Kristina’s Cafe
This year, as last, the party was scheduled at Kristina’s Café, a small family-style restaurant. Half of the dining room was set aside for the SPARC members and their family. The final tally was a few less than fifty attending. That is a lot of people to feed all at once. Usually, for affairs of this nature, the restaurant will offer a limited menu, many of the items prepared in advance to facilitate serving. It was open menu at Kristina’s and it is a rather extensive menu at that. Kristina’s does feature daily specials, Shepherd’s pie was featured today, and several people selected that delightful looking dish. That would have helped out a bit in the kitchen but most ordered a wide selection of the offerings.
Kristina’s is open 24-hours a day and serves breakfast anytime. The party time slot was between lunch and dinner. Our ordering options were for the entire menu, breakfast, lunch or dinner. My wife, Janis, chose the breakfast option and ordered one of her favorites; chocolate chip pancakes ($5.25). Her serving was three large, nicely browned pancakes with lots of chocolate chips. Although her favorite chocolate chip pancakes are made with a portion of buckwheat flour, these all wheat flour pancakes were tasty, nicely browned on the outside, cooked through on the inside (not doughy like some) and the chocolate chips melted and gooey but not burnt. There was a sufficient supply of butter and syrup provided. The three pancakes were a large serving for her and she finished most of them; the dogs got very little. That should attest to them being tasty and a worthy dish to sample. She had coffee ($1.25) along with her pancakes. I don’t know what is usual at Kristina’s but at the banquet seating of the party there were insulated carafes of coffee being passed around that the servers kept full.
It is really hard for me to pass up a hamburger. Somewhere inside me is a part of Wimpy from the Popeye cartoons… “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” And so it was that I chose the mushroom and bacon cheeseburger, deluxe of course with French fries (you have a choice of potatoes, $6.95). It is a large burger, served on a platter with the fries. A smaller platter along side has the vegetables, lettuce, onion, tomato and a pickle. When dining out I order ground meat medium well, just in case. My burger was cooked to order. There was no skimping on the bacon, cooked crisp, and the mushrooms. It was a mound ontop of the burger patty and it needed the melted cheese to hold it all together. By the time I added the lettuce, onion and tomato, it was a very tall burger and I really had to squeeze down to get a bite. The flavor was good, nice and juicy and didn’t really need any mayo or ketchup. The burger along with the fries was a big meal and I was quite satisfied. I had a soda with my burger. They feature Pepsi products so I chose a Mountain Dew ($1.35).
Entrees at Kristina’s are large. So, dessert is a “loosen the belt a notch” kind of thing. When the servers came around for dessert orders, I relented and chose a tapioca pudding with sprinkles of cinnamon and topped with a swirl of whipped cream ($1.25); a nice 4-ounce serving. It tasted like tapioca should, was sweet and cold and made for a nice touch after the heavier taste of the bacon mushroom cheeseburger and fries.
most part each order came to exactly the right person. On top of that, checks came to the individual parties; our tab was correct. The servers out front and the staff in the kitchen did yeoman service to keep that all together. I can see why SPARC chose to return to Kristina’s. And by the way, the other half of the dining room was able to accommodate the regular customers, our servers doing admirable duty for them as well.
he interaction with my fellow hams was the spice that turned a meal into a veritable feast; one I will long remember. At the end of the dinner hour, the club president passed out favors to all the guests. It was a select a wrapped gift from the basket event. We did quite well. A nice box of chocolates and a bag of double-fudge brownie mix.



Labels: amateur, Cafe, club, fellowship, hamburger, holiday, Kristina's, party, radio, St Petersburg. Albert
Albert Whitted Airport AWAPS
It was from St. Petersburg that Tony Jannus began the first scheduled commercial airline flights way back in 1914. Jannus made the less than a half hour flight to Tampa and return trips in an open cockpit Benoist flying boat, a bi-wing aircraft that flew across the bay almost skimming the water.
During the Second World War Albert Whitted was a very busy base for training Navy and Marine Airmen as well as providing a base for antisubmarine patrols in the Gulf of Mexico.
Unfortunately there are people with self interests that go beyond cultural and historical assets. All too easily those self interest groups find politicians who would plow under one thing to make another for profit, a short term gain while ignoring the long term damage. Fortunately there is a watchdog group, a volunteer organization that keeps the public informed about back alley deals that would end the life of Albert Whitted Airport. More than once they have been successful in thwarting nefarious plans bringing the issue to the voters who voted to preserve the airport. Greed has a way of perpetuating itself and will be back and hopefully the Albert Whitted Airport Preservation Society, AWAPS, will still be there to stop them.
The Alfred Whitted Airport Preservation Society, AWAPS, is an all volunteer organization with an office on the airport that also serves as a small museum that houses many displays from the National Airlines era. Funded through membership and donations, the Society also conducts fund raising events. In the past the Society held a pancake breakfast on the first Saturday of the month. Today, January 7th, they are doing something different, a cook-out lunch, from 11:00AM until 2:00PM. The menu includes hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad, baked beans, chips, beverages and a dessert table. For the admission price of $7.00 per person you get either one hamburger (or cheeseburger) or two hot dogs plus all the other fixings. Considering what you would pay per person for a hamburger, fries and a drink at a national chain, the price is quite reasonable.
The wife and I both chose the hamburger option, mine with cheese and hers without. The large patties, ¼ pounders I believe, were cooked just right, the pink was just gone from the middle, what you need for ground beef, but were not overcooked. They were still moist and juicy. Condiments, self-applied, included catsup, mustard, lettuce, a slice of cheese and tomatoes. The potato salad, self serve, was a deli style mustard and vinegar, nicely done and tasty. The barbecued beans were served in individual cups, a nice touch helping to keep the plate a bit neater. Drinks were cans of sodas on ice and some juices. I chose a nice cold can of Coca Cola; after all, things go better with Coke.
Dessert is self serve from the dessert table. On this day the selections included cherry pie, pumpkin pie, brownies and an assortment of cookies. After all was said and done, we had a nice tasty meal and were comfortably full. We had a chance to visit with some old friends and get back in touch with our aviation psyche.Labels: airport, aviation, Florida, history, preservation, St Petersburg. Albert, Whitted

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