Homemade marmalade is where it's at.
Our prescribed cure for the Christmas Hangover. Or, a fun recipe for cranberries.
A big announcement about The Preservery and a ridiculously tasty Bacon Jam recipe.
road trips are just the best.
I realize not everybody feels this way, so allow me to state my case. Perhaps one of the most wonderful things about living in this vast expanse of land called the United States is that we have thousands of miles of fabulously beautiful country to explore. Plus, we all know the old adage, "life is a journey, not a destination." Sometimes if we take our time with the journey, we'll find all sorts of unexpected destinations along the way.
So Obe and I love road trips and our favorite place to drive to, lately, is New Orleans. Admittedly, in the 1,400+ miles between Denver and New Orleans there is a whole lot of, well, nothin'. For two days. From the seemingly endless, flat fields of east Colorado all the way through Kansas to the miles of swampy highway through Louisiana, it's easy to conclude that there's nothing to see.
But of course, there are tons of places to see in between and we learn something new each time we make the trip. We learned that driving all the way to Nashville in a torrential, multi-state downpour will slow you down enough to miss dinner in music city, altogether, despite leaving Denver at 4:30 in the morning (womp womp). After crashing in Nashville for the night but not getting to spend any time there at all (which made me sad, because Nashville is wonderful), we hit the road and drove all the way back across the breathtakingly beautiful, lush landscape of Tennessee down through northern Mississippi to finally stumble upon the green, wooded, tucked-away little town where Ole Miss and the Southern Foodways Alliance happen to be. And we learned that it's a lovely little place.
Obe and I found the Southern Foodways Alliance website when we were looking for information about some of the great ingredients that go into Louisiana cooking. It is a veritable treasure trove of information about food culture across the South, packed with oral histories, recipes, short films and interviews with Southern cooks, and so much more. It's kind of my favorite place on the internet (one of them, anyway). So when we realized they were located right on the way to New Orleans from Nashville, we knew we had to stop and say hello.
The timing could have been better, we discovered, as we pulled up to campus and saw that clearly it was graduation day and the place was swarming with kids in cap and gown and proud parents and here we were like, "Hey, can you talk to us about food?!" But still, the kind folks at the foodways office took some time out of their extremely hectic-looking afternoon to sit for a spell and have a chat with us. We were grateful.
We talked about the unique food cultures of the South, and were shown a map of the areas they cover. We spoke about some of the efforts they're making to give voice to all the people out there who are maintaining some very old, and sometimes pretty weird, food traditions and doing amazing, delicious work in restaurants, farms and everything in between. We talked about restaurants and food in New Orleans and perhaps most importantly, we talked about Middendorf's.
Just before you cross Lake Maurepas, as you drive south on I-55 to get to New Orleans, there's a very old and very special restaurant called Middendorf's (in the South, they swallow up all those d's and it gets pronounced more or less like min-dorf's) in a tiny town called Manchac. We were told that the original owner, Josie Middendorf, was credited with inventing "thin fish" and that we had to get some. Made with catfish, the flesh is cut very, very thin and then breaded and fried. The result is a crispy, crunchy "fish chip" for which the restaurant has become best known.
So now we had a mission. By the time we left Ole Miss, we calculated that we had exactly enough time to get to the restaurant about half an hour before they closed, so we knew we were cutting it close but we were determined and hungry. Once we got to Manchac it was dark and absolutely pouring rain and we had been eating road food for two solid days and we were exceedingly enthusiastic about putting some gumbo and thin fish and shrimp in our faces. It might have been the exhaustion, or the thrill of finally arriving super close to our final destination, or the spirit of Josie and her restaurant taking us over, but either way, the meal tasted amazing.
I have a full-blown obsession when it comes to gumbo, so I ordered it almost everywhere we went in New Orleans. This one, being my first bowl of the trip, tasted pretty great although I can't say it was the best (I'll tell you where the best gumbo I had in New Orleans was in a soon-to-be-posted blog. Oh, the suspense!). Nevertheless I found it deepy satisfying in my state of hunger and excitement and this was just our first course. Did I mention how much I adore the soft, pillowy, ultra-refined bread of the south? It's everywhere and in abundance. And there's always room-temperature butter to be found.
But we were here for thin fish and thin fish we ate. Along with more bread (always more bread), hushpuppies, cole slaw, and a big plate of Louisiana BBQ shrimp - another dish that I can rarely resist ordering from any New Orleans menu. The thin fish was crispy with a sturdy cornmeal crust coating that famously slender slice of catfish. The shrimp were plump and drenched in sweet barbecue and butter. I liked them best of all, but I am a true lover of shrimp. Random fact: in my teen years as a vegetarian slash pescatarian, sometimes shrimp was the only pesc I ate. You might've called me a shrimpatarian. But I digress, the food was all so good and I feel a little bit like letting out a deep, wistful sigh as I gaze at that picture of our meal. These are just a few of the things that make Middendorf's such a special place.
Our trip was off to a great start. And we hadn't even arrived at our destination, yet.
sometimes twitter is just the best.
While many of us have a love/hate relationship with social media, I find that outlets like twitter can be quite useful for finding out what's going on in the food world. I follow tons of local businesses, food news sites, and fellow food bloggers who are all posting the latest and greatest information on All Things Culinary. It was one of my favorite local preserves makers, Red Camper, who posted on twitter that they would be at The Denver Flea, and I was all like "What the heck is the Denver Flea? I want to go to there!"
And so we did.
Even though the skies looked pretty threatening all evening, the rain clouds kept away from City Park as the crowds of Denverites milled around tent after tent of local food, beer, jewelry, clothing, furniture and more. Some of my favorite folks were there, reppin', like The Real Dill with their beautiful and delicious pickles, Svper Ordinary from The Source with their interesting and artful items, Corvus Coffee with their artisan coffee, and a newly-discovered favorite, the Bakin' Bakery truck.
This magical black truck is pumping out the best donuts I've ever put in my face. Literally. I went for their Vanilla Bourbon donut, made with a cakey donut dough that's got the distinctively savory taste of bacon fat, then covered in a boozy vanilla bean glaze with little bits of bacon. We tempered our enthusiasm and got a large one to share, but I'm pretty sure I could have wolfed down an entire dozen all by myself.
Another discovery at The Denver Flea was local jewelry maker, Native Clutter, who sells beautiful handmade and vintage jewelry (like those pretty gold earrings pictured below) which you can purchase online, or at my favorite Denver boutique, and one of the best places in town for locally made jewelry, Fancy Tiger Clothing. I also found a new preserves maker called Puff's Preserves, who makes boozy artisan jams using Colorado spirits.
I purchased Puff's weirdly wonderful watermelon, rum & sea salt jam. Her blackberry lavender is the most popular, owner Kirsten Farabi told me, but I had to go with the watermelon because it sounded so unusual (and I'm a sucker for pretty, bright pink things). After just one taste I was already dreaming of how I wanted to eat through my jar this summer: whisked together with lime juice and tossed with fruit salad, spread onto cream cheese biscuits, melted down and mixed with a little minced jalapeño and poured over grilled chicken. And there are definitely some cocktail ideas floating around in the ol' noggin (but then again, aren't they always?).
It just goes to show that Denver is a really neat place to live. After living in Colorado for over 16 years and working in the food biz for nearly 10, there are still so many cool new things to discover, and old favorites to fall in love with all over again. The Denver Flea was a great way to do that, and a fun way to spend an evening with friends! But next time I'm getting my own donut.