Thursday, December 4, 2008

An Unorthodox Thansgiving

Thanksgiving is a time for reconnecting. Food, warm drinks, fir trees, first snows and fufilling that most basic of human needs: companionship. This year, I had the immense pleasure of taking my thanksgiving in new and different way, one that turned out to be a food and love filled weekend to be reckoned with.
I traveled to Vermont- the closest state in the US to Canada-a place where everyone is friendly and aware of their carbon footprint. The Burlington airport is one of the best I have visited, an easy, unselfconcious place where air travel might be considered enjoyable. The friends I was staying with are a variety of poets, artists and writers, all of whom are very well versed in culinary pleasures. We spent the days roaming around, discussing Walt Whitman, listening to Aretha Franklin and most of all EATING. We took our culinary satisfaction in many ways: pecan pie and coffee ice cream, hard little pears, molasses cake, eggnog french toast, thick cappuchinos, thai chicken soup, warm goat cheese and roasted tomato salad, apple cinnamon pancakes and much more. The food we ate was made all the more sweeter by a New England early winter, snow spread across the ground and vast amounts of stars at night, steam filled kitchens and bright morning hikes. It made for a new way to define the holiday, and one that I much prefer to sticky family parties and awkward reunions. All in all, I learned that home has a myrid of meanings, and that most often it is found in a hot pot of coffee and a good friend reading the New Yorker.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Review: 2 Vine

Lets face it, Rochester NY is no temple of gastronomy. The most interesting thing we have going to for us culinarily is something called the "garbage plate". If this isn't indicative of the mindset of the entire city then I don't know what is (perhaps the Greece Ridge Mall being the largest tourist draw?). Anyways, we brave and hardy foodies in upstate are forced to cling desperately to any and all relatively decent food options that we may have. Of late, our choices have improved drastically thank god, but one of the original real restaurants (with gasp, a concept!) in Rochester: 2 Vine, remains a solid, if not rather smarmy place to eat good food.
By now, 2 Vine has built a reputation on several things: its pricyness (nothing compared to New York), its steak and its clientelle. The typical Saturday night bar crowd consists of vaguely overweight buisness types getting drunk on overpriced cocktails, while scoping the bar for plently of inversely proportioned younger women looking to snap up the next heir to some upstate media fortune or just "have a good time" with the girls from Pittsford Mendon High. Perhaps I am being unfair. Occasionally you will run into an old friend or someone you want to see, but this can only add to the "sceney-ness" (rarely used in conjecture with Upstate NY) of the place.
The food however, is more than decent. I often end up ordering a hodge podge of appetizers and sides when I go out, and while the entrees are acceptable but rather usual, it is in the specials and other bits that the menu really shines. The brussel sprouts, roasted to Maillard perfection, are well seasoned and warming; paired with the sausage and escarole over white beans, a perfectly filling wholesome meal is able to be had for almost six dollars off of a main course. We also ordered the appetiver special of sauteed calamari, cooked in an interesting carrot broth which I am still trying to excavate spice-wise.
The other person with me (my lovely grandmother) ordered the plat de jour rib eye steak with mashed potatoes. The steak, when it arrived, was almost as big as my forearm and significantly thicker. It was cooked perfectly, you could cut it with an ordinary butter knife it was so tender, and appropraitly fatty around the edges. With the table bread and a cup of black coffee, it made for fine Saturday out, save for the incessent noise of the Kodak louts to my left.
The service is adequate. The waiter was not overbearing and prompt, though at tiems there was a sense of rush that threatened to overwhelm affected tranquility of a structured dinner. All in all however, 2 Vine rates high for quality of food, service, proximity to evening activities, and any light in the dim gastronomical bulb of Upstate NY.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

On Foam

Something immense has occured. Before last week, the idea of any sort of caffinated beverage that had been whipped, frothed, or lathered I found entirely unappealing and even mockable. Now however, I must admit I am total caffine hippocrite and have become addicted to drinking a cappuccino between four and nine at night. The sensation of foam and milky coffee is perfect after the school day, when you want something to sooth and lift, but not jack your heartrate like the morning.
On caffine and coffeeshops: It's a sad fact that they now are symbols of hipness and bygone romanticism, instead of remaining in their rightful place in history as places to drink, talk, learn and study. Pop culture distorts traditions into cliques. People have been meeting in coffeehouses for as long as trade routes between east and west have been open. During the spice trade, Turks and Ottomans brought the tradition of communal coffee drinking to Europe, where it was initially viewed as unhealthy and even sinful to indulge in caffine. Soon though, men began to gather around the coffeepot to talk and read and often discuss the unhappy political affairs of the day. In this way, many of the worlds revolutions were born out of coffeeshops, to say nothing of the art and literature movements propagated there.
Nowadays your more likely to come across some indie kid updating his facebook page than the next Robespierre, but I like to think that in my cappucchino there are some vestiges of intellectual revolt. The closer reality however, is just sitting in a cafe late on a school night, drinking a cappuccino and getting lost in some overstuffed chair.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Beginnings


Hello all!

Well after such a long hiatus from the other blog, I decided to start from scratch in hopes of motivating myself to post more. So here it is! No Beef with Goats, a Life in Caramelized Onions, which is as good a mantra as any.
Pictures are in the works, though I will need the help of any camera-handy friends or family to aid me, as I am sorely lacking any photographic prowess. Any takers? 
Just to start things off I leave with you with this quote from one of my favorite books, Insatiable by Gael Greene, a fantastic memoir and palate exciter: "I lived to eat and ate to love and loved to delicious excess." What more is there to take from life?

photo credit: frances cannon