Wednesday, March 30, 2011

A Food Post: Complaining, Searching, Making

Complaining about: What’s with avocados lately? About two out of every five I buy are inedible because they have these disgusting brown strings in them. They remind me of bermuda grass runners. Start to pull them out and they pull up all the brown yucky stuff along with the green flesh and it tastes awful. This is a particularly painful circumstance since avocados are fairly expensive and no matter which store I buy them from, this has been the case.


Searching for: Monkfish


I had a delicious, brothy monkfish, shrimp and rice dish in Lisbon that I would love to re-create. Fresh Market can order monkfish aka “poor man’s lobster” and Whole Foods has some on hand at the moment. Apparently, what I had is a typical Portuguese dish and I found the recipe online (note: no measurements were given, so punt):


Lobster and shrimp shells, monkfish bones (ask the seafood manager for trimmings), coarsely chopped onions, tomatoes, quartered, rice, leeks, parsley, sage, coriander, 1 bay leaf , Monkfish and shrimp


Making the broth – 12 hours (a serious recipe!) Place the shellfish shells and fish bones in a large stockpot along with the, tomatoes and onions; cover with water and let simmer over low heat for about 12 hours, adding more water occasionally so that the broth reduces very gradually; strain through cheesecloth or a fine-mesh strainer.


Making the ragout – 15 minutes. Place the broth into a saucepan, allowing twice the volume of liquid as you have rice; add the parsley, bay leaf, leek, coriander and sage; bring to a boil; add the rice; reduce the heat and cook covered for about 8 minutes; add the monkfish and shrimps; continue cooking for 5 minutes longer; serve immediately in an earthenware dish.




Making: Vin d’Orange


Vin d’Orange is an infused aperitif made in the south of France and the basic recipe is this:


750 ml. rosé wine


1/2 cup vodka


1/2 cup sugar


1/2 vanilla bean, split lengthwise


1 cinnamon stick


2 Seville oranges, quartered


1 lemon, quartered


Funny story: I was having dinner in Paris on my last night there. I called my friend Dan to coordinate his nice offer to pick me up at the Memphis airport the next day. He asked me what we were eating and drinking and I told him I was having something I had never had before called Vin d’Orange and that it was very good. He didn’t make any comment about the vin d’orange except to say “huh”. Yet oddly, a week before he had run across a Vin d’Orange recipe (he had never heard of this either) and decided to make it and stash it in my refrigerator as a surprise when I got back home. Weird coincidence, no? I was doubly surprised I would say. It has to sit in the refrigerator for three weeks so the second Saturday of April will be the big taste day.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Not Much Time Left...

Looking for something different to do from now until the slate of spring festivals are upon us?

The Arlene Fisch: Creatures from the Deep exhibit comes to a close April 3rd at the National Ornamental Metal Museum. It sounds really cool, have a look
here.

What about those festivals? Have a quick look:

Hot Wing Festival

Crawfish Festival

Stax to the Max

Africa in April

Memphis in May (The honored country is Belgium this year)

River Rising; a Sock Monkey; the World's Most Fashionable Rabbit

Some photos of the river taken earlier this week.




A sliver of Greenbelt Park (above) remains. And below a photo from the summer for comparison's sake:

Poppy had her 12th birthday while I was away on March 12. I left her a birthday sock monkey before I departed knowing if I didn't leave a gift for her I'd get a cold reception upon returning. However, as you can see, she's not impressed.

And in more animal news, I discovered the world's most fashionable rabbit while in Paris. Her name is Fifi Lapin. She's on Facebook and Twitter. She also has a blog and has written a book titled "What Shall I Wear Today?", that all consuming question we ask ourselves each morning. Love her!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Dreaming about the Mississippi River; Photos from Abroad

I'm back! And back into the blog I go...

While away I was surprised to learn that the ebb and flow of the Mississippi River is deep in my subconscious. Despite running around Paris all day and night in crowds of people, in the metro, on the Champs-Élysées, around St. Germain etc. and even though I was tapas-ing myself into eating oblivion at midnight in Madrid and in spite of wandering around castles and plazas in Lisbon, my dreams at night were of...the Mississippi River.

It was interesting to discover that Ol' Man River holds this kind of sway over my deepest inner workings and that he would not be outdone by a few of the most remarkable capital cities of the world. I had two very vivid dreams about the river while abroad. In one dream I was standing on the platform of a very tall water tower that was oddly situated in the middle of the river. My friend Mary was floating in the muddy water below and was telling me to jump. I did and I was fine. That would never happen in real life. The second dream was longer and more complicated but I will only tell a bit of it. The river had flooded to my window sill which was remarkable indeed as I live high above the ground floor of a 14-story building. There were horses and other weird things involved but suffice it to say the major theme of my sleep-world while traveling was the river.

Upon my return I see that it has risen and that Greenbelt Park does not exist at the moment. I wonder if the people who live on Island Drive get nervous every spring. Here's what I've read about the flood stage currently:


THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AT MEMPHIS* UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.* AT 10 AM WEDNESDAY THE STAGE WAS 36.4 FEET.* MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MINOR FLOODING IS FORECAST.* MAXIMUM FORECAST STAGE OF 36.4 FEET THIS AFTERNOON.* FLOOD STAGE IS 34.0 FEET.* AT 36.0 FEET...LAND BETWEEN THE MAINLINE LEVEE SYSTEM FLOODED
And now, three photos from each capital for your viewing pleasure. Still, it's good to be home...

Paris




Lisbon




Madrid

Friday, March 4, 2011

Super Five Favorites for Friday

For a variation on the Five Favorites this week, rather than listing five favorite blogs for you, I'm listing five downtown favorite fives in various categories:

Five Favorite Downtown Restaurants
1.
McEwen's
2.
Flight
3.
Itta Bena
4.
Local
5.
Lunchbox Eats

Five Favorite Downtown Shops
1.
Lansky 126
2.
Red Fish
3.
Delphinium
4.
Gir Collection in the Peabody
5.
Nice As New

Five Favorite Downtown Parks
1. Confederate Park
2. Greenbelt Park
3. Tom Lee Park
4. Court Square
5. Martyrs Park

Five Favorite Downtown Patios
1.
Felicia Suzanne's
2.
Tug's
3.
Majestic Grille
4.
Blue Fin
5.
SOB

Five Favorite Downtown Rooftops
1.
The Shrine Building
2.
The Madison
3.
The Peabody
4.
The River Inn
5.
The Lofts

Thursday, March 3, 2011

More of What Is Cool About Downtown in Photos; Coffee and Tea




Like that? Me too. Moving on to the tea and coffee now...

I venture into Aveda from time to time and they offer customers a little sample cup of hot tea. I always declined since hot tea does not float my boat. But on a recent trip to the Aveda in Oak Court Mall, it sounded nice so I tried it. Wow. It's not actually tea, it's an infusion of licorice root (I hate licorice too, but stick with me on this), peppermint, sweet fennel, and basil. It has no caffeine and no sugar yet it is delicious, sweet, minty and so smooth. The good news for downtowners is that you don't have to go Out East to get it. Rachel's Salon and Day Spa, an Aveda concept salon, has it if you are so inclined to partake of this herbal infusion.

I also recently discovered the Mayan Cappuccino at Little Cafe Eclectic on Harbor Town. It's Illy coffee, Monin Mayan & Ghirardelli Chocolate with a dash of cayenne pepper. It's fantastically sweet and hot.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

What's Cool About Downtown?

It's been a long while since I listed out some of the things I like so much about downtown, so :

1. The hot dog guy at Union and Main who plays Rock 103 on his radio
2. Being able to walk to the new market at Main and Union for fresh produce
3. Walking Poppy along the backside of the beautiful Law School
4. The dogs that "work" at Trestle Capital on Main Street who get to take breaks on the mall
5. How cosmopolitan the Thompson Co. renovation is (at Main and Union)

6. Harbor Town Square Commercial District
7. Interesting architecture
8. history
9. the river
10. trolleys