Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Dune Buggies, Doris Day, and Yorkshire Pudding - Talking Story with Arlo

Storytelling
Talking Story with Arlo

By Arlo Agogo

How I Blew the Minds of a Gaggle of Brits with My Yorkshire Pudding Burrito 

My name is Arlo—yes, like the folk singer, no, I don’t play guitar—and I just pulled off the greatest culinary ambush since the Boston Tea Party, only this time the Brits didn’t see it coming and they loved it.

It all started on a Friday night when my phone did the electric slide across the nightstand. One text. From  Doris Day—my desert darling, my daredevil, my personal 5-foot-10 tornado of blonde hair and throttle.

Everyone else calls her Doris. I call her Desert Darlin’ because she’ll smoke your doors off in a 1968 VW dune buggy faster than you can say “God save the Queen.

”The text was short and dangerous:

“British mates in town for a summer desert adventure. Sunday desert potluck. You. Me. Dune buggies. Bring food or I’ll leave you in my dust again.

”Challenge accepted. Doris is cultured. Doris once corrected my pronunciation of “Worcestershire” while doing 60 mph across a dry lake bed. She announced she was doing a desert cookout for her mates who rented Jeeps to venture out in the Arizona desert mid summer. 

I could practically hear the smug radiating through the phone. Game on, lady. I spent the next 48 hours turning my backyard smoker into a weapon of mass deliciousness.

I smoked a brisket until it was cowboy perfection

I smoked potatoes until they surrendered. I even smoked the carrots because why the hell not? Then came the evil genius part: 

I poured Yorkshire pudding batter into a screaming-hot cast-iron skillet, but instead of letting it rise into dignified little cups like a civilized human, I swirled it thin like a crepe—basically a giant, fluffy, golden tortilla of British tradition.

Yorkshire pudding is a British tradition for Sunday dinner along with roast beef. Me mum was British and would nearly every Sunday have a roast rotating on her Faberware cooker. Grand mum made the Yorkshire pudding.

I loaded those bad boys with sliced smoked brisket, smoked roast potatoes, smoked veg, a sneaky smear of horseradish cream (for the kick), wrapped them like a Southwestern burrito, and named them absolutely nothing that would give away the plot. 

They just looked like innocent, oversized burritos.

Perfect.Sunday. Avi Casino parking lot. 9 a.m. sharp. Two yellow 1968 VW dune buggies sitting side by side like we’re about to film Mad Max: Retiree Fury. My cooler is packed with 24 mystery burritos the size of newborn babies. 

Doris eyes it suspiciously. “Arlo, my love, tell me those aren’t from Taco Bell. “Darlin’, the only bell these rang was the Liberty Bell of flavor.”

She rolled her eyes so hard I thought she’d see her own brain. We blasted five miles out into the desert to the legendary Desert Bar road—technically the Nellie E. Saloon, but everybody just calls it the Desert Bar—where roughly a several hundred sunburned cowboys, off-road lunatics, and one very confused British tour group were already halfway to Tipsy Town. 

Someone had a flatbed truck with a country band, someone else had bongos, and the beer was flowing like the Colorado River after a dam engineer falls asleep at the switch.

Doris’s British posse—ten of them, ranging from Nigel who wore a Barbour jacket in 110-degree heat to Penelope who kept asking where the “loo” was (girl, pick a cactus, we’re in the desert)—were politely terrified of everything. 

Perfect victims.

We set up the potluck table: burgers, hot dogs, seven kinds of chips, and then… my burritos. 

24 foil-wrapped torpedoes of deception.

The Brits circled them like they were unexploded ordnance. Doris, sensing mutiny, went full mum-mode: “Come on, darlings, Arlo’s usually decent in the kitchen. Try one. For Queen and country.”Guilt is a hell of a drug. One by one they grabbed a burrito and sat down.

I waited. First bite. Silence. Second bite. Eyes widened to dinner-plate size. Nigel actually dropped his monocle (okay, he wasn’t wearing a monocle, but he should have been for dramatic effect).

“Blimey… this isn’t Mexican. This is… this is YORKSHIRE PUDDING.”Penelope started crying—happy tears, I think, it was hard to tell through the dust and tequila.

“This is better than my mum’s and my mum has been dead for twelve years!” Another one stood up and yelled, “Oi! This cowboy just kidnapped Sunday dinner and held it for ransom inside a burrito! I feel violated and DELIGHTED!

Doris looked at me like I’d just invented fire. 

Her exact words: “You absolute madman.” The country band stopped mid-song because the lead singer was too busy inhaling a burrito. Someone started a chant of “USA! USA!” which felt ironic coming from people who still owe us rent from 1776, but whatever, 

I’ll take the win.

By the time the sun started doing its golden-hour Instagram filter thing, the Brits were my best friends. Nigel tried to knight me with a plastic spoon. Penelope asked if she could take six burritos back to Manchester in her carry-on (“Southwest might object, love”). 

Doris just kept shaking her head, grinning like she both wanted to murder me and marry me on the spot. As the sky turned nuclear orange, everyone packed up before the desert turned into a black hole with teeth. 

Doris and I fired up the buggies for the traditional farewell race back to the casino. She beat me by half a length—mainly because she’s a demon and I was still digesting my brisket—but when we skidded to a stop, she killed the engine, marched over, grabbed my leather vest.

Using both fists like she was about to head-butt me into next week, yanked me in, and laid on me the kind of kiss that was slow, wet, passionate and  breathtaking long.

When she finally let me breathe, she whispered, “Arlo, you ridiculous, brilliant, burrito-sorcery cowboy… never change.”

Then she hopped back in her buggy, did her traditional 360 burnout, honked her goofy VW horn—beep-beep!—and disappeared in a cloud of desert smoke and pure triumph.

I stood there in the parking lot, covered in sand, lipstick, and victory, happier than a man has any right to be. So yeah. That’s the story of how I weaponized Yorkshire pudding, pranked an entire delegation from the United Kingdom, made my desert darling proud, and lived to tell the tale.

God bless smoked brisket, Yorkshire style.

And a Yee-Haw to Doris Day, the fastest, kissiest, most glorious dune-buggy queen the Mojave Desert has ever seen.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

Sponsored by

Barbecue Grills


Barbecue grills



Channels from Arlo......

TalkingStorywithArlo.com

ArloMarketPlace.com

Tea.TalkingStorywithArlo.com

ProductDiscovery.TalkingStorywithArlo.com

For E mail notification of new content subscribe at arloagogo.substack.com

Saturday, November 15, 2025

Biscuits and Gravy - Talking Story with Arlo

Storytelling
Talking Story with Arlo
By Arlo Agogo

Man, dig this scene, friends and flavor chasers of the sunrise squad:
First Saturday after a full moon, the rec-center hall swings wide open like a big ol’ hug, all for the pure joy of Southern soul food
—biscuits and gravy that make your heart sing. 
We’re talkin’ fluffy clouds of homemade biscuits, rivers of sausage-kissed gravy warm as a summer morning, and butter melting into every bite like pure happiness.
This ain’t some fancy contest showdown; it’s a joyful gathering where folks come to taste the old-school recipes that feel like coming home, fifty bucks up for grabs, and everyone’s buzzing with excitement just to dig in.
Picture it: 500 homes, 750 neighbors, many rolling in on walkers gleaming in the sun or scooting on carts with spots for coffee cups and grandkids’ drawings. 
The crew sends out golf-cart rides—sirens humming “Sweet Caroline”
—to pick up anyone who needs a lift.
Folks help each other out; that’s the heart of it. Got room? Make space. Miss Ethel with her oxygen buddy rides up front, tank buckled safe, cheering “Let’s roll!” as the cart hums along at a gentle cruise.
Doors open at 10 a.m. sharp, and the place is already alive with smiles and that irresistible aroma. The spread’s laid out like a family feast: pancakes soft and stacked high, eggs fluffy as clouds, bacon crispy and inviting.
Five bucks for all you can eat, but the real magic? Folks are here to savor the biscuits and gravy—the homemade kind that wraps you in joy from the first taste.
Ten big pots bubble with different gravies, each one a labor of love from old family recipes passed down like treasured stories. You wander the line, plate in hand, eyes wide with wonder, ready for the happiest flavor adventure.
There’s Mabel’s pot—champ so many times, her hair shining like a sunny day. Folks flock to her gravy, thick and savory, with sausage bits dancing in every spoonful. 
It’s been made the same way forever, a recipe full of history and heart. You ladle a bit onto a warm biscuit, and oh, the joy—it’s peppery, creamy, like a hug from someone who’s known you all your life. 
The crowd murmurs in delight, savoring every bite.
Next up: Wild Bill’s creation, with a touch of sweetness that surprises and warms the soul. Some folks chuckle and tease, but when you taste it, it’s like a gentle kiss of flavor, perfect for sopping up with a flaky biscuit. The happiness spreads as people share bites and laughs.
Then Crazy Carl’s spot—bold and full of fire, sausage chunks bold as his stories. It’s the kind that wakes up your taste buds with pure delight.
Artistic Alvin pours his gravy with flair, swirling smiles or hearts right onto the biscuits. You bite in, and it’s fun, creamy, a playful explosion of homemade goodness that makes everyone grin from ear to ear.
Dolores brings her classic—peppery and thick, straightforward joy in every drop, the kind of old-school taste that feels timeless and comforting.
Harold’s is rich and hearty, sausage shining through like stars in the gravy sky.The air’s filled with friendly chatter, thicker than the steam rising up. These folks have shared laughs for years, so the teasing’s all in good fun. 
“That one’s got kick!” someone says. “Mine’s smooth as a lullaby!” another calls back. Laughter bubbles like the pots, and even the helpers smile wide, keeping things light and safe.
You line up, plate steady, heart full of anticipation.
Grab some eggs, a pancake or two, then dive into the gravy magic. Ten ladles, ten chances for bliss. Sneak a taste from each—who’s watching?—and let the flavors dance on your tongue. One’s spicy and alive, waking every sense with joy. Another’s so creamy it melts like a dream. 
Alvin’s swirl tastes like grandma’s secret recipe, full of love. Each bite of biscuit soaked in homemade gravy is pure, old-school happiness—flaky, warm, soul-stirring.
By 11:30, the room’s bursting with folks, joy spilling over to the patio where chairs unfold like old friends. Music plays soft—Sinatra crooning—and it feels like a big family party. 
Kids and grandkids join, eyes lighting up at the tastes and the fun. “This one’s swimming in flavor!” a grandpa says with a wink. “Mine’s got heart!” grandma replies, and everyone chuckles, plates piling high.
Voting’s a sweet secret—scribble your favorite on a slip, drop it in the box. Signs wave: “Best Bite Ever!” Tension builds with giggles and cheers.
Noon strikes. The activities leader steps up, voice bright: “
The November 2025 winner, with 312 votes… MABEL!” 
Cheers erupt like fireworks. She waves the fifty-dollar prize with a big smile, happiness all around. Others get ribbons and hugs, everyone sharing the love.Soon, folks swap stories and tips, planning next time’s tastes. The room hums with connection, no grudges—just joy.
You leave with a full belly and fuller heart, maybe sitting by the pool, sun warm, replaying those magical bites. Friends chat about the sage, the creaminess, dreaming up more. Bonds strengthen, excitement builds for the next gathering.
And that’s the magic of biscuits and gravy here.
It’s not just food; it’s joyful tastes of homemade, old-school recipes that bring people together.
One flaky, gravy-soaked, heartwarming bite of mmm.
Groove is in the Heart - Arlo