Archive: June, 2010

POSTED: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 8:14 PM
Filed Under: Where'd We Eat?
Photo | Drew Lazor
Took CP photo/video dude Neal Santos out for lunch, and he pulled some classic Neal Santos-style shenanigans. But where?

Neal
Posted 2010-06-02 15:30:40
I need a haircut.

Andy B.
Posted 2010-06-02 15:19:25
500 Degrees?

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-02 15:21:49
Holy fastness! You are correct, Andy B. Neal got the classic, I got the "Ranger" Burger of the Week (lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, cheddar, BBQ, bacon) and we split an order of spicy fries. Also I drank two cherry sodas and I'M FREAKING OUT BECAUSE IT IS SO SUGARY

Don
Posted 2010-06-02 16:46:41
I don't think so.

Andy B.
Posted 2010-06-02 17:44:18
When I'm on, I'm on.  That Jersey shore dinner sounds sick too.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 8:14 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 6:11 PM
Filed Under: Openings
Laura Novak Photography
A second Brown Betty Petite (the first one's near 20th and Spruce and opened in '08, joining the original Brown Betty in Liberties Walk) is set to open near the 17th Street entrance of Liberty Place this coming Monday, June 7. In addition to cupcakes, the shop will regularly carry 6-inch layer cakes and what they're calling "Nudies," all-natural confections sweetened with fruit and fruit juice in lieu of added sugar. Mother/daughter team Linda and Norrinda Brown will be handing out free-cupcake coupons (redeemable in July) for the grand opening.

Tweets that mention Philly's latest Brown Betty location opens June 7: -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-02 13:35:52
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Kate O'Donnell, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Philly's latest Brown Betty location opens June 7: http://bit.ly/c1hYEc [...] 

Ticket Stubs: Meal Ticket Weekly Recap, May 31-June 4 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-07 11:10:34
[...] - Brown Betty opens up shop in the Shops at Liberty Place.  [...] 

Reminder: Brown Betty No. 3 opens today :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-07 11:51:45
[...] Brown Betty Petite starts hawking cupcakes inside The Shops at Liberty Place (1625 Chestnut St.) today, joining the dessert boutique’s locations in NoLibs and Rittenhouse. They’ll be giving out coupons for free cupcakes, but they won’t be redeemable until July, kinda like a post-dated check with frosting. The Shops at Liberty Place are open Monday to Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunda from noon to 6 p.m.   Reminder: Brown Betty No. 3 opens today [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 6:11 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 5:27 PM
Filed Under: Openings
Steve Poses, fresh off this past weekend's debut of Frog Burger, is rolling out an indoor café at the Franklin Institute themed around the Cleopatra exhibit that opens this Saturday. It's a "pop-up café" operation situated on the Franklin's second-floor terrace. Poses and chef Abderrazzack Ftouh have developed a menu that's mainly Middle Eastern in approach (babaganoush, grape leaves, skewers, etc.), but Ftouh's also worked in some more subtle touches from his native Morocco. They'll also serve wine and beer, plus thematic cocktails like the "Nefertini" (Absolut Raspberry, Chambord, Pomegranate) and something called the "Cleopolitan." Cleo's Portico will be open only to museum patrons. Hours, starting June 5: Thu.-Sat., noon-8 p.m.; Sun., noon-5 p.m. UPDATE [08jun10]: Added a few photos of Cleo's Portico after the jump.

Tweets that mention Chef debuting Cleo's Portico at this weekend: -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-02 13:29:01
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Rich Pawlak, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Chef @Sposes debuting Cleo's Portico at @thefranklin this weekend: http://bit.ly/cEvB30 [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 5:27 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 4:25 PM
Philly Beer Week is such an omnipresence that even the BYOs are getting in on it. At Kanella (1001 Spruce St.), chef Konstantinos Pitsillides is cooking a "head to toe" dinner, paired with international beers provided by The Foodery, on Monday, June 7. Pitsillides, who's passionate about honoring the whole animal, will cook cuts like lamb's tongue, duck liver and rabbit saddle; for dessert he's doing a milk custard using mastic, the uncommon ingredient Trey Popp told you about recently in our food section. The six-course, seven-beer dinner, which'll start at 6 p.m., costs $85; tickets are available at both Foodery locations (837 N. Second St. and 324 S. 10th St.) as well as at the restaurant. Full menu, with beer pairings, after the jump. Pretty Things Jack D'or Saison and Baby Tree Quadruple // Lamb tongue and pickled vegetables 1809 Berlinner Weisse // Pan fried baby sepia and tabouleh Schlenkerla Helles Lager // Duck liver with onions and onion seed and Zaatar spiced crostini Cantillon Gueuze // Beetroot salad with cilantro and Kefaloytri cheese and a yogurt and tahini dressing served Dulle Teve Triple // Grillled saddle of rabbit with fingerling potatoes and wild nettles Cider Bouche Etienne Dupont // Mahalepi: Lebanese Milk Custard with Mastic gum

Tweets that mention Kanella and "head to toe" beer dinner: -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-02 11:49:57
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Adam Erace, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Kanella and @fooderybeer's "head to toe" beer dinner: http://bit.ly/aVZW0i [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 4:25 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, June 1, 2010, 8:48 PM
Filed Under: Booze | Dealage | Happy Hour Hopper
Happy Hour is a place to vent daily frustrations and unwind, a time to reconnect with friends and coworkers you don't mind seeing beyond the boundaries of Cubicle Land. It's is also the ideal time to score a deal on your favorite gustatives and gulpables. Although my work scenario has me behind a kitchen prep station rather than a desk, I can appreciate HH just the same. For this feature, I'll hop bar by bar to HHs across the area and report back to Meal Ticket every Tuesday. If you've been to this week's featured HH, tell us about it in the comments. I want recommendations for future trips, too! Let's delve into it at MidAtlantic.
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WHERE YOU AT? I've got to be honest, I've stayed away from University City for my happy-houring because I was fearful I'd be consumed in a crowd of obnoxious, barely 21-year-old kids-gone-wild. Now that school's out I felt it would be a bit tamer and their antics wouldn't crush a good time at MidAtlantic (3711 Market St.). Situated at street level in the Science Center building, MidAtlantic's got major space, including an outdoor patio and a roomy bar separated from the equally spacious dining room by a rustic, wooden communal table. With such a vast assortment and such nice weather I weighed my perching options, but that was short-lived — my duty as Happy Hour Hopper is best fulfilled at the bar, this time atop a backless stool pulled up to a 15-seat metallic surface, with a great view of the beer walk-in and red-white-and-blue-stained wood-paneled wall behind it. WHAT'S THE SCENE? As hopped out of my cab I heard mufflings of Frank Sinatra's "My Way" and feared it was coming from the restaurant. (I wasn't in a Rat Pack mood.) After spinning a few circles looking for a speaker I could kick my foot through, I saw a man zip down Market Street on his motorized wheelchair, mic-in-hand. A West Philly sighting of Sonny Forriest Jr.! After not being able to produce evidence of last week's three-man wonder and Prince-wannabe sightings, I learned my lesson and snapped a photo. Things inside were much more serene. Aside from employees it was just me on the premises, but I was soon joined by my HHH partner-in-crime, a few repairmen savoring sips after a job and a few corporate coworkers doing the same. I confessed my initial reservations about U-City happy hours to the ‘tender, Joe, and he reminded me of the nocturnal habits of college students. I forgot how cool it is to sit in your matchbox-size dorm room for 7 hours, get wasted then wander around campus. My comments may or may not have annoyed/upset/offended the guy flying solo next to me, who conspicuously got up and relocated to a high-top table. Was it something I said? WHAT'S THE DEAL? Initially, Joe told me three select drafts (Kenzinger, Stoudt's and Lionshead) were on special for $3 each in addition to two wines (Pinot Grigio and Shiraz) and two cocktails (Root Tea Julep and Skukyhill Fish House Punch) for $5 each during MidAtlantic's happy hour that lasts 4:30 to 6:30 every Monday to Friday. Enter Manager-Who-Made-My-Day: He tells Joe to offer all draft pours, excluding the Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA (dammit), for $3. WHOO! This week's draft list included the aforementioned plus Brooklyner Weisse, Dock Street's Royal Bohemian Pilsner and its Rye IPA. For research's sake I tried the Root Tea Julep then finished off with numerous Rye IPAs. I'm a sucker for hops.

Tweets that mention HAPPY HOUR HOPPER: MidAtlantic :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-01 22:01:44
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by MarieDiFeliciantonio, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: It's Tuesday — HAPPY HOUR HOPPER time! This week @luckyporkchops makes a go of it at @MidAtlantic3711: http://bit.ly/ar7pGK [...] 
Posted by Marie DiFeliciantonio @ 8:48 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, June 1, 2010, 6:52 PM
Filed Under: Notes from the Weekend
Notes from the Weekend is a Monday Tuesday (this week) feature that sees the members of Team Meal Ticket compiling all the food/drink highlights uncovered during prime eatin' time, Friday to Sunday. Consider this a place for good deals, great dishes, wicked cocktails, recipe triumphs (and tragedies), bizarro conversations and more. We're eager to share our notes, but especially excited to read yours. We encourage you to leave notes from YOUR weekend in the comments. Have at it! (View past NFTW installments at citypaper.net/notes.)
DL: Drew Lazor MD: Marie DiFeliciantonio
Friday night, revisited my old pal chicken and waffles at Jones (700 Chestnut St.). We hadn't spoken in a minute. Drank bourbon and talked about the cult of Sex and the City with the quite-chipper bartender. —DL Family LBI weekend plans were derailed by the slow-moving construction company that's remodeling our house, so I offered my pad as a getaway from city life. We sat out back, smoked cigars, drank Stellas and ate hot dogs and fancified burgers made with oyster sauce, soy sauce, cilantro, garlic and ginger. We also drank a $10 Chardonnay from Cupcake winery, which wasn't bad for the price. —MD
Saturday brunch: Mowed through a purple broccoli/cheddar/bacon omelette, plus a side of scrapple (gotta do it!), at Café Estelle (444 N. Fourth St.), home of the city's sweetest servers (and most elaborately festooned fruit/granola plate). —DL Met out-of-town family friends for an early dinner at Beau Monde (624 S. Sixth St.), where their 10- and 12-year-old sons downed frothy mugs of hot chocolate (in 90-degree heat!) and tore through 1.5 crepes apiece without blinking. They still looked a little sleepy afterwards. If I ingested that much sugar at once you'd find me clawing at the walls and screaming "COQ AU VIN! COQ AU VIN!" over and over again in a cartoon French accent. —DL Saturday I was enjoying a quiet spot of sushi at my local/low-key joint when it was invaded by five overdressed girls. They boisterously raised their glasses to each other — and to their alleged Sex And The City counterparts — a conversation that makes me want to rip my ears of. This raised the question: when is it appropriate to approach a table and tell them, “You're ruining your night. Shut the hell up”? —MD Who makes tastier drinks than George Costa at Southwark (701 S. Fourth St.)? Raise your shakers. It was at his bar that we pow-wowed with pal Preston Eckman (formerly of APO) and were sweetly treated to a drink by the one and only Suzy "Beer Lass" Woods. Ordered a Pikeland Pils in Suz's stead despite her insistence that we were not contractually obligated to drink Sly Fox just because she works for them. —DL
Post-Southwark, beer-y whirlwind (fuzzy, but it did involve a big bottle of Ballast Point Sculpin IPA on a roof), then ordering late-night pies, for whatever reason, from a pizzeria that shall remain unnamed. Above is what one showed up looking like. Still ate it! —DL At a friend's BBQ Sunday I tried Michelob Ultra Pomegranate-Raspberry and Dragon Fruit-Peach beers. Once removed from Crystal Light. —MD Famous 4th Street Delicatessen (38 S. 19th St.) told us they were unable/unwilling to make a tuna melt, so we opted instead for a corned beef special, egg salad and a scoop of chopped liver. Grubbed on it all for the next 20 or so hours. —DL
Resurrection Ale House (2425 Grays Ferry Ave.) has a tasty new chicken sausage sandwich. But the sausage, which tastes like delicious sausage, is shaped like a burger patty and served on a burger bun. It comes with a fennel/raisin mostarda and it is awesome. —DL Tip: Substituting unsweetened applesauce for oil and butter in baking recipes (brownies, especially) is a great way to cut calories and keep a moist, chewy consistency without losing flavor. —MD It's summer. Where is all the Dogfish Head Festina Peche?!!? A beer distributor told us it's stocked in every state except Pennsylvania. Porque?! —DL

Xtian
Posted 2010-06-01 14:22:13
Found some Maryland-style steamed crabs at Pike's Seafood Market at Washington & Ogontz.  They were pricey at $6/crab, but heavy, sweet and soooo worth it.

4th Street Lied To Me
Posted 2010-06-01 14:23:03
"unable" to make a tuna melt? a load of bullshit. same thing happened to me before. when I asked our server if they had an oven, he told me that no, 4th street does not have an oven in which to make a tuna melt.  I don't blame our server, I know he was only doing as told. I do however blame the establishment for not granting simple guest requests AND for condoning their servers to tell such lies in order to prevent said requests.

On a positive note I did enjoy a delicious Unibroue Ephemere yesterday to beat the heat, one of my favorite summertime beers!

poncho
Posted 2010-06-01 14:46:03
I was treated to my first John's Water Ice of the season yesterday! I got a lemon and cherry mix with pretzel rods on the side, soooo good!

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-01 14:47:06
Hell yes. What's your pick for best John's flavor? I gotta go with cherry.

rascal b. schuylkillian
Posted 2010-06-01 15:12:02
I did a lot of cooking at home this weekend, and I treated myself to a bottle of buffalo trace, a decent but not too pricy burbon I had not previously sampled.

I did dine out Friday and hit up Rembrandt's, enticed by its close proximity to home and outside seating.  I was impressed by their great selection of drafts...no macros and not a bad choice on the list.  I was a tad bummed they were out of the Chouffe IPA tripel...one of my all time favorite breweries and not common option on tap.  

The best part of the visit was the lamb burger I split.  Served on great bread, cooked to perfection and topped with goat cheese, shaved fennel and olives.  One of the better sandwiches I had in a while...

On the way home, stopped off for a totally uneccesary special or two at Era.  For $3, you get an all-star bottom barrel combo of a shot of heaven hill burbon and bottle of lionshead.  Still need to sample the fare at Era...

Michelle C.
Posted 2010-06-01 15:37:56
The first part of the weekend was spent in Scranton visiting my sis.  The bf and I were delighted to discover several great beer bars, one of which (Backyard Ale House) was offering a free bbq to anyone hanging out that day. Score!

Back in the city on Saturday, we hit up Kraftwork for dinner and I gazed jealously across the table at the beer can chicken sandwich while I ate my falafel.  Randomly, that was my first experience with falafel and I was underwhelmed.  I hate dill, and the herb was used liberally in this particular version. The fries with mustard dipping sauce were great, though.  Attempted to work it all off dancing at Kung Fu Necktie, until they kicked us out at 2:15.  

Sunday was a hangover lunch at Resurrection Ale House.  I'd kill a man for their German potato salad so of course I went with the fried chicken, served with a heaping pile of the salad.  Still dreaming about it.  

Today: Fat kid remorse.

Tweets that mention Notes from the (Long) Weekend: June 1 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-01 16:25:31
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Philly City Paper and Drew Lazor, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: The latest installment of NOTES FROM THE WEEKEND is live. Share your own notes in the comments! http://bit.ly/9YHEkt [...] 

Marc Steel
Posted 2010-06-01 17:30:27
The most notable item of the holiday weekend was hitting Dino's in Margate for the first time this summer. For a lesson in controlled chaos go in there during a busy lunch. I don't know how they manage, but they do. It was PACKED but our order was ready early. Their cheesesteaks and hoagies (on Atlantic City bread of course) are great, but their tuna is simply the best.

Carolyn
Posted 2010-06-01 17:52:59
No recollection whatsoever of what I did/ate on Friday. It was so long ago!

Saturday we went up to New York for the day. Most notable food experience: dinner at Prune. Fried chickpeas with coarse sea salt; fried sweetbreads with bacon and capers; roasted marrow bones with parsley salad; seared duck breast with dandelion greens; pistachio pastry with buttermilk ice cream. Holy hell. Decadent and, all things considered, affordable. 

Sunday I had my first Sarcone's hoagie ever -- I went with the Sinatra (prosciutto, spinach, mozz, herbs). Regretted only getting a small.

Monday went to Capogiro on Passyunk, aka Capoyunk and seriously felt like I was in France. Amazing cappuccinos (La Colombe) and pastries (including H&H bagels from NY!).

Carolyn
Posted 2010-06-01 17:53:26
Chocolate!

Marie DiFeliciantonio
Posted 2010-06-01 19:20:56
I would destroy sweetbreads with bacon and capers. ARE YOU SERIOUS???

Carolyn
Posted 2010-06-01 20:54:56
Um yeah. They were CRAZY delicious.

brian howard
Posted 2010-06-01 21:11:38
Was along for the New York Saturday trip; here's my non-Prune highlights (as I shared all the above, though not a Negroni, a Boulevardier and a rye manhattan): 

On the bus ride up had one of those Dunkin' Donuts cheddar bagel twists: Total yum

At Blind Tiger: A Chelsea Rye Not on cask and a Founders Rye Ale with former CP hard hitter Tom Namako

At Rattle 'N' Hum: A Great Divide Titan IPA and, on cask, a Middle Ages Wizard Winter Ale with former CP music czar Neil Gladstone and former CP contributor Gabrielle Mosquera

JC
Posted 2010-06-02 11:16:28
ditto cherry.

Jesse C.
Posted 2010-06-02 11:25:26
Hit up Resurrection Ale House for the first time. Chili glazed shrimp skewers with white gazpacho and red grapes was the highlight. Also had brunch at Morning Glory on Monday. The food was good as always. However I think I will be boycotting this place for the remainder of the summer, or until they get a/c. Sauna brunch.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 6:52 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, June 1, 2010, 5:19 PM
Filed Under: Openings | Photos
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Meal Ticket stopped by the soft opening of Mac's Tavern (226 Market St.) yesterday evening to check out the revamped Skinner's, owned in part by It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia stars Rob McElhenney and Kaitlin Olson. Mac's is owned and operated by a group of investors, almost all of whom went to St. Joe's Prep together. (Partner Dennis Hart is actually the school's current Dean of Students.) Managing partner Eric Vesotsky realizes that that the name of the bar and the involvement of the It's Always Sunny couple — he's been buddies with McElhenney since first grade — creates the expectation the place will double as some some sort of It's Always Sunny Epcot attraction, with every floorboard and coaster serving as a glib reference back to the hit FX show. While there are plenty of touches — check out the themed menu items, or the door marked "Pirate" instead of "Private" — Mac's is first and foremost a pub designed for drinking. "You're not going to come in here and see Charlie dancing around in his underwear," says Vesotsky. "Green Man's not a bar back." What you will see — 17 beers on tap (check the draft list above), between 60 and 70 in bottles and and grub from chef Michael Suminski, formerly of Ortlieb's Jazzhaus. (We posted a few menu teases on Friday.) Vetotsky says they have plans for a regular happy hour and will offer specials during all Phillies games. The bar will be closed today and tomorrow, but will officially open for business this coming Thursday.

MaltyDog
Posted 2010-06-01 12:50:15
LAME, the beer list is weak, i miss Skinner's terribly.

Dan
Posted 2010-06-01 14:52:11
I am inclined to agree. What a let down. Looks like another generic sports bar to me. I can tolerate two of the following: Guinness, Carlsberg, Hoegaarden, Stella, Yuengling, Leffe Blonde. Even Kensinger and Yards Pale are pretty meh. The pirate thing is lame too. Looks like the popped collar set should be thrilled by the new ubiquitous addition.

hihater
Posted 2010-06-01 14:54:57
Don't you think this place at least deserves a single visit before being shit all over  anonymously on the Internet? If you go and it sucks, that's fine, but it's not even open yet...what is your problem?

Dan
Posted 2010-06-01 15:06:56
Fair enough. But I'm not sure I need to go there to tell that the beer list isn't very interesting and that there's a TV on every wall amidst fake mahogany surroundings that are infused with a healthy smattering of dudes with striped polo shirts.

ebj
Posted 2010-06-01 16:09:35
I was there for the soft opening this past weekend, and it has all the makings of a decent bar, beer, good food and a jukebox.  Having TV's for games is the added bonus.  The staff was friendly, attentive.  It was a pretty mixed crowd..from the popped collar polo set, to the tattoo'd pierced folks.  People just hanging out, enjoying some drinks.

rory
Posted 2010-06-01 16:53:37
pirate thing is a reference to a fantastic episode of the show.

Rock Colors
Posted 2010-06-01 17:26:04
EBJ, your comment is way too rational for this thread. Where's the hate?!?

Tweets that mention Mac's Tavern soft-opens :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-01 17:33:39
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by It's Always Sunny, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Pics/info on Mac's Tavern, which soft-opened this weekend. Co-owner informs us, sadly, that Green Man is not on staff: http://bit.ly/d2Yz41 [...] 

Dan
Posted 2010-06-01 18:27:12
Yea, that was funny. When one of the cast members misread the door sign that said private.

Anonotroll
Posted 2010-06-03 22:30:33
I'm conflicted.  

On the one hand, it's managed by the same team that drove one of the most fabled jazz clubs in the city into the ground.

On the other hand, it's owned by one of the best comedy writers of our generation.

I guess my ultimate decision will depend on the happy hour specials.

Ticket Stubs: Meal Ticket Weekly Recap, May 31-June 4 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-07 11:11:39
[...] - Mac’s Tavern soft-opens in Old City. They have a door marked “Pirate.” [...] 

Tonight: City Paper’s A Moveable Feast Happy Hour kicks off at Mac’s Tavern :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-10 12:11:08
[...] back — A Moveable Feast, the CP-sponsored Thursday happy hour, kicks off for 2010 tonight at the brand-new Mac’s Tavern (226 Market St.). AMF, which runs from 5 to 7 (see upcoming venues at citypaper.net/moveablefeast), [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 5:19 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, June 1, 2010, 3:45 PM
Filed Under: Where'd We Eat?
Photo | Drew Lazor

anne
Posted 2010-06-01 12:17:11
Jerk Hut

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-01 12:21:30
Anne:

Nice guess, and you're dead-on in terms of what cuisine, but this Caribbean spot is a little more under the radar than Jerk Hut...

Shao
Posted 2010-06-01 12:45:37
Caribbean Delight?

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-01 12:47:40
You're getting (geographically) closer...

kibby
Posted 2010-06-01 12:51:54
Golden Krust?

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-01 13:03:54
Clue: It's named after a plant of some sort.

kibby
Posted 2010-06-01 14:02:49
Mango Bush?

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-06-01 14:03:42
YES! Strong work Kibby. Mango Bush, just off South Street on Fourth. Never a lot of people in there but they do some tasty snacks.

Andrew
Posted 2010-06-01 15:38:52
Mango Bush's patties are the bomb.  But those are the only things I've eaten there; is it worth it to do more than pick up a patty to go?
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 3:45 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, June 1, 2010, 3:12 PM
Filed Under: Booze | Philly Beer Week 2010
Flying Fish's popular Exit Series is expanding with a nod to the Dutch Walloons (known today as the Belgians), aka the first Europeans to settle in the Burlington County area. Exit 6 Wallonian rye Belgian-style ale starts with pale malt and locally grown rye, which is fermented with Belgian yeast. Three kinds of hops are worked into the brew (Japanese Sorachi Ace, English East Kent Goldings and Slovenian Styrian Goldings) to bring lemon and spice notes to the bright-hued pour. Get some of the first sips during the Exit 6 launch at Nodding Head Brewery (1516 Sansom St.) on June 5 at 3 p.m. Ric Hoffman of Stewart's Brewing Co. in Delaware, Casey Hughes of Flying Fish and Gordon Grubb of Nodding Head (the brew's collaborative creators) will be around for the tapping. No ticket purchase is necessary — it's gonna be pay as you go.

Tweets that mention June 5: Flying Fish debuts Exit 6 at Nodding Head :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-06-01 11:02:20
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Rachel Meadows, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: June 5: @jerseyfreshale debuts Exit 6 at @NoddingHeadBrew http://bit.ly/aPeWGZ [...] 

poncho
Posted 2010-06-01 11:37:32
This beer sounds delicious!

Not sure if you heard, but Philly Beer Week starts today … :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-04 16:10:31
[...] also marks the official debut of Flying Fish’s brand-new Exit 6, which we wrote about on Tuesday. They’ll start pouring the rye ale at 3 pm. at Nodding Head (1516 Sansom, second [...] 

Ticket Stubs: Meal Ticket Weekly Recap, May 31-June 4 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-07 11:10:19
[...] Flying Fish unveils the latest beer in its Exit [...] 
Posted by Marie DiFeliciantonio @ 3:12 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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