June 18, 2015
Days Until. . .
Father's Day 3
Food Calendar

The Old Kitchen Sage Sez:
Picnics are magic. They make cold fried chicken taste good.
Gourmet Gazetteer
Cherry Creek is a town of 1200 people in the western extreme of New York State. It's a dozen miles from the shore of Lake Erie, and fifty-one miles south of Buffalo. A stream called Cherry Creek flows north of the town, and both it and the town got the name from an abundance of cherry trees in the area. The first settlers in 1815 saw those, and formed the town in 1829. It's mostly flat, perfect for small farms. But a steep 1922-foot mountain rises just north of town. The best place to eat in Cherry Creek is the Trillum Lodge, right in the middle of town.
Edible Dictionary
gravlax, Swedish, n.--Fresh raw salmon, cured for several days with salt, pepper, sugar, dill, and sometimes aquavit. It looks like and is served in much the same appetizer presentations as smoked salmon, but the flavor is very different. Gravlax has a distinctive, translucent appearance. The garnishes include capers, lemon, parsley, herbed sour cream, and thin slices of toast. It's most often served cold, as finger food. It's also called gravad lax, which means "fish in the grave." This is a reference to the oldest way in which the dish was made, when it really was buried in a hole in the ground to ferment a bit. The current method is a great improvement.
Annals Of Popular Cuisine
Today in 1898 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, the Boardwalk opened. This is the Boardwalk of Monopoly fame, also known as the Steel Pier. It replaced an earlier Boardwalk opened in 1870. The Steel Pier is nine miles long, and offered no end to the assortment of food, drinks, music, sideshows, and hawkers selling all sorts of things. It's where Ed McMahon got his start. Imagine nine miles of Bourbon Street, and you have an idea. Speaking of that, have you noticed a new style of barker on Bourbon Street? Used to be that enterprise was the preserve of croak-voiced, thin guys trying to get you inside a strip show. Now every restaurant and bar has its people--often young women--walking around with signs telling how you can get this beer or that pizza. My wife and daughter hate even crossing Bourbon Street, and ask me whether this is what I love about New Orleans. I answer, quoting Louis Armstrong: "If you have to ask, you're never gonna know."
Food Namesakes
It's the birthday, in 1960, of Barbara Broccoli, daughter of Albert Broccoli, producer of the James Bond movies. She took over the job when her dad died. . . Speaking of Bond, the stunt coordinator on License To Kill, Barry Champagne, was born today in 1952--in Louisiana. . . Early film actress Blanche Sweet, who was well named, made The Big Debut today in 1896. . . Today in 1914 Oscar Egg, who made many records in the early years of bicycle racing, set one of those--44 kilometers in an hour. . . Mateus Galiano da Costa, a professional soccer player from Angola (the country, not the prison), kicked off his life today in 1984. He mostly goes by his first name only. Mateus is also the name of a Portuguese blush wine in a flagon, very popular in the 1970s. It would make a good picnic wine.
Words To Eat By
"The man who has nothing to boast of but his illustrious ancestry, is like the potato—the best part under ground."--Sir Thomas Overbury, born today in 1581.
Words To Drink By
"Let's drink the liquid of amber so bright; Let's drink the liquid with foam snowy white; Let's drink the liquid that brings all good cheer; Oh, where is the drink like old-fashioned beer?"--Unknown, 1800s.