Friday, April 18, 2008

Spreading the Chili Gospel




Our weekly free city newspaper, City Beat, had a great column about Cincinnati's famous Skyline Chili and its hold on its afficianados. I've shipped hundreds of packs of this local delicacy all around the country.

Here's the column:

Living Out Loud

Spreading the Chili Gospel

By Sara Bedinghaus

If there's one thing people from Cincinnati love, it's chili. We love eating it, and we love talking about it.

Those of us who have moved away from the area have cans of chili and spice packets mailed to us. When we return home, it's often the first thing we eat, and then we continue to eat it on a daily basis to hold us over 'til next time.

Another thing we love is making people who aren't from Cincinnati eat it.

Last summer, I made a decision that many Cincinnatians in their twenties make: to leave town and live somewhere else. Since moving across the country, I've forced canned chili upon many of my new friends, only to find that most of them think Cincinnati chili -- specifically Skyline -- isn't that big of a deal.

Since most people I know from home seem to have a substance abuse issue when it comes to Skyline, I'm still caught off-guard when someone isn't elated upon tasting this wildly delicious and comforting dish for the first time.

I recently made Skyline three-ways for my two roommates, one who went to college in Cincinnati and one from Minneapolis. The Minneapolis roommate sat silently while we chiliphiles reminisced about chili days past.

"Did you ever see Alan and Stevo go to the chili eating contests? They used to eat, like, three three-ways and four cheese coneys. It was so awesome!"

"When I worked at Skyline, the old people would bitch about the price of coneys. 'I remember when cheese coneys were a nickel!' "

"Oh, this brings back memories. I wish I were drunk right now."

My chili-appreciating friend and I did try to change the subject in order to be inclusive to the Minnesotan, but the conversation kept going back to all the fun times we had stuffing our faces with cheese-covered chili spaghetti and hot dog dishes in the middle of the night. We've now begun trying to recreate the experience for those who never had the pleasure of injesting these 1,000-calorie bombs at 3 a.m.

Those of us who prepare the homemade version outside Cincinnati just love watching people eat it for the first time. We get no greater joy than when the chili virgin enjoys the meal, and we enthusiastically embrace their naive questions about the cuisine.

"What is 'Skyline'?"

Skyline is to chili as Kleenex is to tissue.

"Wait, you put the chili on the noodles?"

Yes! See how exciting this is?

"Where are the beans?"

No, silly, beans are only on four-ways and five-ways. Baby steps.

"That's a lot of cheese."

Yes, it's obscene. That's how you have to do it!

"Do you ever actually feel good after you eat Skyline?"

No, but it doesn't matter, because it feels so good when you're chewing it.

"Is there a healthy version of this?"

Of course, they offer the low-carb bowl: two hot dogs in a bowl of chili. Duh!

"Hey, I'm switching planes in Cincinnati on my way to New York."

Eat some chili! They have Gold Star at the airport, and that's close enough for these purposes. Your unsophisticated chili palette won't know the difference.

When the chili newbie enjoys our concoction, we feel as though we've helped someone reach a heightened level of food enjoyment. To think they've come this far without ever passing such beefy gold through their digestive system. A travesty, really.

The same phenomenon of chili gospel applies to out-of-town visitors.

My friend once brought her boyfriend from Colorado to Cincinnati to meet her friends and family. We all converged at Northside Tavern, and immediately after introductions we pounded the poor guy with chili questions.

"Did Rachel take you to Skyline? What did you order? Did you like it? Did you like it?"

He thought the chili was OK. He thought we were truly insane. We haven't seen him since, and I wonder if the chili interrogation has anything to do with that.

Some people get it, though. I once treated a friend from Washington, D.C. to late night Skyline at the Clifton location.

"Oh, oh my gosh," he mumbled through a mouthful of steaming hot spaghetti. "This is the best drunk food I've ever had in my life."

I will never forget that victory, but I'm also aware that many who have witnessed a Cincinnatian's eyes light up with enthusiasm for teaching people about chili might think we're nuts. After all, do any other cities have such a loyal food following?

I've never heard of anyone from Baltimore or Seattle or Atlanta or Philadelphia having canned local food shipped to them "for an emergency or special occasion." With so many losing sports teams, depressing election results and a national reputation for weirdness (Jerry Springer, Marge Schott, Larry Flint, Maplethorpe censorship, race riots), this is the one thing we hold onto with pride.

Please know that those of us who have left Cincinnati probably miss the chili more than anything else. We're littered among many American cities, wielding cans of chili and an enthusiasm for preparing foreign fare.

Outsiders don't have to like it, but we demand to be humored. It's the only thing we have that might possibly impress them.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Journeys Through Bookland


What a great title for a eleven volume set of books for children's classic literature. Published in 1909, ten volumes are the literature itself and the eleventh is a Guide book, introducing the wealth of the material presented.

These volumes are in tremendous condition for a series which will be 100 years old next year. I'll have a photo to put up tomorrow, but here is the listing in my store - Journeys Through Bookland

The New York times announced the publication of the final eight volumes in 1910, an interesting read (it opens as a PDF file).



Sunday, March 30, 2008

Opening Day - A Holiday in Cincinnati


Well tomorrow is what I call the "high holy day" - Opening Day in Cincinnati. The Cincinnati Reds are the 1st professional team in baseball (established 1869) and every season, we're the only team which begins its season at home.

Prior to the game, we'll have the annual Findlay Market parade, beginning at the market in the historic Over The Rhine section of Cincinnati. The whole town celebrates and we hope the Reds bring home a winner!

With the start of the season, check out our Baseball Emporium for lots of baseball books, Cincinnati Reds items and even copies of both the Cincinnati Enquirer and Cincinnati Post's tribute to the late, great Joe Nuxhall.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

El Molino Best Recipes - 1953 Cookbook


I've added yet another listing to our cookbook section - a vintage 1953 El Molino Best Recipes cookbook. This volume is in a 13 ring binder, but the cover has become detached. Great looking recipes in there, including a whole section devoted to Allergy recipes for wheat, egg and milk allergies.


There are now six listings in our Cookbook section, so check them out. Yum!!!!

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

What's Cooking? New Cookbook Section to our Bookstore


I've added another section to our bookstore - cookbooks! I'm listing some today including a 1958 Good Housekeeping Cake Book, chock full of delicious cake recipes from years ago. Another is a five volume set of Favorite Recipes of America, a 1966 set of hardback cookbooks. I'll be adding some of my other cookbooks, so keep checking my bookstore for new editions.

Later today I'll be adding a fun titled - Vintage Cocktails, Authentic Recipes & Illustrations from 1920 to 1960 and Aunt Sammy's Radio Recipes Revised, signed by the late Tennessee Congressman, John Jennings Jr.

Monday, March 17, 2008

eCrater.com growing - reaches the One Million mark for listings!

I've been listing items on eCrater since last summer - but the site has been growing considerably since the boycott of eBay began in February. Following is a press release about eCrater.com reaching the 1,000,000 items listed mark.

Check out all the items I have listed on eCrater - and this blog entry for a breakdown of the store's sections.

http://tscsales.ecrater.com/ - our featured item is Cincinnati's famous Skyline Chili



eCRATER.com passed the 1,000,000 item count on Monday 3/10/08 !!!


Love to buy and sell online? Try www.ecrater.com for jewelry, books, fashion, antiques, electronics,etc.

eCrater is more than just a marketplace of fixed-price listings. It's a free web-hosting site where sellers manage their own stores (like eBay Stores but better organized).

On eCrater, shoppers can access an individual seller's site directly or may search for products from the main eCrater.com website (http://www.ecrater.com).

The beauty of eCrater is that it is so simple. Sellers can point their websites to their eCrater page using URL masking, so buyers will only see the seller's website address (not eCrater's). This makes it seem more professional, and more like your own website rather than a page on someone else's site (as you get with eBay Stores).

eCrater has a feedback feature just like eBay, and some of the better features of Feedback 2.0 were integrated, well before eBay launched them. eCrater allows sellers to accept PayPal and Google Checkout and has plans to add Amazon Payments.

Premium Listings

eCrater is completely free, but the site does offer premium positions. A position on the home page, which merchants can use to rotate their products, costs $100/month. (The position is booked through the end of March 2008.) A position on the top of all listings in a category costs $25/month per item and guarantees a premium top spot in the category.

New Features

eCrater also added a "mods" system. The idea is similar to the Wikipedia content control. Moderators make sure that all the listings belong in the correct category and are compliant with eCrater's policies. As a certified Google Checkout partner eCrater will make sure that all listings are compliant with Google Checkout's and Google Base's policies too.

Moderators receive a small icon next to their store name as a bonus for their efforts, making their stores stand out from the others.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

See what I'm selling on iOffer.com