Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

No cookies to display.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

No cookies to display.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

No cookies to display.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

No cookies to display.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

No cookies to display.

By Joshua Elie

Photo of a chaffle burger by J. Elie.

 Growing up in a musical family, I learned early on that musicians don’t get sick days. Come rain, sleet or flu, you still must show up or lose your gig and reputation.

One time, I was hosting one of the Country (Music) Showdown programs (formerly “Star Search”), and my B-3 (organ) player John Lawson came back from a Cuban tour with what I dubbed the “Cuban Death Flu.” He shared it with all of us in the band. COVID-19 is practically a runny nose compared to what we went through for those “kids with dreams of stardom in the music world.”

Advertisement for Saint Ambrose Cellars features its red barn in winter on a clear, blue-sky day. The logo of a queen bee with a woman's face, eyes closed and her arms extended says Mead, Beer Music. The gold logo is a circle and appears to float in the sky. Beneath the photo of the barn is a list of things found at the location. Mead. Beer. Wine. Food. Live Music. Disc Golf. Indoor and Patio Seating. Open 7 days a week. There is a Q.R. code to point your smartphone at. next to it are the words: Check out our event line-up and weekday specials. Located at 841 South Pioneer Road, Beulah, Michigan. Call them at 231-383-4262. Click on this ad to be taken to the website.Advertisement for Kaleva Art Gallery reads: Celebrate Kaleva's 125th. 1900 to 1925. Monthly artist shows at Kaleva Art Gallery. Saint Urho's Day bake sale, march 15, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Kaleva Art Gallery. Bottle House Museum open Memorial weekend through Christmas. Depot Railroad Museum, open Saturdays from 12 to 4 p.m. Kaleva Art Gallery is located at 14449 Wuoski Avenue in Kaleva. The ad is in the blue and white colors of the art gallery logo which is also red and black. Click on this ad to be taken to the website or Facebook page.Filer Credit Union ad is in white and green using its logo of green pine trees. The top of the ad says Join Today! Member Focused, Community Based, Financial Wellness. Save Borrow Business. Equal lender. Click on this ad to be taken to the website.

Sidelined in a gown

Something not commonly known ⸺ though happens far more often than you would think to skinny, tall, athletic young males ⸺ is a scary condition called “spontaneous pneumothorax.” This is caused by not having enough fat between the lungs and the rib cage. The lung blisters, a blister pops and the lung collapses, filling with blood. You may have seen the non-spontaneous version (resulting from an accident) on TV, in which they insert a tube into the side of the chest. I will spare you the gory details, though my doctor did tell me it is far more painful than what a woman giving birth experiences.

So, there I was, in the hospital, tube going from my lung to this portable suction box, and a gig to perform. This is how I learned the difference between a friend and a true friend. A friend will take you to the hospital, but a true friend will help you escape. I missed the Friday show, though after hospital staff saw me singing, playing guitar and harp (harmonica), they decided to let me play my Saturday show and, no, not because I was being a nuisance. The patients on Friday were turning off their TVs, the nurses were bopping around, and the doctors were asking me if I had ever considered playing for patients professionally. Music therapy is a real job.

Saturday, I couldn’t sing full out and had to sit in a chair, but I still played the entire night.

There are many different diets out there. Some people go on them for healthier living. Some, like me, have to for medical reasons, and some for religious beliefs. I have researched many and have yet to find one I could not only make palatable but enjoyable.

The gig is up: gluten-free chaffles

I have always been thin living in a world where it seems everybody else is trying to lose weight. I have a challenge going with Toni, a close friend, who has been extremely successful at losing weight on a Keto diet. I have been doing well on a diet to gain weight by boosting my ghrelin count. Ghrelin is known as the “hungry hormone,” and you can control how much your body produces by what you eat. I am up 25 pounds, and she is down 30 pounds, so Toni is winning, as usual. We trade recipes all the time, which is our thing, and she introduced me to a recipe that is fantastic. You can eat them like regular waffles, substitute them for any kind of bread, or enjoy them plain. They are gluten free, only one carb per chaffle (115 Kcal, 1 net carb per plain chaffle), and, best of all, they are simple to make.

The writer's cooking surface includes a chaffle in the mini waffle iron, an empty mixing bowl, a measuring spoon, a measuring cup, a knife and two chaffles cooling on a wire rack. Photo by Joshua Elie.
Photo by Joshua Elie.

Toni’s Keto Chaffles

Yield: 4 mini chaffles
Prep time: 5 min. Cook time: 20 min.

Ingredients:
2 eggs
1 cup shredded cheese, a type that melts easily

Heat your mini waffle iron. In a medium mixing bowl, beat 2 eggs until well blended and frothy. Mix in the cup of shredded cheese. Grease the inside of your iron with butter, (for the first one). Drop 2 tablespoons batter onto the hot iron and spread it some. Close the lid and start your timer for 4 minutes. Be mindful when placing the batter on the iron; it will ooze over the sides of the iron if it’s overfilled. Remove the completed mini chaffle and place on a cooling rack while you make the others. Chomp in and enjoy the practically zero-carb bliss.

Joshua Elie is a musician and retired building contractor. He now enjoys life as a homesteader.

More from our Northwoods Sauce Boss

 

 

Write A Comment