It is better off the beaten path.

IAM Rand

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So I have already posted about my MC trip to the Tail of the Dragon. Along the way to Gatlinburg I had to stop at a small family restaurant. My wife and I found it on a previous trip several years ago on our way to Virginia. We found it by accident. We were both in need of a break and getting hungry. We saw a billboard showing it to be a good family restaurant.

It is in a small town called New Baden, IL. The restaurant is called The Good Ol' Days. Their motto is, "Food so good, you will think we stole your grandmother." I don't know about you but, neither of my grandmothers could cook worth a damn. Still loved them but, not the cooking type. When we first went to them the chicken lunches were fantastic. What was even better was the price. I don't recall what we paid back then but it wasn't much at all. At the time there were not too many people inside the restaurant.

This time when I made my purposeful detour, it was very busy. I took one of the last tables. I ordered my 3 piece chicken lunch and tea. Sorry to you southerners, UNsweet tea. The drink and tea was less than $17 with tax. Now I am not sure where you are from but in the Mile High state it would have been considerably more just for the chicken. It came with a Uuge roll and a side plus 3 large pieces of chicken.

My wife and I love going off the beaten path so to speak. These smaller towns are what America is really about. So much about how the way we should live is cooked up in the large cities across America but what makes this country truly work and survive are these smaller communities. My one regret is when I went through New Baden it was on a Sunday and the bakery down the street was closed. Last time we picked up an elephant ear and several "Cow" cookies and again, paid well under the going rate in Colorado.

My advice to younger individuals here and elsewhere, the Interstates are good for getting to and from your destination in short order but if you want a real trip, explore the towns off the beaten path. You won't regret it.
 

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I took a trip to Colorado by myself in the mid-90's. I stayed off all the Interstate Highways and drove the back roads the whole way. Stopped at several of the small town diners on the way. I will admit to it being Dairy Queen about half the time. I much preferred the laid back atmosphere and quality scenery to the bore you to sleep monotony of the big highways.
 
I always take two-lane black top and avoid chain restaurants whenever the schedule allows it. There are occasional disappointments, but they are rare. I stay on the lookout for breakfast places with lots of trucks in the lot before 7am!
 
Know exactly where New Baden is. I was raised not far away in an adjacent county. The communities in that part of the world are predominantly populated by folks of German heritage. "Homecomings" in Southeastern Illinois are a bit different than most places. Held in the summer months and lasting at least a three-day weekend they amount to municipal parties with lots of food and beverage vendors. The reason I mention it is because New Baden always had an exceptional homecoming and we never missed it. Stag Beer served in literal buckets and the best bratwurst on the planet. A bucket of beer in 1978 at the New Baden Homecoming was $1.50 - $5.00 if you needed the bucket which held about two liters.

Thanks OP for taking me back for a moment!

Bryan
 
Have you ridden The Back of the Dragon, Rt 16 between Marion and Tazewell, Virginia?
I didn't. I was kinda on a hit and run mission. 3100 miles in 7 days. After doing the Dragon both ways I went back and hit the Company Distillery. Was only looking for bourbon but the guy gave me a thimble of their Ghost Rail Gin. I fell in love. I also picked up a bottle of their straight rye finished in cherrywood. I will have to save the back for another trip.
 
Know exactly where New Baden is.
Thanks OP for taking me back for a moment!

Bryan
My pleasure. What you describe sounds like a separate trip all by itself. Not sure if you have visited that bakery but man was I heart broken when it was closed. I really wanted an elephant ear and a couple of cow cookies
 
If you ever get a chance ride Hwy 141 between Dove Creek and White Water Colorado. It runs along the Colorado-Utah border and is my favorite motorcycle road in the world.
Not a lot of traffic because on the northern end you have to go through a tight twisty canyon and at Slick Rock on the south end the road zig zags about a 1000 feet up or down a cliff face.
These tend to discourage big trucks, folks towing trailers, or driving porta-ghettos (RVs) from using the road unless they have to.
Make sure to gas up in White Water or Dove Creek and top off in Naturita. There's a bar-burger joint in Naturita and now a luxury resort in Gateway and just north of Naturita you can cut west on Hwy 90 through Bedrock and see the Flintstone folks and come out just south of Moab at La Sal Junction or just south of Naturita take Hwy 146 through Norwood to the Ridgeway-Telluride Junction.
But pay attention to the road signs, when they say slow down do it. :rolleyes:
 
Wonderful thread. I really enjoyed it. I need to clarify one point. I was born and have lived in the deep south for 72 years and remain grateful for that to this day. Amazingly I despise sweet tea! I do like collard greens after the first frost.

On another subject, I hear and read "ya'll" all the time around here. It's important to understand that "ya'll" is figure of speech or slang. Southerners of my generation never use "ya'll" in written communications. Furthermore, the over use of "ya'll" in speech and the use of "ya'll" in your written communications is a sure give away that you are from somewhere else and attempting to blend in down here. Some of you might be surprised to learn that many native southerners enjoy hearing accents for other places in the USA and around the world including yours.
 
I learned long ago to look for the joint with some work trucks parked outside, the more of them better my kinda food was being served and the waitress were classics. Plus, about 9:30 was when the good ol boys would break there for coffee and a BS session. Wanna know whats going on. join them.

lessons I learned from my step dad, who was a concrete contractor
 
On another subject, I hear and read "ya'll" all the time around here. It's important to understand that "ya'll" is figure of speech or slang. Southerners of my generation never use "ya'll" in written communications. Furthermore, the over use of "ya'll" in speech and the use of "ya'll" in your written communications is a sure give away that you are from somewhere else and attempting to blend in down here.

That's just not true for Texans. While ya'll may not say and write it alot in the "deep" South, Texas is like a "whole other country" as our tourism department likes to say. Actually, if they wanted to mimic the speech patterns of most Texans, they would have said it's like a whole 'nother country.

In that regard I once heard a young woman say in response to her husband's question as to whether they needed more soap, "No. We've got a whole 'nother half o' one."
 

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