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Travels both intrepid and trepidatious, around the world and around the block |
Dinner in the
Diner,
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Heres whats on offer on a typical Sunday. Dinner begins with a friendly greeting and a tall glass of iced tea (or a cup of coffee if you prefer), that will be constantly refilled. Then you have your choice of turkey with all the fixins (fabulous), Southern fried chicken (terrific), roast beef, or baked ham with pineapple. It is the vegetables, however, that make the Summerton Diners specials truly special. You can choose three out of eight and the choice can be devilishly difficult.
The veggie selection varies from day to day and includes things that, unless youre a Southerner, you may never have heard of, let alone eaten. There are pole beans, collard greens, turnip greens, okra, and dry lima beans. The pole beans served on Sunday are bathed in a bracing "pot likker" redolent with country ham. There is also a squash and carrot casserole that is a transcendent example of 50s-style home-cooking and the sweet potato souffle, with its chunks of pineapple and pecans, tastes more like a dessert than a vegetable side dish.
Then theres
the bread basket with its homemade biscuits and corn bread muffins. I
have seldom tasted their equal. You almost feel you should eat with one
hand held over the bread basket, just so the biscuits wont float
away.
You probably wont save a place for dessert, but youll get
it anyway, a beautiful rendition of banana pudding in a sensible-sized
serving that wont completely pop your belt. You sink back and sigh
and realize that this is one of the best meals youve had in a good
long time.
Of course, fine dining like this will cost you . . . $6 to be exact. No,
thats not a typo. The Summerton Diner has prices that are just as
old-fashioned as the food. And the $6 Sunday Special is their priciest.
On other nights of the week the daily special is just $5.50. A few a la
carte entrees, like steak and quail or the seafood platter hover around
$10, but youll do yourself a serious injury before you manage to
get your dinner bill over $15.
UPDATE: March, 2008. The prices for the dinner special at the Summerton diner have soared to $6.75!
The daily special menu varies from day to day. Come on Tuesday for chicken
pot pie and on Friday for catfish, but don't come Thursday because the
place is closed. If nothing on the days special menu appeals, or
if you just cant face a full meal, you can order pork chops a la
carte or just have a $3 bacon cheeseburger.
The
Summerton Diner has been around since 1950, but its present incarnation
dates from 1967, when John and Lois Hughes bought the place from the previous
owner and set a new standard for diner food excellence. John Hughes is
dead now and Lois, who remarried Rolfe Files, retired in 1987, but the
place is still in the family. Lynelle Blackwell, Mrs. Files daughter,
now oversees daily operations, but Mrs. Files, a vigorous and vivacious
77, still comes in now and then to lend a hand and warm up the room with
her smile.
The Diner is cozy, with a short counter, a handful of booths and another
handful of tables. At dinner time, it is often full, for reasons that
should be obvious. The crowd is small-town friendly and Americans will
find it a reminder of a Norman Rockwell America that seems to have vanished.
Foreign visitors to our shores will find in the Summerton Diner one of
the few extant examples of the "real" America that existed before
brands were slapped on everything and courtesy was replaced with the sullen
refrain "ywant fries with that?"
Summerton itself
is a sleepy little village that harkens back to an earlier age when little
happened and when it did it took its own sweet time. Its the sort
of place where the local garden club gives a "Lawn of the Month"
award, where a sign outside Cokers Hardware on Main Street proclaims,
"We Give and Redeem Greenbax Stamps,"and where, nailed to the
weathered wooden door of Senns Mill, youll find a hand painted
notice informing you that "Starting Jan 1988 Lunch Hrs. Will Be 12.00
2.00."
Thats not to say that Summerton is without its attractions. Theres
a nifty little World War II-vintage tank sitting outside the American
Legion hall and Main Street boasts what might be called an "antique
district" where the savvy urban sophisticate might find a good deal
on the kinds of things country folk call junk. Theres even a driving
tour, to judge by the numbered signs that youll see around town
in front of historic buildings. The trick is finding the brochure that
explains whats what. Most folks will settle for a drive-through
or, better yet, a short stroll along its quiet back streets.
After a hearty Summerton Diner dinner, you might feel too full to continue
your drive and Summerton offers a small selection of budget to ultra-budget
lodging. (Theres even a $16-a-night motel!). But dont look
for anything fancier. I asked the hostess at Rowes Family Restaurant,
another purveyor of local country cooking, if Summerton had a B&B.
"Youve got to be kidding," she said in genuine surprise.
"This isnt the end of the earth, but you can just about see
it from here." Then, after a moments thought she added, "We
could fix you up with a trailer out back and we open at six."
If you do stay overnight, youll probably want to head back to the
Summerton Diner for breakfast. There will be nothing unusual about your
breakfast, except that the check will be well under $5 and every element
in it will be executed to perfection. Eggs that remind you just how far
from "farm fresh" those little white things you find in the
local supermarket are. Fabulous country ham. Home-fried potatoes that
are perfectly browned little squares of spudliness. And the biscuits.
Oh, those biscuits.
The Summerton Diner, "a Summerton tradition since
1967," is located in Summerton, South Carolina. The restaurant is
open 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Monday through Wednesday and 6:00 a.m. to
9:30 p.m. Friday through Sunday. It is closed Thursday. Take Exit 108
from I-95 and drive west, until the road dead ends at US 301-15. Turn
right and the diner is on your left about a tenth of a mile. The phone
number is 803-485-6835.
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