Showing posts with label memphis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memphis. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Dad Keller in Memphis

Hello!

Not only do I love a good roadtrip, but my Dad does too.   He left MA on September 6th on his way out to visit his brother in Albuquerque and seeing as how we were going to cross paths he stopped in at Memphis to visit.   This was well timed as he arrived on my birthday and was able to come out to dinner with us.
I was expecting him to need to hit the road early the next morning but as he's not pressed for time he stayed the next day and we went to do a little sightseeing.


We started our day with, you guessed it, a meal! We went down to Beale street and had a BBQ lunch at the Blues City Cafe. We ordered the platter to share: a half-rack, a catfish filet, coleslaw, baked beans, french fries and texas toast.  At Matthew's recommendation we also ordered the Beef Stew. Everything was good.  Not over the top awesome, but tasty.  The ribs were tender, the coleslaw tasted fresh and the beans were cooked with peppers-a unique flavor.  The atmosphere, however, was festive and fun.


After lunch we wandered around Beale street be-bopping in and out of all the tourist shops selling Elvis tee-shirts, shot glasses with drinking slogans on them, bedazzled hats, "My aunt went to Memphis and all I got was this lousy shirt" shirts.   You know the store.   We went into a music store owned by Clyde Hopkins, The "Godfather of Blues".   He was standing outside saying hello to people and inviting them in.  I linked someone else's video of it. 


After wandering the half block of Beale street we got hungry and wandered into a store with an ice cream parlor where we got Milk Shakes, ice cream and root beer floats. While sitting there I convinced them of the excitement to be had at the Peabody hotel and we wandered over there next.






Peabody Ducks and the DuckMaster


                                                             














The Peabody Hotel is home to the Peabody Ducks.  The Ducks live in the hotel lobby fountain.  The attending DuckMaster (not kidding) brings the ducks down in the elevator every day at 11am and then brings them back up at 5pm.  They roll out a red carpet, play a loud orchestral number with trumpets and drums and march the ducks out with as much pomp and circumstance as possible.  The DuckMaster then hovers around the fountain all day making sure people don't poke or harass the ducks.  I chatted with him and this is what I learned:  The ducks are wild.  They come from a farm outside of the city. The owner puts out feed to lure wild ducks down and from the ducks that come he picks out the ones that are around 1 year old and seem to have the right temperament. He trims their right wing and brings them to the Peabody.  The work there for about 90 days and then he brings them a fresh batch of ducks and takes the other ones away to be released.  He tags their legs so they won't get accidentally chosen a second time.   Fascinating.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Eating in Memphis

My birthday extravaganza is coming to a close but our culinary adventures will continue on.
Since arriving in Memphis we have had delicious foods in amazing restaurants.   In fact, outside of sight-seeing, our typical day generally progresses like this:  wake up, eat, come back to the house, nap, go back out to eat again.   It's been awesome.   Some of the great places we've tried:

Las Tortugas Deli Mexicana:
I know you don't think "Mexican" when you think Memphis, but this place was stellar.  I had the pinto bean tostadas-they were packed with flavor on crisp and crunchy tostadas. We split a bowl of the chicken tortilla soup-best chicken based soup I've had in a long time.  Jamie and Matthew each got Tacos-one set was Brisket (genius idea) and the other was Pork (excellently spiced).
The atmosphere in the restaurant is fun too. There's signs on the walls saying "If your food isn't ready in 10 minutes...wait longer" or "Don't sit down before you have your ticket in hand.  Thanks, God".  The owner has created his own superhero, Viperman, and there are quotes and pictures of him all around too.  This was all great because the place so was hoppin' we had to wait a bit in line and then for our food so it gave us plenty to keep ourselves entertained.

Central BBQ:
Our first BBQ experience in Memphis.   We split a rack of ribs and got half dryrub and the other wet.  My last experience with dryrub was that they were, indeed, dry. Too dry.  These, however, were superb!  The meat was tender and moist. The flavor was sweet and tangy and then we added (unnecessarily) the extra spicy sauce which, while not needed, was also delicious.   They are very busy so, unfortunately had gotten both ours and Matthew's side orders wrong-and for me, Side Orders are very important.  I'm sure we could have fixed it but we were to busy eating ribs to talk to anyone. The staff is super friendly and while they don't have a table service there are plenty of people walking around clearing tables and stopping to check in and see if you need anything.

Iris:
This New Orleans style restaurant was not only a culinary treat but a gorgeous place to have dinner.  We sat out in the patio where we could sit under the bare bulb string lights and admire the brightly painted outdoor bar.   We started with their cocktail menu which, with the fashion, was extensive and unique.  I can hardly remember how the drinks were prepared but some of the ones at the table included a more delicious version of a Long Island Iced tea, a drink with muddled cucumber and something else called a Six-toed Cat.  All delicious.  For food we started with fried oysters and in reality we could have stopped after that.  Each couple shared one platter and with the french fries and asian style coleslaw we were pretty full after just that  course.  But of course we didn't stop.  Jamie and I ordered a Salad and Catfish.  The catfish was steamed on a bed of rice with a chunky tomato based sauce on top served in a cast iron casserole dish-Superb.   Matthew and Ashley got a  salad and boudin hotdog.  The boudin wasn't terrible but, according to them, it wasn't as good as it had been in times past.    The salads, for being an iceberg base, were great. Goat cheese, balsamic, stuffed olives, fresh and tasty tomato.   I also appreciated that for being a shamncy restaurant, the servings were substantial.  Overall, great!

Bryant's Breakfast:
This is a counter order breakfast place and while we were in there the line NEVER got below 15 people. And that was when it was short.  We really enjoyed our breakfast here and Jamie and I ended up splitting the "Special" which comes will all the meats-ham, pork, bacon, sausage-a potato pattie, three eggs and like all the breakfasts-3 biscuits, sausage gravy and grits.  Did you read that right?  THREE BISCUITS.  Every plate comes with three biscuits. Who can even eat that much?  We didn't branch into their pancakes and french toast but we were might tempted by the Cinnamon Role French Toast made from their freshly made cinnamon roles.  Maybe we'll have to go back just for that.
The food was classic breakfast food made fresh, hot and to order and while the line was incredibly long, they moved you through pretty fast, there was plenty of seating and your food came out within 3 minutes of ordering.

Hog and Hominy:
This was my birthday dinner. A tiny little restaurant that was so popular we had to change our dinner time to get a reservation.   We got there early to have drinks and play bocci ball in their little outdoor court.  That was a great start to the dinner.  Our friends all arrived and we sat down to look at the menu. It was split into three main sections.  A brunchy section (weird because it was 6pm), pizza (they have a wood fired brick pizza oven), and Appetizers.  We started with some Poutine which, while delicious, had chili oil on it making it a spicy version of the classic.   We got the Vito Pizza to share. It had goat cheese and sausage and was delicious. Everyone at the table tried it and loved it. And they we also got a "Hot Brown".  An open faced sandwich with turkey and gravy, bacon, cheese and topped with an egg (off the brunch menu). That was delicious.   But clearly not enough (HA) because we also ordered desserts.   We weren't daring enough to try their "parmesan" gelato but we did get all three of the pies on the menu. A chocolate, a banana peanutbutter cream, and a blueberry. All three of which were stellar.  Overall, a great birthday dinner.  Oh! and my dad is on his own roadtrip out to New Mexico so I got to celebrate with him as well!

Asiana Restaurant:
We met Matthew while we were teaching English in Korea.  All of us love and miss Korean food. Thankfully for Matthew, there is a large Korean population here and some great Korean restaurants.  So, of course, we had to go to one.  It was great.  When we ordered she brought us our rice in the little metal bowls and brought out all the side dishes.  Perfect start!  We tried the Kimchi Pancake-excellent!  And then we ordered all the soups, a bibimbap, and more kimchi!   The only dish that fell short was the Mandu Soup. The Mandu were frozen and not the kind meant to go in soup.  Our favorite was the Yuk Gae Jang. A beef based soup with lots of vegetables, rice noodles and flavor.   I hope we get to go back again so that I can try more things from their menu!

Eating with Ashley and Matthew 



Sunday, September 7, 2014

A Month of Blogging

Hello!
Today is my (Shannon) birthday. So far it has been marvelous!  It started two days ago with tickets to see Mary Poppins and then continued yesterday with a ballet of Midsummer Night's Dream in the Memphis Botanical Gardens. Today we woke up early to do a color run and will finish it all off with dinner tonight and maybe a trip to the fair!  All of this has been interspersed with eating and napping.  YAY!

All of this wouldn't be possible with the help and encouragement of our hosts here in Memphis: Matthew and Ashley. They've been so great in the planning and taking us around and, of course, letting us live with them on this cross country adventure.

Which brings us to the next point.  We are on a cross-country adventure. It's been AMAZING. We left MA on the 24th of June and have been doing lots of fun stuff.  Most of which you haven't seen blog posts about because I haven't been posting.   When I sit down to write a post I get overwhelmed with what to put in and what to leave out and ultimately I don't write anything.  Then I get frustrated that I haven't been posting and I hate being in that negative space.

With all that in mind and with today being my birthday I've decided to do some New Year Resolutions. The new year being my 34th year.  

I have two resolutions.  My resolutions:
For the next 34 days I will...
Write a blog post every day 
           I'm hoping this will kickstart me to be more dedicated.
Exercise every day
           a 5K run every day would be AWESOME, but I'll settle for burpees or something like that. Just as long as I'm doing some intentional exercise and bringing my heart rate up.

I've already explained the blog post one, let explain the exercise one.
Aside from the general benefits of "exercise" I've put this one in because I am usually good about exercise, when we aren't traveling.    Which is great except that we travel a lot. And I like to eat.   If I want to stay healthy enough to continue this lifestyle-I've got to be diligent about exercise.


So, that's it.  Just two. I think I can manage it.  You'll know how well I'm doing when tomorrow rolls around.