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    Archive for May, 2008

    Wednesday, May 14, 2008

    Hot day, San Francisco; Innervisions, cocktail

    That headline is today’s six-word memoir. A special shout-out to my friends Larry & Piper, with whom we got to kick it the second weekend of Jazz Fest and see Stevie Wonder.

    For those of you not living in San Francisco, this is one of the random weeks that is hot along the Barbary Coast. Today = Hot. I’ve been working with wool, of course, sewing on my final project. At 6 p.m. I called off the work, searched the cabinets, created the In A Pinch Rum Cocktail and made a playlist. This is my open-window, sweaty-thigh San Francisco hit list. It’s best played on random with a squeeze of lime. I hope you like it.

    Crosby, Stills & Nash - Suite Judy Blue Eyes
    Janis Joplin - Mercedes Benz
    Joni Mitchell - Big Yellow Taxi
    Cat Stevens - Moonshadow
    Judy Collins - Both Sides Now
    Stevie Wonder - Livin’ For The City
    Boz Scaggs - Lido Shuffle
    Carly Simon - You’re So Vain
    Queen - Fat Bottom Girls
    The Carpenters - Superstar
    Sonic Youth - Superstar
    Flaming Lips - Do You Realize?
    Bette Middler - Superstar
    Carol King - I Feel The Earth Move
    Don’t Go Breakin’ My Heart - Elton John & Kiki Dee

    What? You didn’t know I was such a softie? I went to Montessori school in the 1970’s, people. Sing-alongs are ingrained in my brain.

    Friday, May 9, 2008

    Gulf Coast Eats: Where Y’at?

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    The M.F.K. Fisher in me just can’t help but link places to tastes. New Orleans is a town of rich, spicy and fried. To partake in the food is to partake in the culture and New Orleans loves to share its culture. The camaraderie that goes with eating in the Big Easy makes you eat more. It’s true.

    Parasols is my favorite po’boy stop. They also serve a giant basket of the best fried pickles. I practically needed someone to roll me out the door and into the Garden Distrcit after finishing my shwimps sandwich. The leftover pickles came in handy a few hours later after sucking down giant cocktails on the sidewalk at Igor’s, waiting out an afternoon rain.

    The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival is known for its food vendors. No two vendors are allowed to sell the same thing and the food is closely curated by the festival organizers. This year’s standouts included the red beans and rice, crawfish etouffee and duck po’boy. Every few hours a beer and food pick-me-up is just what the good doctor ordered at Jazz Fest.

    To celebrate our anniversary, Ted and I dined at NOLA, Emeril Lagasse’s French Quarter restaurant. I appreciated the friendly, high end service. The food was spectacular, from the duck gumbo to the ribs to the mint juleps we favored instead of wine. It’s the south, y’all, and I’ve never found a red wine that matched a gumbo. I could have made a meal from the jalepeno cornbread muffins.

    In Gulf Shores, Ala., we sampled fried alligator, which tastes like chicken. The Royal Reds were in season and I ordered a pile of these steamed, large shrimp. I love the ceremony of peeling and cleaning as well as the accessories of clamps, picks and shell bucket. As is true with most food eaten in the deep south, these delicasies were paired with a frozen cocktail.

    After years of longing and reading Streetcar Named Desire, I got to eat at Galatoire’s. We were lucky enough to join Dr. Lutz, a fine southern host and member of New Orleans society, on our excursion. We got a corner table downstairs and could watch all the goings-on in the mirrors. Jackets are required and there were a handful of straw hats hung on coat hooks around the dining room. I ordered eggs sardou, a dish I discovered in New Orleans 15 years ago (artichoke bottoms covered with creamed spinach and each topped with a poached egg). It’s become the default Christmas breakfast for my family. Enchanting.

    Our last afternoon in New Orleans we stopped for a muffuletta. The receipt read “One large muff.” I love a dirty ending.

    (Photo by TedR)