Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Tasting...

I almost forgot! I have yet to regale you with tales of my chef's tasting. It was everything I wanted it to be. Here's a look at the menu:

Course 1: Tomato Borscht with Sour Cream and Chives
Course 2: Fried Chicken Livers and Hominy with a traditional Ragu
Course 3: Quail Breast, Creamed Spinach, Citrus-Tarragon Sauce
Course 4: Ostrich, Asian-style Slaw
Course 5: Dry-Aged Ribeye, Sautéed Green Beans, Cippolini Onions, Bordelaise
Course 6: Elk, lightly fried artichoke, mint/coriander/fennel sauce (Moroccan)
Course 7: Goat cheese, homemade apple butter, crostini
Course 8: Homemade carrot cake with cream-cheese icing

My only complaint was with the chicken livers. Not sure about those in general. On the whole, a little lackluster on the creativity, but all cooked well. Excellently fresh, local ingredients. Good service. No corking fee, and was asked whether I wanted my wine decanted: both good signs. We sat at the restaurant's titled table, Table 16, which was a lovely table situated beside a window. This is designed, of course, to be the restaurant's best table.

On the whole, I score the restaurant a 9 out of 10, and I imagine I will be able to give it a 10 on my next visit.

Tasting notes on the Carruades de Lafite, 2002: Ripe, elegant, New-World style fruit. Medium body, with flavor profile that included crayon, slate, pencil-shaving, blackberry. Drinks well, and better after decanting.

Proposal: Part 1, The Journey Begins...

In the interest of keeping up the academic side of this blog, I'm throwing out the proposal for my Masters thesis. Rising from the mists of a caffeine-induced haze, this profoundly cloudy document attempts to tell people what I'm writing this thing about. To tell you the truth, I'm still not sure myself. That may not bode well, but I'm so excited about post-humanism right now that it is clouding my judgment. If you have helpful criticism, please post a comment. Better yet, if you have any ideas about how this whole thing might be developed into a class or have books/source materials to recommend, then PLEASE tell me!

Here you go...

Discover Simple, Private Sharing at Drop.io

Saturday, December 19, 2009



For a small town, Greensboro, North Carolina has some amazing food. I'm currently sitting in The Green Bean, a fantastic coffee shop on Elm Street, sipping a "red" (rooibos) espresso with white chocolate and honey. I am eating a turtle brownie from Spring Garden Bakery, a fabulous coffee shop in its own right. Tonight, I'll be going to the eminent Table 16 for a chef's tasting that is bound to be fabulous. Last night, I made a roasted NY strip steak (grass-fed beef) with a zinfandel cream sauce.

Let's talk about Chef's tastings for a moment. You can do this at most fine restaurants that are not chains. Essentially, this means that you give a chef general parameters of your likes, dislikes, allergies, or dietary restrictions, and he will prepare you a succession of courses that are not on the menu. Usually these courses tend to be small 'tasting' plates designed to impress the diner
and give you a sense of the chef's overall skills. They are a lovely way of being surprised by food, since the chef decides what delicious things to bring you. Sometimes they can be paired with wine selections for an extra fee. However, the tastings can be expensive, so check with your waiter for standard pricing and flexibility.

Now, here's a case in point for wine investment. At dinner, we'll be drinking the Carruades de Lafite, the second bottling of Lafite Rothschild. I bought this wine for approximately $60 in 2007. Now, looking at online prices for this bottle and vintage, the price has shot up to nearly $300 American. We're not going to sell it, of course, because at this point I'm going to take great pleasure in drinking it, but you see my point? There's a pretty penny to be had in this business if you're willing to store the wine in an appropriate fashion. Some knowledge, a friend in the business, and a good wine shop can do wonders for your cellar, friends, and don't you dare forget it. I'm looking forward to laying down a good Brunello di Montalcino, and just seeing what happens...

Now, a word to pan-roasting meat. I'd never done this before, but you'll accelerate the process if you use a cast-iron pan. One 1-1/2 inch thick steak was pan-seared (5 mins. on both sides) with a bit of olive oil and a very hot pan. Then, I suggest an oven at 400 degrees for about 30 mins for medium doneness. Then, your best course of action is to make delicious sauce with a bit of wine, cream, and a dash of butter for richness. Scrape up the good stuff left on that pan as you deglaze with the wine. There you go! Now sit down with some garlic-mashed potatoes and a bottle of good seasonal beer. Yes, I said beer. Steak and beer are a delicious combination, friends. Taste and believe.

Additionally, I've discovered a new author (or two) for good reads over break. Try A.S Byatt's new novel The Children's Book for something psuedo-historical. For something more on the edge of sci-fi try the fabulous Octavia Butler with Kindred. Butler's reputation precedes her, winning both the Hugo and Nebula awards for her science fiction.

I think that's all for now. Have no doubt that I will write about this evening's dinner for your enjoyment. Be careful in the snow, everyone!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Could I get a drum-roll please? . . . . . . . . . . . I'm done with semester three! Am I anxious about the papers I've turned in? Yes. Am I afraid that I might be full of, in a word, bull? Yes. However, I don't need to be concerned about that anymore, 'cause its over. Sort of.

Really, the work never ends. Now is the time to construct the syllabus for next semester's class (or two classes, not sure yet). For those of you gasping in horror at the implications of that statement, let me assure you that, yes, they are going to let me teach students BY MYSELF. Sound like a terrible idea? Well, it might be. Only next semester will tell. In fact, I'm looking for some ideas. Here's my class description (at least, on the original application) . If you have readings to suggest, let me know:

Historical Narratives: Performance and Identity in the Early-modern and Post-modern World.

How does history inform the present? The future? What is its value, and how do we construct it? In this course we will examine the nature of history as narrative through the lens of early-modern and post-modern constructs of identity, popular culture, performance, and literature. Through these texts, the course will seek to use the seemingly distant past as a means for interrogating and understanding the present. Our examination will range from Deleuze and Guattari's theories of the 'post-human' body to The Duchess of Malfi, from Judith Butler to The Tudors. In each instance, we will seek to critically analyze how bodies, texts, and performances of the past haunt the present, as well as how they can be considered, in the words of Umberto Eco, as 'open works' for interpretation.

So, history and performance are big themes here. Anyway, if you have any ideas, just post 'em!
The other class is Introduction to Acting. I have no idea what I'm doing for that one, yet, if you have ideas. Possibly, I'll just spend each class making them pretend that they're Jell-O. That's always fun, right?

Let me think...do I have any cool links for you today? Maybe



Sunday, December 13, 2009

Muppets and...

I have to repost this from a friend:


Somehow, the muppets just never quit being entertaining. Thank God for Jim Henson.

Anyway, in other news, I've eaten a lot. I ate a spatch-cocked quail, Manchego mashed-potatoes, latkes, mulled cider, wine, rum, egg-nog, apple-carrot Slaw, homemade cookies, spice-rubbed salmon, apple-cake, stew, and that's probably not all. The holidays, as I have mentioned, are one of my favorite times of the year for eating.

I have also succeeded in nearly finishing two papers and writing an abstract for one of them. An active weekend, my friends. I'm exhausted, elated, and a bunch of other 'E' words. However, I can't take it any more and I need it to end. I can't even form sentences properly anymore. I don't even know what my papers were about when I started them. Probably not what they're about now. Roughest semester in graduate school so far. Tomorrow is the last class. If I don't come back...well...

Anyway, because I love you, my adoring fans (or whoever clicked that incorrect link that sent you here) I'm going to give you this. It's funny. Read it.