September 7, 2007

I think I'm becoming a foodie


As soon as Lisa gets home this evening, we're probably going out to the Market Street Wine Shop in Charlottesville for their free weekly tasting. We did that last week too, and it's fun. And I mentioned free, right?

We've also made a habit of hitting the weekly farmers market that sets up shop down the street on Saturdays. It's tomato season, and we've been going a little nuts with the heirloom varieties -- probably spending a good 50-60 bucks on tomatoes alone in the past three weeks. We also invested in a new wine rack, because, well, we had too many bottles for the other one to handle.

Which leads me to wonder:



Have I become a foodie?

The answer, I think, is a qualified yes -- qualified because I had Wendy's for lunch yesterday, and sometimes I just want to sit on the couch and eat potato chips out of the bag.

But I also get excited by the prospect of cooking dinner a couple times a week, and by the idea of trying a new restaurant -- which, let's face it, is one of the good things about moving. The restaurants are almost all new.

The wine thing, too, is a recent development. Five years ago I probably would never have ordered a glass of wine with a meal. I was a beer snob, sure (and still am), but wine was a little outside my realm of experience.

Funny what a couple trips to Santa Barbara will do for that, though. Now, we have 20 bottles from all over sitting in our new wine rack, and if we try something at a restaurant that we like, we write down the name so we can find a bottle of it later. We spent an afternoon last weekend on part of the Monticello Wine Trail, drinking some surprisingly good (and a couple of really not very good) local wines.

Twice, we have stuffed dates with blue cheese, wrapped pork products around them and baked them.

A lot of this -- including the blue cheese-stuffed dates, which we had during our stopover in St. Louis -- started on the trip. We made a conscious and pretty successful effort not to eat big-box food while we were on the road, and that idea has pretty well carried over once we got here. Charlottesville also seems blessed with an inordinate number of good restaurants for a town its size, so there's probably no need for us ever to set foot in an Applebee's.

So now, I guess, the trick will be keeping this all in check, remaining a food lover while not tipping over into nose-in-the-air territory. I suspect that won't be too hard -- we both love our cheez-with-a-z too much to become true snobs.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rick, I haven't met you yet, but I'm Lisa's friend Christine. I have two things to say - One, I'm kind of a foodie too but I still eat at fast food places sometimes too. Two, reading your blog entry tonight makes me wish I could hit the "pause" button on my two young children so my husband and I could join you guys on your food and wine outings. We don't get out enough, as Lisa can attest to. But now that you're here, we'll have to get a sitter. Can't wait to meet you!

Anonymous said...

Rick,

i have met you. i don't think you are bcoming a foodie or winey. I think it has always been dormant. You just finally, luckily, have someone to share it with

Anonymous said...

Rick, I think you can be a foodie without being a food snob. I think all foodie really means is a lover of all cuisines who appreciates when something superb is put in front you. Take back the word!

That said, I admire both of your restraints for keeping wine unopened in the house long enough to need a wine rack and I could really go for a blue cheese stuffed date wrapped in a pork product right about now.