this december we will host our annual "SPAM JAM" dinner!!!
this is not a JOKE!!!
yes canned perfection
it's on, the fine meat product we love so much, will star as our main Ingredient
in this dinner,also the launch in the 1st of a 3 part cookbook series,in which,over 100 recipes from chefs all 'round the low country will be featured.
please feel free to send your favorite recipes to me at
jimihatt@guerrillacuisine.com
don't be left out in the cold!!!
this, the bible in potted meat will be a sought after
gem to anyone who has ever tasted this cherished american food.
thanks,and eat your meat!!!
jimithehatt
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Sunday, October 26, 2008
press in the USA TODAY!!!
Dig in: Jenn Garbee's Secret Suppers is about the underground restaurant movement, which she calls "an Internet-age alternative to classic dining.
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By Jayne Clark, USA TODAY
The latest twist in dining out is a hush-hush affair. These eateries have no sign. And they don't advertise. Still, theunderground restaurant scene is growing, says Jenn Garbee, who has just written Secret Suppers: Rogue Chefs & Underground Restaurants in Warehouses, Townhouses, Open Fields & Everywhere in Between (Sasquatch Books,$18.95). She estimates there are at least 100 such places nationwide, with new ones opening all the time. She talked to USA TODAY about secret suppers.
Q: In a nutshell, what are underground restaurants? Are they essentially dinner parties that strangers pay to attend?
A: They're something in between a dinner party and a supper club (in which members share the cost of dinners at rotating houses). The difference is the members aren't the same every time. There's a donation, but sometimes that doesn't cover anything but expenses. So it's sort of a paid dinner party — or like going to a restaurant where you don't know who's sitting next to you.
Q: What's the origin of the trend?
A: The classic dinner party is disappearing. Everyone's busy; people don't cook. Also, it's a way to meet people. They're as much about the socializing as they are about the food.
Q: How did you learn about the phenomenon?
A: I got an assignment from the Los Angeles Times about two and a half years ago to do a story on the Ghetto Gourmet, an underground restaurant in San Franciscothat was in someone's attic. The more I got into it, the more (restaurants) I found.
Q: Where are they?
A: Mostly in big cities. New York has a lot. And San Francisco. There's even one in Des Moines. They can be harder to find in the South, though there's one in Atlanta andone in Charleston called guerrilla cuisine.
Q: Since they're generally skirting tax and licensing regulations,most operate under the radar.
How did you find them?
A: Most are Internet-driven, so I just Googled "underground restaurants"and "secret supper clubs." You can ask chefs, food folks or at farmersmarkets, and check out food blogs. Iwanted to include different types inthe book in terms of size and locationand the reason the chef is doing it.
Q: Why are they doing it? Is itmore about love of food or a wayto make money?
A: They all started with a food sense. For instance, Supper Underground in Austin is run by a woman who loves to entertain. I went to one last week in L.A. run by a woman
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By Jayne
The lates
Q: In a nutsh
A: They'
Q: What'
A: The class
Q: How did you learn
A: I got an assig
Q: Where
A: Mostl
Q: Since
How did you find them?
A: Most are Inter
Q: Why are they doing
A: They all start