Keith Levenberg
Keith Levenberg
I found this cool place called Ivy City Smokehouse. They make some very tasty smoked salmon sold at a couple spots around town and also have a storefront with a fish counter. The sign out front says "Wholesale to the Public." Yesterday they had live Maryland blue crabs for $1.25 each!
I am new to the crab thing. Could never really figure out the mallet. So I looked up an instructional video on YouTube. Oh! Turns out you only use the mallet for the claws. You just put them palm side up and give them a short, sharp, shock. The rest you get at with a knife and hands. Anyway, I steamed them with a heavy hit of Old Bay. Best $7.50 meal I ever had. Soooooo much better than soft-shells, which I'm starting to suspect are just a tax on people who don't want to deal with the mallet.
Drank with it: 2013 Lucien Aviet Melon a Queue Rouge. This is a new grape to me. Internet sleuthing reveals some disagreement about what, exactly, it is, either chardonnay or a relative of chardonnay. It is not, however, Melon de Bourgogne. The "Queue Rouge" is on account of the red stems. It doesn't taste at all like chardonnay. It tastes a lot like Melon de Bourgogne. Perhaps just the power of suggestion? But if in fact it was *that* Melon it would be one of the best Melons I've ever had. All the briny and quartzy minerality with more flesh and body. Just about perfect with the crabs.
I am new to the crab thing. Could never really figure out the mallet. So I looked up an instructional video on YouTube. Oh! Turns out you only use the mallet for the claws. You just put them palm side up and give them a short, sharp, shock. The rest you get at with a knife and hands. Anyway, I steamed them with a heavy hit of Old Bay. Best $7.50 meal I ever had. Soooooo much better than soft-shells, which I'm starting to suspect are just a tax on people who don't want to deal with the mallet.
Drank with it: 2013 Lucien Aviet Melon a Queue Rouge. This is a new grape to me. Internet sleuthing reveals some disagreement about what, exactly, it is, either chardonnay or a relative of chardonnay. It is not, however, Melon de Bourgogne. The "Queue Rouge" is on account of the red stems. It doesn't taste at all like chardonnay. It tastes a lot like Melon de Bourgogne. Perhaps just the power of suggestion? But if in fact it was *that* Melon it would be one of the best Melons I've ever had. All the briny and quartzy minerality with more flesh and body. Just about perfect with the crabs.