Food and Art

POSTED: Tuesday, February 10, 2009, 12:01 AM
Filed Under: Contests | Food and Art

It's no secret that on the first Friday of every month, Philadelphia's artistic underbelly comes out of hiding to patronize the city's latest/greatest galleries, stores and restaurants. Among the veteran draws, however, are a handful of surrounding-area shindigs attempting to gain footing in the mayhem.

Hosted at Haverford Estates by First Friday Main Line (FFML), a local non-profit that promote and supports artists in Ardmore, Haverford and Bryn Mawr, this past Friday's inaugural Foodapalooza was one of these infant events. The evening featured seven different restaurants from the Philadelphia area, all of which provided a starving buffet line with grub that was (by the time I got to it) systemically picked clean, save for a pretty-darn-good plate of rigatoni, tomatoes and vegetables. Aside from the buffet, the event (a fundraiser for FFML) also featured wine tastings courtesy of the Chaddsford Winery and the Wine Merchant of Venice, as well as an glistening chocolate fondue fountain courtesy of Whole Foods. (I was slightly tempted to stick my hand into it since the table full of fruit and cake underneath was quickly reduced to a smattering crumbs and empty trays.) Although the wine and sweets were definitely flowing, it was clear that the restaurants just couldn't keep up with the enormous crowd, which eagerly circled tables like a flock of beady-eyed birds.

The insatiable attendees weren't the only anxious-looking people there, either, since the primary component of Foodapalooza was a competition pitting the participating eateries — Auspicious, Café San Pietro, Fuji Mountain, McCloskey's, Mediterranean Grill, JR Monaghan's and Primavera Pizza Kitchen — against each other in an appetizer cookoff. Each restaurant's plate was rated based on four components: flavor, presentation, originality and texture. The judging panel consisted of local chef/author Aliza Green, restaurant consultant Linda Lipsky, food writer Irene Rothchild and Democratic state senator Daylin Leach. According to these four, the top participants included the pork tenderloin appetizer with a horseradish cream sauce presented by McCloskey's, which received second place, and the shrimp and scallops dish whipped up by Primavera chef Tim Mellor, who took home the gold. What put his dish on top? Rothschild and Green both agreed that the sauce was perfect, noting its subtle seafood flavor and creamy texture.

But what about the event as a whole — was it successful as a first try? "It's a beginning," said Green. "The food was good, but I don't think that they were expecting as big a crowd as they got, and that's where they suffered." Green was quick to note that every fledgling event has its "birth pains," and predicted that 2010's installment would be bigger and better.

FFML chair Sherry Tillman said that the main aim of the evening was to bring people closer to the art in their community by creating a fundraiser that could collect the money to keep artists thriving. If that was the objective, then Foodapalooza was an undoubted success.


FFML
Posted 2009-02-11 16:22:14
Thanks for coming to our event and thank you for the coverage and photos, both of which are just super.  What the event also was for was to showcase our local First Friday Main Line participating restuarants, which are all very supportive of First Friday Main Line.



The Wine Merchant Limited is from King of Prussia, PA and they rep many fine wineries.



We can't wait for Foodapalooza II and ask you to save the date for Carnivale in March!



Thanks again!!!  We love City Paper for coming to the 'burbs!

Meal Ticket :: Blog Archive :: Everything But the Oink: ScrappleFest 2009 :: Philadelphia City Paper :: Philadelphia Arts, Restaurants, Music, Movies, Jobs, Classifieds, Blogs
Posted 2009-03-23 11:15:51
[...] Where publisher Laura Burkhardt and chef/author Aliza Green (who lent her expertise to the recent Main Line Foodapalooza) as a judge in the recipe contest, which featured RTM vendors’ scrapple renditions. Some [...] 

SCRAPPLEFEST 2009 « Messy and Picky
Posted 2009-09-14 03:01:32
[...] Where publisher Laura Burkhardt and chef/author Aliza Green (who lent her expertise to the recent Main Line Foodapalooza) as a judge in the recipe contest, which featured RTM vendors' scrapple renditions. Some [...] 
Posted by Lauren Fleming @ 12:01 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, January 22, 2009, 8:10 PM
Filed Under: Food and Art
Whipped Bakeshop on Flickr

Baking-goddess-about-town Zoë Lukas of Whipped Bakeshop, who created the deliciously amazing work for City Paper's 2008 Choice Awards, has come up with the ultimate tech fanboy confection: She used a custom cookie cutter to create these Apple Logo Cookies, which feature a vanilla sugar base and almond royal icing. Horde these so you have something thematic to snack on while you're waiting for Brasserie Perrier to become an Apple Store.


felcia
Posted 2009-01-23 10:25:04
GASP!  These are so cute and blazing white and perfect.  Does that make me a fanboy?   Do they cost $1,999 each?
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 8:10 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, January 14, 2009, 3:07 PM
Filed Under: Food and Art
 drawingforfood.blogspot.com

Philly-based artists Hawk Krall and Kris Chau, who run the blog Drawing for Food, have posted an illustrated list of their favorite eats around the city in 2008. Among the picks: Cosmi's for best hoagie, Pub & Kitchen for best bar snacks, El Jarocho for best Mexican, Artisan Boulangerie for best reason to wake up in South Philly ("Fresh baked baguettes and brioches and the best damned croissants in the city, I say this with passion and a little bit of spit"); and much more. Read the full list on their blog. Nicely done, guys!

(Chau did a great illustration for my Dec. '08 story about restaurant secret shopper Marc Kravitz.)

Posted by Drew Lazor @ 3:07 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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Founded in October 2008, Meal Ticket is a City Paper blog about food, drink and assorted other things that make you go mmm. We do recipes, interviews, restaurant news, commentary and much more. We don't do restaurant reviews herethose are handled in print, mostly by our critic (and Meal Ticket contributor) Adam Erace. Got a tip, question, thought or concern? Just want to say hello? Please shoot a note to caroline@citypaper.net.

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