Tag Archives: pizza

Thanksgiving Dinner

It’s that day when I sit around and do nothing except feast on carbs and watch football. The league has pitted teams I don’t care about. It seems like they do every year. This time around, it’s two teams with a losing record who suck. But because they’re teams in large markets, the league expects the largest audience to watch. Maybe they’re right, but it doesn’t make for watchable football. They should’ve known these teams would be bad before the season started.

Anyway, my parents understand I don’t like turkey because it’s bland. I’ve never liked turkey since I was a boy. The only time I might enjoy it is for leftovers when I can make a sandwich. My mother, who would keep pounds of turkey meat after Thanksgiving dinner, would have a dozen or so everything bagels to make turkey sandwiches. I used to eat them with lettuce, tomato, pickles, and mayonnaise, enough ingredients to mask the turkey. I would stick a sliver of meat into the sandwiches enough to make it non-vegetarian. But we won’t this year because we’re going out to eat at a restaurant that’ll serve a three-course meal, and it’ll offer several other options than turkey. Whatever I order will taste better.

I have different taste buds from my parents. When it comes to pizza, consider me a snob. I used to live in LA, where several pseudo-New York-style pizzerias coexisted. In case you don’t know already, New York style is thin crust, and they tend to burn the mozzarella enough to form brown spots all over it. My parents aren’t too familiar. They’ve lived in the suburbs for most of their adult lives. New York style is naturally more urban. I can tell when I drive through the suburbs where I live. Mostly corporate pizza chains are the options around here. Some such places try to mimic the style but don’t come close.

My parents wanted to order pizza a few months ago on Sunday when we watched football. There aren’t many places around here for quality pizza unless there’s a mom-and-pop that I don’t know about. I suggested my favorite corporate pizza chain.

My dad went to order from his iPad and struggled with the website. It took him close to a half hour to get to the order page. We had to help him out.

“Seventy dollars for two pizzas?” he said. “Are you kidding me?”

That was after all the delivery fees.

“No way,” he said. “We’re ordering from somewhere else.”

“Where?” I said.

“From our regular place. I’ll pick it up.”

Their regular place was a grocery store, not just any grocery store, but one that offered food at a cheaper price. I was skeptical but more peeved that they wanted to order from a place that wasn’t known for its pizza, let alone a grocery store. My pizza snobbery made me throw a fit, but I stayed polite and kept it internal. They ordered from there, and my dad went to pick it up.

He returned with a pizza without any pizza sauce but a garlic ranch sauce. The pizza wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t good either. I was on the fence about it and still wished we would’ve ordered from the corporate pizza chain. As corporate as it was, it still would’ve tasted better than the pizza from the grocery store. I don’t trust grocery stores when it comes to a deli or pizza in this case. But they continue to order from there and say it’s their favorite pizza. I just don’t understand.

But I gotta hand it to them. They reserved a table at a nice restaurant tonight. I’m sure it’ll be better than plain old turkey in which I would’ve smothered in gravy. It used to be all about everything but the turkey on Thanksgiving–the yams, the stuffing, the mashed potatoes, the pumpkin pie. I used to sit with my extended family, and we would play Trivial Pursuit later after we’d stuffed ourselves with tryptophan and pull our names out of a hat to see who would buy whom a Christmas present on a fifty-dollar budget. Those days are gone. My parents live hundreds of miles from the rest of that side of the family. Thanksgiving dinner isn’t the same with only three people, so we might as well go out to eat.

An Average Sunday

My father sat in his kitchen, and we talked about football because we were going to spend all day watching games on TV. Sadly he got the names wrong of the football players and the teams as well.

“Who’s Baltimore playing?” he asked.

I’d told him about five minutes ago. I almost yelled at him.

“They’re playing the Raiders, Dad. I thought I told you five minutes ago.”

“That’s right,” he said.

The conversation went on, and he kept getting people’s names wrong. I thought about looking up dementia on the internet, but all that would’ve done was make me more worried. I should’ve learned my lesson after all those years of trying to diagnose myself after looking up diseases online, which was never a good idea for a hypochondriac like me, and that was what I wanted to do for my father.

We sat together in the living room and watched the games. He kept getting the players’ names wrong on the television before he went and picked up pizza.

“Where’s it from?” I asked. I was hoping Domino’s at least.

“It’s from WinCo,” he said.

“WinCo? Isn’t that like a grocery store for poor people?” I couldn’t imagine the pizza tasting any good.

“We order from there all the time,” he said.

What was with my parents to where they would order pizza from a place like that? Pizza, which I hold sacred to me, has to come from a reputable place. When I used to live in Los Angeles, there were great pizza places abound. A New Yorker would argue with me and say there were hardly any good pizza restaurants in that city. But a New Yorker could be snobbish about pizza anyway. Don’t ever mention pineapples when they’re around. Since I don’t hold Coachella Valley as a pizza mecca, I gave up and said, “Okay, we can order from there.” They may as well have ordered from Walmart if Walmart served pizza, which they don’t, but that was the regard I held for WinCo. I’ve never been inside one, but I can only imagine something different from Whole Foods.

When he went to pick up the pizza, I sat in the room with my mother, who was focusing on her iPad on the couch, and I asked her, “What’s with Dad? I know I asked you before about his cognitive functioning.”

And she said, “We’re both losing our minds. You’ll have to watch us because we’re forgetting things more often. Both of us worry about dementia. That’s why I do these crossword puzzles all the time, and your dad spends all day looking up ancestors online to keep his mind going. He doesn’t even bother helping with your financial future because he’s afraid he’ll make mistakes. We don’t have too much to worry about now, but when we don’t know how to start the car, you should be really concerned.”

I worried the time would come sooner than later. They’re knocking on the door of their eighties.

“I can’t sleep much anymore,” she said. “I was drinking cherry tart juice and chamomile tea with licorice root to fall asleep. Everything helped except the licorice root was making me burn too much body fat, so my skin began to sag. I had to stop taking it because I was losing too much weight.”

Wait. Licorice root? It burns fat? What the hell? Sign me up. I ordered it on Amazon right away.

A woman using a walker rolled into the coffee shop this morning, and I thought about my mother and how eventually she’ll have to use one. She has beaten herself up after playing tennis for so many years. She fell the other day on the court. The tread on her shoes was wearing out. I worry about her playing. She’s a klutz. I love her, but she’s still a klutz, and a klutz at her age is playing with fire on the tennis court. To think she’ll have to give up her favorite love someday depresses me. I dwelled over that when she had back surgery six years ago, when she was in the hospital for a week. I had a rough time with her in there. I couldn’t stand to see her unconscious in a hospital bed, so I stayed away from there as much as I could and tried to enjoy the air in Venice Beach near where she stayed. After that long, I still have vivid memories of when she was there and how hard it was for me to cope. But they’re still around, and that’s all that matters. And the pizza from WinCo was actually very good.