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Overdramatically, this is where I am tonight, and much recount food memories of nights past to carry me into the future. My sage city newspaper tells me on its online headline: "Snowfall Continues, May Turn to Ice Overnight." I've been well aware of this fact since I went running this morning and chunks of my hair froze. We've had snow, freezing rain, and unstocked stores all day. I sought to come home early today (I didn't) to graut Mexican tile on my pressed wood Target TV stand, butFedex didn't deliver my tiles anyway and Target didn't have the requisite graut. So, my evening consisted of defeatedly driving home in spitting mini-hails and buying snacks at Target, because I felt compelled to buy something or the 40 minutes of my life I spent going there would be wasted. So I purchased the below:
Anyway, getting to it, I want to write retrospectively about two recent dinners, because memories are all I have to console myself with on this dreary night. So, I hearken back to a fine meal I had a few weeks ago with my friend Tammy and her lovely new husband, Bob. New because they are newlyweds, not because she marries as often as I blog. This dinner was one of the best I've had in a while. She proposed the three of us go to Geranio or A La Lucia, and after I mentioned the blog (and that I had already visited and written about Geranio), she kindly said we could go to A La Lucia, though she in fact prefers Geranio. Tammy is a true culinary kindred spirit.
A La Lucia is just up the road but since it was bitterly cold, Tammy and Bob picked me up in the their taxi and we rode 3 minutes until we reached the urbanly isolated restaurant. We had lovely glasses of wine at the bar and I recounted my couch saga (it's been weeks of this), chatted with Tammy about all nature of lovely girl things, and learned a bit of history about the Marines from Bob.
We started with an appetizer: salami with goat cheese and olives. It was beautiful, simple, colorful and tasted fantastic. Plus the bread was good, the olive oil was green, the wine was rich and tasted like Mediterraea, and my dinner companions were both charming and amusing.
Here's Bob eating it:
I ordered a fascinating dinner: butternut squash ravioli with amaretti cookies sprinkled on top. It was one of the most inventive Italian dinners I've ever had (who knows, it could be the EasyMac of the pasta world, but I was very impressed).
I went to Raw Silk, a North Indian restaurant half a block from my house and that opened two weeks ago. The service was horrible. I ordered a glass of Malbec (I don't really know what it is myself, but I wanted it). The waitress squinted at my menu and said, "red? ok." I asked what kind of lamb dish I should get. She encouraged one because it came with rice; I then noticed they all came with rice. I changed my tack: lamb vindaloo or lamb paneer? She said lamb paneer came with those green things. "Spinach?" I asked, having the luxury of reading that as well on the menu. "Yes," she said. But surprisingly, it didn't matter. The glass of wine was huge, Malbec or not, and my seat was at the front, but tucked away in a corner so I could look out the window and not be bothered.
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I ordered lamb vindaloo in the end; it was delicious, really, and the naan was fresh and soft. After I finished dinner, the owner came and talked to me She and her husband both work full-time jobs and run the restaurant, but her in-laws are
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Plus, I felt like it was a neighborhood place in my neighborhood: I saw bristly mustached Irishman walk by (he parallel parked right in front of Raw Silk) and the questionably tranvestite woman from whom I bought Sonia's picture frame for her birthday, who works at a card store chain on King Street. Just another day on my block, or... on the block of my mind's culinary memory?
1 comment:
Thanks so much for your review of A La Lucia. We featured your picture on their homepage on the search engine RUNINOut: http://runinout.com/restaurant/la-lucia-0
Hope you like it.
Thanks!
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