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MitchW

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Posts posted by MitchW

    Gigs

    On 10/25/2023 at 9:49 AM, Wilfrid said:

    I cannot believe Hinds are playing a holiday camp in Bognor Regis next year.

    What's wrong with New York City?

    Well, now you have a reason to head back to the UK for a bit. And convince them to come here again.

  1. 39 minutes ago, Wilfrid said:

    Versus

    The latter seems much more precise and informative to me. Of course, I may be biased having eaten the first dish and not the second. I mean, the kangaroo tastes like kangaroo and the eggplant very much like eggplant. What is he saying?

    They better not send Sietsema to Bazaar. As Helen notes:

    Quote

    and, really, it had better be, at $64 for a single big shrimp

     

  2. I have to say that watching a few playoff games here and there, I realized why these teams are still playing.  I mean, I have seen some amazing defense played, along with some pretty significant clutch hitting.

  3. Did a little striped bass fishing this week.

    I have about 4 lbs. of filets cut up, vacuum packed, and in the freezer.

    Last night, I took two nice, fairly thick filets that I hadn't frozen...

    IMG_0633.jpeg.135b690da2d1e3864ea14339d788c2bd.jpeg

     

    And cooked 'em a little Spanish style.  First, I par baked some thinly sliced Yukon gold potatoes, doused in olive oil, for about 20 minutes.

    Then, I took the seasoned filets, put them on top, and threw some cherry tomatoes and Spanish olives all around. Back into the oven for another, oh 12 minutes, and done.  A little more olive oil, some lemon wedges, and one of the best meals you can imagine was had.

    Oh, I also ought to mention, that when we butchered the fish a couple of hours after they were landed, I took the collars, salted and peppered, and grilled them; they were amazing. 

    • Like 1
  4. Went out fishing for striped bass this week, with a friend who has a house (and a boat) out in Mastic Beach, which is a bit west (and a bit less fancy than) of Westhampton.

    At first, during the early afternoon, he wanted to play around (i.e. fish) on the jetties which line the Moriches Inlet...

    image.thumb.png.c12bde1da287b8a7a3f5768110cac95e.png 

    Moriches Inlet

    Now, I enjoy fishing; it's relaxing, it's fun, it allows me to commune with nature, etc. etc. You see people enjoying it, sitting on a dock or on a boat, perhaps smoking a corncob pipe or chewing on a blade of grass. Like this:

    image.png.7953be07f19b1af517fa852645fbb4c4.png

    This was nothing like that.

    My first task was putting on waders. I've never put on waders; had it not been for the fishing part, this was one of the hardest things I've ever done.

    image.thumb.png.fa7ea9049623144c3da0328a57343379.png 

     

    These keep you dry, even while standing on the shoreline and casting into the surf, praying that you're not gonna get pulled out by the undertow, which is, let's just say, stronger than you think. (Being told to stand on one leg when you think the undertow is going to pull you down was not necessarily a comfort.)  While surf casting on the beach is fun (and driving on the beach is even more fun, though sometimes it feels like driving might be like on the surface of the moon), getting onto the jetties in order to cast into the inlet, is a whole different story. For that, you have to put on boots with spikes on the bottom. Like these:

    image.thumb.png.7f0ad1a67340fd882d3c3a9356924974.png

    Because the jetty is rocks, which are wet, uneven, slippery and dangerous. Let's also just say I didn't last too long on the jetty; my first cast get caught on the rocks, I lost the lure, and that was that. 

    Screenshot2023-10-26at9_00_45AM.thumb.png.83a80cd343b4ceb092e13798bfd4719d.png

    Here's a screenshot of the beach we drove along, from Smith Point to Moriches Inlet on the right-hand side.  When the beach is impassable (high tide, dunes, whatever), there's a "road" just behind the beach which gets used; it makes 2nd Avenue look like the smoothest road you've ever been on.

    Okay, so that was fun, and after an hour or two we drove back to the house to relax a bit, and then went over to the boat to fish again, an hour or two before sunset.  First, I had to put back on the damn waders, and we had to gas up the boat on the way out...

    IMG_0613.jpeg.9592836c731e772c81466770f121b91e.jpeg

    Gassing up in one of the marinas at the inlet, look how beautiful it is! Also, this is one of the few pictures I could take, as it was one of the few times I wasn't holding on for dear life. Actually...I kid...a little - it was mostly pretty smooth. Getting in and out of the inlet to the ocean, not quite as smooth. One of the little pieces of advice given to me by the captain: always have one hand for the boat; meaning, if we hit a wake or a wave and start bouncing around a bit (trust me, you bounce), you want to be able to grab a rail and hold on.

    Out of the marina, out of the inlet, and into the ocean we went.  My friend is a fisherman; i.e. he knows how to find fish. Every minute or two he would say: "Did you see that?!"  My answer: "What?" You're basically looking for birds diving for bait fish, and you're looking for the ocean to boil - or what's called a blitz.  While we never hit a true blitz, there were birds, there was bait, and we ended up with these beauties:

    image.jpeg.8389ace139f1c1b3e5c09c925a3bf9f1.jpeg

    Recreational striped bass fishing is highly regulated.  One fish per day per person may be kept - we each caught one.  And the size must be between 28" and 31" (used to be 35"), which these are. Successfully we fished the sun going down; coming back in the dark is interesting as well, but my buddy, in addition to being an experienced fisherman, is also an experienced boater. Radar helps!

    We went out again the next morning (or, as they like to say, at first light (I learned so much on this short trip)), but no fish were around.  After a leisurely breakfast, I drove back into the city (as any experienced cab driver might do) with my gorgeous striped bass fillets.  He went out again that afternoon, and caught and released a bunch of fish from the shore. I'd do it again in a NY minute!

    Here's what a real blitz, off Montauk, looks like:

     

     

     

    • Like 2
  5. 10 minutes ago, Wilfrid said:

    Do you know whether you are losing more money because people won't take a chance on not getting a table than you would lose on no-shows?

    You do have to factor in what they have to pay to the platform, no? Here, it's $0.

  6. 7 hours ago, memesuze said:

    Did you try to make it look like a nuclear explosion or was that just happenstance? 

    I try to make all my food look like nuclear explosions!

  7. IMG_0575.jpeg.60a7138cfec283f2ff05220f221f140e.jpeg

    Twice-baked potatoes (one of the more annoying things to make, as it involves first baking the potatoes, removing all the baked stuff (don't burn yourself!) from the skins without fucking the skins up, then mashing the insides with in this case (perfect use for the Foley fork!) butter, sour cream, Parmigiano, herbs and spices, restuffing the skins, and baking them again), which were delicious.  And chicken thigh persillade.  I was so annoyed by how annoying the potatoes were to make, that I failed to even clean up the plate before serving.  Oh - steamed broccoli and carrots, tossed with olive oil, lemon juice, Silk chili, salt and pepper on the side.

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