Showing posts with label Charleston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charleston. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Shot Heard Round The World


The first oyster shooter I ever did was at 11:06 in the morning. I have absolutely NEVER had an oyster for breakfast before, and I have certainly not had vodka before noon since college.

For a significant chunk of adulthood years, breakfast for me has arrived predictably lacquered with syrup, or topped with an appropriately pre-day egg; varied in its preparation, but consistent in its asymmetry.

In Los Angeles, my favorite food truck breakfast was an order of pancake tacos, and before that, in Chicago a platter of tart lingonberry flapjacks softened the blow of an arctic brunch expedition.

But I was standing in anticipation and a pair of boots a couple of weeks ago, at the Charleston Wine and Food Festival watching as a chipper stranger assembled an unlikely morning sip (slosh?) ((slurp?))

On behalf of the Charleston City Paper, into a shot glass went a reflective swell of oyster, freshly ejected from the St. Jude Farm shell in which it had spent its sheltered youth. Topped with a bit of Charleston Mix bloody mary mixer, and an inch of ice cold vodka, it was a tiny parfait of flavors. I took the shot in a swallow and a half (it’s been a while, remember), and experienced them all. Salinity, earthy ripe tomato essence, and the trail of sear left down your throat by a straight sip of vodka.

I tried for a long time after this to think of the perfect way to explain an oyster. Before I got there, I found a quote that made my struggles null and void.
 
“To eat an oyster is to kiss the ocean on the lips.”
 
So apparently someone named Leonard Beck beat me to it. But that shall not stop me from going back for kiss after kiss.
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Bacon Caramel Cheesecake. That Is What This Moment Requires.


Cheesecake is the little black dress of desserts. It is a go-to, a default, guaranteed by the FDIC up to the amount of $250,000 to be awesome. But its reliable glory is also its greatest downfall. It can be found in neat cubes, chopped out of its circular mothership in order to serve the needs of a paper-lined grocery store sampler platter. Wobbly wedges of it are served at awkward Christmas parties and interminable baby showers, glossed with Technicolor fruit topping, and studded with candy buckshot.

At its best, it retains the tang of the cream cheese (and sometimes sour cream) that comprises it. The fluffy interior, snowy white and creamy cold, rests atop a golden graham cracker disc bound with butter.

I recall fondly a favorite franchise comfort dish of my college years-the reluctantly prepared and insouciantly named chimicheesecake. Along the lines of a pancake taco, or a peanut butter banana bacon sandwich, this was the sort of thing that would be created in the amber haze of a hangover, throwing every edible thing within reach into the microwave and hoping that once in your stomach, it will soak up the remainder of last night’s liquid poor judgement. Essentially a slice of cheesecake deep-fried and served up chimichanga style, the chimicheesecake stands alone.

Little black dress of desserts? I can be found zipped into a black dress 99% of the time when a night out is involved. And 99% of the time, if cheesecake is on the menu, I will order it-fully aware that it shall make zipping that dress up ever again a bit more difficult. Just like the dress, cheesecake relies heavily on accessories...

Remember when Angelina Jolie wore a black dress with a slit to the Oscars and the world went crazy, and bottles of champagne exploded on shelves, and her right leg had its own twitter account within minutes? Well I experienced that this weekend. In cheesecake form, natch.

The Dulce Truck is a fluffy pink poodle of a thing, a puffball kitten sitting amongst the serious machinery of trucks and tires and tread.
 
 
I spent the better part of one second deciding what I would order. It was listed without fanfare on the chalkboard menu, but I knew right away that it was an Angelina-right-leg-twitter-account moment.

Vanilla Bean Cheesecake with Caramel and Bacon.

FLASHBULBS.
 
 
I was standing in line at another truck in Francis Marion park in Charleston, but really I wasn’t there at all. From the moment it was handed to me, I was wholly devoted to this cheesecake, its top a mirror of caramel, adorned with oversized bacon confetti. It is the swankiest thing you will ever eat off of a plastic fork. It is the most luxurious bite you can take while standing in line. It’s Angelina Jolie in plastic weight loss pants and crocs.

This cheesecake is a three story establishment, and the architecture of each level is without flaw. The foundation is creamy smooth, freckled with vanilla seeds-cold to the touch, but warm on the tongue. The caramel pool on top is not overly sweet, and provides a sticky surface to hold the salty crunch of bacon tiles until you can get it into your mouth.

At a food truck event a few weeks later, with my friends over at www.foodmancingthegirl.com, I suggested, nay demanded that they too tour all three floors of this cheesecake from The Dulce Truck.
 
 
And they did! And I did again! And it was the loveliest of days, and we laughed and laughed. That is what this cheesecake will do to your day.
 
It will make you forget the things that irritate you.
 
Like the fact that I know that my dress zipper has a twitter parody account about me. I KNOW it.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Meats of The Southern Wild


PulledPork is a powerful thing. And with great power comes great responsibility.

To the People.

The PulledPork People.

So: ME (and you)

Take a look at the Sharpie hieroglyphics marking the side of any nearby Starbucks cup and it’s clear. We want what we want, and DON’T MESS with it.

I’m saucy. I’m a saucy lady. I like a well-bolognesed pasta, a drowned enchilada, and I like my PulledPork in a Puddle. A smoky sweet puddle of liquid courage: BBQ sauce.
 
Once upon a time, I was not given sauce with an order of dumplings. It did not end well.

http://thefoodessfiles.blogspot.com/2010/08/sauciers-apprentice.html

The regional differences regarding BBQ ingredients and technique is well documented.

Not by me. By them: http://gardenandgun.com/gallery/bbq-sandwiches

Travel through five different states, get five different approaches to BBQ.

I remember when Goode Co. BBQ was a shakety-shack in Houston in the early 90’s, cranking out sloppy piles of sauce-swaddled animal lunch. It was a city secret then, with a parking lot seemingly made of dust into which shiny Mercedes and Beamers would nestle. Inside were the businessmen and women of the city, dress shirt sleeves rolled up to the elbow, silk ties tucked between buttons or thrown over shoulders.

Hands that moved millions with the stroke of a key, ran the city’s banks, businesses, and bottom lines were taking a lunch break at that moment to manhandle a soft-bunned PulledPork with Pickles.

I love change! Until you change something. Remake Psycho? I cannot even make eye contact with you. I refuse to acknowledge any Catwoman after Michelle Pfieffer. Thank god I never watched Felicity-the haircut would have killed me. Change is good, until it is not.

The Hello My Name Is BBQ has no idea what a Molotov cocktail of change it is to my PulledPork memory database. To that very first sloppy bite of Goode Co. BBQ, drowning in sauce. Just look at it sitting there. A cat among the pigeons…

 


The Holy City is decreed in chalk to be beer braised pork BBQ on grilled brioche. I read it and scanned the available extras. I raised my “ok coleslaw is new for me on a PulledPork, but keep an open mind Frances” eyebrow (the left one) crossed my arms across my chest in a classic Frances “pickles might be a deal breaker” gesture. I am a purist. A divider plate girl.

I am handed my paper-nested sandwich and instantly make a snap judgement. Decidedly NOT saucy. I breathe through it. Change can be good. Change can be good.


I take my incendiary sandwich with me to sit on a blanket in the sun, ringed by people who eat food, know food, and write about food. Namely, the extraordinarily charming Charles and Emmy Powell, BBQ chronicler Dan Cassavaugh and the behatted rum drinker known in certain circles as Jed Portman.

Sometimes change arrives in the form of extremely uncharacteristic mint green nail polish. (Christmas 2012) Or forgiving Ben Affleck for Gigli, on accounta Argo and Gone Baby Gone being so damned good. And apparently, change happens on a sunny Saturday in a southern city, when after one full bite, and while chewing the second, you accept that a PulledPork sandwich with coleslaw and pickles is very, very good. And that you can accept coleslaw’s vinegary crunch, in place of a saucy slurp. And that, while perhaps you can’t totally reeeeeealllly taste the beer of the “beer braise,” you are really very happy to be eating this sandwich at this moment. It is a very good sandwich. And you are having a tremendously good time here.

 

NOTE: The Hello My Name Is BBQ Truck does indeed have a help-yourself shelf of on-the-thin-side squeeze bottle sauces, and I plan to take slightly more vigorous advantage of these next time.

 

Change is good. Life is change. Right, Ben Affleck?
 
NOTE 2: Additionally, a not-so-saucy BBQ experience does mean that you can wear a cream-colored sweater to a BBQ with confidence. Silver. Lining.

Friday, November 16, 2012

The Charleston Chew


“A rolling stone gathers no moss. And gets to eat their way across the country.” That is a very famous quote, you guys. Word for word. And brother, have I been rolling. A couple of months ago I packed my car with snacks and underwear and set out upon the Great American Road Trip. The plan? Coast to Coast, Bite by Bite.

I Googled directions, and immediately made them irrelevant by dragging that “suggested” blue line up and down, based on where I wanted to eat. Google Maps was honest with me about how much time I would be adding to the trip by insisting upon going to Phoenix. Pipe down, Google Maps! I have been lusting after the Arizona pistachio pizza at Pizzeria Bianco for years, you can’t keep me from it! It would be equally ineffective, Google Maps, to try to keep me from adding fennel sausage on top, even though that added an estimated 6 minutes to the 8 day trip.

Google Maps, you resisted when I pulled that blue line down to go through Kerrville, Texas. But if I had listened to you, I would have missed a classic Texas small town square, and the puffy, sweet-dough kolaches that were the ultimate road food. In fact, I would have missed that sweet lady’s attempt to introduce me personally to the Lord, as I sat in my parked car outside the kolache joint eating the sausage-filled one that had been meant as a snack for later. “Later” meant 120 seconds later, apparently. 

She was so very nice, and when I handed her the card for my blog, she explained that our meeting was even more fortuitous than I thought, since she would be getting her first computer in a few days.

When my bank misses a decimal point and suddenly I have a gratuitous amount of unexplainable money, I will be going to Kerrville, Texas, and buying everyone a computer. And a round of sausage cheese kolaches. An old favorite and the new world, united right there on the steps of a small town southern courthouse.

Several orders of Texas Toast, many sweet teas, a flat tire in Louisiana, and a character-buildingly dicey Alabama hotel room later, I hit the East Coast hard. My first three thoughts were as follows:

I am not getting in my car for one week.

I can’t believe I had to return that John Grisham book-on-tape to Cracker Barrel before I heard the last 2 chapters.

I hope they have food trucks here.

Would I find the kind of innovative, layered, on-the fly mobile food culture here, that I had become addicted to in Los Angeles? Belly up amigos, as I present to you: CHARLESTON, South Carolina.

On a sticky-sweet southern heat day, I found my hungry heart’s salvation in the cool shadow of a Charleston Piggly Wiggly.

Though I tried to manage expectations, my hopes got high right away. I had done my research by then, and I knew I had some great options in front of me. Assembled before me was a biopsy of the Lowcountry cuisine that Charleston is famous for, and rightly so.

“Ok, this is a time for careful strategy and planning, not impulse.” I said to my mother, wrongly assuming she was still standing beside me, and not in line at the Auto-Bahn truck ordering shrimp spring rolls with peanut sauce.


 

A word on Charleston shrimp. Lowcountry shrimp is to that frozen grocery store shrimp ring that people seem to gravitate to around New Year’s Eve, as a scoop of whole grain Dijon mustard is to that disgusting stream of mustard water that shows up from a primary color generic bottle of “French” sandwich topping. No comparison.

Lowcountry shrimp tastes sweet and pure and marine, with a proper snap and chew, and not an ice crystal in sight. And when snuggled into a sheer stocking of wonton wrapper with crunchy vegetable bits and pieces, it is a locally sourced tastebud present.

Shrimp is delicious, and peanut sauce infinitely dippable, but I was in for the caloric long-haul. I had come thousands of miles for this, I wanted something I could only get here, a guilty pleasure composed of all of the salty buttered regional specialties that my yoga pants would raise an eyebrow at.

Give me a break, Yoga Pants! I’ll be good tomorrow. Plus you know what happens to He Who Guilt Trips Me…Google Maps can tell you allllll about that.

I gave my mouth the gift of THIS:




 
Actually, the Outta My Huevos truck gave it to me. A buttermilk biscuit, fitted with a sheet of Finchville Farms country ham, pimento cheese, and a side of Anson Mills grits with 3 year cheddar.


Days and ways in which eating this would be appropriate:
for breakfast before a day of building something with your hands; for dinner on a day that went completely totally wrong, or completely totally right; hungover weekend mornings after sleeping late; for lunch on a day which feels like it should be Friday, but is not. Also, if for any other reason not listed above, someone sets this in front of you DO IT. Crumbly tender biscuit, saline robust ham, and a melting mouthful of pimento cheese, the creamy culprit that pushes the whole thing into a new dimension of wonderful.

Anson Mills grits are always excellent, but the very sharp cheddar grated in cold shavings on the bottom and top, sandwiched them with the authentic flavor that cannot be gained by the addition of salt or sugar, but only by time and patience.

But what of the sweet tooth that haunts my days and repeatedly forces me into near-criminal acts of midnight snackery? The sweet tooth that has seen me give in to a heavy slab of glassined gas station lemon loaf, and administer a spoonful of maple syrup to myself as though it were medicine, what of that?

Diggity Doughnuts was there in my time of need. In a bright jewel of a cheery truck, these angels were making life rafts, cakey innertubes of organic satisfaction, frosted and glazed with unique flavors like chili cilantro, and topped with blueberries, or spicy sprinkles, or lemon.



For me, it was the Cookie Mintster and the Sin-Amen. Cookie Minster came dressed in a chocolate glaze and crushed cookies and studded with bright refreshing mint leaves. Sin-Amen let the egg and dairy-free doughnut be its naturally lovable self, but powder-puffed with sugar and Saigon Cinnamon before hitting the stage. The Diggity Doughnuts truck makes the case that organic really does taste better. You are tasting ingredients, not process or additive.

Rome was not built in a day, and Charleston cannot be eaten in a day. I have only begun this journey, and I am looking very forward to the rest of it. In fact, I must say that the food truck scene in Charleston, South Carolina rivals that of Los Angeles. I do not intend to start some sort of hip-hop food truck East Coast-West Coast rivalry here, because they are both very different and war is not the answer.

“Give me local shrimp and organic vegan doughnuts, or give me death.”

Famous quote, you guys. Word for word.
 

 
 

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Midnight In The Garden Of Food And Evil

Where have I BEEN?! This post shall reveal all!

It's been a while since you've gotten a food truck review from me (and honestly, what am I thinking, that's my job forgodssake!) And I know you are all waiting soooo patiently to see what my #1 Bite of Bite Club is (especially since #3 was such a shocker.)

But the truth is I have been exploring the gothic, gorgeous, humid, historic, scrumptious South. I took a good-old-fashioned American Road Trip, and it landed me in the lush Southeastern U.S. In my travels, I had pistachio pizza in Phoenix, Kolaches in Kerrville Texas (see, I even eat alliteratively. WTEFF?!) and lots more in between.

A flat tire in Louisiana on the first day the roads opened into New Orleans post-Isaac kept me from the World's Largest Gummy Bear that a technicolor freeway billboard had promised. I'll have to hit it on the way back...

And now I am here:

 
Yep. I live in this tree.

Ha! No, not really. But if you did decide to live in a tree, this tree would make a pretty dreamy candidate, wouldn't it? It's such a positively dramatic tree. And it has a friend, in front of the beautiful Savannah Public Library.


This library achieves something that many modern libraries fail to. It says "Come hang out with me for hours and hours on a rainy day, after you eat a lavender shortbread cookie sandwich, and before you eat a banana because you feel bad about the aforementioned shortbread cookie sandwich."

I know. Kind of a loquacious library, really. But that's what I did. Today. This library is stellar at self-marketing.

And the bakery where the oft-mentioned shortbread cookie sandwich was purchased and dispatched to my stomach, had this clever thing inside, which made me feel a sudden tenderhearted-ness towards the surly "Pinterest." For it was, upon inspection, so delightfully "pinnable."


I know it has not missed your attention that I have not mentioned a single bite of food yet. My plan surfaces!!!

I had a fantastic dinner the other night with a gentleman and his lady in Charleston. He is a food blogger, and she his muse. They are lovely people to spend an evening with, and I will be forcing myself into their plans as long as I am in this region. (But there, I gave them a head's up so now it's completely ok and not weird at all.)

They love amazing food just as I do, and to read about the night's capers (adventures, not briny berries) you will have to stop in and see him, and I promise he'll tell you every delicious detail.

He lives here: http://www.foodmancingthegirl.com/

Ok, Ok. Here's a little something.

This burger came with a fried egg...and a death wish.