RIA Weekly Digest for September 6, 2010 wrote:Tasting Menu Tribute to Edna Lewis
Big Jones is set to begin tasting menus featuring four courses of
seasonal dishes served at dinner all week long. The degustation debut
takes place Friday, September 3, and features Executive Chef Paul
Fehribach's homage to the late chef Edna Lewis, aka “the grand dame
of Southern cooking.”
All the recipes used for the tasting menu are derived directly from Lewis,
serving to show that simple farm-to-table cookery transcends the times. The
menu begins with deviled crab and benne biscuits, followed by heirloom
tomatoes with crisp house bacon, pickled watermelon rind and garden herbs.
Third course is potted stuffed squab, fried whole hominy, buttered green
beans, preserved blackberries and thyme. Golden pound cake is for dessert,
served with brandied peaches and vanilla custard ice cream.
The Edna Lewis tasting menu costs $45 per person, plus tax and gratuity.
Optional beverage pairings will be offered.
baileybarash wrote:The film is called "Fried Chicken and Sweet Potato Pie".
stevez wrote:baileybarash wrote:The film is called "Fried Chicken and Sweet Potato Pie".
And I wish the dinner in Miss Edna's honor included these dishes as well. After all, that's what made her famous.
Hello -
I am a filmmaker in Atlanta. I just wanted to let you know I produced a 21 minute documentary about Miss Edna Lewis. The film is called "Fried Chicken and Sweet Potato Pie".
It is viewable in its entirety on Internet at a Gourmet Magazine website:
http://www.gourmet.com/magazine/video/2008/01/Edna
Darren72 wrote:Clearly P. Channon hasn't gotten the memo that any (negative) reactions to the food can only be voiced after someone has tried at least six items from the menu.
P. Channon wrote:Darren72 wrote:Clearly P. Channon hasn't gotten the memo that any (negative) reactions to the food can only be voiced after someone has tried at least six items from the menu.
So if I had a positive reaction to Big Jones I would be allowed to make a recommendation based on one visit, but if I thought what I had was average I'm not able to give my opinion?
I went to Big Jones last July for dinner after it came highly recommended to me by a few people. I was pretty disappointed. Fried Green Tomatos were good....but my shrimp and grits were average at best. Then again I had just come back from a trip to Charleston, SC where I ate real low-country food for a week. So I suppose it's kind of like spending a week in Boston and expecting a similar seafood experience at Red Lobster back in Chicago.
Your comparison of my restaurant to Red Lobster is however, offensive and uncalled for.
So I suppose it's kind of like spending a week in Boston and expecting a similar seafood experience at Red Lobster back in Chicago.
P. Channon wrote:I went to Big Jones last July for dinner after it came highly recommended to me by a few people. I was pretty disappointed. Fried Green Tomatos were good....but my shrimp and grits were average at best. Then again I had just come back from a trip to Charleston, SC where I ate real low-country food for a week. So I suppose it's kind of like spending a week in Boston and expecting a similar seafood experience at Red Lobster back in Chicago.![]()
P. Channon wrote:With all due respect to everyone here...it's just my individual opinion. I know many people who love Big Jones and it came highly recommended to me prior to my visit. I lived in Boston for 5 years and know good seafood...and quite frankly much of the seafood in Chicago is of Red Lobster quality. I've spent considerable time in Charleston, having dined at quite a few places there (Magnolia's, McGradey's, The Fat Hen, the Sanctuary, Tom Colicchio's restaurant at Cassique on Kiawah Island, etc... etc...) and I can say I understand quality low country style food.
The reason I mentioned the time I had spent in SC in my post on Big Jones is that I was raising the possibility that it was at a disadvantage from the start considering all the very authentic low country food I had recently enjoyed.
I don't think Big Jones is a bad restaurant by any means, only that everything that I tried was just OK. Again....my individual opinion.
Thanks.
P. Channon wrote:I lived in Boston for 5 years and know good seafood...and quite frankly much of the seafood in Chicago is of Red Lobster quality.
nsxtasy wrote:I grew up on the East Coast, in the days before FedEx when you had to be near the coast to get fresh seafood. Now I live in Chicago and enjoy fresh, delicious seafood at many restaurants here. Many of them are places like Big Jones which don't primarily specialize in seafood. But I also enjoy some of our best seafood restaurants - in the suburbs (Mitchell's Fish Market in Glenview, Oceanique in Evanston, Parker's in Downers Grove, Reel Club in Oak Brook) as well as the city (Shaw's Crab House, Hugo's Frog Bar). They are every bit as good as the better seafood restaurants on both coasts (where I frequently travel). And as already noted, not every place on the coasts is wonderful, either.
P. Channon wrote:Sorry, but you must be kidding...Mitchell's Fish Market in Glenview?![]()