The song is stuck in my head now.
Why? Because we brought this artificial banana with us on vacation and Dave has been charged with photographing it everywhere. Yes, like Flat Stanley. The pictures of this banana as it travels across America are being assembled in a photo album for one of Dave’s colleagues, who uses this banana as punishment for those who arrive at his unit’s physical training sessions late.
Enjoy the pictures of each of the states we crossed so far today on our eastward journey…banana and all:
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| From 2009 06 13 VacationEastDay1 |
| From 2009 06 13 VacationEastDay1 |
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| From 2009 06 13 VacationEastDay1 |
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| From 2009 06 13 VacationEastDay1 |
Tomorrow we continue on I-80 all the way to New York City. According to our GPS, it should only be about 7-8 hours worth of driving (compared to 10.5 hours today). We hope to be out of our hotel by 0800, try to get to NY before dark.
We stopped with Andy, Suzy and their kids on the lakeshore for just
over an hour. Between about 4-5pm, 8 hours into our drive. It was
cool and breezy, but the water wasn’t bad and Timmy got pretty wet.
The kids did lots of running around and I think the exercise did them
some good.
This is at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, near Chesterton, IN.

Tomorrow morning we leave on vacation.
“Whoo hoo! It’s about friggin’ time! You haven’t really had a real vacation in a couple years, have you?”
No, I guess not. We had that fabulous trip to Fort Fisher/Kure Beach, NC back in July 2007. That was a really fun time, the most relaxed I’d ever been, I think. Andy and Suzy are really good at relaxing and worked wonders on me!
Sometimes if I wonder if spending 2 weeks with parents, siblings, aunts and uncles really constitutes a “vacation”. I know for the boys it will definitely be a “vacation” — seeing all 4 grandparents and their cousins will be such a treat. Especially my side of the family, since they haven’t seen my parents since Memorial Day weekend of last year, and my sister’s family since last July.
So today I’m busily packing, straightening up the house, mowing the lawn extra short, cleaning out the fridge and doing those other little things that you want taken care of before you leave the house empty for 16 days. I’m taking a much-needed break right now to vegge on the couch and write about this.
Our plans are to drive for 2 days straight, this Saturday and Sunday. We hope to get to Fremont, OH by Saturday night, where we have a hotel reservation, and then on Sunday, go from Fremont to Dave’s parents house on Long Island. I-80 all the way. Dave and I aren’t really looking forward to plowing through Iowa, Illinois and Indiana…no offense to those from those great states, but it’s not going to be very interesting to us.
We received an invitation from Andy and Suzy (the ones mentioned above from our Fort Fisher trip) to join them at a camp site they’ll be at in Indiana this weekend. On Lake Michigan. We think it’ll be close enough off I-80 that we could perhaps stop for a late lunch. We’ll see.
So we plan to spend 4-5 days in New York, with plans to hit the beach and New York City while there. Then we’ll go to Pennsylvania for Father’s Day weekend, which is the traditional weekend for the Vollmer Family Reunion. Last summer I realized I didn’t blog about any of it, only about the piece of tire that destroyed the front grill of our Prius in Richmond, VA.
The Vollmer Reunion (there are actually other families than just “Vollmers” involved, since they married other families and they are all welcome) has been something I’ve been able to be part of since 1994. That summer, Dave invited me down from my summer semester at PSU to join him. I can’t believe I’ve been going to “Uncle Jack’s Farm” for 15 years now! Of course, Dave has been going since — well, since forever! It’s really touching seeing our boys experience the same things that Dave was able to when he was the same age: Uncle Jack’s sheep, the merry-go-round, the peanut toss, the hay rides!
After the reunion weekend, we plan to go from PA down to my parents’ house in West Virginia by dinnertime, so we can take my Dad out to dinner. I’m excited that we have a chance to spend Father’s Day with both Dave’s Dad and my Dad…perhaps a first! My parents now live just over 2 hours from where the reunion will be, they moved from VA to WV last summer.
We’ll spend the rest of our time at my parents’ house, where we have trips to Hersheypark and Washington, D.C. planned. I’d like to take the boys to the Air and Space Museum on the National Mall (we went to the Udvar-Hazy Center at Dulles Airport last summer).
Then we drive back the weekend of the 27th, and we’re planning another stop with Andy and Suzy and we’ll spend a day in Dayton, OH. We always enjoy Dayton (Dave and I were stationed there in 2000-2002 and had a wonderful time!). We should be home the night of the 28th.
For the next couple weeks I’ll probably be doing short little posts like the ones I did last summer during our move between NC and NE. The boys and I have been discussing which states we’ll travel through between here and NY, so I’ll be making a point to photograph all the “Welcome” signs for each of the states: Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York.
Ta! We’ll try to stay safer than last summer!
So on Thursday night we cooked up the marinated Huli Huli Chicken. Part 1 of this post was pretty simple, make up the marinade, dump in the chicken parts and let ‘er soak.
The cooking is the tough part. Because of the sugar content of the marinade, you have to be VERY careful how to cook up the parts. Low low low, probably for 20+ minutes, then you can turn up the heat at the end to give a nice crispness to the skin. I guess I could invest in one of those rotisserie cooker thingies, but we’re lazy and just want to throw the gas grill.
So that’s what we did, threw the parts on the grill.
What we SHOULD have done was roast the chicken first for a bit, or microwave it first, then throw the parts on the grill.
We foul this up (no pun intended) EVERY TIME! We cook the parts, then serve it up, then frantically attempt to keep the rest of dinner warm while we nuke up the chicken so the near-bone areas finish cooking, all the while drying out the exterior.
So enjoy some pictures of Dave cooking up the chicken, we’re smelling it, hearing it sizzle, looking at it cook up golden brown and delicious…
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Looks WONDERUL, doesn’t it? Unfortunately, at the time it was brought inside, it was still raw up against the bones. Darn it! We had to microwave it for 2-3 minutes after grilling to finish it up.
So word to the wise: if you want to try my recipe, bake the chicken, or microwave it for a few minutes before grilling, at least long enough to cook the meat up against the breastbone and thigh bones.
So on Thursday night we cooked up the marinated Huli Huli Chicken. Part 1 of this post was pretty simple, make up the marinade, dump in the chicken parts and let ‘er soak.
The cooking is the tough part. Because of the sugar content of the marinade, you have to be VERY careful how to cook up the parts. Low low low, probably for 20+ minutes, then you can turn up the heat at the end to give a nice crispness to the skin. I guess I could invest in one of those rotisserie cooker thingies, but we’re lazy and just want to throw the gas grill.
So that’s what we did, threw the parts on the grill.
What we SHOULD have done was roast the chicken first for a bit, or microwave it first, then throw the parts on the grill.
We foul this up (no pun intended) EVERY TIME! We cook the parts, then serve it up, then frantically attempt to keep the rest of dinner warm while we nuke up the chicken so the near-bone areas finish cooking, all the while drying out the exterior.
So enjoy some pictures of Dave cooking up the chicken, we’re smelling it, hearing it sizzle, looking at it cook up golden brown and delicious…
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Looks WONDERUL, doesn’t it? Unfortunately, at the time it was brought inside, it was still raw up against the bones. Darn it! We had to microwave it for 2-3 minutes after grilling to finish it up.
So word to the wise: if you want to try my recipe, bake the chicken, or microwave it for a few minutes before grilling, at least long enough to cook the meat up against the breastbone and thigh bones.
It’s time for another recipe blog!
I don’t remember all that much in my life before about age 4. I don’t know why, I just don’t. Just the intermittent here-and-there memory.
My family was living in Hawaii when I was 4-years-old. My Dad, who was in the Navy, was stationed at this small base northwest of Honolulu. My first solid memories were from Hawaii.
And here’s one of them: Huli Huli chicken fundraisers. Click here for a history of Huli Huli chicken (thanks to the obituary of the inventor from 2002). I vaguely remember driving up to a large dirt/gravel parking lot, perhaps at a church or a high school. And you’d see row-after-row of rotisserie-like skewers, all covered with chickens. I also have vague memories of large metal trash cans to hold the marinade (this was in the 70s, well before plastic trash cans, apparently), and folks using cotton mops to slop on the marinade on the skewers.
My Dad mentioned to me once that the chickens would be sold whole for just a few dollars (I think he said $5, but I could be wrong), and they’d be wrapped for you in newspaper!
I found this nifty blog entry here about a modern-day operation on Oahu.
As for this blog entry, what I’m going to present you is a recipe that seems to bring back the memories I had, but I’m sure someone will tell you that it’s wrong. I’ve had chicken made with commercially purchased “Huli Huli Chicken Sauce” and that just seemed WRONG WRONG WRONG. Too syrupy, from what I remember. If you do a web search for “huli huli chicken recipe” you’ll come up with a very wide variety of recipes. I see ginger, sugar and garlic as a common thread throughout, but from there you’ll see varied other ingredients: limes, chiles, honey, ketchup, white wine, etc.
Here’s the recipe:
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| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
That’s my sister’s handwriting. She’s now quite the vegetarian, but she wrote out the recipe card for me and I still have it today. I didn’t photograph the back of the card, but suffice it to say that the back merely says to cook the chicken :-).
Let me go through the preparation steps I took today, so we can have huli huli chicken on Thursday night. First, let me introduce the ingredients:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
There’s “Sugar in the Raw” in the orange sugar dish. Maybe because it’s really-truly from Hawaii, I am using it instead of plain white sugar. I feel more authentic that way…
Note the whole chicken…let me warn you, I’m about to show pictures of a chicken dismemberment, so if you’re adverse to such images, click away now!
Let’s first disassemble the chicken. When I’m motivated enough, I choose to break up a whole chicken rather than buy the parts separately…it’s cheaper and I can take advantage of ALL of the chicken for broth, soup, etc. The first thing I did was take my kitchen shears and CUT down both sides of the spine.
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Now I can take the spine/back part and toss it into my freezer bag that already contains two other chicken backs…I’ll probably make up some broth this week for recipes later.
Moving right along…I got sick of cutting a little bit of the chicken, then washing my hands, taking a couple pictures, then going back to cutting, I decided not to photograph the rest of the disassembly. I cut the remaining chicken into 2 breasts, 2 leg quarters and 2 wings.
Now I chop the garlic and grate the ginger. I freeze my ginger, so grating it on the Microplane (BEST KITCHEN TOOL EVAH!!!) is easy:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Now we start to mix everything together: this is the ginger, garlic and sugar.
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
To pour 3/4 c. of soy sauce, I have to pry off the slow-pour spout thingy on my Kikkoman:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
That’s better:
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| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Now that we have everything — garlic, ginger, sugar, white wine and soy sauce (I omit the MSG), it’s time to stir stir stir. I try to dissolve as much of the sugar as I can.
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Now I take a 9 x 13 baking dish and line it with a gallon-sized zip-top bag:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Add the chicken:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Pour in the marinade:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
And here’s what you get:
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
Since the chicken is taking up so much space in the bag, a little marinade will go a long way in the zip-top baggie. I will allow this to sit in my fridge for TWO DAYS, flipping the bag about every 12 hours.
| From 2009 05 26 Huli Huli Chicken I |
You’ll just have to come back Thursday night for the rest of this — I haven’t decided whether we’re going to grill or roast/broil this, it’ll depend on the weather. As much as I love how this tastes grilled, grilling bone-in chicken breasts is tricky. Balancing cooking the chicken through with keeping the marinated exterior from burning is always a challenge in the Vollmer house!
Jacob got his top tooth knocked out playing baseball last night during
our Memorial Day BBQ. At first he was spooked by it- the tooth is in
our yard somewhere – but after we assured him that the tooth fairy
will come anyway, he felt much better.
He found four quarters under his pillow this morning 🙂










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