want to take this opportunity to extend an offer to everyone: if you have any questions about your fecal matter (or anyone else's, I suppose), please don't hesitate to ask me as I recently came across this handy little tome:
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hile I am on the subject of books, you may recall that I took a class on medieval manuscripts last winter. I have returned to the subject with my latest read, Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts: Twelve Journeys into the Medieval World, by Christopher de Hamel. de Hamel is a librarian and expert on medieval manuscripts. While working at Sotheby’s, he was in their manuscript department, or whatever group there deals with codices, and is reputed to have touched more medieval books than any other human being on earth.
It's a very
interesting read. He gives an account of the library that holds each text, the
books' histories, and a look at the contents, both the words and images. It was
really neat to see photos of and learn about the Carmina Burana
manuscript. There on the page were the opening lines of "O Fortuna".
Did you know those famous lines are not original to the text and were instead
added later? I had no idea. Plus I agree with de Hamel: much of the art in the Book
of Kells is really pretty awful.
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Ahem.
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(Now to
finish off my account of my trek up north.)
It was yet
another lovely morning when I departed Mountain for Stevens Point. On my way
there I found myself driving through a town called Wittenberg which sounded
familiar but I couldn't place it. Then I saw an old delivery truck that must
have been from the 1950s with "NUESKE'S" in big friendly letters on
the side. Nueske's makes some of the best bacon I've ever stuffed into my
piehole. They smoke the meat to perfection over either applewood or cherrywood.
Just great bacon.
After about
100 miles I arrived at the home of my friends on the northeast side of Stevens
Point just before noon. It was a gorgeous, sunny day and I figured that they'd
be at work while the kids would be schooling somehow, somewhere so I parked in
their driveway and promptly removed my bicycle from the rack. The day's ride
would be the Green Circle, a bike/walking trail of 25-30 miles that goes around
the north, east, and west sides of the city and the town of Whiting to the south.
While some of the trail uses streets, it's mostly crushed and compacted rock.
The Moses Creek Trail section runs about 4 blocks away from my friends' home so it wasn't long before I was on the Green Circle. The next section of the route had a stretch that ran alongside the Plover River which made for some really nice scenery.
The paper
industry in Wisconsin has fallen on hard times as of late. A mill in Wisconsin
Rapids – about 20 miles from Point – closed over the summer putting around 900
people out of work. From what I've read, it sounds like venture capital groups
buy these companies and then shut down the mills rather than updating them for
the 21st century paper market. More on that mill's closure here.
On the other hand, the mill way up north in Park Falls reopened this year.
Anyway, it is hardly surprising that the bike trail went through some nice pine stands.
The Green
Circle goes through many parks including the Schmeeckle Reserve which is a wildlife preserve
belonging to the UW-Stevens Point. There's marshland therein and the trail goes
from gravel to boardwalks.
If memory
serves, this tower/obelisk was built in such a way as to be a home for a
particular variety of bird that I cannot recall in addition to its aesthetic duties.
I was
thoroughly impressed with the Green Circle and hope to ride it again. In
addition to the wonderful scenery, most of it is pretty level with just a few
uphill climbs. Plus, I got lost only once so it has easy navigation going for
it. Next time I'd like to detour from the trail into the city more. Hopefully I
can do so and there will be more shops, cafes, and whatnot open.
Upon
returning to my friends' house, I rang the doorbell and was greeted by my
friend Wendy. She had been home all along and was wondering where I had been. I
spent a couple days with her and husband Matt. During this time we caught up on
each other's lives as we hadn't seen one another in several years. Their kids
had grown considerably and two were now teenagers. I was happy to see that Matt
survived teaching one of them to drive.
We spent
some time touring the area's breweries and ended up at Central Waters Brewing
Company, O'sO Brewing Company, and McZ's Brew Pub. McZ's is in nearby Rosholt,
population 500 or so. A resident had gotten married that day and the town was all but deserted as basically everyone was at the reception. Nice and quiet and no wait
for a table.
Matt lived
in Germany and England after graduation where he learned the brewing trade.
Upon returning to the States, he started work at a brewpub out west and made
beer for a living for a few years. So, if I taste an off flavor in a brew, I
get the chemical formula of the culprit from him. If there's no off flavor, I
get a lecture about how well or how poorly the beer at hand conforms to
traditional style guidelines.
Stevens
Point is in Portage County which has had a large Polish-American population for ages. This
being the case, the county has various roadside shrines and crosses. I saw one
I hadn't seen before on my trip. I wasn’t driving and we didn't stop for a
photo opportunity but I recalled where it was and found it on Google Maps.
My final
stop was at the pièce de resistance of Wisconsin gustatory culture: a
supper club.
The last
time I saw either of them was in, oh, 2004 or 2005. I hadn't announced my intent to stop by ahead of time so, after being seated, I asked the waitress to relay a message to Chef Ed. Since he was
known to some of us as The Polock (he being a product of Milwaukee's south side back in the day), I asked her to tell him that a customer was
asking what he had to do to get a decent pierogi in this town.
It was
really fun to be able to chat with them again. The place was fairly busy
despite the capacity restrictions and they were short on staff so we didn't
have a long time to talk. I enjoyed my pine nut encrusted walleye and the
wonderful view. The building is on the east side of Petenwell Lake and so diners are treated to beautiful vistas of the setting sun.
Bonus photo
– food delivery robots. These deliver food from UW-Madison cafeterias to
students in the dorms.
2 comments:
It was not Miller, but Schlitz which got most of the credit for shipping beer to Chicago after the 8 October 1871 fire. Schlitz did so well; it wound up composing an entire department of bars serving its beer. To this day, you can find data on which Chicago edifices were built by Schlitz - which had the Schlitz globe logo in the cornerstone.
But on the other hand, not all Chicago breweries were destroyed by the fire. C. Seipp (now revived by Metropolitan Brwg.) was outside the burn area! (It was south. The fire spread north and west.)
Yeah, I just looked it up and it was indeed Schlitz.
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