When on I-70, resist the urge to stop at one of those mom-and-pop diners.

Drive Through 

When on I-70, resist the urge to stop at one of those mom-and-pop diners.

ast week, I had to drive from Kansas City to Indianapolis (and back again a few days later). It's a round-trip jaunt of more than 1,000 miles on Interstate 70 -- with surprisingly few culinary thrills along the way. I thought it would be easy enough to get breakfast and lunch on the route, but the dining choices looming off the highway were either fast-food joints or chain operations with shady pasts, such as the Cracker Barrel restaurants, which used to serve up hefty doses of employment discrimination with its eggs and grits.

I suddenly remembered why, during my childhood, my parents would pack a cooler with food -- sandwiches, apples, cookies, beer -- if we took a road trip. My old man was a traveling salesman, and after numerous unpleasant experiences, he was extremely wary of those cute little mom-and-pop diners at highway exits. He swore they were "breeding grounds for food poisoning" and always added a historical caveat to his rant. "Our 29th president, Warren G. Harding, died of ptomaine poisoning, you know. And he died in agony. "

At least my folks would make concessions for a name that was familiar and comforting to them. Howard Johnson's represented a standard of cleanliness and food consistency in the days before McDonald's mass-marketed those same virtuous qualities. For travel-weary parents, the child-friendly Howard Johnson's restaurants had it down. Unfortunately, by the 1970s, the once-mighty chain had started a serious downhill slide. Four decades ago, there were 400 of the restaurants nationwide; today there are nine.

On last week's trip, hunger forced me into a grimy diner outside Columbia, Missouri. The Bull Pen had -- surprise! -- an all-male clientele who all seemed to be eating eggs and smoking unfiltered cigarettes at the same time. The bathroom was outside the building. I mean, this wasn't a Howard Johnson's.

One place that vaguely reminded me of the old HoJos was the spotless, lodge-style Powhaten Restaurant just off the exit to Pocahontas, Illinois, next to 1950s court-style lodgings that looked like the Bates Motel in Psycho. I didn't have the nerve to order "The Belt Buster" (12-ounce T-bone, three eggs, hash-brown casserole and biscuits with gravy for $12.95), but I did enjoy an excellent bowl of homemade vegetable soup.

For literary pleasure, I read the graffiti scrawled into the top of the wooden table, which included a phone number followed by the words "Call for o' good time. Kiss. Kiss."

Next time, I'll pack a cooler.

  • When on I-70, resist the urge to stop at one of those mom-and-pop diners.

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