A Food Cart Infodump In Honor of Cleveland’s Nascent Food Cart Program

Cleveland food cart applications due Feb. 22: What do you want to eat on the street? | Taste: Food and Wine from The Plain Dealer – cleveland.com – – cleveland.com

Alex Malarkey, Cleveland’s food carts, near misses at Hopkins and federal aid for community health centers: Whatever Happened To? | Metro – cleveland.com – cleveland.com

A la [...]

Two New Pizzerias

Crostata's has some new competition

C-Town Eats reports on the opening of a new pizzeria in Little Italy: La Pizzeria. Their website promises the best pizza and gelato in Little Italy. C-Town Eats report doubles as a very favorable review, but also questions whether the area isn’t already saturated. Maybe, I’m not aware [...]

Ceviche Bar

Awesome ceviche. Sorry, I can't tell you where to find it.

Ceviche Bar is right next to Europa, which itself is relatively new. That space housed a Middle Eastern restaurant and a gastropub, but most people remember it as The Lion and the Lamb. Ceviche Bar has a dozen different types of ceviche [...]

Three December Events

Pear, pancetta salad at Sapore. Fantastic.

December 8, 2009 7 – 10pm : Beer Dinner at Buckeye Beer Engine

“Happy Holiday’s Beer Engine Fans. We wanted to remind everyone about our next beer dinner which is next Tuesday at 7:00pm. This will be a special beer dinner because of course it will [...]

A new steakhouse in the Boulevard Blue space?

Good. Why so big? Seriously. Is there a reason? Why can't I have a 4oz piece of beef in a steakhouse?

According to new-to-me blog At The Pass, Boulevard Blue is closed:

Our sources tell us, to look for another restaurant to open in Boulevard Blue’s former location the near [...]

A busy month at fire food and drink

lamb sirloin and lamb ravioli at a past fire Wine Society dinner

fire food and drink has five events scheduled during the next five weeks.

October 26, 2009 6:30 � 9:30pm : Traditional Indian dinner at fire food and drink

October 28, 2009 6:30 � 9:30pm : Fire Wine Society Fall Dinner at [...]

Asian Town Center – Finally! Crust and Crumb returns – Finally!

I've never had a banh mi that I didn't like. They get extra points for making the bun. But you have to remember to ask for the hot peppers which I thought was weird.

Asian Town Center was announced two years ago. It’s managed by the family that owns Asia Foods. I’m a [...]

Home style Indian food delivered to your office door

Dabbawala: Essen Lieferservice in Mumbai by Bahadur Singh aus Rajasthan, Indien

Knock, Knock. It’s Indian Comfort Food

As executive director of a large nonprofit organization in Santa Clara, Mr. Desai barely has time to leave his office, but eating a good lunch is a high priority for him. Food from any [...]

Polish boy; Ice cream; Clam Bake; lunch at fire

Polish boy. From Seti's.

Lunch at fire food and drink

According to Cleveland Independents, fire is going to start serving lunch on October 2. They’ll serve lunches on Fridays and Saturdays throughout the month and continue if there’s some interest.

I wasn’t a part of Cleveland’s clam bake culture. Cleveland Foodie offers a short list of restaurants [...]

Sep 15, 2009: Local Beer & Harvest Dinner at Grovewood Tavern

Local Beer! Yum-yum. Drink ‘em up.
“Buy local. Not a new concept but one that is not often practiced or understood. Especially given the American mindset in which we’re entitled to get whatever we want, from wherever we want, whenever we want.

In the July/August 2003 issue of Utne, an article titled ‘Funny Money’ discusses the creation of local currencies to encourage local spending, but what caught our attention was when the author stated:

‘Buying local helps keep your money circulating through your hometown: paying your neighbors’ salaries, boosting local government revenues and so on. But when you fork over your cash to a national chain, your money gets whisked away in that night’s deposit.’

So true. Apply this to beer consumption, and you’d most likely see more local beer scenes prosper and the chances of a giant national brand taking a foothold decrease. Buying local beer also promotes interest in the local brewing scene, both with consumers and business owners within the industry – bars, restaurants, package stores and whatnot. And, as a result, your chances of getting more fresh local beer on tap and on the shelves increases. Buy a mega-national brand and you merely strengthen its consumer reach, and support its mega-advertising campaigns and corporate lifestyle, but you take dollars, tap handles, shelf space and, potentially, jobs away from local breweries. And that’s not cool.”

From BeerAdvocate, August 2003

Our own beer goddess, Vicki Weisent, presents!

Beer……Course
Indigo Imp Blonde Bombshell (Cleveland, 6.2 ABV)……Grilled Flatbread with pears, blue chèvre and Dijon cream.
Imp beers are naturally carbonated, unfiltered, un-pasteurized, Real Ales. Blonde Bombshell is an American blonde ale with a smooth malty taste, moderate hop bitterness, and slightly fruity and nutty aftertaste.

Fat Heads Brewery Oktoberfest (North Olmsted, 5 ABV)……Squash Blossom & Chicken Saltimbocca, tempura’d yellow beans.
Fat Heads Brewery recently opened with much anticipation in Cleveland. Brewer Matt Cole spent more than a decade at Rocky River Brewing, and has been called “one of Ohio’s best and most innovative beer makers.” Formed in partnership with Pittsburgh’s beloved Fat Heads local chain, the North Olmsted incarnation has met with rave reviews. Imported German Malts give this Fest Bier a deep copper color which is balanced by imported by German Noble Hops. This beer is smooth and highly drinkable.

The Brew Kettle Old 21 Imperial IPA (Strongsville, 9.5 ABV)…… Moroccan-Spiced Pork Chop, Ohio peach chutney.
The Brew Kettle opened its doors in the fall of 1995 as Ohio’s First Brew-On-Premise Microbrewery. This double IPA is made with 11 additions of Simoc hop for 21 lbs. of hops total. Nice aroma of pine, citrus, toast, and sweet caramel malts. Pours a bright golden amber with a decent head and lacing. Nice sweetness – caramel with some citrus fruitiness. Some toasted malts as well. A resiny pine finish lingers for a while. Nice bitterness, the base malt seems perfect for the hop flavor as it is very harmonious and drinkable.

Buckeye Brewing Old Mammoth Stout (Lakewood, 6.5 ABV)……Coffee & Ancho-Braised Short Ribs, molasses-roasted baby acorn squash.
Rich roasted aroma. Lots of cocoa on the nose with a light hint of coffee and peat. As it warms a nice touch of molasses starts to come through. Smooth, molasses and cocoa roll across the tongue from the very onset; rich and creamy chocolate notes flood the palate and leave a long and lasting mark. On the finish, a silky smooth mouthfeel and good carbonation, and a moderate, lingering bitterness.

Cellar Rats Ratsberry Porter (Madison, 6 ABV)……Deep Dark Chocolate Cheesecake, fresh berries.
Cellar Rats Brewery, located within Debonné Vineyards, is fairly new on the micro-brew scene, however brings together a team with years of experience. Active trio Brian Burns (assistant wine maker & brewer), Tony Debevc (the younger), and Ed Trebets (chemist and wine maker) have been brewing small batches of brew since 2008. Ratsberry combines their signature, creamy, espresso-laced black plague porter with natural raspberry flavoring. A great combo of cascade hops, black malts and berry fruit.
Fellow food tourists, join us on our trip around the local beer block. I promise you won’t be disappointed.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009
by reservation only
216-531-4900
20090915T183000

Local Beer & Harvest Dinner

Location: Grovewood [...]