I hope you had a happy Memorial Day! We had way too much food and this is the only evidence (except for my overloaded fridge with leftovers) of the entire meal. Sorry!
This was dessert. It's the Blackberry Cobbler from The Blackberry Farm Cookbook. It was sensational. The best part was the lime zest zinging up the blackberries. Wait, I forgot the ice cream. Here you go.
I'll tell you all about the cobbler and Blackberry Farm in my next post. Don't remind me if I said that last time.
But, first, did anyone catch the premier of the Cooking Channel? After my company left, I turned it on for just a second and I saw a group of young men EATING PIZZA OUT OF A GARBAGE CAN! I kid you not. Then they proceeded to eat more pizza off a model of a geodesic dome. WHAT was going on?
After a little research, it turned out that THIS was what I was watching. And that wasn’t a garbage can they were eating the pizza out of; it was a box formed by pizza dough (the episode was called 3D pizza) and they were scooping fillings out of the box to put on their ripped pieces of pizza dough, which were the walls of the box. Gross.
Then I noticed that the next show was called Drink Up! and it was about “everything you always wanted to know about beer”.
It suddenly occurred to me that I definitely do not fit into the demographic of this new network's target audience. I had thought it would be a COOKING network with COOKING shows, but after my first exposure to it, it seemed more geared to frat boys.
Oh well. I wonder if my first glance will be my last.
After leaving beautiful Tennessee, we traveled to welcoming South Carolina to see other friends. We had visited them lastyear and had a great time.
This time A and I went to Asheville, North Carolina (they’re close to the SC/NC border) for the day. I had no idea what a fabulous town it is. It’s like a throwback to 70’s hippiedom, but with lots of modern touches. The city is full of artists and artisans, and everywhere you look there are galleries, street vendors and interesting shops, sculptures AND citizens. Very cool.
When was the last time you saw a sign that said this?
It was hanging here.
Along our way, we stopped at “Asheville’s Greenest Restaurant”, The Green Sage, for coffee and a little quleque chose.
The coffee wasn't great, but the atmosphere was so friendly and communal-like. The staff was having a meeting near our table and they were talking about how to get more kids into the place. It just seemed like a homey, comfortable place to hang out.
We stopped at SO many galleries, stores and stands that I’m going to make a list (a LONG list) and gather them in one place. And then if you go to any of these places, you can take this list (soon to be posted in the future) with you as a great starting point. And don’t worry, H, I didn’t buy stuff at EVERY place we went into…maybe just every other. ;-)
We had lunch at a quintessential Asheville outpost, The Laughing Seed.
Look at how soft and warm and good the pita looks. (You can tell the pita was warm, just by LOOKING, can’t you?) The pickled beets were a great foil for the deliciously crusty falafel. Yum!
I was sooo excited to try a Reed’s Ginger Brew. I guess I’m not alternative enough to have liked it.
Here’s a great video about The Laughing Seed, where they talk about, among other things, their own brewed beer. Fast forward through it just to get an idea of the place.
Definitely check out Asheville and get your groove on if you’re ever in that neck of the woods.
More Asheville:
Two more meals to tell you about.
A Day In The Country. No, I’m not talking a rural outing OR the Jean Renoir movie, but a little lunch place in Hendersonville, North Carolina.
Actually, it has a BIG shop attached to it with all kinds of fun and countrified chotzkes. The lunch part is actually called Cafè on the Veranda. A sweet talking Southern lady at the counter takes your lunch order.
Then you get a number, which you display on the table of your choice. Another Southern lady serves you, always purring in that soft drawl that’s so easy on the ears.
It was a bit chilly outside,
so we sat near THIS lady.
I had the quiche and tomato soup combo and THEN A and I spilt an apple dumpling. Just saying the word makes me think of Paula and warm and wonderful things. It was finger-lickin’ good…and this is a picture of only HALF the dumpling. (Gosh, I LOVE that word.)
I decided to ignore A when she tentatively suggested that the dough could have been those canned biscuits that I get so hot and bothered about. All I know is that I loved my dumpling and I wasn’t having any of her intrusion into my dumpling reverie.
This Spring Salad with strawberries was completely delightful and well as gorgeous. The honey mango vinaigrette was nicely tart and the radishes made the salad not too sweet. Plus I loved the curried maple cashews.
The Cavendish farms quail had a chili and garlic rub that wasn’t particularly robust, but the meat was sooo tender and the pomegranate glaze was perfect. Quail is a good choice for an appetizer, since there’s not tons of meat on it.
My scallops were wonderfully cooked with a good sear on them. I could eat mango with every course, so I liked them as a garnish.
The cheddar grits with the Scottish salmon were yummy. HOW exactly are grits different from polenta? I know that real grits are supposedly made from hominy and soaked in lye water (YUM-MEE!) and that polenta is made from ground corn, but I still don’t really know what the taste difference is except that grits are coarser.
I really should have made it my business to research that when I was in the South. Next time, I will, but I’d love to avoid lye water, if I could. It doesn’t surprise me, though, that the same folks who drink moonshine, eat grits.
Anyway, dessert was an ambrosial croissant bread pudding. The crème anglaise, I believe, was made with white chocolate, which was a fabulous addition. It was so moist and mushy (in a good way) AND I loved that they had scrunched the croissants so tightly together that they could cut perfect squares. What a stunning dessert.
One other stop was at the outstanding Fluor Field to watch the Greenville Drive minor league baseball team. The game was good (I'm told) but the BBQ sandwiches were superb and the soft ice cream in the little plastic helmets was nothing short of superduper. Sorry, no pictures of the food. My hands were too sticky.
What a wonderful trip with great friends, great food, great places (AND great shopping). I’ll tell you about Blackberry Farm next with a nifty giveaway.
H and I have some great friends that we love to visit. They do live almost 12 hours away, but with one couple living in South Carolina and the other in Tennesee, we combined visits, so at least we were heading in basically the same direction.
With friends, M, RJ and C, we toured beautiful Knoxville, Tennessee, including the revitalized downtown area and The University of Tennessee. It is such a lovely city with lots of green areas, restaurants and bars (lots of them).
Here are some highlights:
La Costa on Market Square was great. It was Margarita Monday - woo-hoo.
Some of our other stops:
We looked inside S&W Grandrestaurant, which we're told has a wonderful brunch.
Knoxville is also the home of the South’s Finest Chocolate Factory. Wow, what a place. I was sooo good and came out with only a few chocolate turtles (different flavors, though) and a couple boxes of Tennessee Taffy.
We went to a little town called Sweetwater. So cute.
The Mild Yellow Cheddar is particularly good, as is the Governor’s Aged.
AND they sell lots of different flavors of honey jelly fromHoneyberry Farm. (Yup, I said honey JELLY. So interesting.) The pecan flavor was my favorite. I bought lots. :-)
We had an amazingly fabulous meal at Blackberry Farm in Walland, Tennessee. It was so great that I'll bring that visit to you in a separate post, along with a really special giveaway. Want ahint? But before that, I have to tell you about a few other places in Part Two.