Friday, 10 March 2006

cornbread coming soon

Inajiff The 10th Annual National Cornbread Festival convenes in South Pittsburgh, Tennessee next month. The dates are April 29 & 30. One of the events is the Tennessee 4H Cornbread Cook-Off; that's Saturday. Sunday features the Celebrity Cook-Off. Besides the cornbread cook-offs, there are lots of activitites unrealted to food. But the food-realted attractions interest me most. Southern Cooking & Dishes from across the USA make up the festival foods. There's a Cornbread Alley where folks can, and should, sample "Cornbread Recipes Galore." And we can't forget the eating contests: Cornbread Eatin’, Buttermilk Chuggin’, and Ice Cream Eatin’ . I say, we're in for a treat. I'm making a point of getting down to S. Pitt this year for the festival.

FYI: Jiffy comes from the Midwest. But I like the box's design. And, in  a pinch, those jiffy corn muffins aren't bad at all. Plus, you can request their  recipe book at the website. I should be touting Martha White given their close relltionship to Nashville, the Opry, and country music. Southern cooks have relied upon MW products since 1899. 

Wednesday, 23 November 2005

painted love

ClaeszProbably won't get to the National Gallery of Art by December 31 to see the Pieter Claesz exhibit. But if I could get away... I have the week between Christmas and New Year's off from work. I could zip up to DC for a visit.

He was a seventeenth century Dutch still-life painter whose subjects included images of mincemeat pies, breads, lemons, olives, nuts, fruits, and wine are visual feasts that delight the eye and whet the appetite.

Wednesday, 02 November 2005

tea exhibit

My first thought is: Will icedtea or icetea be represented at the new exhibition on the history of tea in Philadelphia at the National Archives branch in Center City? If you didn't know, sales of loose tea have tripled in the last decade, developing into a $500-million-a-year business. That's a lot of leaves. Aaaaah, it seems the show is mostly about the early, and sometimes nefarious, tea trade here when Philadelphia was the capital of the United States. Called Hot, Iced and Bagged in Article I: Tea and the Constitution, it seems they did drink it iced after all.

Here's the info (it's not like I'll be in Philly anytime soon):
Hot, Iced and Bagged in Article I: Tea and the Constitution runs through the end of the year at the National Archives Mid-Atlantic Region, Chestnut Street side of the old federal courthouse, just west of Ninth Street.
Hours:
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. second and fourth Saturdays. Free. Telephone:215-606-0100.

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