The company was excellent, and my sincere thanks to Matt for organizing this, including making the real investment of his time and money to pull it off, and my blanket thanks to my charming and witty fellow LTH'ers. It had been my plan to eat and leave fairly early, but there I was at 10pm, suckered in by free Hurricanes, good conversation and just sort of watching things unwind.
My favorite foods were probably the seafood gumbo and the steak, but there were many very good options. The bread pudding was tasty and tender, the crawfish were fresh, sweet and kept flowing. Chuck's house-made tasso ham was wonderful, particularly the well-seasoned burnt ends laid out at the end. And there was more.
But the most impressive thing, and it is very impressive, was the quality of the food. By my rough count, he served 550 people over 20 different dishes in a 3 hour period. I am not a fan of buffets, because the food is usually baked to death after the first hour, or banquets, because of the need to cook the food ahead and hold it, so you end up with everything being steamed, much of the flavor leached away and overcooked with rubbery or mushy texture.
There was none of that here. Each bite was properly cooked, the flavors fresh and bright, the texture just right.
I have never experienced this in a meal served for so many people Not ever. Not at the fanciest hotel buffets, not anywhere. Not at any price point. I actually did not think it was possible.
Cooking comes down to three things - technique, ingredients and creativity. Last night, Chuck demonstrated himself to be a technical master of a sort I did not think existed. Any time I need someone to cater, or someone asks for a suggestion, Chuck will be my guy.
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Feeling (south) loopy