2B | WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2020 | APPEAL TRIBUNE K1 RESTAURANT INSPECTIONS MARION AND POLK COUNTY Enchanted Forest - Mary’s Coffee Cottage Semi-annual restaurant inspections from June 24 to July 6. Location: 8462 Enchanted Way SE, Turner Date: July 2 Score: 95 Priority violations i Food contact surfaces are not cleaned between different raw animal foods, between raw to ready-to- eat foods, or as frequently as necessary, specifically: Observed stored food probe thermometer with accu- mulated food debris. Point deduction: 5. Antojitos Margarita Location: 4521 Newcastle Circle NE, Salem (mobile unit) Date: July 6 Score: 97 Priority violations i A hand-washing sink is not accessible for em- ployee use at all times, is used for purposes other than hand-washing or is not operated properly, specifically: Hand-wash sink had two plastic bottles inside it at start of inspection. Point deduction: 3. Brooks & Terry’s Espresso Location: 100 Ellendale Ave., Dallas (mobile unit) Date: July 2 Score: 97 Priority violations i Hand towels or a hand drying device is not pro- vided at the hand-washing sink, specifically: No paper towels at the hand-washing sink at the time of the in- spection. Point deduction: 3. The Gallon House Location: 219 Oak St., Silverton Date: June 30 Score: 97 Priority violations i Food-contact surfaces are not clean, specifically: Dark buildup on can opener blade. Point deduction: 3. Just Us Girls Location: 2195 Hyacinth Ave. NE, Salem Date: July 6 Score: 100 No priority violations Mac’s Place Location: 583 Lancaster Drive NE, Salem Date: July 2 Score: 94 Priority violations i Multi-use food contact surfaces are not properly constructed or accessible for cleaning, specifically: Several plastic containers cracked along the inner sur- face stored with intact containers in the back storage area. Point deduction: 3. i Food contact surfaces are not clean, specifically: Old lettuce and cheese buildup hanging from the rack inside the prep-line refrigerator. Point deduction: 3. Location: 201 N Water St., Silverton Date: June 10 (reinspected June 23 and June 30) Score: 87 June 10: Priority violations i Potentially hazardous food is not maintained at proper hot or cold holding temperatures, specifically: Hummus heaped over fill line of container in prep cooler measuring 52°F. Point deduction: 5. i The chlorine sanitizer concentration, pH, or tem- perature is not adequate, specifically: Residual of 10PPM in bar dishwasher after running once, refilling machine and running again. Point deduction: 5. i Food employees eat, drink or use tobacco in un- approved areas or use an inappropriate beverage con- tainer for drinking, specifically: Employee beverage in cup with no lid sitting on prep cooler cutting board. Point deduction: 3. June 23: Priority violations i The chlorine sanitizer concentration, pH, or tem- perature is not adequate, specifically: Residual of 10PPM in bar dishwasher after running once, refilling machine and running again June 30: No priority violations Location: 8462 Enchanted Way SE, Turner Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Obituaries The Manila Fiesta Raymond Griesenauer MT.ANGEL - Raymond A. Griesenauer was born August 12, 1936 in Mt. Angel, Oregon; son of Anton and Angela (Bean) Griesenauer, and passed away July 14, 2020 at home. Ray attended Mt. Angel High School and graduated in 1954. Soon after, he joined the U.S. Army and served two years in Alaska before returning to Mt. Angel, where his life as a farmer began. He was member of St. Mary Catholic Church in Mt. Angel. In March of 2003, he married Gail Buchholz, who preceded him in death in 2011. Ray is survived by his brother, Larry (Jeanette) Griesenauer of Salem and sister, Jeanette Moist, of Caldwell, Idaho, nieces, Dee (Brian) Burford and Niki (Jay Don) Greenwood and nephew, Kevin; step-children: Don (Lian) Buchholz, Audrey Bu- chholz, Monica (Wayne) Bochsler, Tom (Barb) Buchholz, and Ruth (Darren) Volbeda. He is proceeded in death by his nephew, Scott Griesenauer. The Rosary will be held Thursday, July 30th at 7:00 pm, with a Funeral Mass on Friday, July 31st at 11:00 am; both will take place at St. Mary Catholic Church. Rite of committal will follow at Calvary Cemetery in Mt. Angel. Unger Funeral Chapel – Mt. Angel assisting the family. Livestreaming is available on the following link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsEb-K1m- C3YuOwkLUTorRGQ Contributions go to St. Mary Catholic Church in Mt. Angel, Oregon. Location: 1952 McGilchrist St. SE, Salem Date: June 24 (reinspected July 1) Score: 90 June 24: Priority violations i Raw or ready-to-eat food is not properly protect- ed from cross contamination, specifically: Raw beef in closable plastic bags stored above raw shell eggs, ground meat stored above whole portions of pork in upright cooler, raw pork in closable plastic bag stored over sauces and ready-to-eat foods in chest freezer. Point deduction: 5. i Food-contact surfaces of equipment and utensils are not properly sanitized after cleaning, specifically: Pans and utensils were washed and rinsed and put on shelf to air dry with no sanitizing step. Point deduc- tion: 5. July 1: No priority violations Mendi’s Pizza Parlor Location: 560 Wallace Road NW, Salem Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Rafa’s Bar & Lounge Location: 4120 Portland Road NE, Salem Date: July 6 Score: 100 No priority violations Location: 201 Oak St., Silverton Date: June 30 Score: 92 Priority violations i Food-contact surfaces of equipment and utensils are not sanitized after cleaning, specifically: Equip- ment and utensils are washed and rinsed and air dried with no sanitizing step. Point deduction: 5. i Hand towels or a hand drying device is not pro- vided at the hand-washing sink, specifically: Paper towels stuck in dispenser in employee restroom. Point deduction: 3. Sacred Grounds Cafe Location: 1865 Bill Frey Drive NE, Salem Date: July 6 Score: 95 Priority violations i Potentially hazardous food is not maintained at proper hot or cold holding temperatures, specifically: Yogurt parfait measured 45°F, egg burrito measured 55°F, and ham slider measured 59°F in display cooler with an air temperature measuring 60°F. Point de- duction: 5. Starbucks Location: 1124 Wallace Road NW, Suite 105, Salem Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Starlite Lanes Location: 394 Main St., Dallas Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Subway Location: 242 Main St., Dallas Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Taco Bell Location: 200 W Ellendale Ave., Dallas Date: July 2 Score: 100 No priority violations Location: 1695 Monmouth St., Independence Fishing Continued from Page 1B black horizontal stripes. Reading an ad about this next big thing in an outdoor magazine, I bought a bunch (ba- nanas, get it?), I may have been one of the only anglers to buy any of these plastic bas- sin’ gotta have ‘ems. My excuse is that I was a neophyte bass-tackle sucker, something of a fa- Simple Cremation $795 Simple Direct Burial $995 Church Funeral $2965 SALEM 275 Lancaster Drive SE (503) 581-6265 TUALATIN 8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd (503) 885-7800 PORTLAND 832 NE Broadway (503) 783-3393 TIGARD 12995 SW Pacifi c Hwy (503) 783-6869 EASTSIDE 1433 SE 122nd Ave (503) 783-6865 MILWAUKIE 16475 SE McLoughlin Blvd (503) 653-7076 Privately owned cremation facility. A Family Owned Oregon Business. “Easy Online Arrangements” www.CrownCremationBurial.com OR-GCI0348841-02 Pizza Hut Raw Blend Juicery Del Taco Enchanted Forest - Jolly Rogers and Theater Snack Date: July 1 Score: 97 Priority violations i Ready-to-eat food is not properly date-marked, specifically: Canadian bacon in metal containers in the walk-in are not date marked; turkey meat in the prep unit is not date marked. Point deduction: 3. natic in training. Anyway, rubber ba- nanas went bust, so to speak. But dark purple went gangbusters. Purple, in bass-an- gling parlance, became the new black. Over the years and decades, plastic evolved to softer materials such as silicone, and colors now run from hues re- sembling used motor oil and authentic night crawler (who’da thunk it?), to psychedelic lime green, florescent purple and electric blue. Offerings have gotten larger, in many cases, with flattened and forked tails and a range of ap- pendages with the ap- pearance of flippers and legs. Because, after all, what largemouth or smallmouth bass could resist eating something that looks like a neon lime-green version of the chest-burster from the “Alien” movie series? More importantly, sales volume-wise, what serious bass angler wouldn’t bite, pardon the pun, on putting a couple of those in their tackle box? My point, more like a nub after the previous bloviating, goes back to the opening paragraph about fish vs. anglers. They all work, given the right circumstances. Including the previ- ously disparaged banana edition. To flash back, I asked Jack if he was blowing smoke after a couple of Note the plastic worm in the mouth of this Willamette River smallmouth. The angler is the legendary Jay Yelas of Lincoln City, who I was privileged to fish with several times for stories in the early 2000s. HENRY MILLER / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL fruitless trips and count- less hours fishing with the black rubber worms. “How’d you work them?” he asked. Jack saw the blank look on my face. “You know,” he con- tinued. “Did you give them short jerks? Or long pulls; or drag them across the bottom?” “Oh,” I said, aghast at being caught in my utter, naked ignorance. “I just cast it out and let it sit there, you know, like a real worm.” Yep. When it comes to soft plastic bass-attractors, about any color, size or grotesque shape will work. If you do, too. Moral of the story: I knew Jack. But I didn’t know jack. FISHING QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “Funny how an angler can forget their license, their rods or their tackle box. But I’ve never met one who forgot to bring the cooler.” – Henry Contact Henry via email at HenryMil- lerSJ@gmail.com