Showing posts with label crab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crab. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2025

Mother's Day 2025

"Ann is a nosy sort." he said lovingly. She really cannot help herself; her penchant for prying is deeply encoded in her DNA. She will not take polite hints to mind her own business, either. Thus, it is nearly impossible to surprise her.

Quixotic fool that I am, I set out to do just that for Mother's Day, a day which, for reasons that need not be discussed here, has been an emotional day in the past. I figured she could use some friends to help her celebrate and so I invited Rob and Dyce to come over on Sunday afternoon.

Mother's Day Brunch
Hoping for beautiful weather as we had been having for a week, I came up with a menu of light eats to be enjoyed on the patio with crisp white wine. Naturally, the weather did not cooperate and we ended up eating inside at the island. Quoting Stevie Winwood, "You just roll with it, baby!"

I am kicking myself now for not having taken any pictures of Rob and Dyce. I was too caught up in talking and pouring Champagne around. They brought the most beautiful flowers for Ann. And did a wonderful job of acting all week as if nothing were happening on the weekend.

Rob and Dyce Brought This Exquisite Arrangement
The Surprised Guest of Honor
Ann, true to form, did her best to ruin the surprise. The three of us guys put the plan together a week in advance. Shortly thereafter, Ann asked me to take her to the local wine bar and out for brunch somewhere. I confessed my plan for a special brunch at home. Her immediate response was, "Can we invite Rob and Dyce?" At this point, I had to lie, saying that I preferred to have a more intimate tête-à-tête chez nous.

Sunday afternoon, while Ann was watching TV upstairs, I excused myself to go downstairs to prep brunch. Just as I had plated everything, the doorbell rang and Ann was surprised. She was even a good sport about not being dressed or having her game face on!

Camarones in Escabeche with Cilantro Aïoli
Crab Guacamole
Dungeness Crab Mixed with Cilantro-Lime Vinaigrette
Jalapeño Quesadillas with Chipotle Crema

Monday, November 13, 2023

Brisket with the Boys

Somehow Ann and Dyce are joined at the hip and are constantly texting back and forth. This time, unbeknownst to me, they schemed up a dinner Wednesday last week for which Rob would smoke a brisket and I would make a "sexy potato dish." Don't take this the wrong way. I'm always game for dinner and I hardly mind if Ann commits me for a dish.

As always, the guys went way overboard, making not only the brisket, but mini crab cakes for an appetizer, a wonderful salad with apples, spiced pecans, and a maple dressing, as well as an old-school apple cake for dessert.

Ann and I kicked in the sexy potatoes, a Savoyard cheese and potato casserole called tartiflette which I covered in a prior post, a bowl of herb mayo for the crabcakes, and a delightful magnum of Chianti Classico. All in all, we had a phenomenal meal that would be impossible to get at any local restaurant.

Out at a restaurant or at one of our homes, it's always such a pleasure to have dinner with Rob and Dyce. Not only do we have wonderful conversation, but when we do it at their house, we our dog fix playing with both of their pups. Having lost both our dogs in recent years, Ann and I are being a bit jealous of our freedom to go on a whim, to travel, and to not worry about finding pet care. But we both love dogs so much that we still need to get our dog time and that's what we get from Rob and Dyce's girls.

Smoked Brisket with Tartiflette
Lola Loves Ann
Crab Cakes with Herb Mayonnaise
Brisket Ho!
Slices of Brisket with Smoke Ring
It's a Party When You Crack a Magnum
What wine to pair with smoked brisket? It is beef and so it is going to want a red and a pretty big one at that. My palate runs to wines that are lighter bodied, higher acid, and less fruity. For me, major grape varietals that fit this profile are Pinot Noir, Nebbiolo, Sangiovese, and to a lesser extent Tempranillo. Because it's beef, I opted for a bigger more extracted Sangiovese, a Chianti Classico. Of all the Chianti sub-zones, Classico seems to me to be the best match with beef, but then a great Brunello would have been delightful as well.

Spiced Pecans
Delightful Salad
Rob's Apple Cake, More Savory Than Sweet

It looks like Rob and Dyce are headed to California for Thanksgiving and we won't be able to get together again until early December. I'm feeling dinner at our house and I'm looking for an excuse to make braciole, if I don't get overruled by the powers that be.

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Anniversary: Crab Cakes

Many weeks ago back in the summer, Ann told me that she'd like crab cakes for our anniversary at the end of September, partly in celebration and partly as a reward for dropping some of this COVID weight. We've both been successful in that mission so far, dropping a combined 17 pounds over the last month of eating carefully, but well. But more importantly, we're celebrating having been married for 8 years now, 8 years that have seemingly flown by, each better than the last.

To find decent crab, which out here in Oregon means Dungeness, I had to go two towns over to the seafood retailer in Newberg, where I bought a pound of crab, a small bag of mussels, and a pound of halibut cheeks. Not only do we have an anniversary to celebrate, but Ann has a birthday coming up in three days, and seafood is our splurge.

Before hitting the seafood store, though, I stopped at what is probably our best retail wine shop to buy a bottle of sparkling wine, because what's better than crab cakes? Crab cakes and sparkling wine!

Crab Cakes
We have not had crab cakes since I closed the restaurant in 2017. Actually, I needed that break after cooking them every night of my life for fifteen years. I really needed that distance. But I am glad to have made them for our anniversary: they were delicious and brought back good memories, memories of the restaurant and of my life most of which has been lived near the Chesapeake Bay, crab central for the East Coast.

My fondest crab memories are not of crab cakes, which have always been restaurant fare and not part of our ordinary lives. In the real world, everyone rolled up their sleeves and cracked crabs and swilled beer like Ann and I did with Jeff and Kelly in Mathews, VA in the summer of 2016. For me, cracking crabs is where the memories are.

My experience cracking crabs started long ago. I crabbed each summer when we would stay down on the Bay for our vacation in a cabin that my aunt owned. There was always a bunch of my mother's family there, coming and going as schedules permitted. Crabs were a big deal and my taste and smell memories of those summers are intense to this day, some 50 years later.

We'd have a big crab feast at least once while we were there, beer-steamed crabs redolent of Old Bay seasoning piled high on the newspaper-clad picnic table on the deck, with a cooler full of Natty Boh for the adults. And if we could get our hands on some peelers, the local name for softshell crabs, my mom and her sisters would make us fried softshell crab sandwiches for lunch. 

We had a chickenwire crab pot that we would toss out of the end of the dock, baited with trash fish, backbones, heads, etc., that I would check a couple of times a day, transferring the crabs to a large wire mesh pot tied off to the dock. I learned early on how to grab a big jimmy from behind to keep him from amputating a finger. As the oldest of all of the cousins who might be there, I was the one handling the crabs.

While the trap yielded some crabs, more came from lines that us kids, and by that, I mean mainly me, would toss out from the end of the dock. The drill with the lines was to drive a nail through a chicken neck and tie off a line to the nail in such a way that the conniving crabs could not make off with the bait. The bait wouldn't be in the water long before a crab would grab it and start dragging it. The idea was to gently pull the line in and elevate the crab off the bottom﹘it wasn't giving up on a free meal that easily﹘to run a dip net under the crab.

Even when I was off fishing at the point where our "creek" met the Bay proper, I'd have a couple of crab lines out. And if I were bottom fishing in the deep channel for flounder, as opposed to top water fishing for bluefish, sea trout, or that prize of all prizes, striped bass, I'd often reel in a crab that could be netted. On my way to and from fishing, I would wade the marshes with a dip net and a bucket looking for crabs. When I would spy one through the clear water, I would stealthily dip net the unsuspecting crab. I became pretty good at it. All these crabs went into the communal pot.

All these memories are now part of me and are inextricably entwined with my love of crab, blue crab, in particular. It may just be those memories coloring my palate, but I swear that blue crab, as hard it is to pick relative to the huge Dungies out here, tastes so much better. Blue is sweeter and more delicate.

If you'd like to read a fantastic book about blue crabs and the waterman's life on the Chesapeake, I highly recommend the Pulitzer Prize-winning Beautiful Swimmers by William Warner. It's a fascinating read about an endangered way of life.

My Lovely Wife of 8 Years
Champagne on the Porch
Before cooking the crab cakes, Ann and I decided to take advantage of the delightful end-of-September weather by having Champagne on the front porch. And not just any old Champagne either: this is Bouzy Grand Cru from Pierre Paillard, from a lieu-dit called "Les Parcelles." I tend to prefer blanc de blancs sparkling made from 100% Chardonnay with seafood, but I know that Ann favors the restrained red fruits in blanc de noirs. This 70% Pinot, 30% Chardonnay cuvée was a wonderful compromise. I hadn't set out to buy Champagne, thinking to get a local sparkler, but the wine merchant dissuaded me. He was not wrong. This was delightful grand cru Champagne at an affordable price.

Making Crab Cakes


Crab Cake Ingredients
I have an extremely minimalist approach when it comes to crab cakes. Crab is wicked expensive (fresh, unpasteurized Dungeness is going for about $40 per pound) and delicately flavored. I do not want to hide all that expensive crab meat behind a lot of filler that might overpower the delicate crab flavor. It is my philosophy that the crab should shine, but people's tastes are all different. While my crab cakes were always mentioned in magazine articles about the restaurant as being outstanding, they were scorned by a few internet reviewers as bland or tasteless.

This means that you will never find seafood seasoning, onions, or peppers in my crab cakes. Never. No highly flavored ingredients at all. My crab cakes are crab, mayonnaise, celery, Italian parsley, panko, white pepper, and salt as necessary. Each pound of crab will yield about five four-ounce crab cakes.

1 pound crab meat
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 stalk celery, in small dice
1/4 cup minced parsley
1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
1/2-1 cup panko
salt as necessary

Mix the crab, mayo, celery, parsley, and pepper. Sprinkle on the panko as necessary and gently fold until the mix holds together and is neither too wet or too dry. Taste for seasoning and adjust as needed. Refrigerate for at least an hour. Check the mix before shaping into cakes. If it is too dry to hold together, add a bit more mayo. If it is too wet, add more panko and let it sit a few more minutes.

Here are some lessons learned. For small batches of crab meat, under three pounds, I do not use an egg. For every three pounds of crab, I use one egg. For every two pounds of jumbo lump crab, I would use a pound of lump, so that the smaller lump would help the crab cakes lock together with minimal binder. If your crab is very wet (typical of pasteurized crab meat), squeeze out the excess liquid and use it for soup stock. 

Be sure not to overmix the crab and bust up the lumps, yet distribute the mayonnaise and seasoning well. Add panko sparingly. Once the crab mix will hold together when you squeeze it gently, it is ready for the refrigerator. Refrigerate your crab mix for at least an hour before making it into cakes to give the panko time to absorb moisture and set the cakes.

When frying the cakes, do not crowd them in the pan to help them brown and to give yourself room to work a spatula under the cakes. If you use minimal panko as did, a solid crust is the key to holding the cake together. I used only a scant half a cup, but I do not recommend this for beginners because the cakes are very delicate and easy to break. Make sure to brown both sides well.

Crab Mix Ready for Refrigerator
Frying Crab Cakes

Sunday, December 31, 2017

New Year's Eve at Home

Why would you want to spend New Year's Eve at home?

Considering I have worked the prior 15 New Year's Eves as the chef and owner of a restaurant, the answer to that question ought to be obvious! If I never see the inside of a restaurant on New Year's Eve, that will be just fine with me. And of course, Annie was over the moon to have me at home. So we headed to the grocery store to see what we could find. I was in a seafood mood, but there's no good seafood in any grocery store around here. The best we could do was to grab a pound of Dungeness crab, wicked expensive and to my East Coast-born and -bred palate, not as tasty as blue crab. So I decided to do a crab risotto.

While standing in the store, Annie started describing an appetizer that she wanted, "something with mushrooms, gooey, and sexy!" Instantly I flashed on a mushroom crostino, so we got some dried porcini, some fresh shiitakes, and a small piece of funky Taleggio cheese to finish the mushrooms with.

Pashey Sparkling by Trisaetum

Leeks and Shiitakes

Porcini, Shiitake, Leek, and Taleggio Crostini

Who's Happy?

Risotto in the Works with Pancetta

Mise: Pancetta, Goat Cheese, Crab, and Chives

Dungeness Crab Risotto with Pancetta, Chives, and Goat Cheese

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Gwynn's Island, VA

Way back in early June during a random visit at Glen Manor Vineyards, Kelly mentioned to us that she and Jeff were headed to Mathews, VA in August and that we should make plans to join them for a day or two. I kinda just shrugged it off to wishful thinking, but she followed up next day with an insistent email and that got Ann and me to thinking. That far in advance, maybe, just maybe we could swing a Sunday and a Monday off, a real two-day weekend. I know that to a lot of people this sounds like no big deal, but then, those people are not chef-owners of demanding fine dining restaurants. Ultimately, with a lot of planning, I was able to take that two-day weekend this week.

There is a tale in my family that at least some of my Matthews ancestors are from Mathews County; one of my now deceased cousins who was the family historian had done enough research to be convinced. It was kind of neat to be going some place with ties to my family, even if they were 300 years ago. Mathews County is in the middle peninsula (between the York and Rappahannock Rivers) just below the mouth of the Piankatank River, which is the first river south of the Rappahannock. As a boy, I used to vacation on Tabbs Creek, two rivers to the north of the Rappahannock and just under 12 miles north of where we stayed this time, on Gwynn's Island. A small part of me feels at home in this part of the world.
We Stayed Near the Southern Tip of Gwynn's Island
I spent a solid week beforehand just getting ready to take a day off and finally, after a somewhat slow (because of the brutal near 100-degree August heat) Saturday night, I got home and got myself packed. After coffee the next morning, we got away about 9:30 and had an uneventful trip down the Rappahannock River via Warrenton, Fredericksburg, Port Royal, Tappahannock, and Saluda. East of the fall line in Fredericksburg, it is amazing how much the landscape and the flora change and how different it is from what we are accustomed to in the Shenandoah Valley. Moreover, east of Fredericksburg, we entered the land of corn and soybeans, driving through miles and miles of hill-less agricultural fields.

Because we couldn't get in to the rental house until about 4pm, we planned to meet Jeff and Kelly at nearby Merroir, the restaurant attached to the Rappahannock River Oyster Company, for a lingering afternoon lunch. We serve Rappahannock River Oysters at the restaurant and I have met one of the owners at a charity event for which we both supplied food at Patowmack Farm near Leesburg. The idea of oysters and small plates riverside just doesn't suck and I was really looking forward to seeing where at least some of our oysters are born.

Kelly warned us early on in a cryptic text that the Garmin is a lying bitch, but we didn't get the reference until much later. Merroir is situated right on the Rappahannock River just downstream of the Route 3 bridge across to White Stone and the Northern Neck. The Garmin had us turn off route 3 on a horrendous dirt road that was so rough that even in the Jeep with its beefed up suspension, the radio connection shook loose at under 5 mph. As we neared the restaurant, we joined a paved road that is clearly the way we should have come. "I told you the Garmin was a lying bitch," said Kelly just moments later.

We got out of the air-conditioned Jeep into breathtakingly brutal heat and humidity and found her and Jeff under a couple of umbrellas at a picnic table on the north side of the small building, with a view north onto the Rappahannock.

Rappahannock River at Merroir
On the south side of our picnic table was this pergola with a view of Locklies Creek. Nobody was sitting under the pergola because it was 1:00 in the afternoon and the temperature was 98-100 F with soupy humidity and little to no breeze. It was miserably hot, even under the umbrellas in the shade. I'm always happy to be anywhere other than the restaurant and I'm used to the boiling stew-like atmosphere that is a restaurant kitchen, but this weather was trying. I concentrated on our conversation and tried to forget about the heat, but there was no denying the sun.

Most Seating at Merroir is Outdoors
Fortunately for us, Jeff and Kelly had arrived about 10 minutes ahead of us, long enough to order the first round of wine and oysters. Never have I been so happy to see a bottle of wine in all my life. This bottle of rosé was a welcome sight. I don't know this producer, but the wine was spot on what I expected for a Provençal rosé. Even Ann, self-labeled rosé disliker, enjoyed the wine. I will bring her to the dark side yet: I love rosé in the summer.

A Welcome Respite from the Heat
The Merroir menus were fun and not overly serious, pretty fitting for a restaurant with little to no indoor seating, printed on brown paper bags bound to a binder with string, one paper bag each for the beer menu, the wine menu, and the food menu. We became well acquainted with the wine menu as I ordered a Muscadet next and then Jeff ordered a Macon-Villages after that. We never did get around to the food menu. Because, if you're at an oyster house, why would you order anything other than oysters? Especially in that ridiculous heat.

Cute Menus

Bearing Up Under Adverse Conditions! Wine Helps!
Bless our server for keeping us well-supplied with growlers of water and buckets of ice, copious quantities of which Ann was scooping wholesale down the front and back of her blouse. Secretly, I think our server was happy to go stand in the walk-in while getting more ice. She was really nice to let Jeff store his case of wine in the walk-in so that it wouldn't bake in his truck. When Jeff went to retrieve his wine from the walk-in, he found a lot of the Merroir crew in there, taking refuge from the heat. I can't say that I am any stranger to that; we often duck into the walk-in on a hot summer evening if we have a break.

Lots of Growlers of Water
They had three oysters on offer: Rappahannocks from right at the restaurant, Stingrays from Mobjack Bay, and Olde Salts from Chincoteague. I have always preferred the sweeter oysters to the super salty Chincoteagues, but any fresh oyster is a good oyster. I had not had the Stingrays before; it turned out that they were my favorite of the three. I imagine that Mobjack Bay is a good bit more saline than the brackish Rappahannock.

Merroir's Finest
After Merroir, we headed in to the town of Mathews to get the key to the house where we were staying, but it was only about 3:00 so we had time to kill before the 4 pm check-in time. On the way there, Ann texted Kelly saying that we really needed to eat something more substantial and got the response "Follow us!" In town, Jeff parked us in front of Richardson's Café, in an old drug store across the street from the real estate office, and led us inside where we all piled into a booth and ordered something a little more substantial than the 5 dozen oysters we downed collectively earlier. Though it was early, we silently made a collective decision: what the hell, let's eat dinner early and then just nosh later rather than cook dinner.

Richardson's Also Has Cute Menus

Richardson's Clearly Used to Be a Drugstore
Though Jeff was on a milkshake mission (the milkshakes are reportedly very good here) both days we were in town, Kelly and I are both lactose intolerant, so the thought of downing a milkshake is more or less viscerally anguishing. Jeff seemed to have no problem downing them though.

Jeff and Kelly (note milkshake)

And Once Again (another milkshake)
I got a decent enough burger and Ann ended up with loaded fries. The food here is just about what you would expect. They put some care into it and they keep the prices very reasonable. It's a nice place to eat casual fare if you're not up for the more refined cuisine at the White Dog Bistro around the corner.

Bacon Cheese Fries
We stretched our legs a bit in Mathews. A bit being the operative word as the central downtown is about two, maybe three, blocks, no traffic light, no horse, quintessential small tidewater Virginia town, more lighthouses than traffic lights as the old saying goes.

We Were

Looking at Much of Downtown Mathews

Mural with Reference to Whitman, Opposite Richardson's
After our respite in Mathews and after fetching the key from the real estate office, we headed back north and crossed the bridge from the mainland onto Gwynn's island and from there worked our way (all of five minutes) to the far southern point of the island on the Chesapeake Bay side.

As we turned into the driveway of the house where we would be staying, the first thing I saw was an osprey nest in a snag in the yard next door and then I saw an osprey in the pine right next to the house where we were staying. We would hear that osprey call pretty much non-stop the whole time we were there, though the calls were less frequent during the night. They have a wide range of vocalizations and get especially animated when a mate approaches, and more animated still when one of the neighboring ospreys encroaches on their turf. From the back deck of the house, I saw three nests in very close proximity. We watched them catch fish, carry sticks to the nest, and perch, perch, perch. Mainly, they perched on dead limbs and watched the rest of the world, calling all the while.

Osprey in Pine to Left of House Where We Stayed; Nest Far Left

This Osprey Called Non-Stop

Its Mate on the Nest at Dusk

And the Nest in the Moonlight
Looking out on the Chesapeake Bay, we saw a constant stream of ships out in the ship channel in the middle of the Bay, headed to and from the port at Baltimore. At times when the light was right, we could see land out east: the near shore of the Eastern Shore is about 16-17 miles distant at this point.

Lots of Ships Headed to and from Baltimore
Sunday night we hung around the house and drank our share of wine. I brought some and Jeff brought plenty, but none of his own. I understand that. When I'm away from home looking for a meal, I'm looking for something I would not cook. As I am far too close to my own cooking, so is he to his wine. After plenty of wine, a day in the hot sun, and a game of Cards Against Humanity, we all retired early.

As a result of my early bedtime, I was up at 5:30 the next morning, in plenty of time to catch the sunrise about 6:10. Jeff was already outside with his camera when I stepped outside with mine, only to find that I couldn't see through it at all, so dense was the condensation that formed immediately on every surface on moving from the air-conditioned house to the already warm and soupy outdoors. Once my camera warmed up so that there was no more fog on the lens, I got a couple of snaps of the sunrise. Jeff also got some pretty cool ones shooting through the lens of his binoculars, with which we scanned the bay for Bottlenose Dolphins. There was nothing moving in the water, not even any gannets or cormorants diving for fish.

Monday Morning Sunrise

Ten Minutes Later
In the relative cool of the early morning, I started poking about the area in which we were staying to see what could be seen. Mind you, cool is a relative thing. It was so hot and humid that twenty minutes after the sun was up, it was too warm to be in the direct sun any longer.

The house is situated on the southern point of Gwynn's Island with the Chesapeake Bay due east of the house and Milford Haven just southwest of the house. To the north was a small pond with another house behind it. One of the things that we noticed right away is how many crape myrtles there are in this part of Virginia and how huge they can become. You can see several in the photo below; we saw many that were 30 feet high and higher, trees in their own right, in all shades of crimson, pink, and white. Ann and I marveled at all the crape myrtles on our trip back to Winchester on Tuesday.

Crape Myrtles; Milford Haven Behind
Speaking of trees, there was an interesting oak tree in the front yard, some of whose leaves were starting to go red and to fall. My first glimpse led me to think that this was a live oak, a tree that I am very familiar with from my time in Alabama and Texas, but the habit and bark were all wrong. Looking at it in more detail, I could see that is a Laurel Oak, Quercus laurifolia, not something we ever see in our part of the world.

Laurel Oak, Quercus laurifolia, in Front Yard
Just to the north of our not-so-charming house was this little Low Country charmer, across a small marsh of reeds and a small pond filled with small crabs. I expected to find a few wading birds on the pond, but there were none at any time of the day, nor were there any tracks. The only tracks belonged to a much larger bird, more about which later.

Handsome House Next Door to the North

Reeds (Phragmites?) Along the Beach

Annie Enjoying the Sun (too much! ouch!)

Pond Backed by Loblolly Pines

Unusual Beach Pattern by the House
On Monday afternoon, we took a drive to the very southern point of Mathews County near where Jeff and Kelly usually stay. A large tract of 146 acres at the very point is given over to the New Point Comfort Preserve, a salt marsh that borders Mobjack Bay with views of the New Point Comfort Lighthouse, which sits at the confluence of Mobjack Bay and Chesapeake Bay.

The Very Southern Tip of Mathews County is a Preserve

Looking  Across the Salt Marsh to the New Point Comfort Lighthouse

The Boardwalk Gives Great Views of the Marsh and Mobjack Bay

Looking out onto Mobjack Bay

Looking at Baby Crabs

We Saw Hundreds of Small Crabs in the Marsh
The blazing conditions in August along the Bay don't really lend themselves to wildflowers, but there were a very few, most of which we do not see up our way. In particular, all of the ditches were full of gorgeous white hibiscus with bright crimson centers. We also saw a whole lot of trumpet vines in bloom, a lot more than we are used to seeing back home.

Hog Peanut, Amphicarpaea bracteata

Seaside Oxeye, Less Petals, Borrichia frutescens

Crimson-Eyed Rosemallow, Hibiscus moscheutos

A Hawkweed
Several times a day, we saw a small flock of Canada Geese moving here and there about the area. I never really associate Canada Geese with the beach as I do Brants, their smaller cousins, but I guess they pretty much live anywhere anymore. When I was nosing around the pond to the north of the house looking for waders and wader footprints, all I saw were goose tracks in the sand. Lots of goose tracks and the ever present goose crap. You can go to the beach, but you cannot get away from the winged rats, er, I mean, geese.

Noisy Neighbors

Raccoons are Nocturnal Visitors to the Beach

Angel Wing, Cyrtopleura costata, at Northern End of its Range

This Dragonfly was Curious About my Camera

Annie Found This Green Tree Frog on the House
Tuesday morning before our jaunt to Mobjack, Jeff and Kelly had gone into town on a beer and crab run and returned shortly, mission quite successful. They brought back a bushel of some really fat and feisty number one jimmies. Both Kelly and I got bitten transferring them to coolers. I was holding a crab from the back as I always do when it reached around and nipped me. I have never had a crab to do that in all my life; live and learn. In the afternoon, after our trip to New Point Comfort Preserve and after a quick bite for a late lunch at Richardson's, we headed back to the house to start in on both beer and crabs.

When I was a kid, we used to crab all week and hold the crabs in a pot until Friday night when we had our crab feast. Seldom if ever did we buy crabs, though my mom would buy a bunch of softshells and we would have them in sandwiches for lunches. We kids, being always out on the dock when not swimming or fishing, we always had a string with chicken necks out in the water that we would check every few minutes and often I would walk the salt marshes with a bucket and a dip net, scooping unwary crabs up off the bottom.

The beer of choice for steaming crabs back then was National Bohemian; Kelly used Lite, but I won't hold it against her; cheap beer is the only choice for steaming crabs. I started picking crabs when I was only as tall as the dinner table, but it's been a very, very long time since I had picked crabs, at least 30 years. I have picked a few at the restaurant, but none for myself since I was in my early 20s. Though it's tedious, it's a fun time to sit around the table, swill some beer, and chew the fat. Picking crabs is as much a social gathering as it is dinner. And for Kelly and me, it brings us back to childhood on the Bay.

Blue Moon at the Beach, Good Living!

Kelly Loading the Crab Pot

Drinking SB; Waiting on Crabs

The Gentlemen of the Hour

Post Feast Carnage; I Made Soup from the Shells
Monday night was also an early night. Kelly wasn't feeling well and we had to hit the road early the next day so that I could get back to the restaurant. Just before we went to bed, my mother called with news that my father had a heart attack and so we spent the next few minutes texting back and forth with my siblings trying to find out what was going on. He would ultimately remain in the hospital until he had a quadruple bypass on Thursday, but we didn't know that then.

Tuesday morning, I snapped awake at 5:30, glanced out the window through barely opened eyelids, saw a lot of clouds in the still dark sky, and lay there trying to decide if they might yield a good opportunity for some sunrise photography. I finally decided that if I were going to need 20 minutes for my camera to become acclimated to the outdoor heat and humidity, I needed to get moving.

As I emerged, Jeff met me at the door and told me that Kelly was feeling a lot worse and that they were leaving to go to the hospital. While they packed and showered, I sat out on the deck facing the Chesapeake and watched the sunrise unfold. It turned out to be one of the most spectacular that I have ever seen. I took it as a sign that Kelly would be fine.

Chesapeake Sunrise

Chesapeake Sunrise II

Chesapeake Sunrise III
Jeff and Kelly left quickly and I made coffee, packed my stuff, washed dishes, and cleaned the house in preparation to leave. And around 8:30, Ann and I made our exit for the 4-hour drive back to Winchester, back up the Rappahannock through the land of corn and soybeans, and back to home. As much fun as we had at the Bay, when we finally got that first glimpse of the hills that surround our home, Ann exclaimed, "Mountains!"

To Jeff and Kelly, thank you so much for your friendship, your generosity, and a much needed two-day weekend!


Wine Wednesday in McMinnville

Each summer we try to make one or more trips to our former home of McMinnville over in the Willamette Valley, about 3.5 hours from Bend, giv...