Piccadilly: You can’t go home again

Back when I was working at Dër Ratskeller Pizza in Sugarhouse (a southern suburb of Salt Lake) in 1974 – more about this enterprise later –  just down the street from us at 780 East 2100 South was a little brown shack called Piccadilly Fish and Chips. Periodically we’d call them up and swap food – their employees invariably got tired of fish, and ours (rarely) were in the mood for something other than pizza.

Piccadilly Fish and Chips Logo

This little restaurant, one of several in Utah at the time, had the best fish and chips I have ever found in America, hands down.  I remember that when they were open, there was a neon sign that said ‘Now Frying.” In the 60’s, there were 10 locations; as of 2008, they were all gone.  An article in the Salt Lake Tribune, dated March 19, 2008, had this to say:

Salt Lake City’s Piccadilly Fish and Chips, the last surviving restaurant of the 39-year-old chain, will close in April, owner Allan Jones said Tuesday. “The food cost has gone up, and so have taxes and wages,” said Jones. Jones purchased the restaurant at 1446 S. State St. about 19 years ago when most of the other Piccadilly locations were closing.

Piccadilly, a Utah chain, had 10 locations in the 1960s, but they started closing in the 1980s, said Jones. The most recent Piccadilly closure was the Ogden restaurant, which closed in 1991, leaving Jones with the sole Piccadilly restaurant. The restaurant closed in May 2004 after the landlords at the former location at 780 E. 2100 South planned a renovation of the property that didn’t include Piccadilly. But, Jones reopened the restaurant at its current location in December 2004.

Jones said he has had a lot of feedback from longtime customers, who say they will miss the restaurant’s homemade clam chowder, jumbo shrimp and halibut. “Every week we have people come in who say they used to go to the other locations,” said Jones.

Jones has sold the building, but did not disclose the details of the transaction.

– Brianna Lange

I was heartbroken to find out that the restaurant was gone for good; very shortly after the restaurant had closed, I got to thinking about it and wondered if it still existed anywhere. I did a search, and Street View actually showed the restaurant on State Street.

New Piccadilly

I hastened down to the address, but sadly found only this:

Former Piccadilly's Restaurant

It was the end of an era, and I had missed it by only a few short months.

One review by “spumoni” at CitySearch read like this:

What a cozy shack. Staring at the counties of England on your way in is always fun. The fish is a little soft for my taste but the batter is good and stiff. Great chips and chowder and iced tea, and always a great deal. A little heavy, but every now and then who doesn’t want their entire lunch deep-fried? … They also have halibut and shrimp if you’re not into cod; chicken and egg rolls and stuff for people not into seafood at all. Equipped with Malt Vinegar and Lemon Juice at every table, you can almost feel the sea-wind hit the dark wooden walls outside.

Seriously, their fish and chips were divine, and their clam chowder was hard to equal. Sigh… I guess if I want good fish and chips I’ll have to spring for a ticket to London.

If anyone reading this has a picture of the old shack on 2100 South or an image of their menu, please let me know – I’d love to add them here.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

[Edit: it’s really a tragedy when stores like this close down forever and their recipes are lost. People ought to post their secret formulas online, especially if they know they won’t ever be getting back into business. Just sayin’.]

The Hotline

der-fernschreiber-der-hotline

Shortly after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Kennedy White House installed a teletype hotline to be used as a direct link between the heads of Washington and Moscow. It was created on 20 June 1963, and announced to the public on 30 August of that same year.

This device was used for the first time during the 6 Day War of 1967, when Lyndon B. Johnson communicated with Soviet Premier Alexsei Kosygin. Leaders would type their messages in their native languages, and the received communications were then translated.

450px-Jimmy_Carter_Library_and_Museum_99

No, one of these was never used as part of the Kremlin hotline. This one was from the Carter era, probably part of the Defense Red Switch Network.

The teletype system was which was replaced by facsimile units in 1988. Since 2008 the Moscow–Washington hotline has been a secure computer link over which messages are exchanged by email.

The Old Wolf has spoken, and the NSA is listening.

Really Old Stuff

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This is a picture of a pottery fragment bearing what is believed to be the earliest alphabetical written text ever found in Jerusalem. See more at Sci News.com.

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Even older, the image above represents an artist’s conception of Warren Field in Scotland about 10,000 years ago, with material burning in one of several pits which comprise the world’s oldest calendar.

The world is so full of a number of things…

The Old Wolf has spoken.

Population: What’s your number?

Population

The chart above is a screen capture from this BBC website, which allows you to calculate your approximate place in humanity’s march based on your birthdate. According to the supplementary explanation,

Both numbers have been calculated using UN Population Division figures. The first is an estimate of how many people were alive on your date of birth. It is one possible value based on global population figures and estimates of growth rates over time. Data before 1950 is less accurate than figures after that date. The second number includes calculations based on the methodology of scholar Carl Haub, who estimated how many people had been alive since 50,000 B.C. His calculation has been amended by the UN to include additional points in time.

What I find intriguing is that the population of the earth was estimated at being relatively stable between 1500 and 1750, at a level of 500,000,000 people. Naturally there is no way to empirically verify population figures for that time period, but this was the best shot based on Haub’s calculations (see the link above).

Five hundred million is a number that sticks in my mind – it’s the first declaration of the Georgia Guidestones:

  1. Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.

Guidestone

The English face of the stones.

Georgia_guidestones

The stones showing the English and Russian faces.[1]

If you’ve never explored this arcane bit of Americana, it might be worth your while just to learn about them. Erected in June of 1979 by an unknown individual working under the name of R.C. Christian, the stones offer ten suggestions for the success of humanity:

  • Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
  • Guide reproduction wisely — improving fitness and diversity.
  • Unite humanity with a living new language.
  • Rule passion — faith — tradition — and all things with tempered reason.
  • Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
  • Let all nations rule internally resolving external disputes in a world court.
  • Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
  • Balance personal rights with social duties.
  • Prize truth — beauty — love — seeking harmony with the infinite.
  • Be not a cancer on the earth — Leave room for nature — Leave room for nature.

While these are evidently the ideas of a single individual or perhaps a like-minded group, there is nothing in here that I could remotely take issue with. I especially like the idea of avoiding “petty laws and useless officials.” Naturally, no one advocates culling 93% of the world’s population, but it seems like a reasonable number to allow the Earth to regenerate its resources faster than they are consumed. At the rate we’re going, humanity will collapse under the weight of its burgeoning numbers before technology is developed sufficiently to sail in and save us all. It gives one pause.

Like Kryptos, another conundrum erected for the amusement and edification of mankind, someday we may know the full story behind the Georgia guidestones… but perhaps we won’t. Whatever the case, I think they stand as an interesting monument to one man’s desire to build a better world.

The Old Wolf has spoken.


[1] One can see that the stones have been defaced by vandals, and then cleaned as well as possible. The Russian stone says “хуи вам мы хотим жить,” which appears to mean “You dicks, we want to live.” This, more than anything, stands as silent witness to the fact that we could certainly do without certain members of society. While everyone has a right to live, it is clear that as population increases, the percentage of people who fall into the edges of the bell curve increase proportionately as well.

bell_curve

 

The above bell curve is generic, and could be applied to just about any trait of society – intelligence, political spectrum, or whatnot. If we label the graph “humanity,” in the sense of how apt a person is to desire a world that works for everyone rather than just themselves, we can see that the number of jerks we have to deal with increases proportionately. Our schools would do well to balance academic education with social education.

David Letterman’s Top Ten: Golden Corral Excuses.

AJD54226, Atlanta, GA, Georgia, Golden Corral, buffet, restaurant. Image shot 2007. Exact date unknown.

In light of the Golden Corral scandal,[1] David Letterman comes up with another unbeatable Top Ten list, this time dealing with company excuses for leaving meat out by the dumpster during a health inspection. In descending order:

10.  “You say dumpster, we say dining al fresco.”
9. “Cows are out in the sun all day, what’s the difference?”
8. “This is why we’re not the Platinum Corral”
7. “We’d store food in the kitchen, but that’s where we keep the trash”
6. “Relax — the rats are keeping an eye on it”
5. “Tired of being known as the ‘sanitary’ buffet place”
4. “The flies looked hungry”
3. “Judgment impaired after eating tainted meat”
2. “The deal was: we serve $4 steaks, you don’t ask any questions”
1. “Have you seen a corral?”

Every time I see a “Golden Corral,” I can’t help but think of another restaurant prominently featured in Mark Stanley’s science fiction webcomic, “Freefall.”

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Back to Letterman, I love these Top Ten lists… they’re not all home runs, but every now and then he comes up with an eternal classic. I think my favorite of all time is

Top Ten Stores That Won’t Do Much Business This Holiday Season
November 29, 1993

10. Price Gougers
9. Burt and Loni’s Cozy Couple Shop
8. Toys “R” Defective
7. Every Item $7500
6. Crap Mart
5. The Really, Really, Really Limited
4. Hefty Lefties: The Store for Left-Handed Fat Guys
3. Gap for Bastards
2. Joey Buttafuoco’s Auto Body Shop
1. Roseanne’s Secret

Largely thanks to Mark Stanley, I was never tempted to eat at the Golden Corral in the first place; after this latest misadventure, they’re off my dining list forever.

The Old Wolf has spoken.


[1] For those interested, the fallout:

“Golden Corral franchisee Eric Holm has said that the manager who made a “bad decision” when he placed the food outside has been fired. Additionally, the video sparked a state investigation by the Division of Hotels and Restaurants. The latter sent an inspector to the Golden Corral on Monday and the restaurant passed the inspection. There were a handful of violations found that must be corrected however, the inspection report shows.” (Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Note: The article referenced links to the original video, which has since been tagged “private”. Here is a news report on the even that contains some of the most critical footage: