Jane Williams going to the foodie goodies in Mexico |
Ole! This is what I call a REAL cookout!
BJ Advertising Art retiree Mike Williams (BJ 1968-2012) and wife
Jane Spiess Williams give a new meaning to cookout.
Jane enjoys more than the food |
They are in Mexico again, since Jane has trouble with the altitude
in their previous haunt, Ecuador, particularly trekking up the Andes Mountains.
13,000 feet isn’t much fun for some people.
Photo is of Jane going for the uchepos at the Tarerio village booth at the Cocineros
Tradicionales food festival in Morelia, where the wandering Williamses hung out
last year, too.
In
January they were in Guadalupe.
Mike
explains the cookout cavalcade:
“Cooking booths had an outdoor cooker of some kind out front. Several guys
kept busy with wheelbarrows full of wood, supplying the fires.
“Three
huge dining tents sheltered several hundred tables from the strong sun.
“Last
year we went on the weekend, could barely find two seats together. This year we
waited til Monday, the third day, early, found it much more relaxed.”
Jane is Mike’s
interpreter for the Spanish because “she speaks it much better than me,” Mike
said.
Jane became fluent
in Spanish because her first husband was from Ecuador and they spent a lot of
time there.
Mike with John Olesky during the Papa Joe's lunch days |
“An area the size of a football field with
several really large tents filled with tables with fabric tablecloths and staff
ready to pick up your decorated clay tableware as soon as you are finished with
your samples offered by about 100 vendors.”
Mike and Jane, who will celebrate their 37th wedding
anniversary in Mexico on March 19, have two sons, independent trucker Nathan
Williams and chemical engineer Trevor Williams. Mike retired in December 2012
after 44 years, including coming under John Grimm’s wing in 1976.
Mike’s sister, BJ information technology retiree Linda Williams
Torson, is married to Akron-Summit County Metroparks retiree Tim
Torson. Linda was with the Beacon Journal for 42 years.
Another sister, former clinical dietician Cindy Williams Chima,
worked in the BJ classified phone room in the 1970s and writes fiction novels
for young adults.
Linda started in the Beacon Journal classified phone room in the
summer at age 16 before her senior year in high school. Helen Becton,
manager in the phone room at the time, got a two-fer: Linda's twin Cindy started
at the same time.
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