Friday, July 27, 2012

Taste of Home


This post is not for my vegetarian friends but if you are a vegetarian from the south, perhaps you will understand.  

As anyone who no longer lives in the south will tell you, there are things that just taste better in the south - grown in the south, made by people from the south, consumed in the south.  Sweet tea.  Peaches.  Barbeque. Cobblers.  Barbeque.  And yes, that's an intentional repeat and my list could go on....


My sister and I have long complained that what DC is missing is a decent lunch place.  A place like we knew growing up in the south - rotates the meat and veggies each day to give you a meat and 2 or 3.  A place that counts mac and cheese or cobbler as a veggie.  Plus a chicken salad plate.  


I am adding chicken salad to the list of foods that taste better in the south.  I'm not talking about the tuna fish salad variety of chicken salad that the lunch places in DC serve up.  I'm talking about the kind I grew up eating with grapes and pecans mixed in to the usual combo of chicken and mayo.  It was the only kind my mother made.  It was the only kind served by the lunch places in my hometown. 

If you have spent any time in Birmingham, then you likely know the chicken salad plate that O'Carr's serves up.  The heaping scoop of chicken salad, the medley of exotic fruits and fancy crackers.  I was excited to try this copycat of O'Carr's chicken salad that I found on Pinterest.  The thought of food processing my chicken was not appealing and while I didn't have a sample of the real deal to do a side-by-side comparison, the result hit the spot and was a good taste of home.  Plus with low fat mayo and cream cheese, it was not that bad and even more low carb if you forego the fancy crackers for veggies.

Good stuff for lunch.  The kind of good stuff DC is missing.  We are getting closer up here....some investors recently helped franchise Zoe's and their chicken salad will do but it's not got all the good stuff in it.  I think if O'Carr's is looking for any investors in the DC area, I would be happy to help and I imagine there are lots of other transplants that would welcome them as well.

Pinterest trial:  O'Carr's Chicken Salad
Review:  Minus the fancy crackers and fruit, it's a good stand in for the real deal.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Pinning Italy


Periodically on Pinterest, you will find pictures that appear too good to be true.  Pinned with hope of going there one day.  Recently I was lucky enough to have one of those days.  Italy for 2 weeks with 3 friends, 4 cities and 1 academic conference.   (Disclaimer: this might read as a boondoggle but with all honesty it was a helpful conference convened by the International Society of Third Sector Research – i.e. international NGOs). 

Months ago on Pinterest I had found some pics – a market in Siena, the coast of Cinque Terre.  As the days rolled by in Italy, I took great delight in seeing the Italy I had pinned – the Italy of the tour books.  The canals of Venice, the blue sky of Florence, the stacked colored houses of Cinque Terre, the rolling hills of Tuscany.  It was one glorious sight after another.

Travel for me is about the food and the people.  You can’t go to Italy and not talk about the food and wine.   The pasta cooked just so, the flavors of pesto and fresh lemon, amarena/cherry gelato, panna cotta that made you want to lick the bowl.  Chianti in the Chianti region, Prosecco on a patio near the beach, homemade lemoncello, grand crema frozen coffee.  Sure it was rich, sure I don’t usually drink wine in the afternoon but it was all glorious.  And yes, I did bring back a shirt that says I heart gelato. 

And the people - talking at bus stops, lingering in the piazzas, gathering under lampposts for late night community conversations, the drama and intonations of an ordinary conversation.  In Siena the celebration of one neighborhood’s win in a horse race was continuing 2 weeks after their victory – complete with impromptu parades that attracted all generations.  In Vernazza, old men, assisted by their canes, were eager to give directions. 

I could go on about Italy but there’s also more to be said about the experience of travel.  Getting away from a routine and then deciding weeks later that a routine is good to return to.  Having 3 girlfriends that want to travel together on the first day and the last day.  Conversations that continue seamlessly, laughs and inside jokes that emerge from the experience. Seeing the art and churches of the ages. Finding your way – whether it’s navigating the train stations or the backroads of Tuscany that don’t even show up on GPS and force you to talk to locals whose words you don’t understand but hand gestures you do.  

 So my review from pinterest is to do something you have been wanting to do.  Don't take the privilege of travel for granted.  Enjoy the adventure and eat good food.