Cityboyfarmer
Gold Member
- Joined
- May 13, 2005
- Messages
- 371
- Location
- Macon, Ga.
- Tractor
- Kubota B8200D; JD 5205 MFWD w/522 Loader
My 10-year-old son and I went to breakfast last Saturday at the local Shoney's breakfast buffet. It is located right off I-75 in Forsyth Ga. It attracts a lot of northern folks on the way to and from wherever they happen to be travelling. On nearly every visit, especially on Saturday's, I overhear a conversation in midwestern or northeastern dialect about grits. Grits seem to fascinate northerners for some reason. Gets me tickled listening to the various comments about "those southern people" and their grits.
I was in a Waffle House off I-75 (there's that I-75 connection again.) and a guy from Michigan asked me where grits came from. I told him they were harvested from the nuts of the prolific southern grits tree and ground up like corn meal in grits mills. His girlfriend actually believed me. I think he did too. I wonder if they took my advice and stopped in TyTy Georgia to visit the grits orchard?
So I'd like to take this opportunity to answer any questions you northern folk have about grits and invite y'all down to visit one of our vast grit plantations and take a tractor tour of the grits orchards and see the packaging operation as the grits are processed through the grits mill. It will be a highly educational experience that will show you how to expertly differentiate your grits from your granola. We can set an example to the world that both northern and southern TBN'ers can co-exist in "hominy".
I was in a Waffle House off I-75 (there's that I-75 connection again.) and a guy from Michigan asked me where grits came from. I told him they were harvested from the nuts of the prolific southern grits tree and ground up like corn meal in grits mills. His girlfriend actually believed me. I think he did too. I wonder if they took my advice and stopped in TyTy Georgia to visit the grits orchard?
So I'd like to take this opportunity to answer any questions you northern folk have about grits and invite y'all down to visit one of our vast grit plantations and take a tractor tour of the grits orchards and see the packaging operation as the grits are processed through the grits mill. It will be a highly educational experience that will show you how to expertly differentiate your grits from your granola. We can set an example to the world that both northern and southern TBN'ers can co-exist in "hominy".