Before moving to the City of Angels, I lived in Atlanta. I moved there straight from college and spent six important years in the Dirty South. For the most part I loved it and those were happy years. My twenties – the salad days, if you will. And, with the exception of one very brief visit to a friend, I had not returned.
Until now.
One of the beefs I had with the ATL when I was there was the sprawl (and so, of course, I moved to LA). The city seemed disconnected as a whole. I remember the nail in the coffin for me and the ATL - I was walking down the street in my neighborhood, Little 5 Points, when a friend drove by, honked his horn and hollered, “What up, Duchess?!” (Yes, that was my nickname). I don't know what it was about that moment. I suppose I had been itchy already, but right then I felt like I couldn't breathe. Despite the sprawl, despite the city-ness of the city, everything seemed so small. I needed to fly away. I needed to find bigger. And so I did.
It's a funny thing, however. After all
of my years in LA, the very thing thing I really missed, the thing I yearned for the most was exactly the
thing I had turned away from in Atlanta all those years before. Screw
anonymity, screw the whole little fish/big pond thing, I wanted
community and family. I wanted little(r), not big(gest). I wanted to return home to Richmond.
So, how could I not stop in Atlanta, the
very city that took me on my long journey back home? (And I do so love to come full circle) Plus, it has
become a pretty big food destination over the past few years. What's
more, some of my old friends from back in the day are smack in the
middle of this Atlanta, New South food surge. And some other old
friends are still making their food, their way, deliciously, same as
it ever was. And I had three places to visit that fell into either
one, the other, or both of these categories.
Our first stop was one of those
classics, El Myr. It was my Regal Beagle, so to speak, and perhaps
where the whole “duchess” thing originated.
Part dive bar, part DJ venue, part diner, part tattoo corral, all
cheap beer, tequila, chips, salsa, guacamole and massive burritos. I
was relieved to find, upon bellying up to the bar one quiet afternoon
for lunch, that not a thing has changed. Every possible surface is
covered with outsider art or band stickers, ashtrays on each table,
jukebox in the corner, and the same gloriously irreverent and surly staff: perfect.
As Fred and I split chips, salsa and guacamole, a couple of sweet
teas and a Brunswick stew burrito that was the size of our dog,
Eduardo, I gazed around the space, nostalgically. If those walls
could talk... Actually, I'm glad they can't. As soon as we finished,
I hurried Fred out. Just in case.
El Myr's 14th birthday party Photo courtesy of El Myr |
After that meal, we returned to our
home base: my dear, dear friend, Brian's house, at which point we all
three decided we should take a walk. Brian led us to Atlanta's
newest, and probably most attractive addition yet; the BeltLine. The
BeltLine is a former railway corridor around the core of Atlanta which is under development in stages as a multi-use trail.
Some portions are already complete, while others are still in
progress, but absolutely hikeable. We walked from Brian's house, which
is a stone's throw from my old apartment, all the way to the dog run
in Piedmont Park. Though there and back took the better part of the
afternoon, the concept of that route being realistically walkable in
that amount of time would have been completely unheard of during my
time in Atlanta. To see all of the people walking, riding their bikes
or skateboarding, through the heart of a city as car-centric as Los
Angeles was remarkable, and truly a beautiful sight. Kudos,
ATL.
Brian and yours truly making happy faces. |
That alone, and of course a little QT
and a glass of wine with Steven after dinner was well worth the
entire evening.
What a trip.
Atlanta, you surprised and delighted me
on many levels. You gave me three days with Brian, good wine,
delicious food, first glimpses of fall, pride and confidence in
growth and change for the better, wonderful and profound memories of
a life and a me that I had almost forgotten – and missed. You took sprawl and created cohesion. Atlanta,
you are big and beautiful and doing things right. And though I am
confidently heading towards my new home, I will keep all of these
thoughts tucked not too far away. Because you never know. You never
do.
Signed,
The Duchess
Farm Egg Baked in
Celery Cream
(Recipe from Stephen Satterfield, Miller Union, Atlanta)
(Recipe from Stephen Satterfield, Miller Union, Atlanta)
Serves 2
INGREDIENTS
1/3
cup fresh cream
2
stalks celery, including leaves, roughly chopped
1
shallot, sliced, including skin
1/2
small onion, sliced, including skin
1
teaspoon kosher salt
3
peppercorns
1
small bay leaf
1
sprig fresh thyme
Butter
for greasing
2
farm fresh eggs
DIRECTIONS
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a small
saucepan, gently heat cream, celery, shallot, onion, salt,
peppercorns, and herbs until very hot. Remove from heat and let steep
for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, lightly butter two small ovenproof
ramekins and crack an egg into each, being careful not to break the
yolk. Strain the cream into a small bowl, gently pressing on the
solids. Discard solids. Spoon cream over each egg just until covered.
(It's okay if the egg yolk is protruding slightly across the top.)
Bake dishes in preheated oven for 5 to
6 minutes. Check closely to make sure the whites are setting but the
yolk is still soft. Then turn the oven to broil and, with the door
propped open, heat until tops begin to brown. Remove immediately and
let rest a minute before serving. Serve with warm crusty bread
brushed with olive oil.
Printable recipe.
Two years ago: M.B. Post
Three years ago: Sausage over Creamy Lentils
Four years ago: Chicken Fricassee
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