Posts Tagged beer

Mara’s Homemade: NOLA in NYC

When you’re from South Louisiana and you live in NYC sometimes you go through withdrawals. Serious withdrawals. For serious Cajun food. Having eaten a number of places in the city that claim to have “Cajun” or “Louisiana” food, Mara’s Homemade was the only place that actually followed through.

The ambiance, the southern hospitality, the menu, and the FLAVOR – Mara’s has it all! Let’s start with the most important: what’s on tap? Abita SOS, Abita Strawberry Harvest, Amber Bock, and AndyGator to name a few! Other beverages include the almighty Hurricane, Mint Julep, Sazarac; I don’t think I need to go any further!

Onto the goods – this is the real deal! Mara’s flies her product in from the Louisiana Gulf: Oyster’s, Crawfish, Alligator, Crabs and Shrimp. Her website boasts, “If you have been to NOLA and had the BBQ Shrimp then you will love Mara’s.” Need a dessert after your gumbo? You know you can’t eat a good Cajun meal without topping it off with an order of beignets!

Mara’s is also serving from a special Mardi Gras menu, and even Jazz Fest favorites as Crawfish Mara, Crawfish Pot Pie, Crawfish Stuffed Bread and Crawfish Cheese Toast!

Mara’s Homemade
342 East 6th Street
New York, NY 10003
(212) 598-1110
http://www.marashomemade.com/

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Ride the Wave, Louisiana; the “craft beer” wave, that is.

The Louisiana craft beer market is making a comeback!  It’s still hard for me to believe that just before prohibition there were around 30 breweries just in New Orleans alone, not to mention the small breweries and brewpubs all around the state. Well, only 3 made it to re-open after prohibition was lifted: Dixie (gone since Katrina), Jackson (now Jax brewery shopping center) and National Brewing Company (bought by Falstaff and closed in the 1970s). A few have come and gone since then (besides Abita of course) but it seems that recently the tides are starting to turn.

It took about 80 or so years, but Louisiana breweries are on the way back. And why not? Its only natural that the greatest state in the nation, gastronomically speaking, would latch on to the craft brewery wave. I mean, we all know nothing soothes the cayenne tingle from some good hot crawfish better than a cold beer. But beyond that, this “craft beer” thing is right up a Cajun’s alley.

Take something that is otherwise very simple and some would say boring (ahem…insert BIG NAME light beer) and give it depth, appeal and flavor. I mean, that is what we do right? Craft beer is meant to be savored. It’s meant to have flavor. It’s not meant to be served at just above freezing so it numbs your taste buds so you don’t have to taste it. It’s heavy, it’s flavorful, it’s delicious.

I’d just like to use this platform to thank the guys who are pushing to bring craft beer to a place where it is just meant to be, Louisiana. So I say thank you first to Fritz Maytag of Anchor Brewing Company in San Francisco, the father of the American craft beer movement. Thank you Kirk Coco and Peter Caddoo with NOLA Brewing (New Orleans). Thank you Andrew Godley with Parish Beer (Lafayette). Thank you guys with Tin Roof Brewing Co. (Baton Rouge). Thank you Henryk Orlik with Heiner Brau Brewery (Covington) (also brews for Covington Brewhouse, Zea and Big Easy brewing). Thank you Karlos, Byron and Dorsey Knott with Bayou Teche Biere (Arnaudville). Thank you guys at Crescent City Brewhouse (New Orleans). Of course, thank you everyone at Abita Brewery (Abita Springs). Your time, money, and patience are greatly appreciated.

Last but not least, I want to thank you, Louisiana Craft Beer Drinker, for without you, none of this would be possible. Thank you for standing up. Thank you for not being scared to try new things. Thank you for venturing away from BMC and towards Blue Moon and Guinness and Killian’s Red, because that is where it starts. That’s where it started for me.
So, please, even if you are a die-hard Bud Light drinker, if you are a true Louisianan, I dare you: try a NOLA blonde, a Parish Canebrake,  Tin Roof Voodoo Bengal, Heiner Brau Kolsch,  Bayou Teche LA 31, Crescent City Brewhouse Bock, or an Abita Amber. You might just find there is more to beer than ice and funnels.

JB…OUT!!

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NOLA Brewing Company

im head11 NOLA Brewing Company

A friend of mine had a party for St. Patty’s Day two or three years ago and he had on tap some beer brewed by a co-worker at a local restaurant. Always one to try out new beers, I quickly fixed myself a glass of this “home-brewed” beer.

Lets just say that that was not the last glass that I filled, as this beer was exceptional in taste and body and had me wondering why someone who could brew a beer so good in flavor was not doing it for a living and for the masses. Well, that question has finally been answered with the release of NOLA Brewing Company’s beer.

When I first had a glass of NOLA Blonde at The Bulldog, I immediately recognized the taste of this “new” beer. My buddy was now at culinary school in New York so I called him to see if by some chance, his friend was brewing beer for NOLA Brewery. To no surprise, the NOLA brew that I was drinking at The Bulldog was in fact the same delicious brew that I had enjoyed earlier.

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A True Beer Drinker’s Gem: The Barley Oak Old World Draught Haus

A highly anticipated (for me anyway) food and drink gem has opened on the Northshore of Lake Pontchartrain.  The food is great and the beer is plenty at The Barley Oak Old World Draught Haus.

Choosing a career in oil and gas, there was always the possibility of a forced transfer. Sure there is oil and gas in places that I would love to live for a little while, i.e. Brazil, Australia, all around the North Sea, but then there is Africa, the Middle East, or China (which wouldn’t be too bad, except for the huge language barrier).

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Feeling Rogue-ish at the Bulldog Uptown

I am a natural born procrastinator. Recently, I decided I would try to change that because I knew the little lady had a lot on her plate with the wedding planning and all.   I wanted to try to do everything I could to get my stuff done on time so that she would have less to worry about and I figured my wedding  suit would be a good place to start… if had known that my tasks on the wedding planning list included stops at The Bulldog in Uptown New Orleans, I’d have started a long time ago!

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The most envied guy in the room at a BYOB

 The most envied guy in the room at a BYOB

I often get looks of jealousy and envy from other guys, what can I say, my wife’s gorgeous!  Unless, she’s by my immediate side though, those looks are few and far between.  The other night when we went to eat boiled crawfish, I strolled in by myself and guys were looking at me like I was the new SI cover model.  Of course, it was not me they were looking at however…it was the six pack of cold Bud Select I had in my hands.

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Abita Brew Pub

I have been living across the lake just north of the Big Easy for about a year now and I must say, I have been very disappointed in the food selection.  Sure, there are a couple of places that the fiancé and I enjoy once in a while.  It’s as though there is no love in the cooking here.  Everybody just wants to use big words and fancy ingredients without the slightest clue how to properly implement them.  I have been spoiled living in Lafayette for the previous 5 years where you have to really search for a bad meal.  I have been desperately missing my Laura’s, Julien’s Poboys, and basically every bar in and around town that seem to have my grandmother cooking plate lunches in the back.

Anyway, this lack of gastronomical gratification has forced me to broaden my horizons.  I have reluctantly (yeah right) moved on to something that they obviously take a lot of pride in over here.  That something is Beer! With 2 microbreweries in a 15 mile radius, one of which is run by one of 8 (I think) certified German brew-masters in the United States, surely they know their stuff.  And, of course, I’m not talking about the horrible excuse for a beverage with no taste or character known the world round as “American Pilsner”. You know, that stuff we all drank, and sometimes still do, but never truly enjoyed.  Insert Name Here Light.  I’m talking about beer, malty, hoppy, or balanced, dark, amber or light. Just as long as it taste like something other than dishwater.

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