My clever sister came up with some great personalized Christmas gifts this year, all of which she tagged to the theme “your current situation.” You can see mine above – a 3-d version of my blog logo!
For my dad, who has been having issues with his eyesight (we're hopeful it will be improving soon): large print playing cards, a giant die (singular dice), and more. (Dad also got a kick out of the blog book I dedicated to him based on my trip to South Dakota.)
For my mom, who has been driving Dad where he needs to go, a fun turn-about: My sister hired a stretch limo to chauffeur Mom (and the rest of us) around her town to view the Christmas lights!
Today marks the start of Year #3 at Eggplant To Go, and I’m looking forward to where this blogging journey leads me next. I couldn’t have predicted the surprises, delights (and occasional scoops) the last year has brought my way.
Thanks to Chef Todd Kelly at Orchids in Cincinnati and Chef Jeremy Ashby of Azur in Lexington, I’ve had two of the most spectacular meals of my life. I got all kinds of inspiration from the Kentucky Proud Incredible Food Show in Lexington, a front-row seat to watch the filming of Man v. Food at Tom + Chee, an invite to the press party for Chef Kelly’s new cookbook, and an insider’s view of the Cincinnati Magazine “Best of the City” party, thanks to two of my favorite Cincy food truck friends, Toya and Randy from a Streetcart Named Desire aka New Orleans to Go. Even got a hug and a thanks from my favorite fishmonger on New Years Eve day.
It’s funny how what goes around comes around. 2011 was a year in which I made strides in overcoming my shy, homebody ways and learned a lot about how rewarding it can be to reach out. One turning point came in August when I screwed up my nerve and asked local Top Chef: Just Desserts contestant, Orchids pastry chef Megan Ketover, if I might be able to speak to her on behalf of AllTopChef (where I’m a member of the blogging team). In addition to being a remarkable talent, Megan was so welcoming and gracious that the experience inspired me to screw up my nerve again and invite local food bloggers Stephie from Small Girl Adventures (who is launching her own business) and Jen from Our Good Food Life to join me for dinners during Restaurant Week, and Jeff from A Dork and His Pork for a Slow Food Cincinnati meet-up, where I met a bunch of other lovely people passionate about local food. At the press event for the release of Todd Kelly’s cookbook, I finally got to meet in person the uber-talented Courtney of Epiventures (who is also Chef Kelly’s co-author) and a number of other local food bloggers, reporters, and personalities as well. I was in food blogger hog heaven thanks to the company, as well as the opportunity taste more of Chef Kelly's amazing dishes.
As much inspiration as I draw from all the fine food folks I’ve been lucky to meet in person this year, I’m also full of gratitude to my homies – the bloggers of all ilks, from all parts, who have become dear friends even though I haven’t met them in person – who care, and comment, and lift my spirits. One never knows quite how karma weaves its way through our lives. But I can’t help but believe the chances of Scout returning home after his 2½ week kitty walkabout were only improved by your prayers and good wishes. And I’m certain that if he hadn’t come back, you would have been there for me too.
With the full force of your inspiration and friendships filling my sails, I already have a lot to look forward to, including a return visit to Lexington for Azur’s “Naked Dinner” Jan. 26; a local Cincy blogging conference in connection with the Winter Beer Fest on my February birthday; the weekend after my birthday in Lousisville to see Anthony Bourdain and Eric Ripert – and eat at Edward Lee’s 610 Magnolia!; and a late March visit to Nashville, where my niece is competing in Show Choir Nationals (think “Glee” in real life). Let me know if you have any suggestions on where to eat in Nashville.
Meanwhile, I’ll continue to be an enthusiastic cheerleader for the Culinary Smackdown (do you have your recipes ready for Battle Tofu?), and I’m looking forward to bringing you more blog-worthy posts from my own kitchen. Because inspiration is a terrible thing to waste, and it's always fun to keep exploring!
xoxo, eggy
Showing posts with label Chef Todd Kelly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chef Todd Kelly. Show all posts
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Orchids: Treats from Two of Cincinnati’s Top Chefs - Todd Kelly and Megan Ketover!
Things often don’t turn out as anticipated. A truism I bump into frequently. I’d made reservations at Orchids for friend Cindie and me during Downtown Restaurant Week, then learned she had to drive to Indianapolis for work that day. Cindie was iffy about whether she would be able to join me Tuesday night, which I knew would likely turn into a no. But I stuck to the same line I used when I first asked her about going with me: “I am going to Orchids. Even. If. I. Have. To. Go. By. Myself.”
The high-ceilinged “Palm Court” where Orchids is located, in Cincinnati’s historic art-deco Netherland Plaza Hotel, is one of the most magnificent rooms in the city. Every time I walk into that space, I feel swept away to another time and can’t help but check my daily concerns at the door. It reminds me of another classic art-deco landmark, Radio City Music Hall, which I saw the inside of for the first time when my grandparents visited me in NYC and took me to the annual “Holiday Show.” As the house lights dimmed, my stern, straight-laced Nebraska grandma laid her hand on mine and uttered the most startling and endearing sentence I ever heard from her lips: “In my next life, I want to come back as a Rockette.”
The hotel, which has gone through more changes in ownership since it was built in 1931 than I can keep track of, is currently run by Hilton. I’ve eaten and had drinks there in a number of its iterations, but hadn’t been there since Chef Todd Kelly came on board, garnering Orchids “Best Restaurant in Cincinnati” designation from Cincinnati Magazine for the last two years and consistently glowing praise from Cincinnati Enquirer restaurant critic Polly Campbell, bloggers, and other media sources. Chef Kelly was also recently named the American Culinary Federation’s Chef of the Year.
When I learned one of the chefs competing on the upcoming season of Bravo’s Top Chef: Just Desserts is Orchids’ pastry chef Megan Ketover, my resolve was unshakeable. I’ve been a fan of the Bravo cooking competition show since the beginning, and last fall was invited to join the blogging team at fan blog AllTopChef.com. (Blogging partner The Minx does our “morning after” posts, rounds up links to the most entertaining recaps of the show from around blogosphere, posts preview videos of each episode, and more. Laura Kluvo, founder of Blogging Project Runway, has been contributing podcast exit interviews with the Top Chef contestants for the last several seasons and will likely continue to do so when Just Desserts Season 2 premieres this Wednesday.) My role is to wrangle the ATC email box and write (almost) weekly posts spotlighting news and info from around the web about the show and its contestants from all the seasons. I gather TC news via various avenues, but one of the most fruitful has proven to be friending/fanning contestants on facebook, where many post links about their appearances, events, and other press coverage.
When the cast of TC:JD2 was announced, I sought out all the contestants I could find on fb, and Orchids’ Megan Ketover was one of them. She was kind enough to reply to a couple of questions I asked, and confirmed the desserts on the Orchids Restaurant Week menu would indeed be her creations. She also recommended making RW reservations early, and I was glad I did. Orchids limits the number of RW reservations it accepts each night, and when I called to see if I might switch mine due to Cindie’s schedule, I was out of luck – they were sold out through the week. No problem. I wanted to taste the food of both Chef Kelly and Chef Ketover, and would stick with my original reservation, where three courses could be had at this premiere Cincinnati restaurant for a budget-friendly $35.
I’m not accustomed to approaching celebrities of any ilk, but I screwed up my nerve and asked Megan on fb if there was any chance I might be able to meet her while I was there. I thought it only fair to disclose my connection with AllTopChef, but assured her I would not ask anything that might violate the strict nondisclosure agreement Bravo contestants must sign, which carries a $1 million penalty. Megan replied that she would pop out into the dining room if she could, and my anticipation level edged up another notch.
Walking a block from my downtown office, I arrived at 6:00. Cindie hadn’t called to say she’d be able to join me after all, so I informed the hostess I would be a party of one. The restaurant wasn’t yet full, but I was pleasantly surprised when I was directed, not to a two-top in the middle of the room, but to a spacious corner booth with a great view of the entire room. I ordered a glass of wine, perused the Restaurant Week menu (which had some additions and changes from the version posted online), and told my server which options I’d like from the first course and entrée selections. I was torn between the two dessert offerings and hoped that if I was lucky enough to meet Megan I could ask her about them – a question that surely wouldn’t be prohibited by that Bravo contract.
Megan makes not only Orchids’ pastries but also their breads. Here are her three selections that evening, a thin, crisp grissini, an airy sesame-seed-topped roll, and her new favorite, she told me later, a wheat roll made with herbs grown on the 17th floor of the hotel. (She and Chef Kelly are also raising bees on the rooftop of the hotel and did their first honey harvest a few days later.)
Megan’s breads were served with this trio of stellar accompaniments: Paquillo pepper pesto made with garlic and almonds; an herb and garlic infused olive oil, and a thick European butter with topped with Maldon salt. Paquillo pepper is one of my favorite things, and this romesco-style dipping sauce was a delight.
Next up: this delightful amuse-bouche – a savory custard served in an egg shell with crème fraiche, chives, truffle oil, and dried local corn. The custard was cooked perfectly, and the other components added to the inviting decadence of this creamy opener.
I’m always tickled to receive an amuse, not just because these pre-appetizer tastes arrive unordered, but because I think chefs have fun with them too. As I saw plates of these perched eggshells being served throughout the restaurant, I appreciated that the kitchen was sharing them with those of us there for Restaurant Week.
My taste buds were piqued and ready for the Tuna Tonnato first course I’d ordered. But as my server set my second plate before me, I was in for a surprise, this stuffed squash blossom!.
I developed serious foodie lust for stuffed squash blossoms last summer, after reading lots of tempting recipes and gawking over squash blossom food porn. I hadn’t been able to find any to try my hand at until I visited my aunt in California last fall and spied some in her garden. That attempt turned out reasonably well for this home cook on my first try (the flowers are very delicate and tricky to work with). But the burrata and anchovy filling in Orchids’ tempura-battered blossoms and the skill with which they were fried showed me what can be done with them in the hands of a pro.
Not just one amuse, but two. I don’t frequent fine-dining restaurants as often as I wish I could, but this was new for me. Meanwhile, time was ticking away, so, basking in stuffed squash-blossom afterglow, I asked one of my servers if she would let Chef Ketover know I was there. My hope was that if I asked early enough, before the dinner and dessert rush, Megan might be able to find time to “pop out” and meet me in the dining room for a few minutes.
Served next was my “first” course, the Tuna Tonnato. Crisp haricot verts and garlic chips contrasted with the moist, succulent sashimi-grade tuna cooked sous vide. Tomato confit, kalamata olives, and the creamy tonnato sauce underneath brightened the dish and pulled it all together.
As I savored this dish, my hopes were answered when Megan stopped by my table. Warm, genuine, and down to earth, she is Top Chef: Just Desserts contender any Cincinnati fan of the show can happily root for. I was cautious about asking too much about the show, but she did give me a baker’s tour of the three selections on my bread plate. When I asked which of the featured desserts she would recommend – “unless that’s like asking you to pick your favorite child” – she described both the “chocolate option” and the “non-chocolate option” in detail, saying she finds two-thirds of customers opt for chocolate, while she herself prefers the non-chocolate side. (You can find more of my conversation with Megan on ATC here.) I didn’t want to keep her too long during service, and thanked her for her time. She completely won me over, and I must have been grinning from ear to ear as I finished my tuna and looked forward to my entrée of pork cheeks.
However, this whimsical plate was set before me instead. “The chef wanted you to taste his new heirloom tomato salad,” explained my server.
This was another of the first course options for Restaurant Week, described on the menu as Heirloom Tomato Salad with House Made Mozzarella, Tomato Gelée, Fennel Lavosh and Mizuna, and I had wrestled with the decision to forgo it in favor of the Tuna Tonnato. The menu didn’t mention that the mozzarella was not only house-made but also inflated into a balloon. I’ve read about this preparation elsewhere (it’s one Thomas Keller has done at the French Laundry), but had never had an opportunity to try it. What fun to pierce that delicate dairy balloon and watch it deflate while the crunchy teetertotter of lavosh, over tiny skinned heirloom tomatoes, remained in place. (It didn’t occur to me until later that the lavosh crisp was likely Megan’s creation as well.)
Among many things I appreciated about the top-notch service I received that evening was the delicate choreography between back of house and front of house. I appreciate a menu written with enough detail to provide a fair idea of what to expect as I decide what to order, without going into volumes about every element (and its source) in a complex dish. On the other hand, I am very interested in those details. The fellow who served the majority of my plates did a superb job of explaining what I was about to eat in a way that enhanced my appreciation of each dish without coming across as condescending or designed to impress.
It was also at this point in the evening that it finally sank in that not only was I dining at a place with the well-deserved reputation of being the best restaurant in town, I was probably receiving extra attention as a blogger interested in supporting Megan. “The chef would like you to taste this” had been used earlier in the evening in connection with my two amuses, but it was clearly more than a standard line used by well-trained front-of-house staff accustomed to delivering gracious service. By now I’d also been served two amuses and two “first” courses, although I’d walked in the door looking forward to just three courses total from the Restaurant Week menu, and the possibility of meeting Megan. For a moment I worried about the blogger ethics of receiving such treatment. But I was so won over by every morsel I’d tasted and every bit of stellar service I’d received that I decided I’d be a fool not to succumb to this once-in-a-lifetime experience.
On to my entrée at last: Pork Cheeks with Chanterelles and Roasted Garlic Gnudi. This wasn’t on Orchids’ online menu for Restaurant Week as I initially contemplated my course choices. But when I saw it on the menu that night, I was excited by the prospect of trying something new to me. The preparation for these savory pork cheeks reminded me of high-end beef short ribs, one of Cindie’s favorite dishes, and I made a mental note to add them to my list of reasons she should be jealous for baling on me that night.
My belly was pretty full by this point, having cleaned every plate set before me, except my bread plate (sorry, Megan). When my server asked if I was done with the bread, I didn’t quite hear what she said. I was sorry to bid those breads good-bye, but I needed to preserve my appetite to taste one of Megan’s desserts. The time had come to make my selection. As tempted as I was by the chocolate option, I elected to go with her preference from the non-chocolate side: Brown Butter Cake with Cinnamon Toast Ice Cream, Bourdon Blackberries, and Crispy Vanilla Tuile.
But I was in for another surprise when this stunning plate of Megan's Malted Chocolate Bavarian with Roasted Bananas, Peanut Streusel, and Dolce de Leche arrived instead.
“Megan wanted you to try both and thought the other would travel better,” said my server.
I was thankful to be able to taste Megan’s Brown Butter Cake at a later time, especially as full as I was. (You can read more about it, and my conversation with Megan, on AllTopChef.) But I couldn’t resist these mignardises that arrived with my check: dark chocolate and pistachio truffles, caramel hazelnut french macarons, and blackberry pate de fruit.
My deepest thanks to everyone at Orchids who gave me an experience that went beyond my wildest imaginings. And in case you can’t tell, I will be shamelessly rooting for Megan Ketover on Top Chef: Just Desserts!
Saturday, July 10, 2010
FINDLAY MARKET NEWS, LOCAL GETS SOME TOP CHEF LOVE (?), AND A $10K BOURDAIN CONTEST
Some interesting encounters of the blogospheric kind have cropped up lately. Let's start with Findlay Market.
Findlay Market has finally launched SNAP Plus, a program designed to "help families receiving food stamps afford more fresh fruits and vegetables and other healthy food typically found in farmers markets." I've been following news of this program since I heard about a similar one in Florida via blogger friend La Diva Cucina, in her April post about the opening of a brand new urban farmers market in a neighborhood that reminded me of Cincinnati's Over-the-Rhine, where Findlay Market is located. A big difference is that Miami's Overtown/Roots in the City market is brand new, while Findlay is the oldest continually operating farmers market in Ohio.
I was first introduced to Findlay Market by my dad when I was in third grade. For a school assignment, I was supposed to put together a notebook about Cincinnati. Although my family had just moved here from Texas (one of many childhood moves), my dad seemed to know all about this place. He led me on a tour of downtown and its many fine examples of architectural and urban planning traditions, letting me snap away with my little Brownie camera. Although I've forgotten far more than he showed me, three memories persist:
And Findlay Market
We had a great father-daughter day. After I got my snapshots developed, and already feeling more comfortable in my new hometown, I eagerly snugged the corners of my black-and-whites into the corner mounts that were all we had to work with back in those pre-digital, pre-"scrapbooking-as-big-business" days.
Flash forward 45 years (gulp). Findlay Market has been significantly expanded and renovated, farmers markets have become trendy, and I've somehow become a food blogger.
I was so inspired by La Diva's post that I contacted Findlay Market, asking if they were aware of the Wholesome Wave Charitable Venture, a potential source of funding. I received a quick response informing me Findlay was already working to launch a similar foodstamp-doubling program in June, which I mentioned in a comment on La Diva's blog.
What happened next surprised me. I received an email a month or so later from someone looking for further info about the Findlay program. Although my correspondent was local, she managed to find me via Diva's Florida blog, and tracked down my email address. Explaining that a friend's husband had lost his job and unemployment benefits were about to run out, she was hoping Findlay's program might be a big help.
This economy has swelled the numbers of people trying to feed their families on very limited means. Organizations like Cincinnati's Freestore Foodbank are experiencing greater demand than ever, as people who would not previously have looked to them for help are in dire need of assistance. I applaud Findlay and its sponsors for this program, which helps bring fresh, healthy produce within affordable reach to people in difficult economic circumstances, and also benefits the farmers who sell to them. For full details about SNAP Plus at Findlay Market, click here.
On a lighter note, this week I stumbled upon a local connection to Top Chef. Some of you know I'm happily obsessed with this show (in fact, that is how I came to know a few of you) and that I keep an eye out for TC tidbits when surfing the web. Any self-respecting Top Chef fan bemoans Bravo's persistent product placement exploitation, but when I happened upon this eater.com item investigating one of those TC sponsor microsites ("so fans don't have to"), of course I was curious. I clicked through to the read the report, with a fictional byline from "Brandistan," where the writer says: "Some guy named Todd Kelly is staring at me. He's wearing a toque but he doesn't look familiar. A banner says he's a Hilton Signature Chef. What are the other chefs at Hilton then? Meh chefs? Kelly, I read, works at Orchid [sic], The Grill & The Bar [sic] in the Hilton in Cincinnati, Ohio."
Ding, ding, ding! The writer was talking about our Chef Todd Kelly, who helms Orchids, arguably the current best restaurant in town - named top restaurant in the city by Cincinnati Magazine for the last two years and awarded 5 stars by the Cincinnati Enquirer. As I checked out the other Hilton "Signature Chefs" featured on the Hilton/TC microsite, I saw that, with the exception of one from Chicago, they're all at restaurants on the East and West Coasts. I'm annoyed with the eater.com writer for the implied dissing of my Midwestern city.
After watching this week's episode of Top Chef and reading viewer comments about it sundry places, I also have a different perspective on the put-downs of "hotel food." In the case of Chef Kelly and Orchid's, hello, we're not talking about a complimentary make-your-own breakfast bar at a suburban box hotel kind of place. Orchids is located in a gem of an Art Deco building that is still, thankfully, standing. And Chef Todd Kelly's food is celebrated, even if he's not a media hound. For a lovely little profile of him by the multi-talented blogger behind Epi-Ventures, click here.
Speaking of media hounds, there is Anthony Bourdain.
Tony just wrapped his recent promo tour for the hardcover edition of Medium Raw (my recap of his Cincy gig here - thanks to all who commented). In what was no doubt a carefully timed PR campaign, the new season of No Reservations debuted last week. The previews for this Monday's episode, about the Midwest, include Michael Ruhlman saying something to the effect of: "For starters, you asked if we had indoor plumbing," so I'm guessing more dissing of the land where I live is on the horizon.
But Bourdain recently got some come-uppance. Have you seen the ads appearing on many food blogs lately encouraging you to take the "Medium Raw Challenge"? The idea is to submit a 500-word essay on "why cook well" or "what it means to cook well," with Tony's favorite entry winning publication in the upcoming paperback edition. After being called out on the notion he would publish but not pay the winner, Tony says he's personally ponying up $10,000 for the winner. Now that's a contest! Any of you fellow bloggers tempted to sharpen your pencils, er, boot up your laptops?
Reminder: Deadline for the far humbler and less lucrative Culinary Smackdown is July 24. Details here.
Hope you're enjoying your weekend and eating well!
eggy
Findlay Market has finally launched SNAP Plus, a program designed to "help families receiving food stamps afford more fresh fruits and vegetables and other healthy food typically found in farmers markets." I've been following news of this program since I heard about a similar one in Florida via blogger friend La Diva Cucina, in her April post about the opening of a brand new urban farmers market in a neighborhood that reminded me of Cincinnati's Over-the-Rhine, where Findlay Market is located. A big difference is that Miami's Overtown/Roots in the City market is brand new, while Findlay is the oldest continually operating farmers market in Ohio.
I was first introduced to Findlay Market by my dad when I was in third grade. For a school assignment, I was supposed to put together a notebook about Cincinnati. Although my family had just moved here from Texas (one of many childhood moves), my dad seemed to know all about this place. He led me on a tour of downtown and its many fine examples of architectural and urban planning traditions, letting me snap away with my little Brownie camera. Although I've forgotten far more than he showed me, three memories persist:
Cincinnati's iconic Tyler Davidson Fountain (back then, it sat in the middle of Fifth Street)
The Rookwood Pottery detail on the facade of the Gidding-Jenny Building (now, alas, sitting vacant next to a TJ Maxx)And Findlay Market
We had a great father-daughter day. After I got my snapshots developed, and already feeling more comfortable in my new hometown, I eagerly snugged the corners of my black-and-whites into the corner mounts that were all we had to work with back in those pre-digital, pre-"scrapbooking-as-big-business" days.
Flash forward 45 years (gulp). Findlay Market has been significantly expanded and renovated, farmers markets have become trendy, and I've somehow become a food blogger.
I was so inspired by La Diva's post that I contacted Findlay Market, asking if they were aware of the Wholesome Wave Charitable Venture, a potential source of funding. I received a quick response informing me Findlay was already working to launch a similar foodstamp-doubling program in June, which I mentioned in a comment on La Diva's blog.
What happened next surprised me. I received an email a month or so later from someone looking for further info about the Findlay program. Although my correspondent was local, she managed to find me via Diva's Florida blog, and tracked down my email address. Explaining that a friend's husband had lost his job and unemployment benefits were about to run out, she was hoping Findlay's program might be a big help.
This economy has swelled the numbers of people trying to feed their families on very limited means. Organizations like Cincinnati's Freestore Foodbank are experiencing greater demand than ever, as people who would not previously have looked to them for help are in dire need of assistance. I applaud Findlay and its sponsors for this program, which helps bring fresh, healthy produce within affordable reach to people in difficult economic circumstances, and also benefits the farmers who sell to them. For full details about SNAP Plus at Findlay Market, click here.
On a lighter note, this week I stumbled upon a local connection to Top Chef. Some of you know I'm happily obsessed with this show (in fact, that is how I came to know a few of you) and that I keep an eye out for TC tidbits when surfing the web. Any self-respecting Top Chef fan bemoans Bravo's persistent product placement exploitation, but when I happened upon this eater.com item investigating one of those TC sponsor microsites ("so fans don't have to"), of course I was curious. I clicked through to the read the report, with a fictional byline from "Brandistan," where the writer says: "Some guy named Todd Kelly is staring at me. He's wearing a toque but he doesn't look familiar. A banner says he's a Hilton Signature Chef. What are the other chefs at Hilton then? Meh chefs? Kelly, I read, works at Orchid [sic], The Grill & The Bar [sic] in the Hilton in Cincinnati, Ohio."
Ding, ding, ding! The writer was talking about our Chef Todd Kelly, who helms Orchids, arguably the current best restaurant in town - named top restaurant in the city by Cincinnati Magazine for the last two years and awarded 5 stars by the Cincinnati Enquirer. As I checked out the other Hilton "Signature Chefs" featured on the Hilton/TC microsite, I saw that, with the exception of one from Chicago, they're all at restaurants on the East and West Coasts. I'm annoyed with the eater.com writer for the implied dissing of my Midwestern city.
After watching this week's episode of Top Chef and reading viewer comments about it sundry places, I also have a different perspective on the put-downs of "hotel food." In the case of Chef Kelly and Orchid's, hello, we're not talking about a complimentary make-your-own breakfast bar at a suburban box hotel kind of place. Orchids is located in a gem of an Art Deco building that is still, thankfully, standing. And Chef Todd Kelly's food is celebrated, even if he's not a media hound. For a lovely little profile of him by the multi-talented blogger behind Epi-Ventures, click here.
Speaking of media hounds, there is Anthony Bourdain.
Tony just wrapped his recent promo tour for the hardcover edition of Medium Raw (my recap of his Cincy gig here - thanks to all who commented). In what was no doubt a carefully timed PR campaign, the new season of No Reservations debuted last week. The previews for this Monday's episode, about the Midwest, include Michael Ruhlman saying something to the effect of: "For starters, you asked if we had indoor plumbing," so I'm guessing more dissing of the land where I live is on the horizon.
But Bourdain recently got some come-uppance. Have you seen the ads appearing on many food blogs lately encouraging you to take the "Medium Raw Challenge"? The idea is to submit a 500-word essay on "why cook well" or "what it means to cook well," with Tony's favorite entry winning publication in the upcoming paperback edition. After being called out on the notion he would publish but not pay the winner, Tony says he's personally ponying up $10,000 for the winner. Now that's a contest! Any of you fellow bloggers tempted to sharpen your pencils, er, boot up your laptops?
Reminder: Deadline for the far humbler and less lucrative Culinary Smackdown is July 24. Details here.
Hope you're enjoying your weekend and eating well!
eggy
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