Tag Archives: BBQ


Permalink to Lactose-Free Foodie: Asheville, NC

Lactose-Free Foodie: Asheville, NC

On a recent trip to Asheville, NC, I was on a mission. I mission to eat delicious lactose-free dishes that I didn’t need to modify or ask for items to be left off. I wanted to live just like everyone else who doesn’t have to ask for something special and then critically check the dish before I dug in.

Here are my picks for having a great lactose-free trip in Asheville:

BreakfastSunny Point Cafe – This is the MGB (Mighty Good Breakfast) and, yes, it is mighty good. Egg prepared just as you like it, local nitrate-free sausage, herb tossed potatoes and a biscuit. While this meal is not vegan, Sunny Point says they can make any meal fit the bill upon request. With that said, I am happy I’m not vegan by choice. That sausage was incredible! If your breakfast needs to be a lot tipsy try the Mega Mimosa that is served in a pint-glass and is at least half champagne. It got a lot sloshy by the end of this meal even when I chased the mimosa with coffee. Yum, yum!

 

Lunch - 12 Bones - Now, this is how BBQ should be done. After a year in eastern North Carolina we have sampled a lot of the eastern Carolina vinegar-based pork. It’s good, but nothing tops a saucy, smokey pile of moist pig. Now, you can usually fare pretty well at a meat shack without dairy, the sides can get you in trouble. Beware of some coleslaws because some folks add ranch or other creams to the mix. I usually chance it, but have had painful results. On our maiden voyage to 12 Bones, I got a pulled pork sandwich, the best potato salad I’ve had in a long, long time, and the cucumber salad which I discovered after a few bites was studded with feta and I had to toss it. I also tried the mustard sauce which I would pass on next time. It’s was a grain mustard sauce and pretty strong. The tomato-based sauce that Brian got was sooooo much better!

LunchChai Pani – Tasty, small plates that were not that tiny after all. Chai Pani is a great Indian street food joint with the illusive “v” markings on many of their plates. I find Indian food joints a hard place to find lac-safe foods. Indian dishes are often vegetarian, but also have lots of yogurt, cheeses and ghee to make them tasty which all spell disaster for my belly. Brian loves Indian so we usually go for buffets that I can see the dishes and look for the tell tale signs of dairy. At Chai Pani, I went a bit wild and ordered the vegan feast of behl puri, samosas. corn behl and fried okra which was WAY too much food even when I shared all of it with B. We did wash everything down with delicious Lime Rickys which were TDF (to die for) and the new summer official drink of BC/DC Ideas since it was so hot pink!

Veggie delight - Caribbean Jerk TofuDinner - Laughing Seed – A vegetarian’s paradise, this innovative restaurant does not serve any meat at all. For those that are lactose-sensitive beware of veggie restaurants. There is usually lots of cheese included in these healthy meals. Laughing Seed thankfully had the handy “v” for vegan dishes. I tried a Caribbean Jerk Tofu which was tasty enough, but I wish it had more spice. The beers were really tasty. I had a kölsch that was golden and refreshing!

 

 

Duck at The AdmiralDinner - The Admiral - This joint is the possible birthplace of the hipster. This restaruant is tiny, dark and filled with more tight jeans than a Panda Bear concert. Call ahead for reservations and make sure you go early in the evening before they run out of key ingredients (like their famous homemade ginger syrup!). This was a tougher place to be lactose-safe with tempting items like pimento-cheese grits taunting you on the menu. I settled on one of my foodie splurges of duck breast that had a side of a fried duck egg. Rich yumminess. Cut with a rye Manhattan, I felt right at home in this too cool dive.

 

DessertFrench Broad Chocolate Lounge – If you love good chocolate, prepare to go to heaven. French Broad is one of only two shops in the country that is lucky enough to carry Mast Brother’s chocolate, which my in-house chocolate aficionado Brian says is amazing. The chocolate bars are complex and multilayer experience of dark chocolate ecstasy. Along with the Mast bar, we got the Buddha Vegan truffle collection studded with fig, balsamic and ginger among other interesting flavors. Really amazing stuff. So worth the long line and pretty penny.

 

Special thanks to Leadership Asheville for inviting me out to speak at your breakfast series, and to my foodie friends Mary, Amy E, Amy B and Arik for your excellent recommendations!

 


Permalink to Chicken of a Different Q: Hursey’s Bar-B-Q

Chicken of a Different Q: Hursey’s Bar-B-Q

Amble up to the Burlington, NC area and you’ll find old fashioned bbq joints called Hursey’s Bar-B-Q. These family style locales are full of tasty meat and wholesome sides.

The sign proudly proclaimed the home of “broasted chicken” – which I had to Google. Wanting to taste this technique, we both ordered chicken and bbq plates full of meat, slaw, hushpuppies and fries

The chicken was delicious! I got dark meat which was juicy and fried crisp. The batter on the chicken was flavorful, but not thick. The pork was wonderfully moist and not too vinegary. Tasty, but simple. Brian liked the slaw because of its small cut, I say “meh.”

This was also the first place I tasted the NC-local fave Cheerwine. This bubbly, spicy, cherry concoction is now a fave. It’s sweet and wonderfully southern.

A wonderfully southern meal to be repeated for sure!

Distance from Raleigh: 59 miles or about an hour – Get the Route

Wander Well Tips:

  • Come hungry – portions are hearty
  • Order it with Cheerwine – you won’t be sad
  • There are more locations – Elon, Burlington and Graham


Permalink to Triangle Dining Guide v1

Triangle Dining Guide v1

As I’m sure we’ll have many new additions, I wanted to share a post I wrote for my other blog 52 Ways To… which outlined our doings on our March 2010 visit to the Triangle – Raleigh, Durham, Cary, Wake Forest, Chapel Hill, Research Triangle, etc. This is only version one, many more will be penned in the future.

Excerpt from “Living the Dream”

Favorite meal of the trip was at Poole’s Downtown Diner – I really love this place. It represents everything Raleigh to me. It’s a tiny diner with a tin ceiling and graphic words painted on the back wall. It’s a perfect balance of good olde south and modern. I had fried oysters and a kale side-dish. Local, well prepared and delicious.

Another favorite haunt is the Raleigh Times Bar. I love it because it used to be a newspaper office, I can almost hear the sharp sounds of typewriters tapping out the latest news. It also has great food. I had an amazing Country French Salad – pears, roasted beets, candied walnuts and goat cheese (special request). They also have an extensive beer list, which always gets a A+ from the Crawfords.

Best breakfast by far was a NOFO at the Pig. Really cute shop and restaurant serving up modern southern breakfasts. I had the special of pulled pork hash, poached eggs and biscuits along side a cup of black coffee with one packet of raw sugar.

A surprise favorite  was the Duck and Dumpling. Really inventive and tasty Asian food. We had a starter of dumplings and I had a dish with duck prepared very simply. It was so good because the duck was prepared unceremoniously, just like chicken. I liked that because usual duck is prepared so preciously that you feel bad eating the poor thing.

For some FANCY BBQ we went to The Pit. It was really good, but a little fancy for my barbecue tastes. Really liked the collard greens that I had…did I mention that I’m a southern girl trapped in a western girl’s  body?

In Durham, we met with a friend for drinks at the Pinhook which is a great, funky bar downtown. Then we took her advice and went to Dos Perros for dinner. It was a great upscale Mexican bistro. The most wonderful part of the meal was handmade churros with a rich, Mexican chocolate dipping sauce (MMMM!). A favorite lunch stop for us is Parker and Otis for a little bite. I had a rich egg salad sandwich and too much shopping.

We did stop in at the famous Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen – pretty dang good and the biscuits are made with shortening instead of butter (I’m lactose-intolerant so this is very good news). We got them take away, as it is the  only option, and stopped in the hippie-chic Caffe Driade for coffee and people watching.

Coffee was usually taken at The Morning Times. Nutty, rich coffee and simple morning pastries. Has a beautiful upstairs lounge, which we missed on our first trip, but enjoyed on the second.

Sweet Tweets