Jesus and Tomatoes Coming Soon!
Downtown window sign
Hattiesburg MS, 2015.
Churros to Chicken Fingers
I haven’t been to Russellville, Alabama since February 2020. There are such nice shops downtown now — Mexico Bakery:
Pinatas inside a candy shop:
The 1949 Roxy Theater, which had included when first built, a soundproof “Crying Room” to the left of the inner lobby so parents could still view the movie screen if their little one needed some time away:
And La Cascada is a…Chinese restaurant:
Professions only, pls:
Pool:
1940 Post Office:
The Section of Fine Arts fresco here is “Shipment of the First Iron Produced in Russellville” by Conrad A. Albrizzio, which has a bit of its own drama.
El Quetzal Buena Vista Super Market:
not just food, but boots too. Pointy ones.
Fireworks:
If you go to Russellville, you have to get something from Frosty Inn (here’s their parade float!)
a true walk-up dairy bar
btw, if the root beer on the roof reminds you of the Frostop in New Orleans, yes:
Tomato X Infinity, 2022 Version
FGTs forever. That sign is from O’Hanlon’s in Geneva, Georgia, from 2017
Pursell Farms sent an email this week about its TomatoTaste dinner — it’s on August 7 this year, and starts at $429, which includes one night in the Inn, and a four-course supper including wine.
I’m taking this as a sign to do the second annual Tomato x Infinity post:
I love these pimento cheese – tomato stacks. No recipe needed: just layer the PC with slices of tomato.
If you’re also a fan of aspic, let’s talk. We need to stick together. This one, I made at home and served in little cups
These tomato, basil, mozzarella shells are the bessstttt
This tomato pie recipe is so crazy good
BLTs at The Tomato Place in Vicksburg
Fried green tomato, pimento cheese biscuit at the Loveless by the Trace outside Nashville
Amish-made tomato stakes, Etheridge TN
Nosherie at Old Town Stock House in Guntersville
Aspic at Walnut Hills in Vicksburg
When we’re kinda lazy, we make a chunky shakshuka at home with Rotel and tons of onion (and only egg whites because Shugie’s not a fan of yolks)
Hazelrig Orchard, Cleveland AL
Cleckler’s Produce Stand in Selma
Hot green tomato chow-chow at Dog Days Flea Market in Ardmore
huge sidenote: this is like when my friend who has a perpetually-perfect-magazine-shoot-ready home told me she shops yard sales because “surely nobody can afford all this from an antique store” and basically told me I needed to get over myself about not going to them (and she of course was right). Also: her mom for yearssss ran an absolutely incredible space at the top antique shop in Birmingham and while one is visualizing her European shopping trips, and the container arriving from overseas, the truth was that it was fine European antiques — sure — from the most fab yard and estate sales right here in town.
So, if one has an appreciation for cakes and confections and all kinds of canned items not found at the grocery store, it’s time to be frequenting farmer’s markets (and not necessarily the ‘fancier’ ones, though those certainly have their place) and flea markets, where the barrier to entry for the home cook and craftsperson is low. While we’re talking about it, flea markets are where those making spoons and rolling pins on a home lathe, those gathering materials and making baskets, quilters, gardeners with their enormous fruits and vegetables, beekeepers with their honey…I’m just going to have to make a flea market appreciation post. Yes, there is junk. Juuuunk. But we learned to love the flea market early in Covid when we wanted to be outside but still be around people, safely. And I’ve brought home gorgeous baskets and spoons and honey and other little treasures.
Farm stand, Cullman County
FGTs at Irondale Cafe (my least favorite because the breading is so thick (but if you like that almost tempura-like batter, this is your place!)); it’s the inspiration for Fannie Flagg’s Whistlestop Cafe book and movie
Canned chopped tomatoes at Spradlin Farm Stand in Cullman
Fried green tomatoes I make each year at Passover — the Jeff Nathan K-for-P panko is the best
Arrow sign for fruit stand in Hartselle
FGTs at the Bright Star in Bessemer
Craig Nutt‘s tomato table at the Columbus Museum in Columbus GA — if you know the giant flying corn at Concourse E at the Atlanta airport, that’s his, too
Tomato pie at Cohen’s Retreat in Savannah
Tomato salad at Neon Pig in Tupelo
“Harvest” by Henry La Cagnina at the Crystal Springs MS Post Office
FGTs at Bully’s in Jackson
Aspic at the Carriage House at Stanton Hall in Natchez
prize tomatoes & friends at the Neshoba County Fair
A meal: the fried green tomato app at Apolline in New Orleans
Tomato pie at Gratefull Soul in Hattiesburg
Giant tomato watch I found at the Swatch shop in Las Vegas
Vicksburg Tomato Sandwiches from a luncheon I attended at the BB Club
I go to Walton’s Southern Table in Huntsville for one reason (though it’s good all-around) and here it is
Straight Mountain Tomato Farm
Green tomato chutney from Purloo (RIP) in New Orleans
FGTs from Mrs B’s in Montgomery
various tomato goodness from the Cullman County Fair
We all have our favorite mountain for tomatoes
aspic from The Colonnade in Atlanta
***and my favorite favorite favorite tomato art, Madonna and Child with Homegrown Tomatoes, by Kati Ozanic-Lemberger, viewable here.
Collected Objects
Goodbye, Red’s Little Schoolhouse
Hate to hear that Red’s Little Schoolhouse, a restaurant in Grady, Alabama, 25 miles south of Montgomery, is going to close early next month.
Hills Chapel Community School was built in 1910 for black students, from grades 1-6. It sat empty for 25 years until 1985, when it was purchased (for $3500 at auction the year before) to become a restaurant. Four generations of the owner’s family have worked here — just really good people (seriously, read their FB posts).
We last ate here last year, and because of Covid reasons, just masked up, got a go-plate, and ate in the car. Love this place.
Pie safe, baybeeeee
You *know* you’re in the south if they’ve got camp stew by the quart
Thinking of other restaurants in Alabama with similarities to Red’s — White House in Warrior also lines their walls with portraits of the presidents, and I wish I had taken pictures but we’ll have to settle for this pic of chicken, greens, and green beans:
Also: Mossy Grove Schoolhouse Restaurant in Troy, Alabama.
A few other schoolhouse restaurants: The Old Schoolhouse Inn and Restaurant in NY // Behham Inn in KY // Schoolhouse Restaurant and General Store in OH // Schoolhouse Lunch Room in MI // Dorset Valley Schoolhouse Restaurant in WI
PS: Red’s recipe for their frozen cucumber pickles is here.
St Roch, Rededicated
To celebrate the reopening of New Orleans’ St Roch Chapel — dedicated originally in 1876 in gratitude for the saint’s intercession in protecting the city against yellow fever — last month, Father Patrick Williams, vicar general for the Archdiocese of New Orleans, led a prayer ceremony. The restoration, which took four years, also won a 2022 Louisiana Landmarks Society Award for Excellence in Historic Preservation earlier in the month. The building is officially the National Shrine of St Roch.
I know the room just off the chapel for what it holds inside — rhe pictures interspersed above and below are from some of my visits there.
From the article in the Clarion Herald:
St. Roch Chapel’s most famous interior feature was left largely untouched – the grotto-like room holding ex-votos – cast replicas of limbs, leg braces, crutches, children’s shoes and other tokens of gratitude for St. Roch’s healing intercession – survives as a historical freeze-frame of the prayers of past pilgrims.
St Roch was a “Third Order Franciscan who devoted his life to caring for victims of the bubonic plague and was credited with miraculous cures. Born in 1295 in Montpellier, France, St. Roch is the patron saint of the sick, invalids, dogs and dog lovers.
When New Orleans was plagued with wave after wave of yellow fever in the late 19th century, Father Peter Leonard Thevis, pastor of nearby Holy Trinity Church, asked his parishioners to pray to St. Roch for his intercession. In gratitude for a lull in disease outbreaks, Father Thevis’ flock erected the chapel in 1876 as a monument of gratitude.”
Leaders said the chapel will host a Healing Mass on the first Friday of each month at 10, open to all, especially to those in need of healing. More here: nolacatholiccemeteries.org.
Bridge over the Mulberry Fork of the Black Warrior River
Pursell Farms & Orvis
I brought a friend out to Pursell Farms outside Sylacauga, Alabama this month; I’ve only ever been once before, and it’s absolutely gorgeous there. Leslie and I just found it by accident the first time and drove the grounds, enjoyig the scenery and especially seeing the longhorns
They have a special Orvis store there in its own building, and an Orvis shooting grounds plus fly fishing courses.
This time, my friend and I stopped for lunch at Old Tom’s Pub there, with a view of the golf course
This happens to be Jim Nabors’ 1903 Brunswick pool table (he was from Sylacauga, and friends with the Pursell family) – more abou that, and the object below, in this article.
The other sit-down restaurant is Arrington, which at the moment only seems open for supper on Friday and Saturday, with reservations on OpenTable.
The resort also features other activities, like axe throwing, archery, a UTV experience (I’m putting together a group this summer for that)…
There’s a 40-room Inn down this hallway, plus detached cabins and cottages, an 8-bedroom lodge, and the Orvis farmhouse.
They do a good number of corporate meetings and weddings here too; I’ll do another update once we go back for the UTV trip!
A Graveshelter to Research
I’ve known about, and visited a certain monument at the Harpersville Garden of Memories cemetery in Shelby County, Alabama for several years now, but has had me perplexed for a while, and it’s time to put some research time in.
It’s a large, old cemetery, with some newer monuments in the back, and some nice features like this stacked rock enclosure in the earlier section.
This is the graveshelter. At first, I was trying to figure out if it was — rather than an open-sided graveshelter like so many others — some sort of mausoleum. I’m convinced that it is a barrel-roofed empty space covering graves in the ground.
Above, it appears as though this end has the opening to the inside that’s been filled in. Below, the opposite.
The plaque in view below reads:
Restored 2005
by
Mary Louise Moore Lamkin
Great Great Grandaughter (sp)
of the
Rev. Lemuel C. & Orpah Byrd Moore
The inscription reads:
To the memory of the deceased whose names are inscribed beneath this monument
erected and piously consecrated by their surviving relatives
Rev LEMUEL MOORE born February 13th 1761 departed this life October, 1826. ORPAH, consort of Rev. Lemuel Moore born August 13th 1772, departed this life March 24th 1823
MARTHA MOORE, consort of M.E. Moore, departed this life August 24th 1823 Aged 30 years
By whose side sleeps her infant daughter SARAH ANN
They all left assurances of their peace with God. Let then the doctrines of the immortality
of the soul and of the resurrection of the dead cheer the
hearts of the mourners who come to ??? at this tomb
That’s really as far as I can read because the rest of it is at least partially covered. I’m going to contact some other historians to see what I can find, and if you have information, please contact me.
Thrift Store: A Question Requiring Lots of Question Marks
(cleaning up the grammar here a teensy bit because I had to read the original a couple of times to understand):
???????
If you open it
it’s what it’s supposed to be
and it works as it’s supposed to
You don’t purchase it.
Would you answer why you opened it.???
Just curious!
Thrift Store Management Musings
King’s Home Thrift Store
Hanceville AL, 2022.