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CrazyCain
06-20-2020, 06:19 PM
28176

Here ya go John JRTJH, we took a quick trip to St. Ignace and as usual, had to stop and get dinner for a few nights!!Got a couple quarts of gravy too....

LHaven
06-20-2020, 07:01 PM
Did you bring enough for the whole class?

tech740
06-20-2020, 07:17 PM
28176

Here ya go John JRTJH, we took a quick trip to St. Ignace and as usual, had to stop and get dinner for a few nights!!Got a couple quarts of gravy too....

That is a must stop when we cross the bridge. My kids ask for that place by name whenever we mention going to the UP.

notanlines
06-21-2020, 02:07 AM
After that post, we may have to crank up the bike next week and make a run to Rhinelander to Joe's Pastie Shop, https://ilovepasties.com/, one of the few that can be compared with Lehto's in the UP.
And I also want to know if you bought enough for the whole class?

NH_Bulldog
06-21-2020, 05:03 AM
We’ll be up in the Keweenah in a few weeks and always stop in at Roy’s in Houghton for their Thanksgiving (turkey cranberry) Pasties. Their traditional ones are great too!

JRTJH
06-21-2020, 06:46 AM
Pasties are a "taste choice" for most that have sampled them from various places around the UP. Letho's in St Ignace (only the original on US2, west of town, not the new Letho's across from the ferry docks in town) are the first choice. Second is Muldoon's in Munising (just as you start up the hill west of town), try the apple pastie for dessert. There are probably 200 or more varieties of pasties across the UP, but these two are "personal favorites. I "draw the line" at "breakfast pasties made with SOS" and served before noon...

Tom, we were there last week, had two while sitting on the picnic tables and brought 6 home.

The "dilemma" still unresolved is: Catsup or gravy..... For us, it's gravy, a dill pickle and chocolate milk.

chuckster57
06-21-2020, 06:50 AM
I finally got the chance to look up what they are made of, I need to learn to make them.:)

ctbruce
06-21-2020, 08:12 AM
Lehto's is great.

roadglide
06-21-2020, 08:35 AM
I figure if I hold off long enough somebody will hone in on someplace I’m going. Will be in the UP Sault Ste. Marie or Saint Agnes the end of August. Will look for the pastries. The Kawadin Casino in Saint Ignace has an RV park were interested In spending some time in the area. I’ve already called so we should be good to go visit the Kewadin casinos there are three in the UP I’ll have to make a choice.

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:15 AM
I figure if I hold off long enough somebody will hone in on someplace I’m going. Will be in the UP Sault Ste. Marie or Saint Agnes the end of August. Will look for the pastries. The Kawadin Casino in Saint Ignace has an RV park were interested In spending some time in the area. I’ve already called so we should be good to go visit the Kewadin casinos there are three in the UP I’ll have to make a choice.


Roadglide

To get to the original Letho's, go west on US 2...when you pass a place called "Mystery Spot" on the right, Letho's will be on the right, eh, 1/2 mile maybe.. You can't miss is.
The Kawadin Casino RV park is a parking lot with sites along the edges. Most site do have Electric and Water, plus a dump station...A good stop over for a night and you can donate to the Local Tribe at the casino.. :)

:popcorn:

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:22 AM
Pasties are a "taste choice" for most that have sampled them from various places around the UP. Letho's in St Ignace (only the original on US2, west of town, not the new Letho's across from the ferry docks in town) are the first choice. Second is Muldoon's in Munising (just as you start up the hill west of town), try the apple pastie for dessert. There are probably 200 or more varieties of pasties across the UP, but these two are "personal favorites. I "draw the line" at "breakfast pasties made with SOS" and served before noon...

Tom, we were there last week, had two while sitting on the picnic tables and brought 6 home.

The "dilemma" still unresolved is: Catsup or gravy..... For us, it's gravy, a dill pickle and chocolate milk.



John, just missed ya by a weekend....Gravy is my choice.We thought about eating the there, but people were starting to line up in the parking lot and with the social distance going on, they were everywhere.. LOL

Now the battle begins, is it Catsup or Ketchup....

Breakfast Pastie with SOS, that made my stomach turn :(:nonono:

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:23 AM
I finally got the chance to look up what they are made of, I need to learn to make them.:)

Let us know when you perfect them, than you can fill all the orders people are asking me for..:lol::lol::lol::lol:

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:24 AM
Lehto's is great.


^^^^^ like he said^^^^^^^^^

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:25 AM
Interesting NH_Bulldog

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:29 AM
After that post, we may have to crank up the bike next week and make a run to Rhinelander to Joe's Pastie Shop, https://ilovepasties.com/, one of the few that can be compared with Lehto's in the UP.
And I also want to know if you bought enough for the whole class?

Good to hear Jim> See Chucksters post, he is going to perfect the Pastie and start filling orders....:lol::lol::lol::lol::eek::hide:

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 10:31 AM
Did you bring enough for the whole class?


see below or above posts where ever this ends up LOL

Roscommon48
06-21-2020, 11:52 AM
lehtos for pasties and Clyde's for a hamburger, fries and a malt...both are a must when in st. Ignace

travelin texans
06-21-2020, 12:22 PM
I'm from the south so when you say "gravy" are you talking that brown stuff the type you put on roast or good old white cream gravy with bits of sausage.
Had friends from Ontario invite us to brunch one Sunday only to find she had made great homemade biscuits with brown gravy, SORRY that ain't real biscuits & gravy.
I've had fruit pasties while in St Ignace that were great, but didn't try the breakfast ones, they sound good.

notanlines
06-21-2020, 12:54 PM
This letter (site) was sent to me by a woman in Cornwall, England: They are VERY serious about their product in Cornwall, to the point of having it patented!

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 01:35 PM
This letter (site) was sent to me by a woman in Cornwall, England: They are VERY serious about their product in Cornwall, to the point of having it patented!


Interesting, but we make UP pasties and spell istwith ies and not Ys :lol::lol::lol::lol:

Northofu1
06-21-2020, 01:50 PM
This letter (site) was sent to me by a woman in Cornwall, England: They are VERY serious about their product in Cornwall, to the point of having it patented!

They are real deal. I have had both, I prefer the English version.

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 02:51 PM
lehtos for pasties and Clyde's for a hamburger, fries and a malt...both are a must when in st. Ignace

Clyde's was jammed packed

CrazyCain
06-21-2020, 03:06 PM
for your viewing pleasure :rolleyes:

Smoked White fish from Manly's in St. Ignace

roadglide
06-21-2020, 03:40 PM
This letter (site) was sent to me by a woman in Cornwall, England: They are VERY serious about their product in Cornwall, to the point of having it patented!
In New Mexico the Mexican word for that is called empanadas .

JRTJH
06-21-2020, 04:18 PM
In New Mexico the Mexican word for that is called empanadas .

Two significant differences: First, empanadas are usually fried (some are baked) and pasties are always baked.

Empanadas don't have rutabaga (swede) in them. Pasties always include rutabaga. Carrot is sometimes substituted in "outlaw pasties"... no self respecting Yooper would ever agree to that substitution....

Whitewolf
06-21-2020, 06:20 PM
To me and many of my fellow Yoopers, the key ingredient is the crust. You can have the best tasting ingredients with just the right amount of spices, but if the crust sucks, well...............

billsr
06-21-2020, 06:53 PM
We got our pasties from Muldoons in Munising when we were in the UP 2 years ago. Ready for some more.

roadglide
06-21-2020, 08:11 PM
Two significant differences: First, empanadas are usually fried (some are baked) and pasties are always baked.

Empanadas don't have rutabaga (swede) in them. Pasties always include rutabaga. Carrot is sometimes substituted in "outlaw pasties"... no self respecting Yooper would ever agree to that substitution....
I’m going and will try Them while I’m in the area maybe ride around and find Brevort lake I remember going to that lake every year for vacation in the late 60s

JRTJH
06-22-2020, 01:54 AM
Brevort NF Campground is about 10 miles west of Letho's (US2) pasty shop. As you're headed west on US2, it's on the right side of the highway. Turn right, about 1.5 miles and you'll turn right again. Then straight into the campground (don't turn right onto the "day use/beach area road).

One of our members works as a campground host at Brevort. I won't name them, but they may chime in if they want you to know who they are.

We try to get to Brevort for a few days at least every other year. Fishing isn't the greatest and there's some pretty "hazardous" sand bars if you're "high speed boating"...

The campground is all rustic (no hookups) with dirt/grassy sites. Many are directly on the water and the rest are within easy walking distance. Depending on the time of your visit, ALWAYS carry some insect repellant with you. Between mosquitoes (the UP version are classified as large enough to require a hunting license) and the black flies/deer flies/horse flies, there's almost always a "painful bite awaiting".... The campground is always clean, well maintained and a nice place to spend a few days, "boondocking".

There's a brown NF sign on US2, it says, "Brevort Lake Recreation Area" with a small trailer under it. If you reach the shore of Lake Michigan and see the Hiawatha National Forest sign (the big one with rocks supporting it) then you're about 200' past the turn to the campground off of US2... Just beyond that "big NF sign" US2 opens up on the northern shore of Lake Michigan. Some of the "nicest fresh water beaches in the US are right there. There are numerous places to park along US2 and walk down to the water's edge. It's unique to stand on the sandy shore, look out over the water and not see a "distant shore". Yes, Lake Michigan is that large. And "no sharks or jelly fish" although there are occasional "sharp, jagged rocks" so step carefully.

roadglide
06-23-2020, 03:08 AM
John. I Remember brevort Lake having a line of small cabins along the beach across the lake there was old wooden vacant 2 story house on the beach ther were huge sand dunes as a kid of 10 years old everything is giant but that’s where we played on the dunes . The fishing was excellent and I do remember the lake being sandy shallow in places . I have my dad‘s 16 foot aluminum boat on my buggy trailer. Dad would strap the boat racks with the rubber Suction on top of the Oldsmobile and tied the boat on top of the racks and that’s how I remember brevort lake .

JRTJH
06-23-2020, 06:11 AM
Jerry,

There are a LOT more cabins on Brevort now than what you remember. About the only "strip of waterfront" that doesn't have a cabin is the National Forest property. Otherwise, it's built up much more than what I remember from camping there when we lived in the UP in the 80's.

The campground is on a "peninsula" that juts out into the lake. The actual lake is on the east of the campground and there's a bay on the west. It's grassy, lots of milfoil and other species and there's some pretty good fishing in that part. The campground extends west from that peninsula with a "second part of the campground" that is "wetter with more bugs". We prefer finding a spot on the peninsula side of the campground. Some are "first come/first serve" but there are also some sites that can be reserved.

legger99
06-29-2020, 07:56 PM
Today I just went across the southern UP coming back from a family visit in Traverse City and can't say I have ever gotten a pastie from Lehto's, I will try to make it a point to pick one up on my next time through to sample.

I have had others from throughout the UP, but I am partial to Dobber's which are made & sold in the town I live in.

I also just discovered this site and it has a pastie tour: https://thepastyguy.com/portfolio/the-pasty-trail-best-pasties-in-up/

And I use ketchup!

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 04:01 AM
And I use ketchup!:eek::eek: :lol::lol:

I like gravy on the side to dip that big crust roll in at the end. I know we'll probably get kicked out of the U.P. for this, but Shirley likes a little mustard with hers. :nonono::nonono:

Years ago, actually a lifetime ago, we rolled into Copper Harbor to camp at the state park with our kids in a tent. As the gas station attendant was filling my tank (yeah, THAT long ago), I saw several restaurant signs. The following short conversation took place.

Me: Who makes the best pasties in town?
Him: (deadpan, no expression) My mom.
Me: (looong pause) Ok, who makes the second best pasties in town?
Him: (a little smile now) That place over there.

:lol::lol::lol:

notanlines
06-30-2020, 05:17 AM
Him: My name is Legger. I'm a ketchuphaulic.

Group: Hello, Legger. Welcome.

Him: I eat ketchup on pasty.

Group: You may need more than one sponsor!

Group: You may find pasty outlets won't sell to you.

Group: Keep coming back. It works if you work it.

And to think I was sworn to secrecy by Whitewolf and his wife's mustard! :D:eek:

JRTJH
06-30-2020, 06:16 AM
Me: Who makes the best pasties in town?
Him: (deadpan, no expression) My mom.
Me: (looong pause) Ok, who makes the second best pasties in town?
Him: (a little smile now) That place over there.

:lol::lol::lol:

You left out the "tonal inflection": In Copper Harbor, his response would have been: "Dat place ova dare, eh." http://www.sherv.net/cm/emo/laughing/animated-giggling-smiley-emoticon.gif (http://www.sherv.net/)

When it comes to "a whole 'nother country".. Texas has nothing over da UP, eh?

ronheater70
06-30-2020, 07:04 AM
Pasties are a "taste choice" for most that have sampled them from various places around the UP. Letho's in St Ignace (only the original on US2, west of town, not the new Letho's across from the ferry docks in town) are the first choice. Second is Muldoon's in Munising (just as you start up the hill west of town), try the apple pastie for dessert. There are probably 200 or more varieties of pasties across the UP, but these two are "personal favorites. I "draw the line" at "breakfast pasties made with SOS" and served before noon...

Tom, we were there last week, had two while sitting on the picnic tables and brought 6 home.

The "dilemma" still unresolved is: Catsup or gravy..... For us, it's gravy, a dill pickle and chocolate milk.

We rent a cabin On lake Superior in AuTrain and the first pastie I tried was from Muldoon's Those things are good. Really the equate to a hand held pot pie with a lil something extra!

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 08:11 AM
And to think I was sworn to secrecy by Whitewolf and his wife's mustard! :D:eek:

:lol::lol::lol: I'm sorry, I couldn't keep the secret any longer. Wow. I feel better now that it's out. :lol::lol::lol:

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 08:24 AM
When it comes to "a whole 'nother country".. Texas has nothing over da UP, eh?

We've lived here close to 26 years now. Shirley's family is from Missouri, right on the Arkansas border.

A few years ago her family had a reunion. Us guys naturally gravitated into a group. After a few minutes they started asking exactly where Shirley and I live because I talked funny. :lol: So I lapsed into a little Yooper speak and the looks on their faces was priceless. :lol::lol: 'Course I had to translate what I said. :lol::lol::lol:

Holy wah! Dey taut dat it was a hoot, eh! (We all had a great laugh.)

legger99
06-30-2020, 01:25 PM
Thanks for the Welcome!

And ketchup can't be as bad as mustard? - I don't even have that yellow stuff in the refrigerator!

I am now wondering what gravy would be like. I think Dobber's has ketchup bottles on the tables there :) might have to branch out when on a camping trip this summer.

Unrelated too pasties. I used to travel for work and did get lot of people asking if I was from Canada, um No but pretty close...

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 04:19 PM
Legger- Shirley likes mustard (the regular yellow stuff) on pretty much everything. From sandwiches to dogs to burgers to pasties. She's pretty much a little mustard queen. :lol:

I've been asked at time or two if I was from Canada. Could be the accent or could be the use of the word eh.

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 04:40 PM
:lol::lol::lol:

JRTJH
06-30-2020, 05:05 PM
Substituting carrot for rutabaga is like taking your sister to the prom... Some things just never should happen, eh !!!!!

Whitewolf
06-30-2020, 05:05 PM
Substituting carrot for rutabaga is like taking your sister to the prom... Some things just never should happen, eh !!!!!

:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

tech740
06-30-2020, 07:17 PM
:lol::lol::lol:

So true. This maybe one my favorite threads now.

Whitewolf
07-01-2020, 06:28 AM
2 things Yoopers love. Their pasties and their Stormy Kromers. :D

JRTJH
07-01-2020, 06:40 AM
2 things Yoopers love. Their pasties and their Stormy Kromers. :D

Got two SK's, one in red/black plaid for normal days and a fancy gray one with fuzzy flaps for dressin' up, eh...

DW's uncle, Pete Jujutenin, from just north of Marquette was a commercial fisherman. He invited me to go catch some lakers on a Saturday morning. We left Marquette's Upper Harbor about 430 AM in a 26' wooden boat with a 40 hp 'evinrood on da back, eh... Well, we lost sight of land in about 30 minutes and it kept getting colder and colder on the big lake. By noon, with a "land temp of over 80" it was between 35-40F "on da wader", eh... Sure glad I had my winter coat and my SK wid' me, eh.... Da plaid one, eh, cause it wasn't Sunday, eh...

Whitewolf
07-01-2020, 07:46 AM
Holy Wah John. Youse might as well move to da Yoop, eh!

flybouy
07-01-2020, 07:58 AM
You guys talk funny, a lot like the people in Minnisooooda.

Whitewolf
07-01-2020, 08:35 AM
I think there's a northern band of people, from the U.P to North Dakota that talk about the same. Might be the Scandinavian influence. :D