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Food memories? Everyone seems to recall being mesmerized by a female family member preparing meals lovingly: forming the perfect gnocchi, composing a sublime kugel, rolling the flakiest biscuits. It helps if they were immigrants or Southern. With the exception of one mock apple pie, I can’t remember a single thing my grandma ever cooked (though it’s impossible to forget slogging through a sad bowl of puffed wheat poured from a plastic pillowcase-sized 99-cent store bag when we spent the night) and I have no idea where her ancestors hailed from.

In our household, enchiladas and lasagna, time-consuming to prepare and fit for a crowd, were reserved for company. I guess that made them special (in fact, I recently reconnected with distant cousins now in their 50s and one brought up how she remembered my mom being a good cook, her lasagna, in particular, stood out, which is more of an indictment of their mother’s culinary skills than anything) but there wasn’t much kitchen wisdom to be gleaned. We ate a lot of fried eggs and bacon for dinner. There was a spell in 1982 where we ate taco salad with Catalina dressing on a weekly basis. My entire senior year in high school we nearly subsisted on Taco Bell takeout, later supplemented by my summer job at Pizza Hut. My mom had long given up the charade of cooking.

What we didn’t do was go out to eat very often. Fast food was a rarity and a sit down restaurant practically unheard of. Maybe Salty’s or Sizzler for Easter, Rheinlander for Christmas and graduations, Denny’s when you were too young to get into bars but wanted to sit someplace and smoke in the evening, and Heidi’s to discuss bad grades over marginally German desserts (never in academics, but grade school benchmarks like makes good use of  time and gets along with others—two subjects I still haven’t mastered).

I do remember the colorful plastic markers indicating the doneness of your non-aged, un-prime conventionally raised steak and cast iron pots of sharp alcohol-spiked fondue, every last nub of rye bread skewered and ready to wipe out any last remaining streaks of cheese, black forest cakes piled high with whipped cream and filled with canned, syrupy cherries. This was fun, certainly more so than home cooking, even if the food wasn’t exemplary. That kind of wasn’t the point.

This was also before the rise of the chains we know today. Applebee’s, Olive Garden and all the heavy hitters didn’t seep into my consciousness until I was an adult. Shiny, caloric, excessive, they held a lot of foreign appeal, particularly in brown rice burritos and tofu scramble-laden Portland, Oregon. Radically suburban, blowing away even my own suburban upbringing with a grotesque luxury I wish I had known sooner.

In 21st century NYC there’s little need to fall back on the safe and predictable. We have food diversity in spades, in all price ranges. Mediocrity feels more egregious when unnecessary. Yet I feel myself drawn to chains with semi-alarming frequency. I will admit I prefer them in their natural habitat, as the charm doesn’t translate well to the city’s constraints–and I don’t want to be responsible for pushing out the old-timers, a very real trend that seems to pick up speed weekly.

Comfort is meatloaf or mac and cheese for some. For me, it’s settling into a spacious booth and being dazzled by promotions and carefully calculated menu offerings. Nothing soothes rattled urban nerves like a big parking lot and equally gargantuan portions. It’s all about balance. There’s no reason why someone can’t enjoy a Never Ending Pasta Bowl and Marea’s spaghetti with sea urchin and crab.

Recently, I have been feeling apathetic to mad rushes, anything involving waiting in line, gilded dining, and chefs, butchers and foragers as rock stars (maybe this is passe? I originally wrote this in 2011). So, I will be writing about chain restaurants, the  misunderstood, vilified genre—from classics like Red Lobster to independent offshoots like Fatty Crab (man cannot live on Cheddar Bay Biscuits alone). Either the novelty will soon wear off or I’ll gain a deeper understanding of…something. Maybe chains just need a little love.

* * *

lonelyhunterThe Chains of Love logo is inspired by the 1946 cover of The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Robert Jonas, my favorite paperback illustrator. I think he’s still alive and hope he doesn’t take issue with my infringement, er, homage.

For more examples of his work, here is a bountiful Flickr set. I have a couple that aren’t in this batch but never have the energy to take on scanning projects. Thank you, people of the world who do.

NYC

THE BRONX

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MANHATTAN
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QUEENS
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REST OF WORLD

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WALES
Cricceth

In-Store Eating: Steak and Potatoes

Which eating and drinking establishment within a store are you most looking forward to?

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The Gorbals inside Urban Outfitters’ Williamsburg outpost. I’m still outraged about the liquor license denial because I wanted to drink a Dick in a Hat while shopping for an OBEY Vagabond Fedora.

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Makers and Merchants, i.e. the Brooks Brothers steakhouse.

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The Roof, which, er, will be on the roof of that Gowanus Whole Foods that’s been in limbo for years. Wegmans has an in-store pub called The Pub, so why not?

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The Williamsburg Rough Trade cafe from Five Leaves folks.

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TNT a.k.a. Taters ‘n’ Tits in an unspecified North Carolina mall.

Photos: Urban Outfitters, Brooks Brothers, Wegmans, Made in Shoreditch, HBO

Writing Samples: Food & Beverage

I’ve been blogging and writing about food since the turn of the century (yep, before “blogging” was even coined). I’ve also been a columnist at Serious Eats and a regular contributor at NYMag.com, New York Post, and Metromix (r.i.p.).

I also do non-food writing at my day job and elsewhere.

Get in touch: krista.garcia@gmail.com

 

 

 

The Best Tiki Bars for Your Make-Believe Tropical Christmas

 

 

 

 

 

Insights on Today’s Tipping Economy from an Employee Perspective

What It’s Like to Run a Kitchen in the Middle of Nowhere

 

 

12 Local Boozes Made in Portland 

taste

 

 

Chef Alvin Cailan: From Egg Sandwiches to Eggplant Adobo

extra-crispy


 

There Are No Moons Over My Hammy at Denny’s in Japan

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Front & Center, the Rockefeller Center Blog
Mighty Milkshakes
Summer Drinks at SixtyFive
Iced Coffee Break

seriouseats

International Intrigue: Why There’s No Shame in Dining at US Chains Abroad


Fast Food International

A column showcasing foreign chain restaurants in NYC

A sampling:
Sushi By-the-Piece at Wasabi, Times Square’s Newest Fast Food Import
A Hundred Bite-Sized Spanish Sandwiches at 100 Montaditos
Sweet and Savory Gelato at L’Albero dei Gelati
A Homier Take on Japanese Fast Food at Ootoya, Now in Times Square and the Flatiron
Jinya Ramen Bar

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Thailand: Bangkok Is Crazed With A Hipster Haggis Joint

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Foreign Invasion: How Have International Restaurants Changed for NYC Audiences?

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An Ode to Forcella’s Neapolitan Pies
The Cashiers at Yip’s Are Consumate Professionals

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Restaurant Reviews

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(I was a regular contributor 2009-2011. These were originally slideshows.)

Check, Please!
At these eateries, the bill holders are just as noteworthy as the food you’re billed for.

Halloween’s bloodiest bites
I want to suck your blood! And eat it too! In puddings, in sausages, in stews.

Top 5 in NYC: Pioneer Tiki Bars
The NYC Tiki Renaissance™ is upon us. Here are five places that started it all.

Oddball frosties in NYC
Horseradish ice cream: oooh or ewww? The cold truth about NYC’s quirkiest scoops, snow cones and popsicles.

Banh mi ban!
Sick of the overexposed Vietnamese hoagie? Nine other Asian(ish) sandwich substitutes worth checking out.

 Older…

About Goodies First

I first realized I had a problem in the second grade. Once, during my brief stint at a backwoods Christian school, I started to eat the dessert out of my brown-bag lunch and the entire class piped up Flanders kids-style, “She ate her goodie first!” I was humiliated (and promptly went back to public school).

Now, I’m resigned to unhealthy fixations with chain restaurants, foreign adaptations of American cuisine, and middle-aged drinking (now with a standalone Tumblr). Sometimes I cook. Sometimes I eat out. And sometimes I write about it, same as I’ve done since the dawn of the millennium. More and more, though, I relegate the what-did-I-eat nonsense to Instagram, as is the fashion now.

This started as a text-only dining journal, a way to catalog my eating experiences and appease my inner librarian (my original profession). Anything service-y is likely accidental; you probably won’t find lists like the “Top 5 Hawker Stalls in Singapore” Maybe you’ll settle for some fleeting food impressions from my first visit to the city-state in 2003, then more informed takes on subsequent returns. It all adds up.

I’ve since come to terms with my goodie-loving ways, and it’s obvious that I’m a glutton for more than just punishment. Goodies first? For now, it looks like I will simply continue to embrace this misguided carpe diem one post at a time.

Sincerely,

Krista Garcia

The Middle Ages: When Drinking Gets Old

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Don’t get scared, but at some point you may be sitting in a bar with friends, same as ever, and when you look up from your whiskey you realize you are the oldest people in the joint—by a decade. (Ok, it’s my own fault that I live in a young, rich person neighborhood.) Next step, you’re swaying alone in the corner to “Save a Prayer,” over-dressed, in too much makeup. This is what Logan’s Run was meant to prevent.

So, it turns out that I’m middle aged. I didn’t think that happened until you were a divorced empty-nester (or in Brooklyn’s case, the parent of a toddler). Apparently, it can happen to anyone.

It also appears that being a middle-aged woman means you no longer imbibe alcohol in public—unless you want to patronize hotel bars or wine bars, exclusively, which I kind of don’t.  Instead, I and some fellow grown-ups will be surveying the scene–all neighborhoods are fair game–for the elusive drinking establishment where women over 39 aren’t yet extinct.

Read the The Middle Ages.

About Shovel Time

fourshovelIn fourth grade someone got the bright idea of cutting lunch to an outrageous 15 minutes (as if going to a year-round school without a cafeteria wasn’t enough–we ate at our desks and were served by mobile carts in the hall). To get the slow eaters (me) up to speed, our teachers implemented a policy called “Shovel Time.”

The first nine minutes would pass normally. Then as the tenth approached, Miss Stauffer (a feathered-haired gal who drove a Camaro and loved Little River Band) would yell, “Do you know what time it is?!” The class would shriek back manically, “SHOVEL TIME!!!” Talking was absolutely forbidden the final five minutes; it was a deathly silent scarf fest.

I don’t know if I’ve ever been the same since. But as a nod to this classy ritual, I’ve adopted the humble scooping implement as my rating system’s icon. Shovel on!

Quinoa and Moscow Mules Are the New Salad Bars and Mudslides

In the chain world where flatbreads, wraps and pretzel rolls are considered innovations, a few brands are trying harder to tap into contemporary food trends, whether a ruse to appeal to the irrationally coveted millennials or simply a desire to appear relevant in late 2013. Some I’ve witnessed firsthand. (I’ve already documented how Cheesecake Factory’s kale salad doesn’t contain much kale.)

Take Maggiano’s Little Italy. Little Italy isn’t a selling point for anyone in NYC who enjoys tasting their food, so adopting this shrinking neighborhood as a concept and transporting it to the suburbs seems misguided at best. I don’t doubt that there are parts of the country lacking in big family-style plates of manicotti and breaded veal cutlets smothered in marinara, and I have family members who insist on dining on Mulberry Street when they very rarely visit. It must be America’s favorite casual dining restaurant for a reason.

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It was the Handcrafted Classic Cocktails (as opposed to the plain Classic Cocktails section featuring a lemon drop and long island iced tea), though, that caught my attention and ultimately brought me to Bridgewater, New Jersey. There is an aviation, properly made and just mauve, not jewel-toned like the royal purple version ordered by James Spader in French in Montreal on The Blacklist to show off to the young FBI lady who just wanted a glass of Chardonnay, as if an aviation is the epitome of sophistication. They taste like Sweet Tarts, frankly, but they certainly are pretty and I do appreciate their presence on Maggiano’s menu.

maggiano's aviation

There was a surprising lack of sweet cocktails, the bane of all chain restaurants, and while not yet Fernet-crazed, a Negroni using Carpano
Antica was pretty on point, as was the presence of Aperol, multiple bitters and Fever Tree tonic water. Do note the fat ice cube in my Catcher in the Rye (Knob Creek Rye, Luxardo Marashino, simple syrup, Old Fashion Bitters).

* * *

Until recently, Bonefish Grill was dinner-only, so its decision to introduce a Sunday Brunch (and Bistro Lunch) is certainly more about increasing a day’s earnings (also, the Ruby Tuesday in Times Square advertises breakfast, a feature mentioned nowhere on its site) than trying to attract city folk with unlimited bubbles. Still, what other chains can you think of are doing brunch, the most controversial meal among food-centric crowds, with bottomless mimosas and bellinis? On a gut level I am anti-brunch, but because I can’t articulate why in a convincing matter I cave quietly now and then.

bonefish brunch

The brunch fare isn’t particularly on-brand for a seafood restaurant. Sure, there is a surf and turf eggs benedict with lobster and a crab and asparagus omelet (above) but the toast and au gratin potatoes (or fresh fruit) seem odd, especially coupled with the requisite warm Italian loaf and pesto dipping oil.  $19.9 (Bonefish prices everything in oddball increments) gets you that and unlimited bubbly drinks, provenance unknown, though likely prosecco and not Perrier Jouet “Grand Brut,” the only other sparkler it sells.

 

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For fall, P.F. Chang’s has created “fried rice” from red quinoa and assorted vegetables. It’s topped with an egg. I was about to say that this is crying out for kale, but kale has its own showcase in the also-new Shanghai Waldorf Salad.

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Moscow mules have also transitioned. P.F. Chang’s has a tequila jalapeño version, which negates the Moscow. Even Longhorn Steakhouse (I
say even because I’ve never had any interest in this Darden brand because it seemed so bland but am getting itchy to visit all of a sudden–maybe it’s the Snowfall-esque website with a mesmerizing pumpkin spice lava cake that’s sliced and oozes over and over again) has introduced a limited edition montana mule (I can’t get a straight answer on capitalizing cocktails or not, and it’s more problematic when the names contain proper nouns)  Jim Beam, no vodka. So, it seems that the moscow mule is becoming the new martini with ginger, and possibly a metal mug, being the only requirement for the designation.

 The Blacklist photo via The Pegu Blog

Getting My Kix

justin warner cooking

General Mills has been on a tear with its “Hello Cereal Lovers” campaign. Chefs like Dale Talde, Harold Dieterle and Amanda Frietag have developed recipes, and even I was moved to attend a cooking event with Do or Dine’s Justin Warner and I’m pretty certain I haven’t eaten cereal since I was in grade school (which I
probably should’ve kept to myself, if only because saying “I don’t think I’ve eaten cereal in 30 years” aloud only succeeds in scaring the NYU food studies girls who might not even be into their second decade of life).

fizzy trix

Why not Cocoa Puff carbonara, nuggets mimicking ground beef? Or Fizzy Trix cocktails, sweetness tamed with bitters?

ravioli filling

What I really wanted to see was some unnaturally colored food made palatable, and I got my wish during the interactive cooking session. Lucky Charms, marshmallows only was an audience suggestion, which got turned into ravioli, also stuffed with smoked mozzarella and oregano.

lucky charms ravioli

The result wasn’t abysmal, a little sweet and herbal, and most importantly, the shells oozed blue.

cereal swag

The dark (destitute?) underbelly of food media was exposed when attendees began scrounging for leftover raw meat. Heck, I gave in and took the baggie of scallops along with my swag. Even though I rarely blog about cooking anymore, I always make at least two meals a week at home  and a scallop fennel recipe was on the roster for Wednesday. A dusting of crumbled Vanilla Chex actually would’ve worked with this buttery seafood dish, so don’t think that I didn’t learn anything.

No Beaujolais Nouveau?

glade salted caramel

Pumpkin spice’s ubiquity has really taken a beating this year (white girl memes, flavor science proving it’s all spice, no pumpkin) but
there’s something much fouler afoot and I spied it at Target this weekend on the instant headache aisle otherwise known as air fresheners.

Glad is promoting a limited edition fall scents collection, which includes Salted Caramel, as if salt contributes an odor to caramel, which is really just sweet and Cracker Jacky with a chemical undertone. No matter, it’s available in five different formats: jar candle, Plugins scented oil, automatic spray, which differs from premium room spray, and scented oil candles.

The rest of the collection is rounded out by Fall Hayride, a mystery blend, Pumpkin Spice (obviously) and two other foodish scents, Orchard
Apple Cinnamon and Toasted Marshmallow, the latter which is described by an online reviewer as “Makes breathing fun!” Five stars for Toasted Marshmallow. Clearly, I know nothing about how a home should smell (or breathing).

What are the odds that Glade captures the aroma of a croissant-doughnut chimera for 2014?