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TreeTop Senior Q, Broken Arrow OK
Robert and Keri Cathey
In the spirit of the Senior-Q project, we decided to again
bring the fun of barbecue to the residents of Tree Tops, a local
lower-income seniors' apartment complex. We are Robert and Keri
Cathey of Broken Arrow OK, CBJs and sometimes-cooks under the
team name "Hot Wire BBQ". My grandmother Mickie Newman
is a resident at Tree Tops, so the other residents have often
had various barbecued meats for their potluck dinners in the
past. They do seem to have developed a particular fondness for
pulled pork with Blues Hog sauce on the side, and would often
ask Mickie "When are your grandkids going to be cooking
again?" Needless to say, Senior-Q offered an excellent opportunity.
We began the planning phase by giving my grandmother a copy
of the article about Senior-Q around the first of September,
and she reported to her residents' board with a little bit about
what we wanted to do - that we wanted to throw a barbecue feed
for them sometime during the month of October. She didn't have
to ask their opinion twice. It was unanimously approved, and
the date of October 8 was chosen. Mickie then reported back to
me that the residents loved the idea, and had already placed
a sign-up sheet in the community room. Although we had planned
to supply meats and sides, they chose to also follow part of
their usual potluck plan and bring other salads and desserts
to go along with the meal.
By Saturday, October 8, about 50 residents had signed up for
the feed to be served at 5 pm. Most had signed up early, so I
was fairly certain of the headcount about a week ahead of time.
The local Reasor's Supermarket had kindly given us a $75 gift
card to use toward the supplies for the cook. We wound up cooking
eight pork butts, about 50 pieces of chicken, 2 gallons of "Hog
Apple Beans", corn on the cob, a tangy pineapple-coleslaw,
a marinated sweet-tart black-eyed pea salad that I already knew
had proven to be popular at their potlucks, and a huge peach
cobbler. The butts were injected with Chris Lilly's injection
recipe and drizzled with our "Butt Juice". The chicken
was marinated in Italian dressing, dusted with Head Country rub,
hot smoked, and glazed with Blues Hog cut with pineapple juice.
(For once, my chicken turned out decently. Too bad it doesn't
come out that well in competition!) All cooking was done at our
home, then packaged and delivered to the community room of the
apartment complex by around 4 pm. When we pulled in the driveway,
we had a welcoming committee. The weather was beautiful, and
a number of residents were relaxing outside while watching for
us in order to offer their assistance in hauling things into
the building. We accepted their gracious offers of help, and
the barbecue parade entered the building with the luscious smell
of smoked meats trailing beind.
While I lit the steam pans and set up the buffet, Robert started
pulling pork. He acquired quite an audience during this process,
both to watch and to sneak a few preliminary samples. Robert
does enjoy the theatrics of asking those watching if they've
"ever seen the pop-up timer on a pork butt". He then
proceeds to slide the bone out of the butt with a most dramatic
flourish to demonstrate the tenderness of the meat, to the ooooh's
and ahhhh's of those watching.
The residents were invied to start through the buffet right
on time. They seemed to thoroughly enjoy their first trips through
the buffet. And their second. And, in a few cases, their third
and fourth! There was also plenty "planned-overs" available
so that everyone who wanted to take home extra could do so -
and almost all the attendees took us up on the offer.
After everyone had been through the buffet the first time,
I got their attention and explained why we were doing this for
them, admittedly borrowing some of the wording from Hawgeye's
original Senior-Q writeup. There were a number of the residents
that asked where our restaurant was and if we did regular catering,
and we had to remind them that we just do this for fun, and not
for money. I told them, "Shoot, if I had to do this for
a living, I'd go broke!"
All in all, it seemed like everyone enjoyed their
meal and their "doggie-bags". We'll be cooking turkeys
for them for Christmas, and Robert will be playing "Santa"
for their Christmas party again this year. For a group like this,
once is definitely not enough. What I haven't figured out, though,
is who enjoyed the meal more - the cooks or the honorees.
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Residents of the Tree Tops apartments enjoy their barbecue. |
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it was a wonderful coincidence that their trip was already
planned for the same day as the barbecue! |
Submitted by
Robert and Keri Cathey
10303 South 19t8th East Avenue
Broken Arrow OK 74014
918-451-7864
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