“Summer sun, something’s begun but oh, oh those Summer
Nights!” – Grease
When I was little, I thought that I should have been born
in the 50’s. Somehow, I was convinced that I looked much better in a poodle
skirt than I did in the colored leggings/ pants my mom used to dress me in
(probably, because anything looked better than those leggings). Instead of
following the boy band craze, my best friend and I would sing and dance to the
oldies. I waited all year for the annual elementary school sock hop, just so I
could spend one evening with a scarf in my hair, dancing and twisting to a
little rock and roll. So, naturally, when my dad told me one day that there was
a drive-in theatre only 45 minutes away in Dillsburg, I had to go! I thought
about Danny from Grease, stranded at the drive-in, and I wanted to be there to.
We loaded up our car with chairs, radios and enough
snacks to feed a pack of hungry teenagers, and took the drive on the highway to
Dillsburg. When we arrived at HAAR's Drive In, it was everything I had imagined.
We paid the minimal fee (two new movies for the price of one) and found
ourselves a good parking spot in front of the giant screen. Just as we loaded
our car, we quickly unloaded and arranged the gear so we had the perfect
audiovisual perspective. Soon, the warm summer air began to cool as evening
approached. In preparation for the start of the first movie at dusk, we divided
up our snacks, bought any foods we may have forgotten at the bustling snack
stand, and settled in with our blankets and chairs. Beneath the stars,
surrounded by the authentic environment of an old-time drive-in theatre, I
watched two movies late into the night with my family. On the car ride home at
1 AM, with my eyelids heavy with fatigue, I thought happily of the amazing
night I had just spent and the memories I had created.
The movie theatre is now celebrating its 60th anniversary.
For six full decades, children and adults alike have been dazzled by the
immense screen and the unique environment of HAAR’s. In honor of the unique
memories and opportunities that the theatre has given to so many people I know,
a close group of friends and I loaded up a van and decided to relive the
excitement of the drive-in theater.
Arriving at the theatre at 6:30 (two and a half hours before the movie
was scheduled to start), we picked a prime spot to set up ourselves near the
projector. Once we set up our chairs and coolers outside, we huddled back into
the air conditioned van to escape from the sweltering heat outside. We spend
two full hours playing card games and telling stories, laughing about our
summers. I felt like a kid again, just as excited as I had been as a little kid
while waiting for the movie to start. Whether you’re 8 or 18, there are certain
summer traditions, like going to a drive-in, that bring out the child in you
and spark an unquenchable feeling of youthful excitement.
So what does this have to do with food? As I mentioned
about my first experience, part of the journey to the drive-in theatre involves
packing the car with enough snacks to last for two movies. When I was younger,
we packed enough food to “feed a pack of hungry teenagers.” This time, I had to
bring enough food to feed an actual pack of hungry teenagers. I must admit,
there is the added help of the AMAZING snack stand which sells countless
mouthwatering concessions, including burgers, fries, snow cones, milkshakes,
popcorn and Dillsburg’s famous Dill pickles. With such a low fee for the movie
tickets, I’m convinced that the theatre makes most of its money from the
continually crowded snack stand. Regardless of the aid from the stand, I had to
bring snacks that were easy to pack, fun and satisfying. I chose to bring honey
cinnamon bugles, sparkling grape juice jello and traditional whirly pop
buttered popcorn.
Honey Cinnamon
Bugles
(Modified from Farm Bell Recipes and Joy of Baking )
Ingredients
·
2 Bags of Original Bugles
·
Butter Pam (or similar cooking spray)
·
2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
·
½ cup honey
·
½ cup vegetable oil
·
1 cup packed brown sugar
·
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
·
Cinnamon sugar for sprinkling
Directions
1. Preheat
oven to 300°F.
Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
2. Empty
the bags of bugles into a large bowl with room for tossing. Lightly spray the
bugles with pam and sprinkle two tablespoons of cinnamon on the bugles while
tossing them.
3. Measure
the honey, vegetable oil and brown sugar into a medium sauce pan. Bring the
ingredients to a boil, stirring constantly, so the ingredients dissolve and
combine completely. Once at a boil, remove the pan from heat, add the vanilla
and quickly prepare it for pouring.
4. (This
step may require 2 people) Slowly empty the contents of the pan over top the
bugles, constantly tossing them at the same time. Toss the bugles until they
are coated evenly, then spread them in one even layer on both pans. Sprinkle
the bugles generously with cinnamon sugar.
5. Place
the bugles in the oven for 10 minutes. After 10 minutes, stir the bugles and
return for the oven for another 10 minutes. (If the pans were on two separate
racks, rotate them at this time. When the honey has browned, remove from the
oven.
6. Allow
the mixture to cool for a few minutes. Before it cools completely, gently break
the pieces apart with your fingers.
White
Grape Juice Jello
(Modified
from The Jello Mold Mistress)
Ingredients
·
2 packets Knox unflavored gelatin
·
½ Cup sugar
·
1 ½ Cups sparkling white grape juice
·
2 cups boiling water
·
1 pint raspberries
Directions
1.
Set shot glasses or plastic Dixie cups (This is
what I used, but they were a bit large and ended up with SOLO written across
the top of them) in a glass baking dish.
2.
Combine the packets of gelatin with the boiling
water and stir immediately. Add the sugar and the white grape juice and stir to
dissolve and combine.
3.
Ladle the mixture evenly into the cups or
glasses. (My liquid foamed at the top)
4.
Place the baking dish in the freezer or fridge
for 5-10 minutes just to cool slightly.
5.
Wash and prepare the raspberries.
6.
Sprinkle the berries evenly into the jello cups
and return to the fridge until the jello solidifies.
7.
To remove the jellos, poke a small hole in the
top of the cups and run the outside edges of the jello cups under hot water.
Allow them to wiggle and jiggle out with a little shaking.
The bugles came out very well, especially when fresh from
the oven. The honey flavor was quite strong, so if you don’t like honey, I
wouldn’t recommend this recipe. (If you want to try different flavors, you can
experiment with other granola recipes. Bugles make a great blank canvas for
sweet toppings). The cinnamon and vanilla added a unique flavor. The only
downfall was, when left out in the air for too long in the heat, the bugles
began to absorb the moisture and go stale quickly.
The Jellos were a little bit hard to handle. They were
difficult to remove and difficult to eat in one bite (Though the latter
complaint made for a very entertaining scene when my friend attempted and
failed to eat the jello in one bite) the carbonation was not maintained within
the jellos and most of the bubbles ended up on the tip of the cups. Regardless,
the flavor was good (probably because I just enjoy the taste of white grape
juice). I really enjoyed working with the unflavored gelatin. I’m excited to
use it to make jello out of all my favorite fruits and juices.
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