Beer in the Garden

Miss Annie’s Rustic Park Restaurant and Beer Garden in St. Joseph, Tenn., finally is reopened! It’s been a long four years since the owners had to close and move their restaurant back from the roadway to make room for U.S. 43 widening. They took advantage of the break, though, and remodeled and redid so that Miss Annie’s has returned better than ever. Definitely worth the wait. The renovated building is spacious and gleaming, while the beer-garden courtyard is clean and welcoming. What is Miss Annie’s, you ask? Well, it’s a restaurant, with sandwiches, steaks, chicken, seafood, BBQ and pasta. It’s a bar, with plenty of beer and appetizers such as hush puppies, stuffed mushrooms and spinach/artichoke dip. It’s a landmark —  Miss Annie’s has been welcoming thirsty travelers and locals off and on since 1928. And it’s an unexpected surprise to find such a fun place in what everybody cheerfully admits is close to the middle of nowhere. Miss Annie’s is about 12 miles from Killen, Ala., — 1.5 miles north of the Alabama/Tennessee state line on U.S. 43. This is the sort of place that makes you happy as soon as you walk in. On the recent crisp fall evening my husband and I went, there were families, couples, groups of friends and folks getting off work, all enjoying a place to linger and relax. Now, this isn’t a place to explore new breweries since the beer menu is pretty limited or to worry about your cholesterol level — although the house salad is fresh. Just go and enjoy yourself. Check out the Web site first, at http://www.missanniesbeergarden.com/, and learn the history of the venerable and much-loved Miss Annie’s.

History and Yard Sales

You know how you always tell your parents, “You really should write those stories down.”? Well, my friend’s dad has done that, and the stories in  “Before and After” are fascinating. Woody Stanley, 93, was born in rural Colbert County, Alabama. He owned and operated several businesses and restaurants in the area and still lives there, where he’s just closing his latest venture — a restaurant-supply store. In his lifetime, as the book says, he’s gone from kerosene lamps and candlelight to TVA electricity, from mules and Model Ts to the space shuttle. Reading his book is like sitting down and talking to him and learning about the ways things used to be. Folks in this part of Alabama know him from the famous Woodymac Drive-In restaurants he owned from 1947 to 1968. Everybody went there for burgers and shakes. Even Elvis Presley ate there after his history-making concerts at the nearby Sheffield Community Center. You’ve got to read the book to find out what Elvis always ordered — and why! You need to read it, too, to see how Woody defused a potential racial conflict on a bus he was driving during World War II — before Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks. Woody also witnessed Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s visit to the Shoals to announce the beginning of TVA. My friend, Susan, said her dad wrote the book in about a year on a yellow pad with a pen at the dining room table. “He was inspired to write it because of the history and changes he’s witnessed and because he wanted to share things that ‘people in the last 30-40 years wouldn’t know about’,” Susan said. The book is $24, including shipping. Email jcant1@hughes.net to place an order or to pay by credit card with Paypal. Or mail a check to 1101 Brookford Place, Muscle Shoals, AL 3566. Or stop by Commercial Equipment Supply, 2613 North Jackson Hwy., Sheffield, this week to meet Woody as the store clearns out inventory with a yard sale, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursday-Saturday. There are all sorts of great kitchen and restaurant items left – and Woody might even autograph a book for you!

Exercising the mind and the body

“The Madonnas of Leningrad,” by Debra Dean, is an amazing book that combines art, history, mother-daughter relationships and the family heartbreak of Alzheimer’s. My American Association of University Women book club read it this month. It’s about a woman who is struggling with remembering the daily routine of her life but can recall in every detail her work as a guide at the State Hermitage Museum in what was then Leningrad (now back to St. Petersburg) during World War II. If you’re like me and only know a tiny bit about the 900-day German siege of Leningrad and less than that about the Hermitage, read this book and be stunned – once again — at tales of human resiliency. But there’s also a gently compelling story embedded in the history and art lessons, a story that explores the question, “Who are we if not the sum of our memories?” Dean writes deliberately yet subtly — she lets you meander around on your own until you realize the book’s done and she’s brought every seemingly unrelated plot line together elegantly and succinctly. That’s one of the best things about book clubs: Other people point out the things you missed. I love it! It enables my lazy reading — I just sort of wander through without noticing the finer details. Plus, at the AAUW meeting, a few of the women had actually visited the Hermitage. It was fascinating to learn more about this apparently unbelievable palace-turned-art-museum. Here’s the link: http://www.hermitagemuseum.org Be sure to click on the English-language option! As always after having my mind opened, I’m shocked by how much I do not know about the world. It’s embarrassing.

Part of the book and so part of our book-club discussion was about memorization. Characters in the book use a mnemonic technique to build a room and furnish it with the things they wanted to remember — “placing” the items you want to remember as you would place furniture and architectural details in an empty space. Turns out that’s an actual memorization method developed by the ancient Greeks. Fascinating! Here’s a link to an essay, http://www.philipcoppens.com/artmemory.html There’s also a book, “The Art of Memory,” by Frances A. Yates, at online booksellers. Why didn’t I know this 30 years ago when I was cramming for exams at 2 a.m.??? Why doesn’t anybody tell me these things?????

Since my middle-aged body is as equally flabby as my middle-aged mind, I try to workout every day — the sweat equivalent of reading. Today’s DVD was a new one, Ellen Barrett’s “Slim Sculpt.” Barrett is primarily a Pilates and yoga teacher who recently branched out on her own with her own studio — called, simply enough, The Studio. I have some of her earlier DVDs with Crunch, the fitness studio known for packing tons of energy into short amounts of time. Barrett’s new DVDS seem to be more of her own style — smooth and slow. But not easy. No, no, no. When I first started Pilates DVDs, I’d just zip right through them without paying much attention. But Barrett explains why holding your core still and solid is so important and why even the smallest movement — or non-movement — is so vital to getting the most out of your workout. The setting is peaceful, too. It looks like a renovated school auditorium. In fact, it reminds me of the old fellowship hall at our former church, Keith United Methodist, in Athens, Tenn. This DVD concentrates on upper body. Here’s Barrett’s Web site: http://www.ellenbarrett.com. I love her tag line — “Sweat glamorously.” If only!!!!