The verdict -- Robert Gardner
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I hate canned peas and carrots. This isn’t just a simple dislike of those
vegetables. This is a deep, physiological hatred.
The core of this emotion can be traced to my youth when I worked for a
restaurant called the Green Dragon in Balboa. The Green Dragon was a
class operation. Our blue-plate special will give the reader a taste of
the place.
The blue-plate special went for 35 cents and featured a breaded veal
cutlet, long on bread, short on veal cutlet. It was served on a heavy
blue plate that was divided into three compartments.
In compartment No. 1 was the breaded veal cutlet. This chef’s masterpiece
was covered with a thick, tasteless gravy.
In the second compartment was the salad. Oh, what a culinary delight was
our famous salad. The cook chopped up a 5-gallon can of lettuce early in
the morning. The dressing was supposed to be mayonnaise, but the only
resemblance to that dressing was that it was white. The Green Dragon’s
mayonnaise had the texture, appearance and taste of Milk of Magnesia. It
was poured over the lettuce--which was not chilled or refrigerated in any
way and accordingly was the same temperature as the kitchen in which it
reposed.
In the third compartment of the blue plate resided a large spoonful of
canned peas and carrots. In the morning, the cook --an ill-tempered man
named Jack--opened a 5-gallon can of peas and carrots and dished them out
during the day to fill up that third compartment.
We waiters and counter men yelled our orders to the cook through a
3-by-6-foot opening into the kitchen. Well, one day I said or did
something that snapped the always hair-trigger temper of the cook, and he
threw a whole plate full of canned peas and carrots at me. Nimbly, I
ducked and thus avoided quick and premature decapitation. Not content
with my escape, I then sneered at the cook and said, “Yeah, yeah, you
missed me.”
The cook, who was pretty big, reached through the opening through which
the canned peas and carrots had gone and said, “Pick them up, each one of
them individually.” I considered refusing, but the cook was not only big,
he was also more important to the restaurant than me. Rather than lose my
job, I spent the next half an hour on my hands and knees picking up each
pea and each piece of carrot from around our customers’ feet. It was very
embarrassing.
My next misadventure involving canned peas and carrots occurred in Guam
during World War II. It was between operations, and a group of us got
some seeds from the states and grew a vegetable garden in the jungle.
We worked our fannies off clearing the jungle, planting and growing our
vegetables. These would be the first fresh vegetables we had tasted since
we left home.
Finally, after much effort, our vegetable garden matured. We loaded
ourselves with fresh tomatoes, carrots, string beans and peas and trooped
to the mess tent. We threw our harvest down on a table and could hardly
wait for the cook to congratulate us on our efforts.
Alas, the cook in Guam had a disposition like the cook in the Green
Dragon cafe. Instead of showing enthusiasm for the job we had done, the
cook swept our vegetables off the table and on to the dirt. Then he
reached back, pulled out a 5-gallon can, opened it with three whacks of a
cleaver and snarled, “This is what you’re getting for dinner. I ain’t got
time to cook those vegetables.”
You guessed it. In the 5-gallon can were peas and carrots. And that’s why
I hate canned peas and carrots.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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