For the past couple of months, we have hosted a special guest in our home. Feline Been is the daughter of our good friend Marina Mengleberg. Marina, Feline, and her brother Alec all live in the small Tuscan village of Barberino-Tavarnelle. In addition to being friends with Marina we work together hosting tours in Tuscany and other Italian locales. I have gotten to know her children over the years and— even though I didn’t go through the official ceremony— I consider them both my godchildren.
Marina,
Feline, and Alec are Dutch but have lived in Tuscany for two decades. For the
past several years I have told Feline and Alec that they need to come to
America for an extended visit when they graduate from high school. Feline, an
excellent student, just finished her final year— second in her class— and is
taking a gap year before attending college in the Netherlands. Her first gap-year
stint was spent in Amsterdam. The final leg of her gap year will be spent in
Bali. In between she is in my hometown of Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
A cynic
would say, “How does Mississippi belong in a grouping of Amsterdam and Bali?” We’ll
cover that later.
The Dutch-Italians had a blast during their initial visit to Mississippi in the summer of 2019, and we are glad to have Feline back with us. In 2019 we covered New Orleans, Mississippi, and the Panhandle of Florida. This trip has mainly been in Mississippi with a few jaunts into New Orleans.
There is
something deep inside of me that enjoys hosting people. I think that is why leading
tours in Europe has been so rewarding and in demand. For Feline’s visit I
wanted to cover all the bases in my hometown, and the surrounding area— food,
art, culture, events, and entertainment.
The food
area has been an interesting challenge. In my mind, our local cuisine holds up
to the cuisine of Holland, but it’s tough when we’re up against Italy—
specifically Tuscany. I’ve forced a lot of gumbo into her diet. One doesn’t
realize the shortcomings of their own diet until hosting someone from another
country. Cream-based dressings and sauces are virtually non-existent in Tuscany.
American teenagers live on Ranch dressing.
Her
favorite meals have been the times we have sat around the table as a family.
Though I have never realized that chicken pot pie looks like it’s already been
eaten and come back up until I served it for dinner the first night. I don’t
think she noticed, and she ate it all, so we passed that test.
We haven’t
had as many at-home dinners because I am in the middle of recipe testing for
the new breakfast cookbook that will be released this fall. Three nights a week
we have been in The Midtowner after closing eating all manner of breakfast
foods. She loves muffins, acai bowls and adores French toast.
Feline has
joined me for breakfast most mornings at table 19 in The Midtowner. That’s
where she fell in love with the acai bowl and French toast, but her main go-tos
were avocado toast and the Skinny Elvis (wheat toast, peanut butter, granola,
bananas, honey, and fresh berries).
She was
able to attend several Mardi Gras parties with us and has recently in love with
crawfish. The local cuisine seems to be what she loves most— etouffee,
jambalaya, and pecans. She really likes pecans, and she fell in love with chicken and dumplings. She has been a joy to be around
and has been a perfect house guest.
It appears
that we’re on some strange exchange program over here these days. Marina’s
daughter is over here, and our son, Harrison, is in Florence and working for a
friend of mine who owns a restaurant in Marina and Feline’s little Tuscan town.
Harrison
wants to go into the restaurant business, and I set out an eight-year plan that
he needs to accomplish if he’s going to come back and work in our restaurants.
After this stint cooking in Tuscany, he’ll go to culinary school to become a
chef, and then he’ll get out and go to work for other people for two years.
That will include another stint cooking in Italy, and then down to New Orleans
for three six-month stints (stages in chef talk). Then, and only then, will he
be able to come back and work in one of our restaurants. But I have told him, “No
matter what your degree says and no matter where you have worked and what your
titles were, you are going to start at the bottom. But you’ll have the
opportunity to work your way up.” He seems to be down with the plan.
In the
meantime, Feline’s days in Mississippi are numbered. But so are ours. She’ll
fly back home to Tuscany Saturday where she’ll spend a little time before
heading to the South Pacific. My wife and I are headed to Spain to host one of
my travel groups, and to film a season of my new television show, “Yonderlust”
in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Majorca, Seville, and Malaga. It’s a trip that
was supposed to happen in March of 2020, and then rescheduled to March of 2021.
We are finally going. From there we will head to Tuscany to host three groups
before having some friends join us for a week. The bonus is we’ll get to see
our son often, as he works in the Tuscan town where our villas are located and
we get into Florence often, where the apartment he’s renting is located.
Back to
the cynical thought that many Mississippians might be thinking, “How does
Mississippi belong in a grouping of Amsterdam and Bali?” Mississippi is an
exotic land to most of the Europeans I have met through the years. We get down on
ourselves and sometimes can’t see the forest for the pine trees, but we are
truly the state that birthed America’s music. We’ll give New Orleans credit for
jazz. But the blues grew straight out of the Mississippi Delta, and if you
believe Muddy Waters— and I do— that “The blues had a baby and they named the
baby rock and roll,” you don’t have to go too far east of the Delta to arrive
at Elvis Presley— the king of said rock and roll’s— birthplace. A short trek
down Highway 45 from Tupelo will land you in Meridian, home of Jimmie Rogers,
the father of country music.
The
Europeans know that we gave that music to the world, and according to Feline
Been the food is pretty good, too.
Onward.
Chicken and Dumplings
2 quarts Water
2 quarts Chicken broth
1 large Carrot, peeled and cut into large pieces
1 large Onion, peeled and cut into large pieces
1 stalk Celery, peeled and cut into large pieces
1 Bay leaf
1 Tbl.
2 -3 lb Chicken, whole
Place all ingredients in a large stockpot and simmer for two
hours. Gently remove chicken, cool and pick the meat from the carcass. Cut into
bite-size pieces and set aside. Strain the chicken broth and return to a large
saucepot.
Dumplings
3 cups Flour
1 Tbl. Poultry seasoning
3 /4 cup Crisco
3 /4 cup Cold milk
Combine flour and seasoning. Use a fork to cut the shortening
into the seasoned flour. Add cold milk and mix until a ball forms. Place dough
on a floured surface and knead it for five minutes. Divide dough into two
parts. On a generously floured surface, roll dough to 1 /8-inch thickness. Cut
dumplings into one-inch squares and sprinkle with flour to prevent sticking
while you roll out remaining dough. Place dumplings in refrigerator and repeat
the process with the other half of the dough.
Reheat chicken broth on high, to a rapid boil. Quickly drop dumplings in broth (make sure they are separated to prevent them from clumping). Once broth returns to a boil, lower heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Add cooked chicken into pot and simmer for 10 more minutes. Remove from heat and allow the mixture to rest for 15 minutes before serving.
Yield: 8-10 servings
14 comments:
This is really good to read.
Thanks for posting KF and thanks to Robert for writing and posting.
This will not make the cut but here it goes. Gap years in Bali and Amsterdam. I am trying to get the appeal here.......does RSJ pay you to post these "better than you" marathons ?
I've heard it all now. A chef writing about cats. I've always suspected the obvious, but typically about Chinese chefs.
I don't understand why there is an inevitable jealous comment every RSJ post. He's a friendly guy, very generous, and great at what he does. Let the man live.
Gonna tell a little story and it won't take long. Right John...right. :)
1:35 : Pure jealousy. Speaking for myself.
Cracker Barrel and Olive Garden crew reppin for their food!
I find RSJ's literary musings uplifting and entertaining. Thank you for posting.
It is sad that small, jealous, unsuccessful people (like @1:14PM) trash others because they have accomplished good something in life.
I just turned 40 and I have two US passports full of visa stamps spanning 20 years of travel. The USA is an absolute shithole compared to the nicest places of Europe and Japan. Europeans consider a visit to the USA, and Mississippi specifically, like an African Safari. That’s it, period. It gives them social credibility in Europe for visiting impoverished places. They don’t see anything that awes them here. The vast biodiversity is the only thing that really makes an impact on them. They have cities older than ours and technology more advanced than ours. They take better care of their poor and hold their rich more accountable.
You can be a poor Detroit hood-rat and get invited to spend a year with a rich North Korean family and later write puff pieces about how great life is in Pyongyang. Doesn’t make life in Pyongyang really that great though.
I'm sorry, somebody needs to say it:
Nobody gives a shit about your very good friends from Tuscany and Amsterdam. If it were remotely interesting that would be one thing. But it's not.
It's just you finding ways to shoehorn in the fact that you're kinda marginally affluent, and hang around affluent people whose kids take gap years in Bali before attending college in other countries.
You're a boring writer and you need to stop.
What he needs to focus on is the “crowd” at his new Fondren project. He may not understand how quickly it WILL go from charming to a place to be avoided. See Metrocenter, Northpark Mall, North Gate, Capitol Street, Ridgewood Road right by the old Sam’s Club. I think you get the point…
I love seeing all of the nut-huggers come out of the woodwork to defend this humble-bragging dude. One doesn't have to be jealous of someone else to not give a shit about all of the "amazing" things this person wants to brag about.
3:16 : Wow. He's talking....always talking about fugging Tuscany ! I've traveled the globe three times big boy and seen it all and have even been to Tuscany(it's very nice). I am trolling simply because these articles seem way out of place here. Having a bit of fun. Have a day to like.
In this article, RSJ promotes his cookbook, his restaurant, his Italian tour, his Spanish tour, and his TV show. His articles are an endless parade of bragging about all of his stuff. How in the world he missed the opportunity to mention the Capri is beyond me. This is an advertisement, every week. It's tacky.
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