Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

eG Foodblog: Verjuice - Red, Green or Christmas?


Verjuice

Recommended Posts

Later, I met up with a few friends for the Canyon Road Walk. It was cold out, but there are random bonfires on the sidewalk that you can warm yourself with (plus a plastic apple where you can presumably get a cup of cider):

gallery_11735_5529_203194.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_319844.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_333670.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_907935.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_814112.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_484203.jpg

The night ended with a couple of these; my go-to cocktail here in Santa Fe, the Silver Coin:

gallery_11735_5499_543789.jpg

Merry Christmas, everyone!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is great!  You're everything I'm interested in, rolled into one package!

I spent some time in the UAE last spring.  Much to my regret, I never made it to Abu Dhabi, but I stayed mostly in Sharjah and took day trips to Dubai (which I hated).  I also passed through Ras al-Khaimah, and I agree, it's a great emirate.  I thought I wouldn't mind living there if I ever moved to the UAE.  My friends work for HCT, so I was lucky enough to go to the Women's College to meet some Emirati women, too.  Maybe in 10 years time, I'll head back to work there for a bit. 

I'll ask you a similar question I've asked other ex-pats--what do you miss most from the UAE (foodwise or otherwise), and what do you miss from the US when you're in the UAE?

I'm also very interested in New Mexico--my parents met and married there (Las Cruces), so I'm hoping to get some travel hints from your blog.  My mother and I are planning to head down there within the next few days to visit all my parents' old haunts.  Are you going to take us anywhere outside of Santa Fe?

Hi! You're so sweet!

I know you were in the Emirates because I followed the thread- and your beautiful photos- with great relish :smile:. The traffic between Sharjah and Dubai is really something else, and I'm sorry you had to experience it more than once. Gag.

As for Ras al-Khaimah, you would not believe what it looked like a few years ago, before Sh. Saud bin Saqr began his extreme makeover. I have PM'd you some details on that.

When I'm here, I miss my family and my dog. I talk to my family every day, and I have three younger siblings whom I adore beyond words.

When I'm in the U.A.E., I miss my privacy.

Nature, mutability, and the freedom to enjoy the occasional cocktail tie for a close second.

Finally, are you and your mom going to be in Las Cruces, or will you be further north? In Las Cruces, have yourself some steak fingers from Hiebert's! A few years ago, I drove all the way there and back (eleven hours) just to eat these things, which I'd read about in Saveur 100, and sounded so delicious that it was keeping me up at night. :rolleyes:. So we went.

I guess I could leave town during the week, but I wasn't planning on it! Taos bores me... any suggestions? I would be going to the dances a Santo Domingo Pueblo today, but I have to prep for dinner!

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

How did you manage to get a picture of the teepee at Nathalie's without the throngs that were surrounding it? The Canyon Road walk was fun. We arrived around 5:30 when there was still a bit of sunlight. We timed it well. There were large crowds heading to Canyon road from church as we headed back to our car. The flying farolitos were wild. I had never seen such a thing before. The full moon rising added a beautiful glow to the whole event. The people and dogs wearing blinking strings of light were really cute. It was a very eclectic and happy crowd.

Back to your original question - Christmas, always Christmas! I don't know how anyone can choose between the two.

KathyM

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How did you manage to get a picture of the teepee at Nathalie's without the throngs that were surrounding it?  The Canyon Road walk was fun.  We arrived around 5:30 when there was still a bit of sunlight.  We timed it well.  There were large crowds heading to Canyon road from church as we headed back to our car.  The flying farolitos were wild.  I had never seen such a thing before.  The full moon rising added a beautiful glow to the whole event.  The people and dogs wearing blinking strings of light were really cute.  It was a very eclectic and happy crowd.

Back to your original question - Christmas, always Christmas!  I don't know how anyone can choose between the two.

Wasn't the moon amazing? When I was driving out from Canoncito, it had cast an eerie glow over the mountains that made them look like part of a theatre set. It took my breath away.

Guess I just got lucky with the tepee? I was standing on the brick walkway that leads to Nathalie...

And I'm totally with you on Christmas. I can never choose; they're just too different.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So nice to see you blogging, and so nice of you to do it this week, a busy one for all. Not to rub it in, but here in Barcelona where we're spending Christmas it's warm enough to stroll in just a sweater in the daytime, so seeing that snow is pretty amazing.

May we have some Lebanese and Emirati recipes as a Christmas present? Then you can work in some photos of home as well as share a taste.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

May we have some Lebanese and Emirati recipes as a Christmas present?  Then you can work in some photos of home as well as share a taste.

I agree! Emirati recipes! When I was there I browsed through cookbooks looking for any kind of information on Emirati food, but I couldn't find much of anything. Are there any special Emirati foods, or is there a cookbook that you might suggest? My friends there tell me there isn't really a distinct Emirati cuisine...is that true?

When my mother and I go to NM (in a couple of years, not days--my mistake!), we'll either start in Santa Fe or Albuquerque and drive down and around. We're mostly interested in food, but also arts and crafts, so I'd be happy to see pretty much anything you have to offer!

Hope the leg of lamb turned out well!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sorry I'm late. Blame SEPTA -- that's what it's there for. (What? You thought it existed to move people around Philadelphia? I'm sorry if I left you with that impression.)

Anyway, I'm looking forward to the rest of this blog! I spent the summer of 1977 (between freshman and sophomore years in college) selling dictionaries door to door in El Paso, which is really a city in extreme southern New Mexico (or extreme northern Chihuahua, depending on where you want to redraw the line). Our merry band of college kids spent enough Sundays traveling into New Mexico for me to get a taste of the place, and it lives up to its nickname ("Land of Enchantment"). Unfortunately, those tastes didn't include habaneros, which I learned about only after leaving the area. I can't wait to see what you have to show us about New Mexico's culinary heritage.

About me:

-I grew up in Abu Dhabi, which is the capital of the U.A.E. (home of Dubai, which most people are familiar with), and am half-Emirati and half-Lebanese. I will gladly post photos of the Emirates if anyone is interested, since I still consider myself a part-time resident.

Please do! And I'd love to hear your take on living in a place where money apparently can buy anything, including love.

-At the metabolically enviable age of 15, I began to cook family meals and fully embrace the insatiable appetite that has remained with me through good times and bad; I can always eat. That same year, I left the Emirates for Yale, where I experienced my first skinless boneless chicken breast, promptly swore off dining hall meats, and was elated to discover the godsend that is New Haven pizza. After graduating in 2001, I moved to Santa Fe to pursue blue skies, crisp air, and a M.S. in Oriental Medicine.

The only things I found redeeming about New Haven on my several visits there were the pizza and Morse and Ezra Stiles Colleges (Yale's two Modernist undergraduate colleges, designed by Eero Saarinen and built in 1961. Edited to modify my description of these structures as Modernist -- while Saarinen is one of the lions of modern architecture, the inspiration for these two very handsome conjoined structures is actually Gothic). I'd say you made the right move in forsaking southern Connecticut for northern New Mexico. I will withhold comments about Yale itself beyond those made in this paragraph out of respect for the Member Agreement. :wink:

Adorable pooch, BTW. Might we be able to see some shots of the Canyon Road?

Speaking of Seattle, I was amazed -and happy- to find that the downtown Whole Foods serves Allegro coffee instead of a local roaster's brew. As far as I know, Allegro ships out of Colorado, and next to Aroma Coffee, which is local, it is the most ubiquitous brand of coffee in town.

For me, nothing beats the coffee at Ohori's. I will have to get down there one of these days. It's great, chewy coffee, but it does leave you feeling like you need to floss.

Are the local coffee roasters in Santa Fe other than Ohori's lacking in some way? I mean, it's not like Allegro is overroasted like Starbucks or anything like that, but I wouldn't necessarily put it above good local roasters in most of the places I've been, including local roasters that have become regional/national chains like Peet's (Berkeley, Calif.) or Bucks County Coffee where I live.

I bought my home eight months ago. It's a 50 year-old Stamm house, single-story like nearly every other home within city limits.

Who was this Stamm fellow? I assume he worked in the adobe style that IIRC is mandatory in Santa Fe?

I hate clutter, but I love warmth, and sometimes I think the two can be confused with one another.

You know, I hadn't thought of it in this way, but now that you mention it, you're absolutely right.

I tend to like bright and airy spaces myself. Your place strikes me as in keeping with Southwestern colors and norms, but now I'm curious: are there any interiors in Santa Fe that would be more my liking?

These pictures were taken last night:

gallery_11735_5529_233897.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_289603.jpg

Love: farmer's sink, downward drafting stove, floor, storage space, slide-out shelves.

Hate: Countertops, countertops, countertops.

Any reason why some kitchen designers confuse the counter for the floor?

Later, I met up with a few friends for the Canyon Road Walk. It was cold out, but there are random bonfires on the sidewalk that you can warm yourself with (plus a plastic apple where you can presumably get a cup of cider):

[...]

gallery_11735_5529_907935.jpg

The symbol on this house should be familiar to rail fans, as it very closely resembles the logo of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway, the legendary route that (almost) connects my forever hometown with your current one ("almost" because the terrain proved too difficult to build the Santa Fe main line through Santa Fe; instead, a spur from nearby Lamy served the city). Its use here suggests to me that it is native to one of the peoples or cultures of the Southwest (and adopted by the ATSF for that reason), but I have no knowledge of its origins or significance. Do you?

Okay, I'll shut up now. Bring on the food and scenery!

Edited by MarketStEl (log)

Sandy Smith, Exile on Oxford Circle, Philadelphia

"95% of success in life is showing up." --Woody Allen

My foodblogs: 1 | 2 | 3

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love it when you post addendum to the blogs, Sandy. Its always interesting and new information and it really adds a lot to my enjoyment of them!

Verjuice - this is just so much fun - I can't believe you are blogging over Christmas. I can not imaging being able to do that! You are my hero.

I, too, would vote for some recipes, food and photos of 'home'! Also, what is "off the grid"?

Thanks, Kim

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, everyone! Sorry for the long wait between posts. I promise to overwhelm this thread with photos and psychobabble over the next few posts to make up for it.

Yesterday morning began with this delicious extravagance:

gallery_11735_5529_365636.jpg

And it yielded many wonderful things, some of which were related to food and cooking:

gallery_11735_5529_32439.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_393657.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_266301.jpg

gallery_11735_5529_913548.jpg

Afterwards, there was some snacking. For me, Whole Foods' wild unagi, a Pink Lady Apple, and a cup of PG Tips with milk:

gallery_11735_5529_372353.jpg

For my partner in crime, the better part of a spiral-sliced honey-baked ham:

gallery_11735_5529_642473.jpg

At noon, I left my house for the Rio Chama, armed with seventeen bags of groceries. By the time we had unloaded the car, unpacked my stuff, been acquainted with the kitchen, and started cooking, it was about 1 pm. Two lovely friends (and dinner guests) came an hour later to volunteer their skills. They hadn't seen the restaurant since the expansion, so it seemed only right to show the new rooms, outdoor bar, and of course the wine cellar and Abiquiu Room where we'd be dining later...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rio Chama, which neighbors the Pink Adobe and the Capitol, was already one of the most spacious restaurants in Santa Fe before it underwent a very recent expansion. This included a new wine cellar, attached to a private dining room replete with Malcolm Varon's exclusive collection of photographs taken of Georgia O'Keeffe and her Ghost Ranch (I have photos of these I'd love to share, but would like get permission to show them before I go violating the law in a public forum), gorgeous walnut tables, leather chairs and armchairs, a fireplace. The table at the back seats 14, and so it made sense that we should dine in here, and that is just what we did. First, though, some pictures of the room:

gallery_11735_5499_152081.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_470198.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_367477.jpg

I love the bar because, to me, it is classic Santa Fe; legislators, old-timers, grad students, filmmakers, you name it; it's comfortable and accommodating to everyone and locals love it. The bartenders rock. This picture does it no justice as it was taken on Christmas Day, the only day of the year that the bar is vacant. While we were working in the kitchen, the phone was ringing off the hook with people asking what time the restaurant opened.

gallery_11735_5529_815963.jpg

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Serendipitously, my mother is spending her Christmas week in Las Cruces - I'm so excited to being living vicariously through both of you this week!

Eating pizza with a fork and knife is like making love through an interpreter.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Onto the food and the cooking. I want to say up front that remembering to take pictures was not intuitive at all and I forgot to photograph a lot of the food and all of the wine (I just got my first digital camera a couple weeks ago, so this has been a crash course in learning to use it)...

Random photo taken while prepping:

gallery_11735_5529_861473.jpg

The restaurant's General Manager popped this prime rib into the Alto-Shaam, and came back four hours later to retrieve it:

gallery_11735_5529_349789.jpg

We served 13 people, including 3 vegetarians. The meal was served family-style, which somehow seemed appropriate for Christmas dinner.

We served a case of this with dinner:

gallery_11735_5499_663936.jpg

Um... no. Not this time.

I carted over my liquor collection, plus Gruet Brut and Gruet Blanc de Blancs (go NM!), various Belgian-style ales, and the Tokaji. R supplied the wine from his personal collection, and guests were given a cocktail or a glass of wine before being escorted downstairs to the Abiquiu Room, where this was waiting:

gallery_11735_5529_276529.jpg

Brie en croute, fried sage, apple compote with port syrup, candied walnuts. Served with cranberry-walnut toasts.

And yes, spoons and other silverware was provided right after the photo was taken. We'd have eaten with our hands but that would've meant getting fingerprints on the champagne flutes, and we couldn't have that!

After everyone had met, noshed, toasted etc., they were seated and served a vegetarian-friendly French Onion Soup, blanketed with a delicious raw milk gruyere:

gallery_11735_5529_613416.jpg

The piece de resistance, a boneless "Lego Lamb", as it was called more than once, to the amusement of some:

gallery_11735_5529_447306.jpg

And then we ate!

gallery_11735_5529_782400.jpg

And ate...

gallery_11735_5529_6324.jpg

There were several desserts, all of which I had made before dinner-- and I forgot to take pictures of all of them except for this, as it was cooling. It's Nigella Lawson's Clementine Cake (flourless, made with ground almonds) but I made it with Meyer lemons instead and added a lemon glaze. There's a whole pound lemons in this thing!

cake

gallery_11735_5529_584393.jpg

Also for dessert: Tarte Tatin, Pumpkin Custard Torte. Everyone got a small white porcelain bowl with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, and bowls of caramel sauce (I use Chef Neil Wyles' peerless recipe) were passed around the table. Royal Tokaji 2001 for those who were interested and had been good this year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sandy, I haven't a clue how to do that multiple quotes reply thing, so forgive me for taking your quotes and purplifying them (well, purple is closer to crimson than that neon red right?)

And I'd love to hear your take on living in a place where money apparently can buy anything, including love.

I am going to be diplomatic by saying that it's just classic, textbook Nouveau Riche Syndrome. But I definitely have some very strong opinions about all of that.

The only things I found redeeming about New Haven on my several visits there were the pizza and Morse and Ezra Stiles Colleges (Yale's two Modernist undergraduate colleges, designed by Eero Saarinen and built in 1961. Edited to modify my description of these structures as Modernist -- while Saarinen is one of the lions of modern architecture, the inspiration for these two very handsome conjoined structures is actually Gothic). I'd say you made the right move in forsaking southern Connecticut for northern New Mexico. I will withhold comments about Yale itself beyond those made in this paragraph out of respect for the Member Agreement. :wink:

You know, the first thing they tell you as a Yale freshman is to never, ever, listen to anything a Cantab tells you... so carry on, my friend, carry on... :cool:

Adorable pooch, BTW. Might we be able to see some shots of the Canyon Road?

The photos of all the farolitos/luminarias on Christmas Eve were taken on and around Canyon Road, but I will go back in daylight, Sandy, if that is what you so desire. I aim to please.

Are the local coffee roasters in Santa Fe other than Ohori's lacking in some way? I mean, it's not like Allegro is overroasted like Starbucks or anything like that, but I wouldn't necessarily put it above good local roasters in most of the places I've been, including local roasters that have become regional/national chains like Peet's (Berkeley, Calif.) or Bucks County Coffee where I live.

There aren't too many local roasters here. Actually, I can't think of any, other than Ohori's, Las Chivas Roasters out in Eldorado, and Aroma, which does not have a retail outlet or coffee shop but sells to local markets and coffee shops. So by virtue of having no real competition, Ohori's wins!

I should qualify my earlier statement about Seattle/Allegro coffee by saying that although I like Allegro coffee, I wouldn't go out of my way for it (I don't have to; the coffee shop a block away form my house brews it). I was really excited to see it in Seattle though, because it's so familiar to me. In fact, a police officer (and native Seattleite), who was waiting for WF to open its doors one cold morning in Seattle, commented that he thought it was the best coffee in town. I didn't want to ruin it for him by telling him it came out of Colorado. :unsure:

Who was this Stamm fellow? I assume he worked in the adobe style that IIRC is mandatory in Santa Fe?

Stamm was a legendary engineer, builder, planner and architect who designed and constructed several notable subdivisions in Santa Fe in the 50s and 60s. His homes are all very different from one another in terms of floor plans, however they are all stucco frame (which looks similar to adobe but isn't; true adobe is wonderful and practical, but labor-intensive, expensive, and increasingly difficult to find here). All of his homes are very solidly built, with crawl spaces, oak floors, and flat tar and gravel roofs (another gripe... don't get me started). Some of the homes, like mine, have vigas and kiva fireplaces.

I tend to like bright and airy spaces myself. Your place strikes me as in keeping with Southwestern colors and norms, but now I'm curious: are there any interiors in Santa Fe that would be more my liking?

Frankly, I prefer bright and airy spaces myself, however after looking at 72 homes on the market, I began adjusting to the notion that my aesthetics would require a little more flexibility if I was indeed determined to buy a home in Santa Fe. There are certainly a few places that do adhere to a sleeker and less busy design philosophy, however these places are invariably lofts or condos, and I was not about to share a wall or a parking space with anyone else. I also really wanted a garden. The first thing I did when I bought my house was have a 7 ft high coyote fence built all the way around the property. Privacy for me, but to each their own. :smile:

Any reason why some kitchen designers confuse the counter for the floor?

:laugh: , right? When you figure out the answer, let me know, because I have no idea!

The symbol on this house should be familiar to rail fans, as it very closely resembles the logo of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway, the legendary route that (almost) connects my forever hometown with your current one ("almost" because the terrain proved too difficult to build the Santa Fe main line through Santa Fe; instead, a spur from nearby Lamy served the city). Its use here suggests to me that it is native to one of the peoples or cultures of the Southwest (and adopted by the ATSF for that reason), but I have no knowledge of its origins or significance. Do you?

Nope. But I will do my homework and get back to you.

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

May we have some Lebanese and Emirati recipes as a Christmas present?  Then you can work in some photos of home as well as share a taste.

I agree! Emirati recipes! When I was there I browsed through cookbooks looking for any kind of information on Emirati food, but I couldn't find much of anything. Are there any special Emirati foods, or is there a cookbook that you might suggest? My friends there tell me there isn't really a distinct Emirati cuisine...is that true?

Oh, dear... time for the inevitable confession about Emirati food. I've been dreading this moment because it will display my bias, and I don't like admitting that I have it- but I do.

Prasantrin, you are mostly correct about Emirati food not having any distinct roots. There is not one restaurant in the UAE (actually, I would be surprised if this was not consistent throught the Gulf) where one can go and order Emirati food. You would have to eat it at someone's home.

There are many reasons for this, but one in particular really challenges, for me, the popular notion that eating locally and seasonally is invariably the best thing for everyone. Keep in mind that for six months out of the year, the weather in the UAE is just plain oppressive, and that you've got a peninsular strip of land that is quite hostile to animals (besides camels, goats and deadly reptiles) and greenery (besides dates and the inedible and highly allergenic ghweifat, acazia and eucalyptus).

In short, the food my father and his forefathers ate was really not what people want to eat today, now that they have been exposed to variety, and of course now that there are more options. Emirati food can be quite heavy and bland. Some people actually crave the taste; other people I know eat it because it reminds them of home. But I don't think it is a cuisine that could ever really gain popularity internationally.

Local standards include the ever-present breakfast/lunch/dinner dish, harees (wheatberries boiled with a young goat, bones and all, and crowned with a slick of cumin-scented ghee), machbous (a mild-mannered, clove-enhanced version of biryani, with rice that is traditionally fudgy with the fat of the animal (mutton/goat/whatever) that it has been stewed with), saloona (a thin, red stew of root vegetables with fish or meat), balaleet (rice vermicelli with honey, saffron, ghee and a fried egg). Also, people in the UAE typically have huge families and even broader social circles, so dishes that can be stretched into gigantic portions and served that way are always favored. Of course, we have fish too, but I never eat it when I'm home. With all of the development activity along the coast, I worry about the health of the marine life. Besides that, I'm not a big fan of warm saltwater fish; they're just not my favorites-- varieties include the beloved, endangered hammour (Gulf grouper) jesh (red snapper) and yellowfin tuna. As far as red meat goes, because of Halal dietary restrictions it tends to be very, very bland and fibrous.

Desserts are usually made with lots of sugar, ghee, and even gelatin, the objective being that they should be able to stay out at room temperature in order to always be visible in case a guest arrives.

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Verjuice - this is just so much fun - I can't believe you are blogging over Christmas.  I can not imaging being able to do that!  You are my hero. 

I, too, would vote for some recipes, food and photos of 'home'!  Also, what is "off the grid"?

Thanks, Kim

Hi Kim!

Blogging over Christmas is no big deal for me; I work my own hours for the most part and don't have any family (read mandatory engagements) in the area- just good friends with whom I can enjoy this whole experience from a non-denominational perspective. :smile:

An off the grid home is one that is completely self-sufficient, with solar or wind power, private wells for water, the whole nine yards. Basically, it means you get a lot less bills in the mail!

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I figured I'd launch my tour of the UAE with a recent tea rendezvous at this iconic structure in Dubai, which I'm sure many of you will recognize:

gallery_11735_5499_27414.jpg

Everything that looks like gold is real gold.

gallery_11735_5499_12440.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_49110.jpg

Al-Muntaha, the cafe at the very top, and the view from one of the seats near a window:

gallery_11735_5499_18179.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_32999.jpg

The elevators are wrought of gold, and travel at 20 ft/second:

gallery_11735_5499_273.jpg

Some pastries. Check out the leopard-printed cake!

gallery_11735_5499_22600.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_19308.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_22476.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Beautiful pastries, but were they any good? I almost went to the Burj Al-Arab for afternoon tea, but couldn't be bothered making a reservation (plus I figured by the time I would have wanted to go, I would have been too pooped from sitting through Dubai traffic!).

More questions about food--what do you think of the restaurant scene in Dubai? I wasn't that impressed with what I had, but I didn't make it to the higher-end places.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Beautiful pastries, but were they any good?  I almost went to the Burj Al-Arab for afternoon tea, but couldn't be bothered making a reservation (plus I figured by the time I would have wanted to go, I would have been too pooped from sitting through Dubai traffic!).

More questions about food--what do you think of the restaurant scene in Dubai?  I wasn't that impressed with what I had, but I didn't make it to the higher-end places.

I wasn't going to say so, but since you asked: the pastries sucked! They didn't look good too me to begin with, so I wasn't surprised. A lot of people disagree, but I think that high-end dining in Dubai is grossly overpriced and overrated. You've been to the Lime Tree Cafe, right? Best value in town, and it's not cheap (the brownies are amazing, though).

Emirati law dictates that all places that serve alcohol must be part of a hotel, which, to me, gets extremely tedious after a while. Same scene; valets and lobbies and elevators, everywhere you go after dark. After a while, they all look the same, in spite of the fact that Dubai is all about one-upmanship in the the opulence department. At Bar 44 at the Grosvenor House, a champagne cocktail runs the equivalent of 30 dollars and the cheapest bottle of red is 80 bucks. Give me a break.

The restaurant I visited most often Prasino's/Indigo at the Jumeirah Beach Club, because my colleague was a member (I wasn't) and we'd meet there all the time. I generally dislike the exclusiveness of private clubs, but I appreciated the elevated level of privacy afforded there as a result.

At the end of the workday in Dubai, I could not wait to get out of this:

gallery_11735_5499_209405.jpg

And hit the new Emirates Road for an hour, crossing the emirates of Sharjah, Ajman and Umm-Al-Quwain...

gallery_11735_5499_317460.jpg

until I got to my beloved hideaway here:

gallery_11735_5499_571250.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_340832.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_8330.jpg

Rona, I believe you've been to this magical emirate!

While growing up, we'd run down to the water and fish our hearts out on this island at the bottom of the cliff where our house sits, but it has since been developed into a platform for an up and coming waterfront hotel. See here:

gallery_11735_5499_61101.jpg:

Ras al-Khaimah is also home to one of the best Lebanese restaurants anywhere: Al-Jazeera at the Al-Hamra Fort Hotel. Strange, but true.

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you so much for blogging. For someone who just got a digi camera a few weeks ago you are doing really well with light infused heart wrenching photos.

Thank you also for the UAE photos- lots of world travel on EG but not so much in that area.

I am amazed that you have such a rich home and life at your young age- you are inspiring. Looking forward to more.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just got back from dinner at Sleeping Dog Tavern, which is downtown on the Plaza. I don't hit that part of town very often, so it was a treat.

Chimay Triple and some monkey bread:

gallery_11735_5499_13133.jpg

A Silver Coin for yours truly... rocks and salt, of course.

gallery_11735_5499_19461.jpg

Oyster corn dogs. Tragically, I cannot eat these. I adored oysters until I suddenly became allergic to them a few years ago.

gallery_11735_5499_2270.jpg

Wedge salad with stilton:

gallery_11735_5499_17467.jpg

gallery_11735_5499_13824.jpg

White chili with Great Northern beans and New Mexican green chile:

gallery_11735_5499_11645.jpg

And my main, a Harris Ranch flank steak with horseradish butter. And fries, natch. Not bad!

gallery_11735_5499_10824.jpg

Edited by Verjuice (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you so much for blogging. For someone who just got a digi camera a few weeks ago you are doing really well with light infused heart wrenching photos.

Thank you also for the UAE photos- lots of world travel on EG but not so much in that area.

I am amazed that you have such a rich home and life at your young age- you are inspiring. Looking forward to more.

Wow, thank you. :smile:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ohori's Coffee has two locations. The one off of St. Francis (on Pen Road) is closer to I-25 and it has a drive-thru, in case you're pressed for time.

I've never heard of Rio Grande Roasters, but that's probably because I never brew coffee at home here, so I don't look at the beans at the store.

As for Allegro coffee, it's very hit or miss, but I adore the Vail Blend. I really do not like the special holiday one they have been serving everywhere these days; I think it's called Celebration Blend.

Thanks very much for the pointers - I'm not sure when we're headed down there again, but it sounds like a great place to have a warm cup to brace ourselves for the family ahead!

Marcia.

Don't forget what happened to the man who suddenly got everything he wanted...he lived happily ever after. -- Willy Wonka

eGullet foodblog

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
×
×
  • Create New...