On our way back from the mountain, Anne and I made a series of mistakes, culminating in disaster. I wanted to stop in the wee town of Elbe, to take pictures of the big spooky train and Hobo Inn for uncledisgusting. This was mistake number one.
It was around this time that we both realized that we were very, very, very hungry, and hey! One of the trains is a diner train! Mistake number two.
When we approached the door, there was a sign that enthusiastically proclaimed they had the best food on the mountain. There were some important things that we didn’t consider. Best compared to what? Trashdiving behind the visitor center? Can you trust anything written on a impermanent surface such as a whiteboard? Not asking these questions? Mistake number three.
When we entered the train, it was like a goddamn Precious Moments store had exploded, spraying everything with a fine mist of creepy eyes and disembodied heads. Not turning around and immediately leaving? Mistake four. The dining area looked like something out of a John Waters movie, if only he were a bit more twisted; and immediately after we ordered, we noticed we were surrounded by the three most annoying Cs in existence. Loud wailing children, annoying lovey couples, and country music. I’m pretty certain Anne didn’t believe me when I whispered to her that the people seated across the train aisle to my left were acting like the tiny diner table was an enormous chasm for their love to cross, but she and I nearly died laughing when they pulled the waitress aside and asked to be moved to the lounge so they could be seated next to one another instead of across.
The wait for our food was interminable. I started asking Anne if we could please, please, please ditch before the food showed up, because I was pretty convinced that nothing good could come of this venture. Anne is much more good-hearted than me, one of those ‘born with a conscience’ types and resolved to ask the waitress if they’d made our food first instead of just running out into the night. Mistake five. The waitress snapped that it was almost done, and came out bearing plates of what should have been lasagna but instead were congealed brown masses of…brown flavored swill. Brown sauce? Brown noodles? Entire garlic cloves?What the hell kind of foul lasagna was this? Both of us were incredibly hungry, yet neither one of us could manage more than a couple of bites before pushing our plates away in disgust. I’ve never had to fight harder to keep my lips together when the waitress dropped by and asked how everything tasted. ARE YOU JOKING, LADY? This is the food of the damned! This food is too cruel and unusual to be served to prisoners! What sort of sadistic wench ARE you? She swooped by our table and asked if we wanted to take home our leftovers in a large foil swan–this, I momentarily considered as I thought it might be humorous to take a giant carving knife to the belly of the foil swan to expose the rotten lasagna guts, but I thought better of it and decided I did not want the car to smell like that wretched food for the remainder of the trip home. As soon as the check was paid, we practically ran out of the place and gunned it to the nearest gas station* for mints to rid our mouths of the foul lasagna coating. So, what have we learned? Do not stop in creepy little towns for any reason. Any cutesy meal place with a theme is going to be rotten. Anyplace that proclaims to have ‘the best’ ANYTHING is invariably lying. If a place is bad, it does not necessarily have to get better; we have not yet plumbed the depths of awful. Do not be plagued by matters of conscience when doing otherwise means feeling vaguely ill for two days afterward. I could hardly believe it–almost down the mountain, and the FOOD is where we make the misstep.
*Wherein I witnessed the most wondrous/horrifying Harry Potter velvet painting, but that’s neither here nor there.
Aw you coulda had a scale burger.
Anne and I were wondering–WTF is a scale burger? Is it a fish burger? One weighed on a scale? SCIENCE MUST KNOW.
Here’s a review:
Scale Burger
I guess it’s called scale burger because it used to be a place where they scale logs. *shrug*
Eble was I, ere I saw Elbe.
Mirth, sir, a gay asset? No, don’t essay a garish trim.
My favorite:
Nurse, I spy gypsies! Run!
I was always fond of ‘Murder for a jar of red rum’, personally.
ordering lasagna was your mistake, never order anything but burgers from a place like that. Lasagna is foreign food, they never get that right. 😉
Seriously though, sometimes little hole in the wall out of the way places have the best food. Though I guess there’ll be some bad ones in the mix. It makes for an amusing story though.
They were trying to be a chichi restaurant, but in a train. I honestly thought lasagna was one of the safer choices–how do you F that up?
That’s really unlucky, on our way home from burning man we tried several local diners in really small towns and they were all lovely. Not perfect but certainly none of them were horrible.
You’d assume most of these places would try home made, but that sounds like it was frozen and they nuked it before getting it to you. Just be thankful you didn’t get sick. :p
Everyone’s posts about Burning Man kind of makes me wish I went.
Next year the theme’s going to be Evolution and I plan on bringing a camper of some sorts. Plenty of time to plan!
Ooh, evolution? I <3 science! I'm thinking it could be a blast. :)
Thankyou for my pictures.
Pity for your nuked crap food.
I wanted to see a hobobeque but apparently they frown on that sort of thing. 🙁
Perhaps this has already been noted, but perhaps the lasagna is made from former guests of the Hobo Inn.
🙁 DO NOT WANT.
But they have cobbler AND desserts!
I want to know what the erased bottom line was…
It was mountain lasagna, see … you put mountain in front of something, it’s a whole nuther ballgame … if you will…
I’m guessing it read “RUN! RUN! FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, LEAVE!”
My sides hurt from laughing… and I was there!
My luck with remote dining experiences failed us. Next time, scale burgers.
Can we flip off the train while we eat?