Showing posts sorted by date for query seafood festival. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query seafood festival. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Saturday in the Park

After a rain soaked Labor Day weekend , we were very happy to be given a picture perfect Saturday. We headed out to Lafayette Square in New Orleans to attend the 5th Annual New Orleans Seafood Festival.



We got there right when it opened so we could enjoy looking around without a large crowd. I think the park was a great location to have this small festival. It provided shade and lots of green space.




All of the food vendors were lined up on one side of the park in the shade.










Mr. B's Gazpacheo was refreshing



Remoulade's meat pie wasn't really spicy but it was tasty.


We never did make it to the Luke booth. This picture was taken early and they weren't ready to serve at that time.


Cafe Giovanni's Shrimp and Grits where a huge disappointment. Instead of the expected rich, spicy flavor we found this dish to be too sweet (?)


The fried shrimp and bacon poboy was very, very good!


We sampled the bread pudding and it was delicious.

By this time we were extremely full and needed to move around. We decided to walk around the block from Magazine to Julia and back up St. Charles. There is so much to observe in this area of the city that we played tourist, stopping every few feet whenever something caught our eye.



















I have a slew of other pictures and I plan to do a post on some of those, especially the variety of window styles, in the near future.

Back at Lafayette Square, the crowd at the Festival was growing



and it was almost time for Amanda Shaw to perform.



We first witnessed Amanda's incredible talent 8 years ago when she was 11. At that time she was relatively unknown and her playing blew us away. She has matured since that performance and in my opinion she gets better and better. She sounded fantastic at the Seafood Festival and she got the crowd dancing.










You gotta love being in a place where a busload of tourists drive by a festival and wave at the festival goers!

After Amanda finished we followed our stomach's advice and got in line at Drago's char-broiled oyster booth.




They were worth the wait!!


Drago's was going thru french bread to fast, they had more delivered by cab. LOL




Kermit Ruffins followed Amanda Shaw with his Barbecue Swingers. They played for more than 90 minutes and the crowd loved them.
















Kermit's 19 year old daughter Neshia performed and she has a very sweet voice.


You can tell who her Daddy is, can't you?

We left about 4 and the people were still streaming into the park. It was a fantastically fun day, but it was good to get home, sunburned and full of good memories of a day in New Orleans. We are truely blessed to live here. See you next week!

Sunday, July 03, 2011

Rebirth, festivals and small town America


Happy Independence Day! I'm posting this slap dab in the middle of the 2011 July 4th Weekend and am hoping that the two readers of this post are enjoying themselves. ;)

We spent our "celebrating America's Independence" Day in one of my favorite cities, Bay St. Louis, Mississippi.

Located about 40 minutes from our home in Slidell, Bay St. Louis epitomizes the "comeback city".

On August 29, 2005 Hurricane Katrina made her final landfall at Bay St. Louis. The little town was flattened and it still working on her rebound. In the past six years she's done well.

click on picture for full size version



My husband and I take pleasure from our trips to Bay St. Louis, especially when we want a fantastic burger. We either go to the Mockingbird Cafe or the Buttercup Restaurant. Both restaurants are on the same street. The joys of small town America.

About four years ago we attended the Crab Festival put on by Our Lady of the Gulf Catholic Church in Bay St.Louis and appreciated the atmosphere, food, music and breezes from the Bay. So we decided to revisit the fest this year and were not disappointed.



While we truly love the French Quarter, PoBoy, Oyster and countless other Festivals in New Orleans, the ambience and down home comfort of a festival away from the Crescent City is a welcome hot weather diversion. The OLG (Our Lady of the Gulf) Fest is well done and small enough allow us park our chairs in a shady spot and take off for a few hours of eating and photography and return to find our chairs still there, unoccupied.

There were more than 50 dishes offered, a good deal of them containing the subject of the Festival.



Here is the food we sampled and savored:


Boiled shrimp (very tasty) and Lake Pontchartrain Crabs (sweet crabmeat)


Fried Catfish with fries, hush puppies and coleslaw


Crabmeat pie and fried softshell crab with cole slaw and seafood smashed potatoes

In between stuffing our faces we took walks and pictures. Our first foray was thru the arts section of Bay St. Louis.


This sweet little courtyard is dedicated to Jean Baptiste Le Moyne, a colonizer in the Gulf Coast region.


Here is a closeup of the plaque in the opening of the courtyard. Apparently Bay St. Louis was originally named Shieldsboro after Thomas Shields, a ship's purser.

Main Street is the section of town that I love to haunt. It has shops and galleries that beg to be discovered.


This building is one of the few that survived the 30 foot storm surge of Katrina.


One of the tenants of this building, Bay Breeze, rents bikes and kayaks. It also sells home furnishings.


A little watering hole on Main Street by the Bay.


One of the art galleries we visited was Maggie May's, a purveyor of local art.

I asked the owner if I could take pictures inside and she said as long as it's not of the artwork. So I took a picture of this nifty glass block window:



There were some very nice pieces and paintings in the gallery which takes up a city block. Plus it has air conditioning, making it a perfect spot if you're visiting BSL in the summer to take a break from the heat. Attached to the gallery is Lulu, a great little spot to catch a bite to eat. .



Moving across the street we found one of our favorite bread baker Serious Bread. We went inside and got a lovely, crusty loaf of bread and two craisin scones along with a complementary bottle of water from the owner himself! Mr Jensen makes fantastic scones, not dry like most that I've sampled.

Fueled up for another leg on our jouney around downtown Bay St. Louis, we carried on and soon discovered the sweetest little community garden which seems to be doing well despite our dry conditions this summer. Here are some pictures of their crops:










This old place is right next to the Mockingbird Restaurant on 2nd Street.


In the garden outside the Mockingbird is this very cool bottle tree.



On the other side of the Mockingbird Cafe is The Shops at Century Hall. Originally built by the Woodmen of the World for fraternal functions, Century Hall now houses an art gallery and many rooms of vintage antiques and one of a kind items. It's a great place to spend an hour or two.



Here are some of the sights we found interesting:






I found this piece to be rather spooky.


I love this stained glass. Unfortunately, my little tiny house has no room for it.




There is a room devoted to old kitchen tools.


Another room is filled with folk artist and Bay St. Louis resident Alice Moseley's work, including this video of Alice explaining her art. In another part of BSL you can visit Miss Moseley's home, which is now a museum.




This plaque depicts the story of BSL's "angel tree". The background to the story is here..


Century Hall's next door neighbor is an ancient cemetery, which I found fascinating.


Doves carved into a tree that died from the saltwater intrusion from The Storm seem to flutter among the graves.


some graves were behind old gates like this one


This angel, most likely carved from a Katrina tree, presides over the small cemetery.



Back at the Crab Fest they were still boiling crabs and shrimp



Ceiling fans and the breeze from the Bay kept it tolerable in the afternoon.

We decided to catch some of the more unique and patriotic outfits at the fest













One of the bands that played early in the day was the 41st National Guard Army Band They rocked.


Toward the late afternoon, we took a walk toward St. Stanislaus College and chilled out on the bench, watching the Bay and the crowds.






Seeing the beach being restored six years after the storm is very heartwarming .

All in all it was a relaxing and enjoyable trip. One that assures us that we will

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