Tides
#226
Posted 17 July 2007 - 03:19 PM
NYC Neighborhood Tours
#227
Posted 18 July 2007 - 07:26 PM
#228
Posted 18 July 2007 - 07:32 PM
#229
Posted 18 July 2007 - 07:41 PM
April 25, 2010 Big Sur Marathon
Montauk Century May, 16 2010
Sept. 26, 2010 Berlin Marathon
#230
Posted 18 July 2007 - 07:50 PM
#231
Posted 18 July 2007 - 08:49 PM
if there was something to prove - by golly i think they did already. their two year anniversary is in a couple days.
Says their third customer. Read the exciting historyhere. (Yes, it's the old Pink Pig interview...)
***Every Monday***At the Sign of the Pink Pig.
If the author could go around the place hitting random readers with a rubber hammer, the Pink Pig would still be worth a visit.
#232
Posted 18 July 2007 - 09:36 PM
oh, good. although i have to say i'm partial to tarragon and hoping to see it again... anyway, i'm on a major lobster roll kick lately and eating around town in a little comparative exercise. haven't been to Tides in a while so i'm due. Pearl's last night was fab - as good as ever. (surprisingly, Mary's wasn't great)the new menu has already started but i stopped in for lunch today - limited menu of course but the new lobster roll - sings on the tongue.
Everything is always OK in the end. If it's not OK, then it's not the end.
#233
Posted 21 July 2007 - 12:26 AM

Fried clam bellies and oysters.

The famous lobster roll, with yucca chips.
Holy crap! I'm definitely returning for the bouilliabaise.
#234
Posted 21 July 2007 - 02:15 PM
[M]ost of the pastas hover around $25. This ought to be enough to buy bucatini that is cooked on both ends. -- Pete Wells on Caravaggio ( * review)
Tonight, there was a dessert of coconut, rhubarb, and black olive. Obvious in its execution how innovation and experiment, when introduced for their own sake, are annoying. --irnscrabblechf52, May 9, 2013
notorious stickler -- NY Times
deeply annoying and nitpicking -- Molly O'Neill, One Big Table
#235
Posted 21 July 2007 - 02:50 PM
I'm not so sure about lobster roll as a dish, but anyway, you take what you can.
6:30pm. Out of sardines. Out of whole lobster.
New menu for Gourmet Night after Kurt is found passed out
o duck with orange
o duck with cherries
o duck surprise (duck w/out orange or cherries)
#236
Posted 21 July 2007 - 04:27 PM
New menu for Gourmet Night after Kurt is found passed out
o duck with orange
o duck with cherries
o duck surprise (duck w/out orange or cherries)
In Tina Howe's play The Art of Dining, after the chef-owner's husband had eaten up all the grapes for the duck, he tells her to just use canned peaches. He also drinks a whole pot full of hollandaise, and cannot identify the "spice" she thrusts into his mouth: salt.
[M]ost of the pastas hover around $25. This ought to be enough to buy bucatini that is cooked on both ends. -- Pete Wells on Caravaggio ( * review)
Tonight, there was a dessert of coconut, rhubarb, and black olive. Obvious in its execution how innovation and experiment, when introduced for their own sake, are annoying. --irnscrabblechf52, May 9, 2013
notorious stickler -- NY Times
deeply annoying and nitpicking -- Molly O'Neill, One Big Table
#237
Posted 23 July 2007 - 02:10 PM
mayonnaisey, but works well with the bun.
I'm not so sure about lobster roll as a dish, but anyway, you take what you can.
Better than chicken-fried steak, right?
***Every Monday***At the Sign of the Pink Pig.
If the author could go around the place hitting random readers with a rubber hammer, the Pink Pig would still be worth a visit.
#238
Posted 23 July 2007 - 02:49 PM
mayonnaisey, but works well with the bun.
I'm not so sure about lobster roll as a dish, but anyway, you take what you can.
Better than chicken-fried steak, right?
Damning with faint praise?
I wonder why a similar shrimp roll hasn't gotten the same degree of attention. You can make a much tastier version at the price range that the market supports.
#239
Posted 23 July 2007 - 02:52 PM
Truly. I like lobster rolls, I would like crab rolls if I could get them. Lobster rolls make a statement which shrimp rolls don't.
***Every Monday***At the Sign of the Pink Pig.
If the author could go around the place hitting random readers with a rubber hammer, the Pink Pig would still be worth a visit.
#240
Posted 23 July 2007 - 03:11 PM
Semiology, ain't it?
Truly. I like lobster rolls, I would like crab rolls if I could get them. Lobster rolls make a statement which shrimp rolls don't.
Of course. I think some good marketing can make the shrimp roll happen (giant live prawn roll, of course). Not so sure about whitefish salad rolls.










