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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

ice cream

Summer is off to a … start

July 1, 2021

Summer is off to a … start. I refuse to say whether it’s a good start or a bad start because mostly I’m just grateful for another day, another season of life. A work friend once described June as the “Friday” of summer because school just ended and you’re still getting used to the idea of time off, whereas July is like the Saturday of summer. You can fully relax into “weekend mode.” School ended in June, and it has definitely taken some time to adjust to our new schedule. So here’s the round-up of what we did, what we ate, what we watched and what we read in June.

What We Did

First and foremost, we finished the school year. Hallelujah. Praise the Lord. It was a year that felt like a decade and while it had its high points, I’m just glad it’s over. To celebrate, we took a quick trip downtown and bought ourselves some sweet treats at Central Market. (And visited my husband and his co-workers.)

Look how happy we are to be done!

One virtual adventure and the topic was Pokemon. We learned about some of its origins and where it’s headed.

The kids and I joined the public library summer reading program. Because if there’s one thing that’s certain about our summer, it’s reading. My daughter and I also printed out reading challenge logs from our local bookstore Aaron’s Books. Not that I need an incentive to read, but I do love a good list.

I ran 5 miles for the virtual Red Rose Run. It was a muggy morning with an air quality alert, but I did it and that’s all that matters.

Started planning our summer road trip vacation. We’re driving back to Illinois this summer, and we’re taking a couple of days to do the driving so we can stop and see some things along the way. The plans are coming together.

Shots and sports physicals. With one child going into 6th grade and the other a teenager playing sports, our first week of summer break was full of medical appointments, all of which we’re thankful for. And glad to be done with so early in the summer. Our daughter also got her second COVID vaccine.

We hosted my brother for a day visit to Lancaster!

I’m told there is a resemblance

He flew in to Philadelphia for a few days because travel is back, baby, and took the train out our way so we could hang out for the first time in 18 months and the first time in Pennsylvania. I took him to my favorite coffee shop. We fed him a smorgasbord style sampling of foods from Central Market. (See more in the What We Ate section) Then we gave him a driving tour of the county featuring the schools we attend and work at; Amish farms; Intercourse, Pa.; Lapp Valley Farms for ice cream and the cows that provide the milk for the delicious treat; then to downtown Lancaster city for a tour of market and some shops for souvenirs. We ended our day with dinner at Luca, a walk around our neighborhood, and a sampling of whoopie pies for dessert.

My son and I played a game of Battleship.

My formidable opponent

A day earlier my husband had taught him how to play solitaire the old-fashioned way with a deck of cards because there are certain hours of the day that I need to focus on work and other tasks and I cannot entertain. But I offered him a game on a rainy Friday. He chose Battleship and it was a close battle.

Our kids attended a youth group kickoff event at our church on a Saturday night, which meant that Phil and I took the opportunity for a date night. We checked out this new beer garden in downtown Lancaster hosted by Wyndridge Farm (one of my favorite hard cider companies), and it was magical. A mild summer night with refreshing adult beverages and live music. It’s my new favorite hangout. I can’t wait to bring friends there! And our kids had a great time at the youth event. They made friends, which always makes my heart full.

Chilling in the beer garden

An early morning bird-watching walk with my bird-watching husband. We’re in this phase of parenthood where our kids are more independent so Phil and I can do more things together ourselves. We saw a bald eagle because we heard a duck quacking loudly and repeatedly. The duck was not happy with the eagle’s presence. Numerous other birds spotted. (We later saw the eagle again on a morning run.)

Graduation parties. We’ve lived here long enough that we know graduates from high school and college. It’s fun to be included in these kinds of celebrations, but we are now firmly in the “friends of my parents” age group at parties.

Lacrosse camp. Four full days for our son. He came home sweaty and tired every day but he loved the extra time to learn and practice his skills.

Friend dates! I’m finally back to seeing friends in person. I spent a glorious 2 1/2 hours in the park with my friend Alison.

We’ve been using Voxer religiously to stay in touch since the pandemic hit, but it’s so different to talk all things writing, vacations, families and life changes in person. It was wonderful, even when the waterfowl got a little too close and when I was distracted by a gaggle of giggly girls taking pictures near the pond. Then we were able to gather with our good friends, the Stevensons, who now live in Arizona.

No, Phil and Gene are not brothers.

We were only together for an evening, but it was a refreshing reunion and a much-needed time of in-person catching up on our lives. I also had a breakfast date with my friend Carol at Panera, and we had a good couple of hours of catching up on life.

Field hockey. Our daughter is participating with some classmates in a summer league and attending optional turf practices. It’s fun to see her so excited.

On one of the lacrosse camp mornings, we took a walk in downtown Lancaster to a friend’s place, then walked with him back to a coffee shop for a drink treat. We then ordered lunch to pick up at Jersey Mike’s and took it to Long’s Park for a picnic. There,  we walked around the pond and the park for a bit.

Ice cream Wednesdays. We’re attempting to create a definitive ranking of our favorite ice cream places in Lancaster County. We took my brother to Lapp Valley Farms. The next week we went to Hayloft. And now we have a system on the side of the fridge to rank our favorites individually because we cannot agree as a family and that’s okay. You can read more about our flavor choices in the What We Ate section below.

Our current ice cream rankings. Bear in mind, last-place ice cream is better than no ice cream at all.

Science!

Last year’s Halloween costume doubles as a functional lab coat for experiments.

Our first experiment was making an acid-base indicator out of red cabbage, then we tested various substances in our house to see where they fall on the acid-base scale. It was a fun morning diversion.

All the household substances we tested.

Shopped for Father’s Day gifts at Building Character. If you’re local to Lancaster and have some time to shop, I highly recommend this place. You’re never sure what you’re going to find, but it’s sure to be unique.

I visited a local used bookstore in a barn that I didn’t know existed. Phil drove us past it on our way back from a graduation party. I would go to this book barn just for the smells.

I’m on track to need a barn for all my books someday.

I gave blood for the first time. It would have been a memorable experience without any added excitement, but I fainted after giving blood and subsequently (or simultaneously) lost control of my bladder so when I came to I was lying in a pool of my own urine. (Ew.)

Free scrubs for every patient who passes out and pisses herself after donating blood!

I was nervous about the whole process from the beginning. I haven’t tried to give blood since I was in my early 20s and was considered ineligible because I had lived in England for just long enough during the “Mad Cow” disease era. Sometime in the last decade, the Red Cross changed the dates that had made me ineligible to donate so I was no longer unqualified on that basis. Mostly, I just didn’t want to do it, even though I have O blood that I know can help people. I passed all the screenings with flying colors and the donation process itself was practically painless and speedier than I expected. I thought I had it made but when I sat down at the snack table, my vision blurred and I started to feel foggy. “I’m feeling lightheaded!” I announced to the staff. The next thing I knew I was on the floor lying in my urine, looking into the faces of a friendly Red Cross nurse and my husband. It took me almost an hour to recover enough that I could change my clothes and leave on my feet. While I’m not eager to repeat this experience, I know that it’s something I can do. And honestly, now that the worst has already happened, I can be more prepared the next time.

Flew home to Illinois for my grandmother’s funeral. We had not traveled by air since before the pandemic, and honestly, it’s not that much different now. At the funeral I was able to reconnect with cousins, friends and other family I haven’t seen in a while. There is a lot more I could say about this but I don’t have the words yet.

Good news: we still know how to navigate airports and flights

The kids drove and rode four-wheelers all over my parents’ yard and had a blast doing so. They finally look like they fit the machines they’re steering.

Most of the time they were riding separate ATVs. I took this picture as proof they sometimes get along.

And of course, we had an adventure on the way back to Illinois. Our drive to the airport took double the usual time because of heavy rain and a traffic accident. Our flight was delayed multiple times for a total of nearly five hours, but we finally boarded the plane about the time we were supposed to arrive in Baltimore. We landed in Baltimore around midnight then waited for another near-hour for our bags to come off the plane. Finally, we made it home to Lancaster around 2 a.m.

The kids and I visited Longwood Gardens.

Before I knew we would be making a quick trip home, I made a reservation for Longwood Gardens, to keep using the membership I got for my birthday. It was the Monday after our trip home for the funeral, and ungodly hot, but we went for a few hours. The kids got soaked in the 12-minute fountain show, which was part of the plan. We had hoped to grab some ice cream as a treat afterward, but the place inside Longwood that sells ice cream wasn’t open on a Monday. So we stopped at Rita’s instead.

They wanted a front-row seat to the fountains and they got it

Hiking! We made our Wednesdays in the Woods return on the very last day of June with a short hike at Climber’s Run Nature Preserve, which just so happens to be the location of our favorite local birdcam. It was quite the adventure. We tried to cross the creek at an unauthorized spot and I slipped and fell into the creek. We successfully crossed the creek twice after that. There’s often a lot of complaining when we prep for these adventures, but my soul needed the time in the woods.

What We Ate

Sushi and poke bowls for our Pokemon virtual adventure.

Taste of Market. For my brother’s first-ever visit to Lancaster, the kids and I shopped at Central Market on a Tuesday for a lunch smorgasbord for Wednesday to give my brother a taste of the area’s food. Selections included: emapanadas, pierogies, bread, goat cheese, whoopie pies, smoked fish, and deli meats.

Luca. We had three appetizers and five pastas and I wish I could describe them all to you as deliciously as they tasted. The fried squid appetizer was cooked so well our son tried it and liked it. We also had a burrata plate with focaccia and another topped bread selection that I don’t remember the name of.

The apps

There were five pasta dishes on the menu, and we all chose a different pasta and shared a few tastes but each one suited our personalities. We didn’t have a bad dish among us. I drank a dry cider with peaches. Phil had a lemon beer that tasted way better than I just made it sound. What we love about Luca is the seasonal menu. If we went back now, the offerings would all be different.

Gnocchi. Also, I’m in love with the plates.

Pulled pork french fries from Holy Smoked Meats at the beer garden.

Goes great with beer and cider

Ice cream. At Lapp Valley we had cookie dough, cookies and cream, maple walnut, black cherry and raspberry. At Hayloft we had orange creamsicle, lemon bliss, triple chocolate earthquake, and Mississippi mud. At Good Life Phil tried the dill pickle ice cream with peanuts mixed in (on the recommendation of the ice cream server), Isabelle had pink lemonade with chocolate sprinkles mixed in, Corban had banana ice cream with marshmallows mixed in, and I had nutella ice cream with peanut butter cups mixed in.

Our Good Life ice cream

After another field hockey match, we tried Son’s ice cream in East Petersburg. Our daughter had sour berry Italian ice, our son had a root beer float, Phil had Budder Brickle (yes, that’s how it’s spelled) and I had chocolate raspberry chip.

Listen, I’m a big fan of therapy. I also find no fault in this sign at Son’s.

Nachos. This was the lunch Phil requested for Father’s Day, and I was happy to comply.

At home in Illinois, we ate Culver’s: burgers and cheese curds and custard–oh my! It’s one of our favorites from the Midwest. As is Arthur’s Garden Deli, our hometown deli. One of my mom’s co-workers ordered sandwiches, salad and fruit for us to eat for lunch the day of the funeral. Post-funeral, we ate at the restaurant my friend runs with her husband. Pizza and pasta and salad and breadsticks. Comfort food, all of it. A Midwest speciality is taking care of people with foods and I am grateful.

If you ever find yourself passing through northern Illinois, stop at Arthur’s Garden Deli. You’ll only be sorry that there aren’t more Arthur’s Garden Delis in the United States.

Chicago mix popcorn from Nuts on Clark. A tradition when we’re flying.

Cheddar and caramel corn: what could be wrong?

Rita’s Italian ice. Two of us mix it with custard, and it’s a refreshing treat.

What We Watched

When Calls the Heart. I finished season 7 and I had so.many.FEELINGS. And a dilemma about how to watch season 8. I bought the boxed set through season 7 to share with a friend and then discovered season 8 is not available till September on DVD. But it was available digitally for a low, low price. I hesitated, but only momentarily. I am two episodes away from catching all the way up. Who can be my When Calls the Heart therapist when I finish?

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. We watched one episode before our Saturdays got full with other things.

Olympic trials: gymnastics, diving, swimming. 

LegoMasters, season 2. Fun, as always. The creativity and patience amazes me.

Kim’s Convenience. A few more episodes.

Lots of baseball. Even when the Cubs are breaking our hearts, we turn on the game.

What We Read

Bury Your Dead by Louise Penny. I finished this one in a matter of days and I’m just in awe of how she weaves multiple plots and stories together to leave readers both satisfied and wanting more.

Truman. I pick this one up every now and then and try to make progress, but I haven’t made a lot of progress.

Miracles and Other Reasonable Things by Sarah Bessey. I’ve been meaning to read this one for years. I finally bought myself a copy last year, I think, and now seemed like a good time to read it.

All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot. I know this is a recent PBS show. I have not seen any episodes of this but heard it was a book. I need a book from every continent for my summer reading challenge, so I picked this one up for Europe. (Really, there are so many choices for Europe, so I just had to choose something.) From the very first line of the book, I was hooked. Herriot is a gifted storyteller. I really enjoyed this book.

The Castlemaine Murders by Kerry Greenwood. Another Miss Fisher mystery for my Australia pick for the summer reading challenge.

The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency by Alexander Mccall Smith. A friend recommended this one to me years ago, and I picked it up at book sale. I read it for my “Africa” selection for the Read Around the World summer reading challenge at our library. It’s delightful.

How to Love the World: Poems of Gratitude and Hope. A gift from a coworker at the end of school. I don’t read enough poetry.

A Murder by Any Name by Suzanne M. Wolfe. This is tagged as an Elizabethan spy mystery and the first line of the book made me laugh out loud. I love a good first line, and I enjoyed the setting and intrigue in this story.

Showing Off (Upside-Down Magic #3) by Sarah Mlynowski, Lauren Miracle and Emily Jenkins. This started as a way to help our son calm down and go to sleep during the week of my grandmother’s funeral. We’ve been reading aloud this series off and on for months.

—

Well, there you have it. A full month of doing, eating, watching and reading. What have you been up to in these areas?

Filed Under: monthly roundup, Summer Tagged With: funeral, ice cream, lancaster pa, local adventures, summer break, summer reading

There’s always room for …

August 20, 2018

I could finish this sentence a lot of different ways. So could you.

Here’s the complete sentence I intended for today:

There’s always room for ice cream.

That’s right. I’m writing about ice cream today. It’s been a week full of some hard emotional stuff and the world can feel like a rotten place to live, so right now, I just want to talk about ice cream.

Photo by Anna Ribes on Unsplash

Besides, school starts on Tuesday so summer is technically over even if we have a full month before the calendar says it’s time for fall.

Let me tell you a little bit about my relationship with ice cream. I can’t ever remember not having one. In my early childhood years, my grandparents managed the local Dairy Queen, and I spent more time than I can add up in the back room–reading, watching TV, working on homework, helping out with occasional DQ-related tasks that probably wouldn’t be allowed today. I smashed candy bars with a rubber mallet for blizzard mix-ins and filled the bottoms of paper cups with peanuts for what would eventually become Buster Bars. (This was all back in the day when each DQ made its own treats on site. I’m not sure that happens anymore.)

My grandparents had a rule for the girls (and yes, it was pretty much only girls who worked for them)–you can’t eat your own mistakes. So if an ice cream cone wasn’t the right number of ounces or didn’t have the iconic curly-cue on top, they’d often walk their “mistake” to the back room and hand it off to me or my brother. (Let’s not judge the amount of ice cream I consumed this way, shall we?)

Dairy Queen soft serve ice cream will always hold a special place in my heart. Even on our most recent trip back to my hometown, we had Dairy Queen ice cream cupcakes for a family get-together and I could not eat just one.

My ice cream tastes have broadened since then, and I won’t bore you with the details of every ice cream experience I’ve ever had. (I’m not sure I could recall them all anyway!) But I will bore you with a summary of our local ice cream adventures this summer.

Lancaster County, where we live, is rich in ice cream variety, and you’d have to go at least once a week all summer long to try every ice cream available in the county. Maybe more. We didn’t make it to an ice cream shop every week, but we tried most Wednesdays to make an ice cream run to an actual ice cream shop. If you’re ever in the area and looking for ice cream, feel free to start with this list. You can trust that I know what I’m talking about when it comes to ice cream. After all, it practically runs in my blood.

We made it to seven Lancaster County ice cream shops as a family and ranked each one out of five scoops (instead of stars, because you know, it’s ice cream.) Some places we had a coupon or a discount. I’ve included the total price, the kinds of ice cream we ate and our overall impressions of the atmosphere of the ice cream shop and quality of the ice cream. (None of the ice cream we ate is pictured because we were too busy eating ice cream to take pictures! Maybe next time …)

Photo by Michelle Tsang on Unsplash

If you are not local to Lancaster, I won’t be offended if you stop reading, but I would encourage you to find your own local ice cream shops and make your own list! (I should also mention that I am in no way being compensated for this blog post, although I’m open to offers if anyone needs an ice cream reviewer!)

Here they are, starting with our medium favorites and building up to our most favorites. (And let’s be honest, even a mediocre ice cream experience is better than no ice cream at all!)

7. Our final stop on the summer ice cream tour was Meisse Candies and Ice Cream Parlor in downtown Lancaster. I was excited to try this because the ice cream parlor is new AND they serve Penn State Creamery ice cream, which is not readily available in our area. We used to stop at the Penn State Creamery on the college campus while driving through State College on our way west to visit friends, and it was always so good. So, maybe my expectations were high. Only 8-10 flavors were offered, and I know that’s still a lot of choices, but at the creamery, there are dozens. We paid $14.85 for three smalls and one medium (three cones, one dish, no extra charges). Our flavors were chocolate chip cookie dough, death by chocolate, peachy Paterno and butter pecan. Don’t get me wrong, it was good ice cream, but we were there an hour before closing and the customer service was only okay, and I didn’t really feel like lingering. But the ice cream parlor itself is unique and we enjoyed looking at all the chocolates available in the candy shop. 3.5/5.

6. Our first stop of the summer was The Pretzel Hut, which is technically still in Lancaster County, but not by much. It’s north on 501, almost to Lebanon County and this was a place we liked when we lived there. Even though it’s on a busy highway, it sits back from the road surrounded by a wooded area. It’s a beautiful and peaceful spot for rest if you’re driving that road. They serve Turkey Hill ice cream. We paid $12.15 for four cake cones (three small, one medium) in the following flavors: chocolate marshmallow, cherry vanilla, toffee caramel crunch and peanut butter pie. It was rainy, so we didn’t sit outside, but that’s an option and I take it every chance I get. 3.5/5.

5. We had a buy-one-get-one coupon for the Bird-in-Hand Bakery & Cafe that we had to use in May or June, so not long after school got our, we went there. It’s a busy place on the edge of the Amish tourist corridor. Once you cross into BIH, I feel like you are fully immersed in Amish tourism. Even with the coupon, we still paid over $14 but that’s partly because our daughter wanted a unicorn milkshake and when they handed it to her, her eyes lit up like it was the best day ever. The rest of us had single dip waffle cones: whoopie pie fudge swirl, blackberry cobbler and death by chocolate. The scoops are generous here and on this particular day the waffle cones were a little chewy towards the bottom. But we sat outside on the porch, which has ample seating and is a pleasant way to pass the time. Be prepared for crowds depending on the time of day and year you go because it seems like a popular spot for tourists. 4/5.

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

4. By the middle of summer, we wanted to try out some places we’d never been before, so we checked out this place in Lititz called Greco’s Italian Ices and Homemade Ice Cream. Lititz, if you don’t know, a few years ago was voted Coolest Small Town in America, and it is pretty neat. We haven’t explored there as much as I would like but what we have seen is fun and unique. The first thing you need to know about Greco’s is it’s a cash-only place, so if you’re like us and never have cash on you, make sure you get some before you go. They also don’t have a website, and I’m telling you, the place was PACKED when we went. It was a Wednesday night in July and even though the line was almost out the door, we were served pretty quickly. We paid $17.35 for three single dips (two with waffle cones) and one Italian ice (Granny Smith Apple flavor). For ice cream we had brownie batter, cherry cheesecake and A Taste of Lititz (vanilla ice cream with Sturgis pretzel pieces, Wilbur dark chocolate chips, bittersweet chocolate fudge and Greco’s own peanut butter topping). The ice cream was creamy (not all of them are) and the portions were generous. The waffle cones came from a package but were still good. There’s both indoor and outdoor seating. We ended up on a bench because like I said, it was a popular place that night. 4.5/5.

3. Oregon Dairy is a supermarket, farm, ice cream shop, and I don’t know what else all rolled into one. It’s a fun summer destination because of the outdoor playground and the animals you can enjoy in a mini-zoo format (goats, a pig, deer–none are roaming wild). We had two coupons for this stop so we paid $6 for four calf dips of ice cream (regular price would have been around $12). Our flavor choices were oranges and cream, rainbow sherbet, coffee and cashew raspberry. It’s Oregon Dairy ice cream, fresh from the farm, and one of our favorite things about this place is the unique flavor options. Also, the sunsets are beautiful from the deck, and the kids can immediately run off their sugar high on the playground. 5/5

2. Our favorite downtown Lancaster ice cream stop is the Lancaster Sweet Shoppe. They serve Pine View Dairy ice cream (which is its own ice cream stop in the southern-ish part of the country). The kids had coupons for free single scoops from their summer reading program, so we paid $7.45 for a single scoop in a dish and a double scoop in a waffle cone. We chose: banana peanut butter, chocolate chip cookie dough, espresso oreo caramel, german chocolate cake. The outdoor seating here is magical. It’s a patio out the back door of the shop, walled in with strings of lights overhead. It’s a lovely outdoor city location. Even though we didn’t get it this time around, I recommend the chai stroopie flavor. The shop is known for its Dutch stroopies, a waffle-like cookie with a layer of caramel inside. Adding it to ice cream is a local flavor experience. The company also supports refugees in our community by offering jobs and ESL training, so you know that has my heart. 5/5

1. It’s no surprise that Good Life Ice Cream and Treats was our summer favorite. It’s our overall favorite always because of the oddball flavors and the high-quality and value of the products. We go here enough that we had a $5 off coupon from their rewards club, so we paid $7.80 for four single-dip waffle cones. A note about waffle cones: here, they are included in the price, no extra charge unless you want a dipped waffle cone. I love waffle cones but don’t always want to pay extra. Plus, they are homemade, so they are totally delicious. Did I mention you get a topping mix-in also included in the price? Hold on to your seats when you read these flavor choices: Old Bay Fries with mini-marshmallows mixed in; goofy grape with white chocolate chips; meadow tea with chocolate chips; buttered popcorn with Twix. Guys, in season, they have sweet corn ice cream, and it is tasty. If you’re up for a flavor adventure, I can’t recommend this place enough. We gave it 5+/5.

Well, if you made it this far, you’re either as mad about ice cream as I am; a dedicated Lancastrian; or bored enough to read a long blog post about ice cream.

Tell me: What do you look for in an ice cream shop? Do you have a local favorite place? If you were going to recommend one place to get ice cream to someone visiting your town, where would you send them?

 

Filed Under: food, Summer Tagged With: bird-in-hand bakery & cafe, good life ice cream, greco's ice cream, ice cream, lancaster county ice cream, lancaster sweet shoppe, local ice cream shops, meioses candies and ice cream parlor, oregon dairy, pretzel hut

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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