Our Story
Our Roots
Ira Goodfellow was born in Grapevine, Texas in 1874. When he was 15 years old, his father gave him a horse, a double-barreled shot gun and a 10-dollar bill, and told him it was time to go out and seek his fortune.
Fred and Jim Parker – brothers and Hard Times Cafe’s founders – knew this story because Ira Goodfellow was their grandfather. His first job was a trail drive cowboy at the Waggoner ranch near Wichita Falls, Texas. It was there that he learned how to prepare chili from a chuck wagon cook. He went on to marry and homestead in Oklahoma territory.
In the mid 1960s, Fred and Jim Parker discovered the Texas Chili Parlor of Washington, D.C. on Pennsylvania Avenue. The place only served straight chili, chili with beans, chili dogs and chili mac. That was it. Open until 3 a.m., it was a favorite hangout for cabbies, policeman, reporters and other folks working the graveyard shift. The Texas Chili Parlor also had a high-profile clientele: David Brinkley was a regular, as was President Truman.
The place was owned by two salty old ladies named Barbara Abbot and Hazel Caloway, and their chili tasted just like Fred and Jim’s Aunt Irma’s. The two women had been feuding for years and would not work together, so they each would run the place two weeks on and two weeks off. Each had a loyal customer following. Fred and Jim were in Hazel’s camp.
Eventually, Barbara and Hazel parted ways – leaving the place to Hazel. When she died in 1971, the Texas Chili Parlor went out of business. Fred kept its memory alive by turning part of his home into a chili parlor for friends and family.
The American Chili Parlor
In the early part of the 20th century, the open range of the West was finally fenced and the railroads replaced the great cattle drives. That was when many out-of-work chuck wagon cooks moved to town and opened small restaurants that featured chili con carne, a meat and pepper stew first concocted to feed the hungry trail drive cowboys. It caught on and soon became a national favorite.
The beloved cowboy philosopher Will Rogers said he always judged a town by the quality of its chili. He liked to hang out at chili parlors where he took the pulse of the nation for his syndicated column in the 1920s.
During the Great Depression, chili parlors supplied an inexpensive and nourishing meal for millions of Americans. It was said during those hard times that chili saved more lives than the Red Cross.
Meat rationing during WWII forced the closing of many chili parlors and although many restaurants today offer chili on their menus, few authentic chili parlors remain. The mission of the Hard Times is to maintain this unique American culinary institution.
My Father
My father, Hard Times Cafe co-founder Fred Parker passed away in 2020. Chili was more than food to him. It was a conduit which he used to spread community, generosity, and knowledge. He had a passion for community service and never stopped donating his resources to local charities. Hard Times Chili Spice Company remains in the Parker family and will continue to further the mission of fostering community and preserving this uniquely American culinary and cultural tradition. Fred’s memory will be kept alive, not only through the family recipe, but through this legendary video shoot that has come to be known as “The Fastest 3 Minutes in Chili History.”