Tag: cincinnati

DINNER 108: Tuesday, April 18, 2006

DINNER 108: Tuesday, April 18, 2006

It’s the third Tuesday of the month, and that usually means the WINE DINNER at the IRON HORSE INN. I met up with David & Chie and we enjoyed the following menu, celebrating the Graziano Family Vineyards. Jen from Tramonte & Sons Distributors guided us through…

HAPPY MOUTH — April 2006

HAPPY MOUTH — April 2006

Tonight was another outing of the HAPPY MOUTH supper club! It was Jay’s month to pick, and a group of us — Ted, Tracy, Wendy V, Doug, Ron, Holly, Ed, Angel, Jay, Drew, Dave, and Robin — met at BALTIC for their European-style Cuisine. We…

DINNER 119: Saturday, April 29, 2006

DINNER 119: Saturday, April 29, 2006

Tonight’s dinner was an exceptional wine dinner at the IRON HORSE INN. The dinner celebrated the wines of the 1996 vintage, and the meal was memorable. Here’s the menu.

First Course
Duo of Seafood
Pan Roasted Line Caught Wild Striped Sea Bass, Tomato Gravy, Wild Mushroom Creamy Polenta
Flash-fried Fresh Sardines, Roasted Red Pepper Asparagus Sautee
1996 Justin Isosceles
1996 Flora Springs Trilogy

Second Course
Duck Duo
Seared Hudson Valley Foie Gras, Chocolate French Toast, Cherry Compote
Backwoods Smoked Duck Breast, Cherry Chutney
1996 Far Niente Cabernet Sauvignon
1996 Caymus Cabernet Sauvignon

Third Course
Duet of Lamb
Char-Grilled Rack of Lamb, Rainbow Swiss Chard, Lingonberry Mint Gelee
Braised Lamb Shank, Celery Root-Yukon Gold Potato Puree
1996 Joseph Phelps Insignia
1996 Quintessa

Fourth Course
Two Flans
Black Truffle Currant Flan
English Blue Veined Cheddar Flan
1996 Dominus (this wine turned out to be corked, so it was replaced with a 1996 Barbaresco)
1996 Chateau Lafite Rothschild

DINNER 120: Sunday, April 30, 2006

DINNER 120: Sunday, April 30, 2006

Tonight, I participated in the ONE NIGHT, TWELVE KITCHENS event at the Midwest Culinary Institute at Cincinnati State Technical and Community College. Dinner was an on-the-go sampling of a variety of dishes from the chefs at the event and a personal pan pizza that was provided…

One Night, Twelve Kitchens

One Night, Twelve Kitchens

This evening, I participated in the ONE NIGHT, TWELVE KITCHENS event at the Midwest Culinary Institute at Cincinnati State Technical and Community College. This is the second annual occurance of this fundraising event. The monies raised benefit the students in the Culinary program. Read more…

DINNER 130: Wednesday, May 10, 2006

DINNER 130: Wednesday, May 10, 2006

I was scheduled to have class this evening, but when I got to school, there was a note on the door notifying us that class had been cancelled (an email ahead of time sure would have been nice and would have saved the $2 for parking, but hey, you can’t have everything!), so I had an unexpectedly free evening.

On the way home, I dashed through Taco Bell for a couple tacos and a Chili-Cheese Burrito (which I still call a “Chilito”, from the long-ago Zantigo days) before heading home. Wendy had a brush-up rehearsal, so I played Oblivion and watched some TV until she got home.

Taco BellI am reminded of when I was a kid and we’d go to the Zantigo (later Taco Bell) out on Beechmont Avenue in the eastern suburbs of Cincinnati. In keeping with the pseudo-southwest theme of the chains, the restaurant had been decorated with high shelves full of knick-knacks around the dining area — things like fake plants, little ceramic donkeys, and plastic cacti. The shelves were about 9 feet off the ground. Too high to reach without a ladder, but just the right height for some hijinks…

One of the kids I used to hang around with (not me, honest!) had the idea that surreptitiously lobbing food items up onto the high shelf was not only fun at the time of the lobbing, but the fun actually MULTIPLIED when considering the already-foul food putrefying over time up there next to the little ceramic donkey.

So, from time to time, and extra burrito or taco would be ordered, unwrapped, and prepared for flight. We learned from experience that nachos were a bad candidate for lobbing since they tended to break-up in mid-flight and make a heck of a clatter as the individual chips crashed back to the floor. Burritos, it was discovered, were exceedingly aerodynamic and not only looked beautiful in mid-flight – smooth white tortilla contrasting with the sand-colored walls — but landed softly on the high shelf, nestling themselves comfortably among the brik-a-brac and beginning the long fermentation process.

Visits on subsequent weekends would reveal a restaurant growing increasingly smelly. It must have taken the poor hourly workers quite some time to discover the source of the foul odor, and the stunt was able to be repeated several times before we, frankly, outgrew it.

I haven’t been to the Taco Bell on Beechmont Avenue in many years now. I wonder if the shelves are still there. If they are, I would fully expect to find a mummified burrito up there, near the ceramic donkey.

Ceramic Donkey
HAPPY MOUTH — May 2006

HAPPY MOUTH — May 2006

Thursday, May 11, 2006 was the May meeting of the HAPPY MOUTH SUPPER CLUB, and it was Chuck’s night to pick. A group of us — Ted, Tracy, Wendy V, Ron, Holly then Ed, Angel, Jay, Drew, Wendy B, John, guest Paul, Dave, and Robin — met at Allyn’s…