Showing posts with label bagel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bagel. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Fun Playing With Destin-Area Breakfast

What better way to start the day than with breakfast? We found a number of tasty options nearby and barely scratched the surface of the local offerings.

In all our prior years visiting Destin, we'd never succeeding in playing with food at the Destin Diner - it was a cool looking old railcar style place, but always seemed to be between owners during our February visits. The current operators of the space (now called Mary's Kitchen) have remedied this. They also operate a second Mary's Kitchen at Uptown in Fort Walton Beach, which is open until 8pm for dinner. The Destin version is open from 7:30am until 2:30pm, and offers daily "Blue Plate" specials beginning at 11:30am for lunch in addition to the generous breakfast and lunch menus. Due to the number of meals we ate there, Mary's will get it's own post. However, our first breakfast at Mary's, on our first morning in Destin, warrants a preview here.

Bob's Pancakes

Half Order of Biscuits & Sausage Gravy
My side of cheese grits










Bob's pancakes were light and dreamy. I honestly didn't love the sausage tossed into the gravy, but the white gravy itself was delicious and the biscuits were light and airy. They told me their biscuit maker makes them from scratch daily and they certainly tasted like it! People tend to love grits or hate them; I am in the former category and found these creamy, cheesy and serviceable. A lovely start!

Our next breakfast adventure took us back to a place that didn't really impress in years past, but has upped their game quite nicely. The Donut Hole now has three locations; on this trip, we dined at two of them. The original, in Destin, impressed us both times we visited.

Bob's: The Everything. 2 eggs, sausage, cheese grits (subbed in for homefries), 2 pancakes.


Mine: Texas Sweet Potato Pancakes with Praline Sauce
The quantity of food provided two full meals for each of us, and then some. But more important was the quality, which was very good and delivered at very reasonable price points. More of Donut Hole will appear in a later post.

We enjoyed two breakfasts at The Pancakery, just up the street from us. While they do use liquid egg product for their omelets, the fillings I sampled tasted of freshness and quality.

Mine: Crabcake Omelet 

They get the crab cakes already made from their vendor, which they said was a local product. They also source local shrimp for omelet making, but we didn't sample it. This mammoth plate gave me two meals, with some to spare! The quality of the filling and presentation of this dish almost made up for the use of liquid egg product. And to accompany this savoriness:

Sand Dollar Pancakes


What a treat! Why get a side of food service bread toast when there are freshly made pancakes in the house? 

Bob's: Strawberry Fields, pancakes filled with strawberries and topped with strawberry compote. 
This was a little too sweet for my palate, but Bob loved it.

Gone Bananas: Filled with fresh bananas and served with bananas foster sauce.
We both ordered this on our second visit, and didn't love it as much as our first visit. The Bananas Foster Sauce had a strong margarine/butter substitute flavor that wrecked the dish for us. So the trick to enjoying the Pancakery is to order carefully - they do a fabulous job with the pancakes themselves and some of the toppings are worthy. We will definitely return.

Crackings was recommended by our realtor, who is a food guy and is married to another food lover. Originally part of the still-existing “Another Broken Egg” chain, but recently taken independent by its owners, Crackings still felt (and tasted) way too chain like. It wasn’t bad but wasn’t especially good either, and more costly than other local options. The menu bragged about serving Hormel meats – that sort of sums it up. There are better choices. And to be fair, my realtor and his wife had lunch items not breakfast; perhaps they do better with that. 

Mine: Praline Pecan Pancakes - two sweet cream pancakes, filled with sweet crunchy praline pecans, drizzled with scratch made cinnamon cream cheese icing
This looks like a bit of a mess and that was how it ate. Way too sweet, and the parts that weren't covered with icing were quite dry.

Bob's: Banana Foster's it Up - a scratch made brown sugar, banana liquor, and butter cream sauce with fresh bananas with pancakes
Crackings actually did a better job with this dish than the Pancakery had, probably because they used real butter rather than substitutes. Bob clearly chose better than I! Having lots of sauce to drizzle where needed helped.

The final two places are almost polar opposites, but each delivered deliciousness!

Mama Clemenza's is owned by the couple that are part owners in Fat Clemenzas in Miramar Beach and Clemenzas at Uptown Station, Fort Walton Beach. The Miramar Beach location, 12273 Emerald Coast Parkway, Miramar Beach, Phone: 850-424-3157 is open Wednesday – Sunday 8am – 1pm. The Fort Walton Beach location is open 8am- 1pm Sunday in the premises of Clemenzas at Uptown Station, 75 Eglin Parkway | Suite 126 | Fort Walton Beach, FL 32591. Both locations offer an upscale, hand crafted breakfast and lunch experience. Though our second experience was marred by some technical difficulties, the house responded well and we'll certainly be back.

Sliced Oranges in olive oil with black pepper

So tasty that I tried to recreate it for our Snowbird group's Happy Hour. How'd I do?

Plant City Truck Farmer Honeybells with EVOO & Black Pepper
Back to Mama Clemenza's.

Bob's: Italian Breakfast Panini "Special" House-made Italian Sausage, sunnyside eggs and Gruyere cheese, served with side of Hollandaise and "side of the day" which was Raspberry Steel Cut Oats 

Mine: "Special" Seafood Quiche topped with Hollandaise, served with Croissant and "side of the day", Raspberry Steel Cut Oats (it ate like pudding!).

Bob's Banana's Foster French Toast: maple glazed sliced bananas and warm caramel sauce.
Mine: Croque Madame. An open faced egg sandwich with Prosciutto, and Gruyere cheese. Served with Side of the Day (Blackberry Steel Cut Oats) and an addition of Hollandaise sauce on the side.
The menu changes frequently and every day brings one off specials. Mama Clemenza's is not a cheap date, but the quality of the food is a notch above most local offerings and well worth it. Despite the hiccups on our last visit, we'll be back! 

Blue Collar Cafe in Fort Walton Beach is the only place in the area making real NY style bagels from scratch. And doing it quite well. But go early if you want a bagel, because they will sell out (by 10:30ish)!  We didn't get there in time the first time we visited. But the made-in-house biscuits almost made up for it! And that Maple Bacon - divine! The grits - nothing special. But there remains plenty of special to go around at Blue Collar Cafe! And at very friendly prices.

Mine: 2 Eggs Over Easy, Biscuit, Cheese Grits, Maple Bacon

Bob's: 2 eggs over easy, toast, sausage patty.

The bagels were worth the price of admission and a second trip. New Yorker approved. And though that cream cheese probably started life in a food service loaf, it had been whipped with a perfect touch of white pepper by the time it hit my bagel. Outstanding! As was the service, a real treat.

Mine: Plain bagel, not toasted, cream cheese, fruit.

No New Yorker would ever toast a fresh bagel.

Bob's: Poppyseed Bagel Toasted, Cream Cheese, Fruit

Another lovely touch - that fruit garnish isn't just a garnish - it's fresh, substantive fruit, which cut nicely through the richness of the bagel and cream cheese. And the sausage and bacon at our first visit.

Finally, a rare made from scratch breakfast in the condo, featuring Black Bear Bread Company Bread made into French Toast with Blue Eggs we got at the Sandestin/Grand Boulevard Farmers' Market, topped with Strawberry Syrup I made with Plant City Farmers' Fresh Strawberries.



And so we have breakfast in Destin and environs. Some lovely places to play with food, and a few others we didn't get to try. There will be more Fun Playing With Food from this trip, coming up shortly!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Fun Playing with Jewish Soul Food for New Year's Day


Ahhh, the bagel. Jewish Soul Food. Despite its Eastern European origin, ubiquitous almost anywhere you go. We knew that we had a couple of packets of Bagel Boss belly lox in our freezer, so we decided to treat ourselves to a luxurious New Year's Day breakfast of bagel, cream cheese and lox. But would the bagel store even be open? Did we really want to schlep out to get them? Academic questions all, once Bob agreed to take a whack at making bagels for the first time. 

The first conundrum - which recipe to use? Internet choices abounded, and every one was a little different than the one before. I didn't have time to consult our shelf of cookbooks - so internet inspiration would have to do. 

The second issue - we didn't want to have to do the entire bread-making process on Saturday morning - could some be done in advance so all that remained for breakfast-making was the final bake (or a fraction thereof)? 

Here are the answers. We began the process during the day on Friday (New Year's Eve):


Bagel dough, consisting of bread (high gluten) flour, water, yeast, malt syrup, sugar, salt



Dough is shaped and rises.



Bagels are boiled in water, about 45 seconds per side. Bob used a chopstick through the hole to flip them. Our plan was to boil them all off, then par-bake half and leave the other half in the fridge to be fully baked the next morning. That way, we could determine in side-by-side fashion which time-saving method was superior.







This was intended to be only partially baked, but wound up fully cooked. Oh darn, guess we have to taste-test them now.





Topped with a schmear of Tempt-tee whipped cream cheese, the fresh bagel made a perfect afternoon nosh to hold us until New Year's Eve dinner, which was planned for 8:30pm.



I topped the other half with Harzler's roll butter. The first experiment had fabulous taste and crumb - but the overall texture seemed a bit too soft for an authentic "New York style" bagel.

Since the first bagel batch wound up fully baked a day early, we set them aside for Sunday, and went off to Restaurant Dante to enjoy New Year's Eve dinner with friends.

Saturday morning (Happy New Year!), we baked off the four bagels that we'd boiled the day before and held overnight in the refrigerator unbaked.





Interestingly, the holes at the center of the bagels closed up a lot, and the final products were a bit smaller than their immediately-baked brethren. Most important, though - the overnight stint in the fridge did something wonderful for the texture, which solidified to a perfect chewy bite. So - boiling then holding seems to win, at least with this recipe.


Bagel Boss Belly Lox (accept no substitutes for Belly Lox)


Sliced Onion



Jewish Soul Food Perfected - home-made bagel, sliced onion, Tempt-tee schmear, belly lox. Fun Playing with New Year's Day food - this, I could get used to. Happy New Year to all!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Final Fun Playing with Passover Food 2009

And so, at Sundown last Thursday, Passover passed. It was a week of fun eats; I consume many of these treats but this one time per year. And so - a few more Passover goodies:

Matzo Brei - "Pancake" style:


The inimitable, and now extinct "secret ingredient."











Yummy!


Cream Cheese (Has to Be Temp-Tee) and Cherry Jam on Matzoh Sandwich

Instead of buying the processed "Kosher for Passover" jelly this year, I used Herb Thyme's locally made product (which doesn't contain any chometz, or leavened no-no's). The jam soaks into the matzoh by the time I get to eat my sandwich - the texture and taste bring back my childhood every time! Even if Breakstone (maker of Temp-Tee) is now part of Kraft.





I did not buy any canned macaroons or packaged desserts this year. Most of our desserts came from Davis Bakery.



These incredible macaroons came from Chef Bennett Davis at Appetite.


KP Muenster Cheese Melted on Matzoh




The Only Processed/Packaged KP Item I bought this year



I've loved these puffy cookies since I was a kid!





And then, Friday morning, when Passover was over - that first sweet taste!


"Half & Half" Bagel with Cream Cheese Lox Spread from D&R Bagels



D&R is located on Aurora Road in Solon, and their bagels are almost as good as the ones I grew up with in NY.



As these last photos demonstrate - Passover is definitely OVER for 2009. Hope you all had fun playing with your spring holiday foods of choice!