Tuesdays in my Town - Poor Red's

Well, my friends, the time has finally come.
I will finally expose the crazy infamous gem in our little nook of the Sierra foothills that is Poor Red's.
It is a hole-in-the-wall in a very very old building on the side of the road, the truest version of "dive" bar and also the best. 
you enter...
through these doors and suddenly you're in a narrow, dim, surreal, rowdy, rollicking otherworldly cowboy biker bar.
Where people like this oldtimer have been coming (from all over the world) since the 1950s...and others came before him back when it was a real live speakeasy.
Even though I never eat there and never have, save the random midnight snack of bare baked potato, I think the dining room is topnotch.
I've always been partial to the saloon area myself, with murals and old western maps on the walls, a jukebox, a big round bar that takes up most of the room and an insanely narrow space to bump into people while you dance around.
Below is the drink they are famous for: the Golden Cadillac.
It's made with Galliano Liqueur, thus making Poor Red's the largest consumer of this liqueur in the whole world. For reals.
Here is my friend Scott, the illustrious bartender, making me up the even-girlier version...
the Pink Squirrel.
which leaves me giddy.
I have been coming to Poor Red's since I was 21 which is longer than I'd care to admit.
It has been the setting for many a madcap, bacchanus night.
They used to serve only two types of beer, Bud and Bud Light.
I'd get it with a lime and then it was called a Corona.
Back then the bathroom had the kind of real live cotton towel that comes on a roller and hangs down and you find a clean spot to dry your hands.
Kim and I would play "Tainted Love" on the jukebox and all the cowboys would glare. But later they'd teach us to two-step.

Nowadays I go to watch fine live music from time to time.
Last night we had the good fortune to see this amazing gent:
"The Last of the Vaudeville Cowboys" - Sourdough Slim.
Oh. My. Goodness.
He was so good I could have cried with pure joy.

brother mikie (freshly back from burning man) and i at the bar.
Stan and Les along the red booth that lines the wall, with old frontier mural behind them.
and my boys looking rather ghostly.

thanks, Poor Red's.  for providing good old-fashioned fun and for never really changing (besides offering Sierra Nevada now) and for being real and classic and true and from-the-heart.

The world needs more places with real character.

Comments

Tina Dawn said…
This post was almost as good as being there. I can't believe you have never eaten there. I love their ribs, but it has been a long time, too crowded with out-of-towners now usually for me, but I am glad they do a good business and everyone has fun. The salads used to be a complete joke, just iceberg lettuce with a slice of tomato and a blob of dressing on top but actually tasted good. I was lucky to see Sourdough Slim at a 60th birthday party for a friend at Jack Russell Brewery a couple of years ago. He was so entertaining! Did he teach you to yodel? Great post. I look forward to Tuesdays! Tina
anne said…
poor reds looks like my kinda place! i'm beginning to think your town pretty much rules! maybe we need to move :D
sourdough slim is awesome! i just listened to some of his songs and me likes what me hears!
i'm off to catch up on your blog lovely lady!
Milla said…
Dear Heather,
Do you think Darin would terribly disagree if I asked you to marry me? Okay then. Good.

Seriously, your posts just bring a smile to my face every time, you're so full of life and joy. I can't wait to meet you in person, what a blast it will be, whenever the time comes.
Lorlore said…
I love it there!! And you should eat there, it's good, too. Love the golden cadillac, I have a recipe for it I found in a book.
Poor Red's and I go wayyyy back!! My ex is just back from Burning Man also. Great post!!
Heidi Ann said…
LOVE Poor Red's !! And it has been WAY too long since I've been there!
Shouldn't admit this, but YEARS ago, before I turned 21, I used to hang out there. The bartenders knew me, and my (older) friends were all regulars, so they let me - but I am pretty sure they didn't serve me alcohol, if I recall correctly. I would just drink soda and they let me hang with my buds - and it was a good time. The first time I ever had a Shirley Temple when I was little was there - our parent's friends took us out to dinner there, and I remember being served the largest baked potato I had ever seen in my entire life!
Loved this post, Heather - I always love your Hometown posts!!
Missa said…
Now that's the REAL DEAL! How lucky you are to have such local establishments of character. With each Tuesday that passes your town becomes more and more enchanting!

Would love to visit one day and join you for a pink squirrel, prettiest lil' drink I ever did see :)

Popular posts from this blog

pretty baby

"I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin..."

handmade homes take to the open road