Prøve GULL - Gratis
Chuck wagon chef
Guideposts
|August 2020
The not-so-lost art of cooking for cowboys
Texas’s palo duro canyon gets mighty cold in December. Especially at 3:45 in the morning. My hands, my whole body, felt frozen as I rolled out of my 1876 Studebaker chuck wagon. I could barely hold a match to the lantern, the wind blowing from the north. “God, let this catch,” I muttered.
The cowboys were still asleep, though they’d be stirring before long. It’s my job as cook to be up first, firing up Bertha—my 385-pound, wood-burning camp stove—and get enough eggs and bacon going to feed a small battalion. An army moves on its stomach, they say. A cattle drive is no different. Without a hearty breakfast…brother, we’ve got problems. It’s all riding on me.
I gave up a good-paying, secure job to become a chuck wagon cook. At the time, it felt like what I was meant to do. But on mornings like this, a warm bed sure did seem inviting. I went to the barrel to get water for coffee, but it was frozen solid. I’d have to chop it to get some in the percolator. Lord, what am I doing here? I wondered. Just then, the lantern blew out.
My whole life, I’d been around cowboys. I was the youngest of four children, and my daddy ran about 250 cows on a small ranch in southwest Oklahoma, some of the most beautiful and desolate land on God’s earth.
Denne historien er fra August 2020-utgaven av Guideposts.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Guideposts
Guideposts
A Preview From Walking in Grace 2026
Ours was not a musical family. Dad had a guitar he never played. We kids plucked at the strings, but none of us thought to learn to play it ourselves. As part of a music program in school, I took up the recorder. The hope was to graduate to clarinet and join the band. I liked the recorder and practiced regularly. But my family could not afford a clarinet, and I stopped.
1 min
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
His Cardinal Rule
Why this man has crafted hundreds of redbirds out of wood and given them away
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Their Scrappy Christmas
It looked like they wouldn't have much of a holiday that year
3 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Blankets for Baby Jesus
Could I get my young son to understand the reason for the season?
3 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Legend of Zelda
How learning to play a video game unexpectedly helped this mom in her grief journey
6 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Popover Promise
My first Christmas as a mother had me longing for childhood Christmases with my mom
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Stitched With Love
If the Lord is willing and the creek don't rise, I know exactly where I'll be every Monday at 3 P.M.
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
A Hundred Shades of Green
Day by day, I was losing my daddy to dementia. What would be left of him?
5 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
“MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM HEAVEN”
Four nights before Christmas, and my tree was bare.
2 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Memory Ornament
I sat at the dining room table, surrounded by craft supplies, putting the finishing touches on my mom's Christmas gift—an ornament that opened like a jar and held slips of paper with handwritten memories of the year.
1 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Translate
Change font size
