CMH Gourmand – Eating in Columbus & Ohio

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Archive for the ‘Ohio’ Category

Rocky’s Italian Ice

Posted by CMH Gourmand on August 17, 2009


Rocky’s Italian Ice
120 West William Street
740.362.8000
(moved to ASHLEY AT 116 EAST HIGH STREET AROUND MEMORIAL DAY 2016)
rockysice.com




The dog days of August have finally struck with a vengeance! While I am always up for an excuse for ice cream, there is one thing I crave to cool down with when it is super hot: Italian Ice. Unfortunately, it is a 6 hour drive to Johnnie’s in Chicago to get the best Italian ice on the planet. Fortunately, I can cut 5 1/2 hours off the road trip and get something that is really good and maybe a bit “cooler” up in Delaware.

Rocky’s opened in Delaware in 2003 and has maintained an element of cool since the doors opened. Tie Die T-shirts and funky signage preserves the summer vibes when the weather cools. The staff knows how to have fun while scooping away. This is a small building just southeast of the main drag in downtown Delaware. Most traffic is of the foot and bike variety so getting a close spot is not too much of an ordeal.

Rocky’s does have fun with deals and promotions. On Mothers Day they gave out free ices to moms and there is typically a Tuesday special of some sort.

The shop crafts over 30 flavors with about a dozen available on any given day. You can look up at the ceiling to see the wide assortment of cool creations past and present. For immediate gratification, it is easier to look at the flavors of the day on the wall. A special treat is a custard style gelato encased in Italian ice.

Tis the season for a road trip, so turn up your AC or crank down the windows and cruise 315 north for some Italian ice. If you opt keep heading north to Chicago, keep in mind the best….and only flavor at Johnnies, is Lemon.

Posted in gelato, Road Trip | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

No Bake Cookie Coolness

Posted by CMH Gourmand on August 6, 2009

On a rainy afternoon in Athens, I spied a sign for pizza by the slice at Avalanche Pizza. Popping inside to inquire, I noticed a small display that caught my eye.

With the name Troy’s Self Righteous No Bake Cookies, I did not care if it was good, I admired the moxy of such an honest advertisement.

The cookies are individually wrapped in tin foil with the same logo as you see in the photo above. Choices are Paw Paw and Walnut. Each cookie is a mix of oats, peanut butter, vegetable oil, cocoa powder, maple syrup, cinnamon and either some of Ohio’s native fruit the Paw Paw (marked with a Paw Paw Power logo) or walnuts.

Selling points for the cookies – as noted on the packaging are (all checked off): vegan, local, post modern and delicious.

On the backside, sealing the tin foil is a sticker with a logo of Troy saying “I’m Troy, and I approved the cookies”. The net weight is listed as 4 oz (give or take).

I ate the cookie on my way back to Columbus and enjoyed it but the packaging and concept intrigued me after the treat was gone.

Avalanche Pizza is worth trying out as well as several other local eateries. Check out the Eating Athens section or the link below.

Multiple Meals in Athens

Below is my exclusive e-mail interview with Troy Gregorino the no bake maker.

“Thank you for your interest in Troy’s Self-Righteous No-Bake Cookies. They were inspired (equal-parts) by a dream, a joke, a terrible economy, and by the burning desire for things that are delicious. Additional credentials are listed on the packaging. Currently, they are available in Athens at Donkey Coffee and at Avalanche Pizza. We are a fiercely independent and righteously underground cookie operation. Kindest thanks. – Troy”

Posted in Athens, Ohio, Road Trip, Vegetarian Friendly | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

Jim’s Judgment Day: Part One – Pork

Posted by CMH Gourmand on August 5, 2009

Heather Hetterick from the Ohio Pork Producers Council serving ribs and a smile

Heather Hetterick from the Ohio Pork Producers Council serving ribs and a smile

On August 4th, I had the fortune to be a judge for the Ohio Pork Producers Council’s BBQ contest at the Ohio State Fair. I was excited about this for many reasons including a free ticket and free parking at the fair. I have not had a chance to BBQ judge in over a year so I was worried that for the want of piles of pork my skills might have waned. I was joined by an all-star cast of judges. Adam Clements and I saved our leftovers from judging (my dog was so happy to see me!) and monitored each others physical and mental health during the grueling judging process.

Judges (Left to Right):  Adam Clements - Columbus Alive, Johnny DiLoretto - Fox 28, Jim Albaugh - Ohio Pork Producers Council and Jennifer Coleman - Ohio Soybean Council.

Judges (Left to Right): Adam Clements - Columbus Alive, Johnny DiLoretto - Fox 28, Jim Albaugh - Ohio Pork Producers Council and Jennifer Coleman - Ohio Soybean Council.

BBQ judging is not all fun and games. Sampling nine sets of ribs and ten samples of pulled pork is a act of intestinal fortitude and determination. We were also aware of the strong possibility of a thunderstorm expected during the middle of the contest. Johnny D. had to do a live broadcast from the judges table at some unknown time so we were all afraid of being caught with our mouths full of food and sauce covering our faces while being asked questions. We risked sunburn and ran low on handi-wipes. Yes, people may call us heroes but someone has to do it.

Cool Pork Council T-Shirt...Heather are you hiring?

Cool Pork Council T-Shirt...Heather are you hiring?

Pork cooking competitors varied from veteran restaurant cook teams to two friends that just started cooking out of their garage with a green egg smoker. Entrants came from all over the state and all over Columbus. I am certain that I had the best pork rib ever and that team won. It is probably best (from a cardiac standpoint) that the winning ribs are not available in Columbus. The winners of the best ribs and best pulled pork categories received banners and $1000.

Pulled Pork Winners - Hickory River Smoke House

Pulled Pork Winners - Hickory River Smoke House, Tipp City

Hickory River Smokehouse

Wallys - winner for best pork ribs (note they won in 2008 as well)

Wally's Great American BBQ from Tiffin - winner for best pork ribs (note they won in 2008 as well)

Tonys Restaurant and Pub, Findlay - Peoples Choice winner

Tony's Restaurant and Pub, Findlay - Peoples Choice winner

Tony’s Restaurant and Pub

Kristen - Ms. Ohio State Fair

Kristen - Ms. Ohio State Fair

The judges were joined by Kristen, this year’s royalty. She only had ribs once before coming to the fair. We forgot to ask where she hails from in Ohio, but when it is discovered, I am going to have BBQ ribs airlifted to that community. It appears that Kristen has been deprived of some critical elements of life in Ohio…..pork.


File under random Ohio State Fair notes and observations – no judgments intended.

Speaking of pork….. Here is the Hungry Woolf report on the fair

The fair could be renamed Porkapolooza. Pork products and promotions were everywhere.

Social Media is all the rage and the Pork Council is on it with their own blog – Porktastic. This site includes a recipe for Pork and Apple Pie. Oh My!

Take an online tour of a hog farm – Ohio Pork Tour.

Ohio State Fair equals food: funnel cakes, fair fries, lemon shake ups, etc. While these things are all tasty, you can help the fair accomplish its mission by eating Ohio products. The Taste of Ohio Cafe is a good place to dine (and soak in some free air conditioning). Concessions are set up to serve fresh Ohio Beef, Pork, Poultry and Dairy (including Ohio cheese sandwiches and Velvet Ice Cream – this years flavor du fair….kettlecorn.).

I also noticed something unexpected. Oscar Mayer Lunchables, (which get some bad marks as a source of lunch for kids) had a large activity oriented exhibition at the fair. They had activity leaders running the kids all over the place doing agility courses and helping with this big Oscar Mayer Tower to climb on (seemed to scare the heck out of kids and parents alike).

A final note. It is easy to forget but Ohio is a farm state and that is why the State Fair started, so follow the advice on the trailer below.

Posted in events, Ohio | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Mission to Athens: Farmers Market and more

Posted by CMH Gourmand on July 16, 2009

A while back, I wrote that I was working on an Athens food tour and needed to get my rear in gear. It happened. Thanks to hard work and great leads from Kate Lainhart at Greener Grocer, some very patient and helpful folks in the greater Athens area, some fast footwork by Bear and Colleen at Slow Food and divine intervention in the weather arena. Here is the story from Bethia (Hungry Woolf) on the Slow Food Columbus blog – Slow Food Athens Weekend Tour June 2009

As part of my reconnaissance to put the tour together, I made my first trip to the Athens Farmers Market. The Market is open all year on Saturdays and Wednesdays from April to December. Hours are 10 AM to 1 PM.

Athens Farmers Market Link

We have a great selection of farmers markets in the Columbus Metropolitan area. There are some up and coming markets in Granville and Lancaster. However, the Athens Farmer’s Market has a history, depth of vendors and an energy that makes it unique and worth the road trip to Athens. Here the commentary ends and the photos begin. This also marks the premiere of the Athens page for this blog. Athens has become my second Ohio home and the world of food there is so amazing it deserves a page to itself.

Posted in markets, Road Trip | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

On the Road Again, Newark: The Eatery

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 23, 2009



The Eatery

44 West Locust Street (4th and Locust, off SR 13)
Newark (Nerk)
740.345.8000

Hours:
Monday to Saturday 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM
Sunday 7:00 AM to 2:00 PM

My job takes me on the road on occasion. Everytime I hit the road, I take a big hit because the work piles up in the office. However, the time behind the wheel is the only peace I get during the workweek – I can’t have a blackberry or a non Flintstone era laptop so the drivetime is dead time. My area is Columbus, Southeast Ohio and the non populated parts of Northeast Ohio. I see a lot of small towns and back roads. The real bonus is that I often get to eat lunch – as in sit at a table and eat an actual meal, something that rarely happens when I am in my cubical farm.

Other than NPR and some rocking i Pod playlists, what really makes my back road public service bearable is my sixth sense for good small town eateries, I can always find the best place to eat in any town I land in. When I was in Newark, my discovery was The Eatery.

Walking through the door I could have walked into 1961, 1978 or later, the place is a timeless small town diner. Whether you are 21 or 60 and whether your waitress is 16 or 36, you are going to be called hon or honey – multiple times. There is a round pie case on display just as you enter. It is stacked with some great looking pies that look like they should be on the cover of a magazine or maybe a centerfold. I knew this was going to be my lunch spot before my waitress called me hon and told me to sit wherever I liked. The locals tolerated me being a non local. I slid into my booth and surveyed the menu.

I ordered the Shepard’s Pie, a special for the day with a side of coleslaw. Both were good. Coleslaw is my diner canary in a coal mine, if it sucks so goes the meal. I was served the standard two rolls with butter swatches and plenty of refills on my beverage. I asked the waitress for pie guidance but she was stumped because “they are all so good, honey”. I believed her – I know good pie when I see it. Finally we decided I would have the double fudge cake because it just came out from the kitchen. Two layers of cake, separated by a dense, pudding like layer of fudge and encased in a thick chocolate icing with a big tear drop shaped dollop of buttercream frosting on top. Damn that cake was good.

The Eatery does breakfast all day – an essential for the quintessential Ohio diner. Some interesting deals are offered during the week. On Tuesdays, free dessert comes with your entree from 4PM to 7PM. On Wednesdays, there is a beat the clock feature on several dinner entrees. If you arrive before 5 PM, your meal is $5, if you arrive before 6:15 PM your meal is $6.15. Who in the heck would come after that anyway since the restaurant closes at 7PM?

Downtown Newark has an old school town square that is filled with independent businesses – not a Starbucks to be seen. Driving through I could see a sign for a big book store called Cindamar as well as The Buckeye Winery – two places that could keep me busy for a long time – if I had the time, but I had to get back on the road to my next appointment. I should have bought a whole pie before I left – the road can be lonely, but not when you have pie at your side.

Eatery on Urbanspoon

Posted in pies, Road Trip | 3 Comments »

Pie on the Highway – Henry’s Restaurant

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 21, 2009


Henry’s Restaurant
6275 US Highway 40
West Jefferson, OH 43162
614.879.9321
Call for Hours
Take Cash – No Credit Cards, No Checks

Philville Phil and I were en route to the US Air Force Museum in Dayton a while back – (which also included a trip to my favorite Dayton hippy lunch spot Christophers and purchase of a few Dorothy Lane Market Killer Brownies!). I am not a fan of driving on I 70 if the weather is nice and I am not on a timetable. As were neared exit 80 (OH-29/State Route 29/Urbana-West Jefferson) I had a notion that Phil could use some adventure in the form of pie.

Henry’s is the type of spot you are going to drive by. First, only locals drive on US 40. Second, the place looks closed and on occasion it looks abandoned. Such is not the case. Henry’s has a long tradition of creating old school, lard laced, sugar laden, fruit filled pies. Back in the day, the former pie mistress took her baked wares to the local fairs and won many a ribbon. In old editions of Road Food by Jane and Michael Stern, this place was listed as an essential Ohio stop. Today, the pies are still as good but the attention has faded.

Henrys was a filling station in a past life - gas(oline) not pie.

Henry's was a filling station in a past life - gas(oline) not pie.

We arrived about 8:45 AM and inquired about pie. We were told the cupboard was bare. The woman behind the counter could tell we were on a mission, so she asked if we might be passing back later in the day. I figured we would be done with our Dayton doings by mid-afternoon so I asked if they would have any pie after lunch. She said she would be glad to hold a few slices for us. When we asked what was baking she listed off a bakers dozen of varieties – maybe more – apple, cherry, peach, chocolate, peanut butter, coconut cream, several other creams, and more. We placed an order for a slice of Blackberry and a slice of Chocolate.

We came back about 6 PM to find our pie was still waiting for us. We were lucky because most of the pies were gone – some eaten by the slice and others sold by the box. Since we had been eating all afternoon, I put off my pie until the next day. My slice looked average on the outside, not something that would appear on the cover of Gourmet but looks can be deceiving. My slice of black berry pie had expertly executed crust – flaky but not dry, dense but light, thick where it counted and a little chewy.

As for Philville Phil…apparently he forgot about his pie or his wife ate it, I’m not sure which. He would not elaborate and seemed to tear up when I asked about the disposition of his slice.

Posted in pies, Road Trip | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Taco Truck Tour (T3): April 25th, 1:30 PM

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 11, 2009

 T# Logo

The initial taco truck trek has been completed and the eating public benefits from our efforts. The TacoTrucksColumbus.com team has tasted the tacos of every known mobile taco slinger in Columbus. We consumed the fare at many trucks twice and in a few instances – thrice. Now we are sharing the results of that research with you.

We picked four of the best trucks on the West Side and created a meat (meet) up style tour to explore La Vida Taco with some ordering advice and background information to boot. If you know you are coming please RSVP to: Hungry Woolf.

In the meantime, take a look at the TacoTrucksColumbus blog for more details and taco truck reviews.

Link to the printable full size T3 flyer by Taco Drew

Posted in Columbus, culinary knowledge, Road Trip | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Pepperoni Rolls, Ramps, Hillbilly Hot Dogs and the Poky Dot

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 7, 2009

I am off the road and back to blogging. The previous three weeks have seen me in Honduras for family; Northeast Ohio: Dover, Cadiz, Steubenville, Toronto, East Liverpool, Lisbon and Kent for my paying profession; and Fairmont, West Virginia for my academic and avocational passions. It is good to be home.

Kevin Cordi - Storyteller and New Pepperoni Roll Researcher

Kevin Cordi - Storyteller and New Pepperoni Roll Researcher

So why West Virginia? (Why the other places as well…?) My friend Kevin Cordi is a professional Storyteller and the nations first Storyteller in Residence at The Ohio State University. He has started the internationally known – The Story Box Project. He was invited the Fairmont State University as the keynote speaker for the Mountain State Storytelling Institute. During Columbus Foodcast Episode Four – Storytelling Through Food, an idea started to stew in our heads about how food serves as connection for people. Below is part of our pitch to the Mountain State Story Telling Institute and the reason why I was riding shotgun and acting as a culinary guide on our Appalachian odyssey.

In addition to hosting an incredible weekend of Storytelling, the Mountain State Storytelling Institute, may well be the site of “conception” of a book by keynote speaker Kevin Cordi.

Mr. Cordi has been collaborating with freelance writer and social media guru Jim Ellison on a book combining two of their shared passions – storytelling and food (the order is different depending on the author). This ongoing project is titled “Food, Family, and Folk: A Feast of Stories from the Counters and Tables of the Heartland.” The recipe for this project mixes food lore, personal memories, local histories and the spices of life that help us all connect with the people through the foods of our home towns. The main focus is on iconic regional and local foods.

Kevin and Jim picked Fairmont and the Mountain State Storytelling Institute as the site to launch their journey of culinary discovery into the folkways and foodways of our country. Jim and Kevin’s storytelling heritage hails from generations of family history in the hills of West Virginia. Both look forward to the weekend in Fairmont as an opportunity to reconnect with their roots.

The two writers hope the weekend will end with a notebook, a laptop, a Macbook and two recorders full of memories of Pepperoni Rolls, Ramps, Hillbilly Hot Dogs (and more). These three foods are the focus of the first chapter of their book. They hope you can help with a serving for your thoughts on these West Virginia comfort foods.

As fate would have it, Fairmont is the undisputed home of the Pepperoni Roll, Ramps were in season and I can sniff out a hot dog within a three mile radius so this was the perfect time and place to launch our project. The addition of a free conference registration secured my spot in the Cordimobile.

Our mission was successful. Thanks to everyone at the Mountain Storytelling Institute for their support. I want to especially thank Dr. Judy Byers as well as the students and storytellers at Fairmont University who will be helping us with our melting pot of food stories. I would be remiss not to thank Kevin’s wife, Barbara Allen, for letting Kevin eat his research and for driving us when we were experiencing pepperoni overload induced dementia

In addition to two days of workshops – which included blogging, using Photostory, Ghost Tales, and such, Kevin and I did some serious food research in our off hours. Here are some highlights of our three day expedition.

What is a Pepperoni Roll? It is a small bun of bread with strips of pepperoni baked in the middle. Some places will add cheese, marinara sauce with peppers or other Italian influenced toppings to the mix. Pepperoni Rolls were designed as an easy to eat food for coal miners. It’s origin was at the Country Club Bakery in Fairmont in 1927 or the 1940’s depending on whom you ask. Everyone agrees that the Pepperoni Roll (sometimes called a Pepperoni Bun) is the trademark food of Northcentral West Virginia (with appearances along the Ohio River in parts of Ohio and Pennsylvania).

I did not know that this part of the Mountain state had such a large Italian American population which continues a strong heritage to this day – there are some great Italian Restaurants sprinkled along I 79 from Morganstown to Clarksburg. These links will bring you up to speed on Pepperoni Rolls and their Italian connection.

Wikipedia on the Pepperoni Roll

Bob Heffner’s Pepperoni Roll Page

We dined at a few famous Pepperoni Roll restaurants in town. As researchers we paid our respects to the Country Club Bakery. We had to make a quick dash there in between seminars and before it closed for the weekend. They had sold out of Pepperoni Rolls for the day but Billie Joe behind the counter let me buy a bag set aside in the freezer for Monday’s restaurant orders. The bakery is a small and for pick up only. The walls are covered with articles about the bakery and its place in culinary history. The best article is in the January 2007 issue of Gourmet.

Kevin with Billie Joe at the Country Club Bakery

Kevin with Billie Joe at the Country Club Bakery

As is often the case, the best Pepperoni Roll was at a place we ate at my pure chance and dire circumstances. Mikey’s is a small, easy to miss six-seater sandwich shop near the Country Club Bakery. It was not on my research list. Since we were not inclined to eat the frozen rolls from the Country Club Bakery we needed a quick lunch spot close to the university and Mikey’s was our default choice.

We found the previous Pepperoni Rolls we sampled to be very “bready”. This was not the case here. At Mikey’s they split open the bun and remove a section of the roll for the pepperoni. Then the roll is buttered, cheese is added and on request, they add homemade coney sauce. The whole package goes into the oven for about 10 minutes to heat to a toasty and melting mass of yummy goodness.

Mikeys version of a pepperoni roll

Mikeys version of a pepperoni roll

Ramps were next on the list. I have heard about Ramps my whole life but I have never been in West Virginia during Ramp season. I was able to buy them fresh out of the ground. The gentleman I bought them from took extra time to show me how to handle the roots so that I can plant ramps in my garden so I can grow my own.

Having never eaten Ramps, I was at a loss for how to prepare them. I knew they were pungent with qualities of onions and garlic. One of the women at the Mountain Storytelling Institute had just the book I needed in this situation with recipes for ramps included. It is a great book on West Virgina wild foods by Anna Lee Robe-Terry.

Here is a resource on Ramps.

1985 NY Times article on Ramps

A Hillbilly Hot Dog includes mustard, chili or coney sauce and cole slaw. My mother proclaims that the best Hillbilly Hot Dogs hail from the King Tut Drive In in Beckley, West Virginia. Most mountaineers have strong opinions on their hot dogs and plenty of places to pacify their palates as they debate the merits of one place against another.

We had little time left to hit the Hillbilly Hot Dog hot spots but we did find some time and room for one wiener. In the process we found an incredible diner that was so good we visited it twice.

The Poky Dot

(Beware the music – The Restaurant Widow and I are of like mind about loud music in restaurant web sites – it turns our stomachs.)

At the Poky Dot, they added cheese and pickles to their hot dog. We also found a lot more on the menu that made our mouths water.

Hillbilly Deluxe

Hillbilly Deluxe

This is a classic 50’s style dinner with a funky, eclectic and fun decor. Their fare features incredible house made cheesecakes and pies, huge banana splits and too many items to choose from for breakfast, lunch and dinner. I will let the photos do the describing for me.

Cookies and Cream Cheesecake

Cookies and Cream Cheesecake

Peanut Butter French Toast

Peanut Butter French Toast

To help ease my transition back to Ohio, I stopped at O’Betty’s in Athens for a “Blaze” Hot Dog – cole slaw with locally produced bacon.

This week I am working to refresh my relationship with vegetables. For those of you living in Clintonville: BEWARE, I will be cooking my ramps this weekend and the aroma does carry.

If you are interested in the Story Box Project, there is a box at Wild Goose Creative this month. Check out the WGC web site for more details. If you have a Pepperoni Roll, Ramp or Hillbilly Hot Dog story, send me an e-mail.

Posted in culinary knowledge, Diners, Road Trip | Tagged: , , , | 11 Comments »

Taco Truck Trek, Viva La Vida Taco

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 19, 2009

Do you know what a Taco Truck is? Do you know how many Taco Trucks are in Columbus? Do you know how good the food is at some of these trucks?

During this past winter a noble undertaking was begun to find out the answers to these questions. Several intrepid souls braved rain, extreme cold, language barriers, the threat of morbid obesity from testing out multiple tacos at multiple trucks in a day, snow and the wild, wild west side. It became a true odyssey, an obsession to find all of the trucks in Columbus. The chase was on.

In some cases there was good information on the exact location of a truck. Other times things were more vague. A post on Columbus Underground helped get a few good leads. There were also some fruitless searches, a Bermuda Triangle of non working trucks on Cleveland Ave and a failed expedition to Delaware looking for a truck that was last seen in 2007.

The next step was locating the trucks, figuring out hours and offerings as well as asking all kinds of questions in Spanish, English, Spanglish and a caveman style sign language. If you own a Taco Truck / Trailer when someone is asking a lot of questions and taking photos…you might get a bit nervous about what these loco people are doing. Unfortunately obsessive bloggers is not easy to translate into Spanish.

These hurdles were overcome and the results were tasty. A whole world of meats were opened up like a can of ….Lengua (tongue). In addition to the standard steak (carne) and pork (carnitas), there is Tripa (Tripe), Cabeza (head as in cow or pig) and so on. The menus included mixes of tacos, tortas, tostadas, tostones and all types of tortilla filled goodies.

The menus at these trucks are extensive and diverse. All have tacos but there are definite differences in the offerings depending on where the owners come from – some have sopes, others have huaraches. Exploring the variety of other cuisines is rewarding – these trucks offer items never seen on local Mexican restaurant menus. Most trucks also offer one or two special dishes on the weekends such as shrimp cocktail, seafood stew, goat stew and so on.

Visiting a truck is going to take most people out of their culinary comfort zones and probably their surburban comfort zones as well. The journey for Latino comfort food leads to parts of town most people pass over on a freeway. Many of these street food vendors are located in the Taco Truck Triangle of the West Side – bordered by Georgesville Road, West Broad Street and Sullivant Ave – areas that saw the recession before anyone else did. The food is worth the effort. Many of the cooks inside the trucks are among the most kind and friendly people you can meet while trying out new meats.

To find the answers to these questions:

Do you know what a Taco Truck is?
Do you know how many Taco Trucks are in Columbus?
Do you know how good the food is at some of these trucks?

Go to: Taco Trucks of Columbus

Posted in Columbus, culinary knowledge, Road Trip, sandwiches | Tagged: , | 3 Comments »

The Ides of March Returneth: My Fifteen Food Favorites of the last 365 days

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 14, 2009

It is time for my second annual Ides of March reflection. I look back at the year and ask myself “ate for 2 Brute”. These are my fifteen favorite meals or moments from the last 365 days. Thanks to those that shared these morsels with me.

1. Hot Dog Daze: A Dirty Franks Field Trip (Posted November 17th)

2. Slow Food Columbus – Celebrated the one year anniversary with a dinner at Rigsby’s on March 2nd. I’m a proud member and I currently serve on the event planning committee. All SFC events rocked. The requirement of a chapter is to have one event per year – Slow Food Columbus often has one per week. We have one of the most active memberships in the country. Read about our adventures in eating and education in the Slow Food Blog.

3) Columbus Foodcast Episode 21 – Pattycake Bakery.

4) Hungry Woolf’s Blog – My cheeky British meal mate Bethia has one of the best blogs in town. This post marks the debut of the new Hungry Woolf Approved (HWA) logo.

That is a jar of Marmite in the paw.

That is a jar of Marmite in the paw.

5. Taco Trucks Columbus – There is a lot of Taco Truck culture in Columbus – go check it out. Viva la Vida Taco!

6. Pizza Grand Prix III – exceeded my expectations for quality of pizza and people and quantity of pizza and people.

7. Bono Pizza (Bedtime for Bono – Posted December 11th, 2008)

8. Hills Market Wine and Cheese Tastings – Tied with judging for the Fiery Foods Festival at North Market. (Posted February 2009)

9. Ice Cream Sandwiches with Pattycake Tollhouse Cookies (Joining Jennie and Jeni – Posted November 24th)

10. Hargreaves Hill Brewing Company in Australia: I discovered this magnificent microbrewery while returning to Melbourne from the Yarra Valley with my mates Mandy, Dan and Katie. The beer is great, they have a wonderful tasting flight and it is a green business. The recent wild fires in Victoria destroyed this place. I hope it comes back. The Yarra Valley is the home of my discovery of wine and my obsession with all things Australian.

11. In April, I found the best cheese in the world. It is Whitestone Windsor Organic Blue Cheese. This New Zealand cheese was suggested to me by a cheesemonger from the East Coast and I found it in Australia at The Queen Victoria Market. That is kind of how my life rolls.

12. The Ritual Tavern, San Diego. After a day in Mexico, I found myself in my “dream seating” for all my tastes – local, organic, everything made in house and a perfect dining companion. I’m heading back next winter to keep my new West Coast winter warmth tradition alive.

13. The Liberty Bar, San Antonio. I continued my quest for sun in the winter with a trip to San Antonio. This was a wonderful food field trip for me. My favorite meal (all of my dines in SA were impressive) was a simple dish of thick, crusty, homemade bread with a Mexican brown sugar style dipping sauce and fresh goat cheese. Dios Mio! I spent the night at the bar and headed back the next day for lunch. The Liberty Bar is is worth visiting for breakfast, lunch and dinner during the same day.

14. The End of Prohibition Anniversary Party – Highland Estates, December 2008. This party inspired my purchase of a vintage Tuxedo and flask. This was not posted to protect the innocent and the guilty.

15. Eating Frank Pepe’s Pizza in New Haven, Connecticut (the end of a 5 year quest) with my friend Lee and her sister Kathy. New Haven pizza is considered to be a unique style of pizza making like New York or Chicago. When I was researching for a pizza book in 2004, this was on my hit list. Scratch one pizza. Next – Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix.

Best Photo: I want a better camera, perfect lighting and a free week to master Photoshop. Until then I will be frustrated with white plates that do not cooperate and shots that scream for a flash or special setting in environments which call for decorum and discretion. This shot from the New Year’s Eve tasting menu at Details came out just the way I wanted.

My best shpt of the year.

My best shot of the year.

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