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  • Quick Pack Food Mart

    Coupla days ago, from the window of a passing bus, I noticed Quick Pack Food Mart on Jackson Street, which claims to be “home of the best fried chicken.”

    Since moving back to Seattle in 2022, I’ve yearned for good chicken, but the city is dominated by KFC, which sucks, and a local chain, Ezell’s, which specializes in chicken that looks great but is almost literally flavorless. Yelp backed up Quick Pack’s claims, so I was at Quick Pack on Wednesday.

    It’s a tiny convenience store, and I mean tiny — there’s an aisle of stuff for sale, with shelves only half full, but the chicken seems to be their primary business, in heat racks at the front counter.

    The menu is a small chalk board, listing a handful of bird-meat combos (wings, legs, breasts, etc), and two side options: six jojos for $1.69, or sambusa for two bucks. These are reasonable prices, and the place sure smelled good, so I ordered seven legs for $14.99. The nice lady behind the counter told me they had only five ready, but said she’d substitute two wings at the same price, or I could wait 15 minutes while they cooked more legs. I went with the wings over the wait.

    For quick service, they can’t be beat. I was in and out in about two minutes, which includes at least one minute of me dawdling, looking for the menu, and getting my Quick Pack bearings.

    They don’t offer separate recipes for ‘regular’ or ‘spicy’, instead treading a delicious middle ground. My chicken was never spicy-hot, but never dull, either. Both the skin and the meat were tasty, not “Oh my god that’s delicious,” but a more subtle “Mmm, that was good, I want another bite.” Sorta hypnotic!

    They call it “the best fried chicken,” and for flavor that might be the truth, but the texture was gruesome. Time after time, amid the yumminess came the gumminess of gristle, usually in a long tube of chewiness. It’s like biting into a stubborn, stringy rubber band, over and over again. Hours later, I was still picking gristle out of my teeth.

    None of the following had I known, until researching it on the internet, but chicken parts have tendons — and of course, they do; chickens are a living thing. And Quick Pack’s pieces are larger than usual, so the ghastly tendons are larger, too.

    According to a website called Restaurant Business, “the tendon is easily removed with a knife, specialized hand-tool, or pulled out by hand (a paper towel helps for grip). There are industrial machines that can rapidly remove tendons. If your meat supplier has one, you can also be sure to source chicken tenderloins without the tendon, typically without seeing a big difference in price.” This, I surmise, is why I’ve never noticed tendons at Kentucky Fried or Ezell’s or even in TV-dinner chicken. I’ve chewed, digested, and pooped out hundreds, perhaps thousands of birds, but never eaten any chicken so tendons-in and tendonacious as Quick Pack.

    Despite the general excellence of the recipe, the quick service and affordability, the tendons took the joy out of lunch, so my quest for a good chicken dinner continues.

    Quick Pack Food Mart
    2616 S Jackson St (Central District)
    Food: great, and gruesome.
    Price: good.
    Service: quick.
    Transit: #8, #14, #48
    Verdict: NO.

    3/12/2026

    Cheap Seattle

    itsdougholland.com
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  • At Mabel’s place

    Judith and Jake, Cy and Joe, three cats and a dog the size of a man live in this house, along with me. We’re all slobs, except Cy. The bathroom gets cleaned only when company is coming, and everyone knows which cat pees on the furniture but nobody does anything about it, and nobody cleans it up. 

    PATHETIC LIFE logo

    From Pathetic Life #22
    Monday, March 11, 1996

    All this is mentioned not as a complaint — hey, I’m comfortable in the squalor — but for comparison purposes, because after working at the magazine today, I took a #38 Geary past Japantown, and worked in a house messier than mine.

    ♦ ♦ ♦ 

    Mabel opened the door almost instantly after I knocked. She must’ve been waiting for me, maybe watching me approach. She’s an attractive middle-aged white woman, and she was wearing a stained sweatshirt and sweatpants, clothes which hinted that she might be pitching in on the work, but she didn’t.

    Since she’s a woman, she was the first thing I noticed, but behind her was a sea of beer cans and old magazines, fast food wrappers and dirty clothes everywhere. Judge not, lest ye be judged, flashed across my mind. You rarely see a house so messy, but it wasn’t that much worse than my own room.

    “Follow me,” was the first thing Mabel said, not even hello. She led the way toward the kitchen, stepping over laundry, auto parts, and huge trash drifts as I followed, and we made our way down a wide hallway narrowed by junk.

    A cacophony of kid noises was coming from up down all around, and I counted five filthy youngins (though there may have been more). By the way she yelled at them, I’m judging they were all Mabel’s, or else she runs the world’s worst daycare.

    In the kitchen, the mess was spectacular, but I’ve seen worse. Mabel told me to ignore everything else — the clutter, the clothes piled in the corner, the stained and rusting appliances, the yellowing beauty and style magazines haphazardly tossed everywhere. I was mostly there to wash the dishes, she said.

    That’s the most popular chore I’m hired for, and indeed, dirty dishes were stacked in the sink, and everywhere else. Plates and bowls were stacked along the length of the counter, many with leftovers never scraped off, and dried for so long it no longer stank. More dishes were stacked on the floor, in an arching oval around the sink, with a gateway between the dirty dishes that allowed access to the sink.

    A dishwasher was in the corner, but it not only didn’t work, it didn’t have a door, and the machine was filled with kids’ toys, with larger toys on the bottom and smaller toys on the cup rack above. And roaches.

    I’ve seen a few houses as messy as Mabel’s, but never have I seen so many dirty dishes. Never seen so many dishes, period. Her family apparently just buys more dishes, to avoid washing the dishes they already have. There’s no other way to explain it.

    Across and under many of the dishes were more roaches and spiders, pests which seemed to co-exist peacefully at Mabel’s place. While I washed dishes, kids often walked or ran through the kitchen, and once, one of them was carrying a live cockroach and trying to throw it at another kid.

    ♦ ♦ ♦ 

    The night wasn’t entirely washing dishes. I also plastic-bagged up a great deal of trash, piling the bags at the back door. The kitchen floor became exposed as I gathered dishes off it, so I took a few breaks from the dishes to scrape and scrub the tile, then swept and mopped.

    But mostly I washed dishes, until my fingers were so soggy and soft I could’ve chopped off a fingernail or fingertip with a butter knife. I had to stop, not because all the dishes had been washed, but because I needed to be downtown by 11:15 to catch my last train home.

    About 90% of the dishes had been washed, but there was nowhere to put them — not enough cupboard space, and what shelves there were had bugs and cobwebs. Since they couldn’t be put away, I stacked most of the clean dishes on the counter, taller than they’d been stacked while dirty. At least all the dishes were off the floor.

    ♦ ♦ ♦ 

    A pee stop was required before my bus ride to the train station, so I asked, “Where’s the john?” and knew I’d regret it. You can’t keep your bladder waiting for too long, but if I had it all to do over again I’d have peed in the bushes beside the sidewalk.

    “It’s this way,” said the sweatshirt lady. “Watch out for the stereo,” she added, stepping over an unplugged turntable, leading me toward what I figured would be Dante’s bathroom, but it was worse than that.

    “After you’ve finished with the kitchen some other night, the bathroom will be next to be cleaned,” she said, as she nudged open a door and clicked a light on. The bathroom was a mess like the rest of the house; only the flavor of flotsam and jetsam was different, with more magazines and hair care products, fewer food wrappers.

    I grunted — there was puke in my mouth — and walked in, closed the door and peed into the toilet, and then puked onto the pee. It was partly sick-puke, cuz I’m still not healthy, but mostly it was puke brought on by the mess.

    My pee and puke were atop someone else’s un-flushed shit, and there was enough shit that flushing seemed like a gamble — the toilet might overflow, and looking around the messy room, I saw no plunger.

    To flush, or not to flush? If the toilet flooded the room, Mabel would probably expect me to clean it up, but if I didn’t want to be stranded in San Francisco overnight, I needed to be on my way quickly.

    Not to flush, I decided. Mabel was in the front room, and asked when I could come back to finish the dishes, and start on the bathroom. “Never,” I wanted to say, but I’m broke so “Wednesday?” is what came out of my puke-flavored mouth.

    She said OK, wanted me to start early, and we agreed on 10AM Wednesday. Then she handed me my pay for the night — $30 for six hours, with no tip you fucker, and not even a “thank you.”

    This is an entry retyped from an on-paper zine I wrote many years ago, called Pathetic Life. The opinions stated were my opinions then, but might not be my opinions now. Also, I said and did some disgusting things, so parental guidance is advised.

    Pathetic Life
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    itsdougholland.com
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  • Weekly dead, 3/10

    Being old, death gets my attention, so I read the obituaries. This is a collection of recent obits for people whose work touched my life, because I want to say thanks, or maybe give ’em a final fuck you.

    There’ll be a roundup like this once weekly, until I’m on the list myself.

    Benjamin Biesecker
    forgotten person

    Roy Book Binder
    bluesman

    Anthony Chambers
    forgotten person

    Tommy DeCarlo
    rock’n’roller, Boston

    Harry Freeman-Jones
    OG gay rights activist

    Emmy Goode
    grace, warmth, and courage

    Claudia Guerrero
    forgotten person

    John Hammond
    bluesman

    Stephen Hibbert
    actor, Pulp Fiction

    Jaime Jimino
    forgotten person

    Lou Holtz
    footballer & coach

    Bernard Lafayette
    Freedom Rider and voting rights

    Country Joe McDonald
    rock’n’roller, Country Joe & the Fish

    Augie Meyers
    rock’n’roller, Sir Douglas Quintet

    Monti Rock III
    actor, Saturday Night Fever

    Jennifer Runyon
    actress, Ghostbusters

    Steve
    an old pal

    Unnamed
    forgotten person

    Keamar’Jae Wilkins
    2nd Amendment

    “I have never killed anyone, but I have read some obituary notices with great satisfaction.”
              —Clarence Darrow

    Previously dead

    3/10/2026

    itsdougholland.com
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