I Love You, I Hate You… No, I Love You

I have a love/hate relationship with autumn. I love the cooler weather. I love the fact that I can now use my oven without turning the house into a sauna. As much as I love Vegas, I hate the fact that I am here and true autumn is elsewhere. I am melancholy and miss the east coast during the cool crisp mornings of October.

This year, I asked my friends back east (and let me clarify, “back east” means the northeast part of the country) to send me pics of the leaves, and while I appreciate it, and the images are lovely, it’s not the same as being there. If you have never lived on the east coast, or visited there in October, the sights are truly awe inspiring. The vistas will literally take your breath away. Does the term “riot of color” have any meaning for you? If so, then you can partially grasp what I am talking about. It has been nearly 20 years since I have seen The Leaves. Growing up in upstate New York, we always had the “leaf peepers” from The City (oh, and BTW there is only ONE city). They were a menace! Stopping in the middle of the street to take pics, getting lost, coming into our family store for directions and not buying so much as a cup of coffee. I never understood the fascination with the changing of the seasons until I didn’t have it. Folks who live in NYC don’t look at the Statue of Liberty the same way the rest of us do. Those living in St. Louis – and I used to – drive by the Arch without so much as a backward glance. (Moment of Truth – when I lived in Spain and went to Segovia to see one of the few remaining functioning ancient aqueducts in the world, I wondered if the locals took it for granted, or if they marveled daily). That’s the way I was about the leaves. Now I crave the visual, but more than that, I crave the smells.

Our property, 20 acres, backed onto an orchard. We used to walk through the woods, cross the stone wall, yes, a real one, and snitch apples from the trees. The orchard owners didn’t care – there were plenty to go around. John and I had been married a couple of years and he always sneered at me because I wouldn’t eat apples from the store. He said I was being foolish, that they tasted fine – remember, he grew up in NYC. The first time I took him to snitch apples and he ate one fresh off the tree, he understood and never gave me shit about it again. All too frequently I go to the grocers and want that fresh picked experience and it just isn’t there. The orchard has a SMELL in the fall, and it isn’t just the apples. There is something alchemical about the breakdown of everything as the trees get ready to “hibernate”. The bark and leaves smell different. Maybe it is the air temp that makes it all smell fresh and amazing, but I doubt it.

Yes, I know Gilcrease Farm is right around the corner from my house. Yes, I go there and pick my own fresh produce, but it just isn’t the same somehow. I am not sure if it is the variety of the apples, the fact that “civilization” has grown up around the farm or what, but it just doesn’t smell the same. Perhaps it is mental. Maybe it’s the fact that I don’t have to travel through a canopy of deciduous trees aflame with color to get there. I don’t know. I appreciate them being here in the Valley, but it doesn’t replace or compare to the memories of my youth.

Of course once all the apples were picked, we had to do SOMETHING with them, so apple crisp, cobblers and apple sauce were all made. The house smelled fantastic. It was almost ritualistic. Sister Janece and I often had mini bake offs and I will tell you, her apple crisp is better than mine, any day of the week. She had a gift for baking even as a young person and now she is a VERY accomplished baker. So now, what do I do to make my house smell “fall-ish”? My mind has turned from apples to other things. I braise beef shanks for hours with candy cap mushrooms, I make soup and stew, I bake bread. Is it a new tradition or a way to distance myself from what I know I can’t have? Either way the food is good and smells great…it’s not an orchard or the sweet, musty smell of leaves decaying, but it is my new autumnal smell.

Thanks to Sister Nancy and Friend Jenn for the gorgeous pics you are about to see. The orchard ones are from Nancy. And here is a TIP for you when buying apples: Flip the apple onto its top. If the part of the flower that made up the bottom is tightly closed it is good to buy. If you see a hole there, put it back. It’s probably been in cold storage and will be mealy and flavorless. The pic below is a GOOD example.



Next week? Gourds…?

Things I Have Learned (or been reminded of) Recently

All too often we do things, without thinking, that while seemingly second nature or insignificant to us, have a massive impact on those around us, for good or for bad. I was reminded of that numerous times this week, in one fashion or another. Consider daily routines for a moment. When you are nice to the waitstaff and tip well, it means the world to them, but may be insignificant to you. Saying “please” and “thank you” are second nature, but the bank teller taking care of you may have just had the MOST difficult client. Listening to someone tell the same anecdote for the umpteenth time is just being polite, but it makes the teller feel valued and important. Holding the door open for the mom struggling with the stroller and the toddler is a matter of course, but she really appreciates that 3rd hand.

I have volunteered for our local Feeding America Food Bank, Three Square, for nearly 6 years. Although it is second nature for me to give back to the community I live in, I seldom think about the true impact that my actions have, or the way people view my charity work. For the past year I have acted as the chairperson on a committee to host DISH Las Vegas – the largest fundraiser for Three Square. My actions were called to the forefront before, during and after this event. Let me make it clear that I don’t volunteer to receive accolades or recognition. I volunteer to feel good about myself and to participate as part of the solution to a problem in the city in which I live.

So here is what I learned (or was reminded of) thru this experience:
 If I am passionate about a project, people will want to work on it with me
 I should trust my instincts more
 Mother Nature doesn’t take requests
 I can appear calm, even when I am a nervous wreck
 I can’t please everyone all the time
 Being nice costs me nothing (most times) and pays unforeseen dividends
 Some people work their own agendas under the guise of charity
 Surprising people by going the extra mile is fun!
Don’t feed the trolls
Don’t poke the bears
 I cry more easily when people say nice things about me than when they say mean things
 A pat on the back is just a few vertebrae away from a kick in the pants, but is miles apart in results – Ella Wheeler Wilcox
 Food brings people together
 Cash is King – put your money where your mouth is
 Some people will complain no matter what happens to/for them
 I don’t like to be hugged by some people, but I do hug most people (yes, I am a hugger)
 I can’t control everything
 My friends are amazing people and I am lucky to have them
 And lastly this from Christopher Robin:

The event was enjoyed by nearly 1000 people. I don’t remember most of it because it all happened so fast! All of the pics below were taken by Hubby John, or friends. I never touched a camera all night! If you want to see pics of the food, please go here to my friend Al Mancini’s blog. He and his fabulous wife Sue worked on the committee with me, and I am grateful for their help and dedication. Overall it was a success.

Thank you to all of you who showed up, participated, organized or otherwise helped to make this year’s DISH Las Vegas a wonderful event. There is still work to do to solve the hunger problem, but I am up to the challenge. And now, back to our regularly scheduled programming…

The Best Laid Plans…

This weekend I learned that contrary to popular belief, Vegas is NOT a 24 -7 – 365 town!

Sunday Friend Lynn had a landmark birthday – one that ended in a 0 – and we went to downtown to celebrate. I checked websites and either I misread the details, or the sites were wrong, so our plans were foiled! The PLAN was to bowl at Drink & Drag at 4 and then eat and drink on Fremont Street. We arrived and found out that D & D (not Dungeons & Dragons) opened at 6…so we decided to eat first. Considering it was Pride Weekend, I thought they’d be open (Hello? Drag Queens and bowling?), and it never occurred to me that my fave places to eat downtown would be closed on a weekend…I was WRONG-O MaryLou!

Our merry little party went to La Comida and they were closed, then we went to Le Thai, also closed! So we ended up at Hennessey’s (the big pint glass?) and had a meal there before bowling. The cocktails were the highlight, the food nothing special. Well, because of the reversal of order, some of our friends couldn’t stay to bowl for various reasons (work the next day, parental duties, etc…) and so our smaller merry little band went to bowl afterwards. If you haven’t been to Drink & Drag, it is FUN, even early in the evening, but I will warn you – the lanes were STICKY. I am not sure if it was poor maintenance or humidity, but either way it made the games interesting and the birthday girl had the high score for the day!

So my question is this: Is the late opening and complete closures of some businesses on a weekend part of the Zapppos-ification of downtown or are these small Mom & Pop joints actually honoring their employees with a family day? Either is fine, I just wish I had been better prepared! I felt like I failed my best bud on her landmark birthday.

I love the fact that Zappos is taking over a goodish portion of downtown and making old, tired places so much better…mostly. I was thrilled with ALL of the work they were doing, right up until they bought The Bunkhouse and closed it. For those of you who don’t know, The Bunkhouse was one of the oldest continually operating bars in Vegas (opened in 1947 if memory serves) and it remained open and operational on its original site until Zappos bought it. Many of the people in my friend group have such great memories of that place. Friend Lillian’s dad used to go there in his heyday, and according to legend was 86ed from there as well. Two men I know proposed to their wives there between sets when the Yeller Bellies were playing. The Bunkhouse was a downtown institution. So, what happens to it now? Will it be cleaned up, Zappos-ified and reopened? Apparently it is under renovation. Will it face some terrible fate, like being turned into a yuppified version of itself? I wish I knew. I just know that it won’t be the same.

I am so glad such an eclectic group came and helped Lynn end her decade. Of course, as we are wont to do, there will be more celebratory events throughout Lynn-tember, including Back of the House Brawl this Saturday and concluding with a party at the end of the month (if we can get our shit together). Party on Wayne! Party on Garth! Here is a little nonsense to enjoy:

Long Weekends Mess with My Head

Yeah, so we had a long weekend to celebrate the end of summer. Frankly, I THOUGHT I was ready for summer to end, but clearly I wasn’t, because I was STILL too busy having a great time to remember I was supposed to post a blog. I could say that I was going to a kick ass fundraiser for my Food Bank – Three Square – and I wanted to be sure to be able to write about it, but that would just be incidental. I did go to a fab event last night, but it was still Tuesday and I still should have written.

This will be MOSTLY a photo blog about the food I ate during Restaurant Week, and the fun I had over Labor Day weekend, in reverse order. But first about the fundraiser:

Three of our local food writers have a fun book out called “Eating Las Vegas – the 50 Essential Restaurants”. They have picked on Chefs and restos here in town, in their book, in their columns and sometimes in person. This time it was the Chefs opportunity to fire back at them. It was all in good fun and the Chefs, not always known for being good public speakers, did a great job. Our panel of roastees were all good sports. Thanks to Al Mancini, John Curtas and Max Jacobson for being willing to sit thru the commentary. And thanks to Dave and Mahoney of X 107.5 for being our fantastic Roast Masters. All proceeds from the event went to Three Square as a kick off to Hunger Action Month. I hope they make it a regular event!

Then Monday there was the All White Party at STK. Yes that is very cool performance art of black electrical tape on nude women. For more pics go to Spy-On Vegas

Sunday I stayed home
Saturday was National Bacon Day and Brian Howard did us all proud. This menu was fabulous!

And Restaurant Week

This week will be MORE more sedate…just about boring in fact.

I’m All About the Food

I love food. It’s not a secret. I love to cook. I love the looks on people’s faces when they taste something fantastic. I have always chosen food based charities as my charities of choice. I have chosen to work as a Consultant for The Pampered Chef (the link is to my website) for more than 15 years because of their commitment to Feeding America (our National Food Bank Chain). I find that people with full bellies are much nicer to be around. I have also found that food is a way of bringing people together, whether it is around the table for a meal or around a table discussing how to feed others.

Yesterday Friend Heidi posted this video to Facebook:

Moving isn’t it? It brought me to tears. I KNOW that I do a LOT to help solve the hunger problems in my community. I PARTICIPATE. I get out there and work food drives; I show up; I donate cash; I speak out and I am involved, but this man humbled me. He feeds their bodies and their souls. His comment, “Everybody has got 5.5 liters of blood. I am just a human being. For me, everybody is the same”, really drove it home. I wondered at his selflessness. Could I be doing more? It struck me that no matter how much I personally do, there will always be more work to be done. I can’t do it alone, so I am very thankful for organizations like Three Square and Feeding America. I know there are a LOT of great organizations out there, but for me it all boils down to one thing: If people have food to eat, that’s one less thing they have to worry about. And like this man, I choose to work locally.

Are you ready to get involved? Do you want to know how you can help? Here’s a list of options for you to explore:
 CASH IS KING – donate cash to your local food bank. In many cases they can buy food at $0.09/lb. so that cash donation will go really far! In Las Vegas, $1 buys 3 meals!
 VOLUNTEER – your time is priceless, in more ways than one. If you volunteer your time, it means the food bank doesn’t have to hire someone to do that job, which means more $$ can go to feeding people. Besides, it will make you feel good – I promise.
 Deliver for your local Meals on Wheels chapter. Sister Nancy did this before going back to work full-time. She said the home bound senior citizens were happy for the food, but even happier for the company (nourishing bodies and souls).
 Click HERE to find your local Feeding America Food Bank and call them, visit their website and find out how you can get involved.
 Wear Orange on September 5th to show your support of Hunger Action Month.
 Hold your own Food Drive. I know my friend Chrisi Ricker holds food drives on her own for her local food bank in Youngstown, OH. You can too!
 Share this blog so others can learn how to get involved.

If you live in Las Vegas, here are even more ways to get involved:
 It’s Restaurant Week – choose from over 100 restaurants! When you purchase their specially priced menu, a portion of your purchase price will be donated to Three Square – up to 18 meals donated when you Help Out by Dining Out just once. Going on NOW – the 30th.
 Attend Roasting Las Vegas September 3rd – at Three Square – watch the Chefs fire back at the local Food Critics. It’s only $25 which translates into 75 meals. Skip that ultra latte deluxe for a few days and you have your admission fee! Buy your tix HERE!
 Attend DISH Las Vegas – September 26th at the Palms – it is the biggest Fundraiser of the year for Three Square – hey visitors! You can come too! You will want to have VIP tix ($125 = 375 meals) because there is a private performance by Million Dollar Quartet in the VIP hour, plus a private VIP lounge and early entry to the event. Buy your TIX NOW – limited quantities available! And if you want to be a sponsor let me know in the comments section – levels starting at $1000 include 10 VIP tix and more.
 Share this blog with others so they can get involved – remember – many hands make light work.

So that’s it – what started as a humbling experience has made me reach out even more to do MORE in my community. What will YOU do?

Dog Days of Summer

It’s the end. Pretty soon, if not already, the kids will be back in school and our days will take on a new rhythm. This is the time of year that I find very difficult to find inspiration to get in the kitchen. It’s like I am stuck. I am stuck between BBQ entertaining and long slow braises. I am bored with the BBQ, but the temps are still in the triple digits here and too hot for the oven to be working for long stretches of time (Moment of Truth – DO NOT talk to me about a crockpot – that is only for keeping things warm when serving, there is only one thing I COOK in the crockpot and it is pulled pork). I don’t want summer to end, but I can’t wait for autumn (even though we really don’t have a TRUE autumn in the desert). I even see the boredom on the covers of food magazines. This is the time of year when they roll out their “Best New Restaurants”, “New Kitchen Tools You Can’t Live Without”, “Chefs at the Top of Their Game” blah, blah, blah issues. IN July and August it was Ice Cream, Paletas and how to have the perfect Picnic/BBQ/Cookout. I don’t want to REALLY cook, and I frankly don’t want to go anywhere either. You would think this would make for a fab weight loss plan, but alas, I still weigh the same.

I think part of my ennui comes from back to school. When Jack lived at home full time, I couldn’t wait for school to start. You know that Staples Commercial?
That was me. Sister Nancy FOR YEARS had a Thank God They Are Going Back to School “Thanksgiving Day” dinner with friends to celebrate the beginning of the school year. They made a complete turkey dinner with all the fixin’s. For some reason her kids were insulted that there was a celebration about NOT having them around all of the time. Now that Jack goes off to school for 9 months of the year, I find I am in less of a hurry to have school start mainly because I won’t get to see my beloved only child for months at a time. On the one hand, I find myself wanting to cook his favorites for him, but not wanting to waste the time in the kitchen. On the other hand, I think going out to eat would be good because then we all can sit and enjoy the meal, but no one has a good idea of where to go or what to eat. We are all bored.

Jack, however, can’t wait for school to start. He can’t wait to leave Las Vegas and get back to Flagstaff where they have different weather, different perspectives and all of his friends are lined up waiting to get the party started again. He’s tired of doing chores, and I am tired of reminding him to do them. I guess I am ready for him to go as well. When he first comes home for the summer, the sleeping until 10 or 11 is kind of cute in a “Oh Honey, let him sleep. He’s young. We did the same thing when we were his age,” way. Now that he’s been home since May, I feel he should be on our sleep schedules by now and yet, he is still in bed most days long after we are up and at ’em I want to strip naked and go skinny dipping (or chunky dunking in this case), but I can’t do that with my son in the house. The fact that we are ready to part means I did a good job. I won’t even cry when I drop him at school this weekend.

Well thank goodness Friday starts the Fall Restaurant Week Fundraiser for Three Square. Roughly 100 restaurants around the city have created special menus at special pricing and part of the purchase price goes to the Food Bank. Planning on eating out in Vegas between the 23rd and the 30th? Well here is your list of GO TO places so you can lift a fork to help fight hunger!

In an effort to combat boredom I invited a couple of folks over for dinner tomorrow night. I decided to make the menu a bridge between summer and fall We’ll be having pulled pork sandwishes with Ancho Chile and Cider BBQ Sauce (sauce on the side of course), cole slaw, fried green tomatoes w/chipotle mayo, watermelon and whatever else I decide to make tomorrow. Thank you, Sister Tina, for the link to this great rub for the pork. The pork has been massaged and is resting in the fridge until tomorrow morning when it goes in the crockpot. Hey, wait! I am not so bored anymore!

Have a great week! Look for pics from my Restaurant Week shenanigans in next week’s posting.

Food Trends

This past week I worked a corporate food show and was amazed at the differences between consumer food shows and corporate shows. First of all, at a consumer show, anyone who can afford a ticket can go and it is usually restaurants and local and/or celeb chefs doing the cooking. The attendees just go around and try samples of food that the chefs are featuring at their restaurants, or food that they are showing off. Sometimes it is even chefs showing off for one another. At a corporate show, the attendees are buyers for corporate chains and the chefs from product lines and different companies are showing folks at the corporate level the different ways their products can be used. Of course there is a measure of showmanship involved, but it is more about the application of the featured products or product line that is key to the event. Here is one of the dishes Chef James O’Donnell with Texas Pete made (I assisted him).
Left to right: Chocolate Chipotle Truffle with Spicy Raspberry Sauce, Tempura Bacon with Hot Sauce Spiked Whipped Honey, Fruit “Sushi” with Spicy Coconut Raspberry Sauce – of course all the items were made with sauces from the Texas Pete line.

Also at a corporate event there are seminars of all kinds showcasing new techniques, and of course food trends. Apparently Southern Cooking is on the rise, according to one of the experts at the event. So here is what I want to know:
Who decides what the upcoming trends are?
How do they make that determination?
Do they have a panel of foodies that get a questionnaire?
Is it like the fashion industry, where a bunch of designers decide Burnt Umber is THE color and that’s that?
Do they follow what Chefs are doing and extrapolate from there?
Inquiring minds want to know!

Well, one of the food trends that has taken hold nationwide and is peaking, is a return to farm to table cooking and utilizing ONLY what is in season. Restaurants change their menus frequently, sometimes daily, based on what they can get their hands on, but a “seasonal” menu has become the norm. This is the way people used to eat. No strawberries in December, fresh tomatoes in the summer and squashes in the winter months. A simpler task in California and the mid-west to be sure, but even Chefs here in Vegas strive to work with THE most seasonal produce available and do it very successfully. That being said, I had one of the single best meals in LA recently. John and I went to a place called animal. Yes, it’s all lower case, and don’t bother looking for a sign, there isn’t one. It’s on Fairfax, up the street from Canter’s Deli (Moment of Truth – Canter’s was some of the worst corned beef hash I have ever had…I don’t care if they are a landmark institution!). Chef Frank Anderson from their sister property, Son of a Gun, made the reservation for us (Thank YOU Chef Jesse Moreno for the recommendation and intro!) at 9 pm and when we arrived the line was STILL out the door.

Let’s just say we had 7 different dishes – all small plates – and they each had a completely different flavor profile. No one in the kitchen was playing favorites in the spice cabinet. There wasn’t a dog in the bunch and the nectarine and goat cheese salad was so delicious those nectarines had to have been picked that day! The Chefs at animal could teach a few things about farm to table to lots of people here in Vegas. It was truly one of the best meals I have ever had, and incredibly reasonably priced!

Chicken Liver Toast with Blackberry Jam

Nectarine and Goat Cheese Salad with Purslane

Buffalo Style Crispy Pig Tails

We also went to a cocktail event at Son of a Gun for a Low Country Boil sponsored by Imbibe Magazine – another fantastic meal!

So if you go to LA and you need recommendations on where to eat – definitely go to animal and Son of a Gun. Remember – don’t bother looking for signs…there aren’t any…

Hanging with The Cool Kids

Sorry I am day late! I am working with Texas Pete Hot Sauce at the Flavor Experience in Newport Beach, California. I THOUGHT I would have time yesterday to post, but it was a whirlwind of epic proportions from early in the morning until late at night! Enjoy this week’s post and thanks for being patient!

Do you wonder what Chefs do on their night off? Well some would say they eat soup and frozen pizza, but I know better. They cook for each other.

Last week I was invited to participate in dinner at Chef Jesse Moreno’s house. There were no less than 6 Chefs and at least 2 pastry Chefs in attendance and I was instructed the theme was “Mediterranean”. Of course I twitched and freaked – I mean SHIT! Chefs were going to be eating my food – AGAIN! (Moment of Truth – I ALWAYS freak out when Chefs or Critics eat my food – massive fear of failure). I made spanakopita and dolmades – because I can do that with my eyes closed and KNOW it is edible. Not fancy, but FAMILY style food that can be picked up and walked away with. I made a good choice, because there was some amazing food and no duplicates! Gorgeous chicken kebabs, lovely salmon, falafel, tzatziki, hummus and other fab food. All made in collaboration and with a fair measure of humor and love. And last but not least was Carmen’s amazing baklava.

You would think that egos enter into the picture and that they are constantly trying to “out-do” each other, but with this crew, that is not the case. I KNOW some Chefs have egos as big as the great outdoors, but with the Cutthroat Crew it is more about collaboration than about proving who is best. It’s a real family affair with kids, spouses and everyone getting their hands in on the action. Hubby John has a unique talent that the Chefs appreciate and his beer is always a hit! Everyone takes turns washing dishes, straightening up and holding the babies.

Set aside the fact that there was a film and camera crew there. Everyone left their egos at the door and had a great time. So, here is the thing, there are the old school Chefs who are established and staid and frankly…well, sometimes a little boring if truth be known. And then there is a whole new breed of Chefs. The Underground, the Fringe, the Upstarts. I told Friend Lynn about how fun this event was and she said she remembers going to events JUST like this twenty five years ago with Charlie Palmer, her ex-husband Rick Moonen and David Burke where they were the upstarts with BBQ’s of their own. Now it is Christian Dolias, Jesse Moreno and their gang (it’s not a gang, it’s a club – the Black and White Knife Club to be exact).

This may come as a shock to some of you, but in school I was NOT one of the “Cool Kids”. Red hair, freckles AND smart? Really? No! I THOUGHT I wanted be a “Cool Kid” when I was in school, and then I decided I was fine the way I was. As an adult I am WAY cooler than I was in school and now the “Cool Kids” invite me to their events and I STILL feel like the Ugly Duckling, even though I know I am a swan.

How Do YOU Eat?

So here’s the thing…everyone approaches their food differently. When it is served to you and looks glorious on the plate how do you approach it? Everyone has their own method; no way is WRONG, but is there a RIGHT way to do it?

So HOW do you eat? If there is a plate of food in front of you how do you approach and attack?
 Do you mix everything together?
 Do you mix a couple of things together (like corn into your mashed potatoes)?
 Do you separate each thing so they don’t touch and eat one thing at a time?
 Do you take one bite of this and then one bite of that?
 Do you eat the “healthy” items first and hope you are full by the time you get to the heavier things (like French fries)?
 Do you put condiments on everything before you even try it?

I will admit that I am in the 3rd category. I eat each part of the plate one at a time. And I have a system. The thing I like best gets saved for last (Moment of Truth – if I like everything equally, I eat in a clockwise fashion around the plate). I am little skeeved out when people mix their foods together – unless they belong together like gravy and potatoes, meat or stuffing, although there are exceptions like poutine, nachos, wraps, sandwishes, etc. I like to eat each thing separately and enjoy it that way. And while that is all fine and good when you are at a neighborhood BBQ or potluck, when you go out to eat and the Chef has created a beautiful plate, that’s not really how you should eat. You are supposed to make sure you get a bit of each thing on the plate in each bite. But I can’t help myself. I have to try each component separately and THEN eat it as a whole.

But…is it right to do that? Probably not, as friend Al Mancini pointed out to me. Recently we went to eat at Fleur by Hubert Keller and I think Al was mildly shocked by my trying each thing on my plate before eating it the way the Chef intended. I am not sure if he was shocked that I personally did it, or that anyone would do that in a top tier restaurant. I explained that I like to try them separately and THEN put them together the way the Chef served it. He brought up a great point: What if I don’t like one of the components by itself? Would it color the way I view the whole dish? So what’s a girl to do? And what about “deconstructed” dishes? Am I supposed to “construct” them or eat them as served?

I find that dining is a singular experience, and it should be, even when enjoyed with friends and family. Only YOU know how you like your food best. I will admit that I salt nearly everything if there is a salt shaker handy. I find most places under season everything and I need that little extra. Of course, in top tier joints there is usually no salt on the table, and in most cases I need not worry, it will be properly salted (although I did have to ask for salt ONCE and the server sniffed and looked slightly affronted when I asked for the salt).

Enjoy these pics of dishes I “deconstructed” and then ate “properly”.

But how do you address a surf & turf plate? Do you try to get some of the seafood AND part of the meat in one bite? That just seems gluttonous to me.