DISCOVER. SUPPORT. REPEAT.
Sept. 13, 2024

Friends of James Beard Benefit: An Evening in Coastal North Carolina

Friends of James Beard Benefit: An Evening in Coastal North Carolina
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Topsail Insider

SPECIAL EVENT: September 28th at 5:30pm - Reserve your seats today!
An Evening in Coastal North Carolina, a Friends of James Beard Benefit Dinner at Beach Shop & Grill in Topsail Beach, North Carolina

What does it take to create a truly unforgettable culinary experience on the North Carolina coast? How about a little moonshine, pop rocks, hoop cheese, and pot liquor? The chefs at Beach Shop & Grill work their magic for an upcoming event with these ingredients and more from the local farms we know and love in the Greater Topsail area!

In this episode of Topsail Insider, Executive Chef Jim Foss from Beach Shop and Grill shares the story behind “An Evening in Coastal North Carolina,” an exclusive six-course dinner event that is part of the Friends of James Beard Benefit Series.

Listeners get a sneak peek into the unique menu that blends local ingredients like Ghost Fleet Oysters, Lady Edison country ham, and Sloop Point trout, all paired with award-winning wines. With Chef Foss’s passion for using regional flavors and his commitment to honoring local ingredients, this event promises to be a celebration of coastal cuisine like no other.

Chef Foss shares his culinary journey from Philadelphia to Topsail Island and the joy he finds in cooking for his guests. He also sheds light on the James Beard Foundation’s mission to support culinary arts and offers insight into what makes this upcoming event so special. If you’re interested in the art of cooking with fresh, local ingredients or want to hear a seasoned chef’s perspective on creating a special dining experience, this episode is sure to please!

Beach Shop & Grill
701 S Anderson Blvd
Topsail Beach, NC 28445
https://beachshopandgrill.com/
beachshopandgrill@gmail.com

Friends of James Beard Benefit Link with FULL MENU: https://www.jamesbeard.org/events/fojbb-topsail-beach-nc

Reserve your seats HERE!

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Thanks - I’ll see you around Topsail!

Chapters

00:30 - Topsail Insider Intro and What's Coming Up!

00:44 - Our Sponsors: Saltwater Resort & Suites and Surf City Line

02:45 - Intro to Executive Chef Jim Foss of Beach Shop & Grill and the James Beard Benefit Dinner

05:45 - Chef Jim's Culinary Journey

13:01 - Pastry Chef, Gerald Hawkins

14:18 - Landing in Coastal North Carolina

17:27 - The James Beard Foundation

20:05 - The Friends of James Beard Benefit Dinner

21:05 - Patio Reception and Menu Details

34:25 - The 6-course Dinner

39:05 - The Dessert

41:04 - Reservations and Prices

42:52 - Topsail Insider Closing

Transcript

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00:00:01.500 --> 00:00:23.233
Welcome to Topsail Insider, where you can hear all about the businesses and events in the beautiful coastal towns in the greater Topsail area of North Carolina Coming up, executive Chef Jim Foss from Beach Shop and Grill is here today to talk about a very special event they're hosting on September 28th.

00:00:23.233 --> 00:00:34.210
It's called An Evening in Coastal North Carolina and it's a part of the Friends of James Beard Benefit Series that's held around the United States and it supports the James Beard Foundation programs.

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It is going to be a culinary experience that you do not want to miss and we have all the details for you today on Topsail Insider.

00:00:43.093 --> 00:00:50.161
The details for you today on Topsail Insider.

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It's time to indulge and experience the finest coastal hospitality on Topsail Island with Saltwater Resort and Suites in Surf City, north Carolina, designed to exceed your expectations.

00:00:59.033 --> 00:01:12.536
Guests can enjoy elegant suites featuring premium, luxurious bedding, fully equipped kitchens with dishwashers, 75-inch flat screens en suite, washers and dryers, and gorgeous ocean views.

00:01:12.536 --> 00:01:20.030
With the grand opening of their newest location, you can now relax in their saltwater pool and modern clubhouse.

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Perfect for unwinding, socializing and private events.

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Perfect for unwinding, socializing and private events.

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Book your next beach getaway today at saltwatertopsailcom or call 910-886-4818.

00:01:34.277 --> 00:01:39.953
Saltwater Resort and Suites redefining luxury on Topsail Island.

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Come on out to Surf City Line for the best made-from-scratch beach and bowls on Topsail Island.

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Treat yourself to their delicious bowls with shrimp, steak, fish, chicken or pork, or enjoy their peel-and-eat shrimp, beach break salads and more.

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They offer a full bar serving handcrafted cocktails, incredible margaritas and they proudly serve North Carolina craft beer.

00:02:09.350 --> 00:02:20.525
The line boasts the biggest deck on the island with three levels for listening to live music, relaxing in the sun or head on up to the top deck to enjoy your meal with ocean views.

00:02:20.525 --> 00:02:24.835
Visit Surf City Line NCcom for their full menus.

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The best service and beach vibes on the island await you at 2112 North New River Drive.

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Whether you're a local or visiting from out of town, celebrating a special occasion or just soaking up the sun with family and friends, it's always a great time at Surf City Line.

00:02:42.439 --> 00:02:44.260
Always a great time at Surf City Line.

00:02:44.260 --> 00:02:50.026
Hello everyone and welcome to Topsail Insider.

00:02:50.026 --> 00:02:52.306
My name is Krista and I am your host.

00:02:52.306 --> 00:02:55.469
Today we are talking to Chef Jim Foss.

00:02:55.469 --> 00:03:00.873
He is the executive chef at Beach Shop and Grill in Topsail Beach, north Carolina.

00:03:00.873 --> 00:03:04.256
Welcome, chef, jim, and thank you so much for joining me today.

00:03:04.415 --> 00:03:05.597
Oh, it's so great to be here.

00:03:05.597 --> 00:03:06.457
Thank you for having me.

00:03:11.000 --> 00:03:11.622
Awesome, so glad to have you.

00:03:11.622 --> 00:03:13.647
So we are here to talk about your upcoming James Beard Foundation benefit dinner.

00:03:13.647 --> 00:03:20.425
It's called An Evening in Coastal North Carolina, but first I just want to bring everyone up to date on what's going on at Beach Shop and Grill and talk about your team a little bit.

00:03:20.425 --> 00:03:23.329
Cheryl, who's now the sole owner of Beach Shop and Grill.

00:03:23.329 --> 00:03:30.420
She's really guided the restaurant's culinary experience to new heights over the years, and she has a talented team of chefs.

00:03:30.420 --> 00:03:43.402
She has a beautifully curated menu that changes throughout the season, and y'all use locally sourced ingredients from a lot of local vendors here, which I love, and she has an amazing wine list.

00:03:43.402 --> 00:03:45.389
Her wine list, I believe, is award-winning.

00:03:45.549 --> 00:03:46.391
Oh, yes, yes.

00:03:46.900 --> 00:03:50.810
And then you have these really special events, and this is an amazing event.

00:03:50.810 --> 00:03:55.170
It doesn't happen often in our area, or have there been any other ones in our area?

00:03:55.721 --> 00:03:56.925
Not to our knowledge.

00:03:56.925 --> 00:04:02.848
I believe we may be the first ones in the Wilmington area that actually hosted a beard event.

00:04:03.341 --> 00:04:10.259
I'm telling you guys, pay attention, because the menu that's posted online that we're going to talk about today it's a six course menu.

00:04:10.259 --> 00:04:17.545
You start out on the patio with the oyster station and you're getting wine pairings throughout the entire experience.

00:04:17.545 --> 00:04:23.065
You go and you have a six course meal that you're sitting down for, followed up with the most interesting dessert I've ever heard of.

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That we'll talk about in detail.

00:04:24.690 --> 00:04:26.850
I just want to talk about your team a little bit.

00:04:26.850 --> 00:04:31.627
How long have you been working with Cheryl and what has that evolution been like?

00:04:31.627 --> 00:04:33.290
You said you've been with her for how long?

00:04:33.690 --> 00:04:34.713
This is my fourth season.

00:04:34.713 --> 00:04:35.201
Fourth season.

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So you've been there for a lot of the evolution of this menu.

00:04:38.411 --> 00:04:39.863
Her vision of the menu.

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What has that been like for you and your team?

00:04:47.060 --> 00:04:48.903
To me it's been a challenge and I love challenges in a good way.

00:04:48.903 --> 00:05:06.855
It has enabled me to really kind of bond a little bit with Cheryl and her vision and the direction in which she wants to take the Beach Shop and Grill, which is really to a casual, fine dining Southern restaurant, really boasting and focusing on regional favorites.

00:05:06.855 --> 00:05:14.668
We got this bounty the ocean, we got the intercoastal, We've got hog farms, chicken farms.

00:05:15.050 --> 00:05:24.908
We really do, and a lot of great things really right here at our fingertips, and why wouldn't we just take advantage of that and really the vision of celebrating the food.

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We're just the cooks.

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So we're taking this beautiful piece of hog nose snapper and making that the star of a dish and being able to pair that beautiful fish with an outstanding wine that's award winning and really just elevates the experience.

00:05:43.315 --> 00:05:44.358
It is an experience, yes, perfect word.

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Let's talk experience.

00:05:44.858 --> 00:05:45.300
Yes, perfect word.

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Let's talk about your journey a little bit.

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Where did your culinary career begin and then what inspired you to be a chef?

00:05:53.341 --> 00:06:10.293
Well, my culinary career, I guess, began when I was a young kid, growing up in Northeast Philadelphia, and I've just always been intrigued by food, by cooking, and instead of watching normal Saturday cartoons, I was watching Julia Child and Jacques Pepin.

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My parents got a little concerned about me and it just grabbed me.

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That's it.

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It had me.

00:06:16.439 --> 00:06:17.826
And there's nothing else.

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I'm the luckiest person in the world, even to this day, and I consider myself lucky back then that I just always knew I loved this craft.

00:06:26.132 --> 00:06:47.733
I loved culinary arts and the celebration of food and the transformation of it from the raw product to what ends up on your plate, and the joy that I feel watching people's expressions and their happiness, and also the sadness that I feel when people are disappointed with the dish that I've put out.

00:06:47.733 --> 00:06:51.651
So it really works both ways, and I'm my own harshest critic.

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Tell me about how you transitioned through your culinary career in different locations and how you ultimately ended up here in Topsail.

00:06:59.860 --> 00:07:14.187
Well, from Philadelphia I graduated high school and in the early 80s there was two really prominent schools for culinary arts the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, new York, and Johnson and Wales in Providence, rhode Island.

00:07:14.187 --> 00:07:15.750
So I chose Providence.

00:07:15.750 --> 00:07:19.312
Honestly, I chose Johnson and Wales because I'm like, oh, new England.

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I had this vision of cobblestone streets and clam chowder and I learned a lot.

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And just going through school, having some jobs, I worked at some really good places up there doing prep a place called Al Forno which was a premier restaurant in Providence.

00:07:35.307 --> 00:07:44.355
Remember Todd English, who's a very well-known chef who opened olives in Boston and a few olives and figs nationwide.

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He was my sous chef, didn't realize he was going to become what he became, but just little tidbits like that along the way that have helped groom me and my culinary journey.

00:07:55.428 --> 00:08:13.341
And then I eventually got a job with Marriott upon completion of school and worked with them for a while and at the time my executive chef had a job offer to go to the Hershey Hotel in Philadelphia and it's not because I was from Philly or I had wanted to go back.

00:08:13.362 --> 00:08:19.802
Well, I was curious, but he's like hey, Jim, you want to come and be my chef de cuisine down at the Hershey Hotel.

00:08:19.802 --> 00:08:23.649
Chef de cuisine, it was one under the executive chef, Gotcha Okay.

00:08:23.649 --> 00:08:34.530
So, I was the guy who coordinated the a la carte restaurants and we had three of them at the time and I oversaw the banquet chef and the other sous chefs.

00:08:34.530 --> 00:08:36.225
You moved up quickly.

00:08:36.225 --> 00:08:37.028
Well, a lot happened.

00:08:37.200 --> 00:08:40.599
I'm kind of giving you the cliff notes, the nutshell version yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm giving you the cliff notes here.

00:08:41.282 --> 00:09:04.330
Then he left and I assume of notes here Then he left and I assumed that role of him when the Hershey's since has sold out and it became the Hilton and Towers and during that transition not that I was overly looking, but I had a job opportunity to go to the Barkley Hotel, which is on Rittenhouse Square in Philadelphia, which is the oldest four-star, four-diamond hotel in the city.

00:09:04.330 --> 00:09:06.774
It was a very prestigious role for me.

00:09:06.774 --> 00:09:15.788
So I went there as executive chef and that's when I started kind of coming out on my own and bugging Developing a name for yourself, sort of you think.

00:09:16.221 --> 00:09:17.726
It happened a little bit at the Hershey too.

00:09:17.746 --> 00:09:18.227
Oh, it did Okay.

00:09:18.539 --> 00:09:19.643
When doing some events.

00:09:19.643 --> 00:09:32.643
There was a popular event called the Book and the Cook in Philadelphia was a popular event called the Book and the Cook in Philadelphia, where you know, famous chef cookbook authors would come in for a week and various restaurants all over the city would host them and cook for them.

00:09:32.643 --> 00:09:39.763
Yeah, so I was able to work with Emeril Lagasse, norman Van Aken, jasper White.

00:09:39.763 --> 00:09:49.330
Just brush elbows with some really, really good, talented people and again you just pick up these tidbits and you learn things that you may not realize.

00:09:49.330 --> 00:09:51.052
You learned until 10 years later.

00:09:51.620 --> 00:09:59.113
So I did the Barkley for a while, and during that time is when I did my first off-site beard event at the Penn Club in Manhattan.

00:09:59.113 --> 00:10:00.645
It was a beard sanctioned event.

00:10:00.645 --> 00:10:09.683
And it was me, philippe Chin, george Perrier from Lebec Finn, and we went up and we hosted a reception there.

00:10:09.683 --> 00:10:10.446
So that was-.

00:10:10.586 --> 00:10:12.431
This was your first connection with the James.

00:10:12.451 --> 00:10:27.341
Beard With the Beard House, and pretty much because I stalked Mildred Amico back then and I was like the young kid who's constantly calling hey, hey, can I do it now I really want to come up and do one, and it just forged a great relationship.

00:10:27.582 --> 00:10:28.605
Very, that's so cool.

00:10:28.605 --> 00:10:30.067
Very cute, by the way.

00:10:30.087 --> 00:10:32.994
Yeah, I could be persistent.

00:10:33.279 --> 00:10:34.001
You fanboyed.

00:10:34.062 --> 00:10:39.251
Yes, and then Barkley Hotel sold, unfortunately and truly.

00:10:39.251 --> 00:10:41.182
It was probably one of my greatest jobs.

00:10:41.302 --> 00:10:42.144
I loved it there.

00:10:42.403 --> 00:10:52.711
It was very old school European flat tops and polished and maitre d's and all that type of stuff and it was during then.

00:10:52.711 --> 00:11:03.034
One of my greatest honors was I got my certified executive chef and from the American Culinary Federation I was able to host the American Academy of Chefs dinner.

00:11:03.034 --> 00:11:04.825
Very big honor in doing that.

00:11:04.825 --> 00:11:06.441
So I was pretty young.

00:11:06.620 --> 00:11:07.682
How old were you at that time?

00:11:07.702 --> 00:11:11.169
Oh gosh, I think I was maybe 24.

00:11:11.169 --> 00:11:16.933
My passion is what really drove me on that and then doing some high-end dinners there.

00:11:16.933 --> 00:11:24.323
Unfortunately, the Barclays sold to a condo developer so there was no need for that and I was scrambling looking for a job.

00:11:24.323 --> 00:11:30.687
And I got a job in Penn State State College, pa, as corporate executive chef for a very small company.

00:11:30.687 --> 00:11:46.144
There was only three hotels, but I did all the food and work in the cities or something like that I would have.

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I guess that's where I really really started getting into what is coined nowadays as farm-to-table or seat-to-table or things like that.

00:11:54.970 --> 00:12:01.231
But for me it's like I would pick up a carrot and be like hi, mr Carrot, I'm going to do some beautiful things to you.

00:12:01.231 --> 00:12:03.947
It sounds so wrong, but it was so right to me.

00:12:05.049 --> 00:12:05.591
That's funny.

00:12:06.100 --> 00:12:10.004
But again it's that celebration of the ingredient and we're just the cooks.

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Mother Nature did the hard work.

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We're just here to not screw it up.

00:12:13.606 --> 00:12:21.886
And then from there I found a connection in Washington DC and I went and this was about a six-month-long interview process.

00:12:21.886 --> 00:12:24.294
I had to do tastings in.

00:12:24.797 --> 00:12:34.005
The company was called Capital Restaurant Concepts and they had several restaurants in the DC metro area and I had to go do tastings in each of the concepts.

00:12:34.005 --> 00:13:00.967
We had Palo's, an Italian one, we had Old Glory, which was barbecue, j Paul's, which was a regional mid-Atlantic saloon, and they offered me the job as corporate executive chef, nice, and so I spearheaded the menus for that and that's where my connection with Mildred from the Beard House really came into play and I started doing a few more beard events and so on and also developing some different concepts.

00:13:01.500 --> 00:13:07.631
Some of these combinations that you're doing are things that I never would have thought of, and we're going to go back to that dessert on this menu here.

00:13:07.652 --> 00:13:09.174
That's all Gerald.

00:13:09.500 --> 00:13:10.142
Is that Gerald?

00:13:10.142 --> 00:13:12.909
Yes, he couldn't be here today and I was really disappointed.

00:13:12.990 --> 00:13:13.311
Me too.

00:13:13.370 --> 00:13:15.904
Tell me about Gerald, how long he's been with y'all.

00:13:16.145 --> 00:13:17.850
Well, this is Gerald's second season.

00:13:17.850 --> 00:13:21.504
Gerald is a very, very talented, kind soul.

00:13:21.504 --> 00:13:30.888
We're fortunate because his style of desserts and his style of cooking really parlays what it is that we're doing at the Beach Shop and Grill.

00:13:30.888 --> 00:13:38.951
So as far as the vision of doing that fine dining Southern Carolina coastal cuisine, it's part of his roots.

00:13:38.951 --> 00:13:39.773
He's local.

00:13:40.033 --> 00:13:40.354
Is he?

00:13:40.600 --> 00:13:41.784
He's from the area.

00:13:41.946 --> 00:13:42.187
Okay.

00:13:42.701 --> 00:13:52.509
And he understands the ingredients, he understands the people and our guest and he's very, very talented and has some skill and he knows how to utilize that and put that forth.

00:13:52.509 --> 00:14:03.768
So it makes sense for the rest of the menu, from the start, to the appetizer, to the cocktail or wine, to the entree and then the final, the dessert.

00:14:03.919 --> 00:14:09.625
You got to end strong on that because, most people that's what they remember is that last thing that they ate.

00:14:09.625 --> 00:14:16.866
Walking out, that's the last impact that you're making to that guest and he just runs with it.

00:14:16.866 --> 00:14:18.365
Man, we're very blessed to have him.

00:14:18.821 --> 00:14:22.331
We talked about how Gerald is from this area, which I think is so cool.

00:14:22.331 --> 00:14:24.548
How did you end up here in Topsail?

00:14:25.019 --> 00:14:26.869
Well, my wife is from North area, which I think is so cool.

00:14:26.869 --> 00:14:27.511
How did you end up?

00:14:27.532 --> 00:14:27.873
here in Topsail.

00:14:27.893 --> 00:14:28.918
Well, my wife is from North Carolina.

00:14:28.918 --> 00:14:29.320
How did y'all meet?

00:14:29.320 --> 00:14:33.974
So I was at Myrtle Beach Bike Week and me and my friends.

00:14:33.974 --> 00:14:37.144
We went out to a place called I think it was 2001.

00:14:37.144 --> 00:14:39.530
And my wife picked me up in the bar.

00:14:41.402 --> 00:14:42.024
She approached you.

00:14:42.220 --> 00:14:43.101
Yeah, yeah.

00:14:43.101 --> 00:14:49.967
She thought I was a golfer and then realized I had a custom 12 and a half foot chopper and yeah, the rest is history.

00:14:50.067 --> 00:14:50.750
That's so funny.

00:14:50.750 --> 00:14:53.284
Was she from this area?

00:14:53.284 --> 00:14:54.126
Does she live here?

00:14:54.548 --> 00:15:03.706
Yes, she's from Stokes County, north Carolina, which is northwest of the Wilmington area, and we did the long distance relationship for a couple of years.

00:15:03.726 --> 00:15:04.849
Were you in DC at this time.

00:15:04.849 --> 00:15:05.390
Yes, yeah.

00:15:05.912 --> 00:15:06.633
And got married.

00:15:06.633 --> 00:15:08.625
She moved up to DC with me.

00:15:08.625 --> 00:15:13.408
Oh, how'd she like that With her daughter and I think she cried for about a week.

00:15:13.408 --> 00:15:22.302
It was a culture shock for her from being rural North Carolina into all of a sudden oh my gosh.

00:15:22.302 --> 00:15:26.412
I'm living in a small place in Alexandria, virginia.

00:15:27.801 --> 00:15:30.669
The traffic through there is crazy, oh gosh yes, so scary.

00:15:30.840 --> 00:15:34.379
Yeah, I do not miss 395 or 495.

00:15:34.620 --> 00:15:36.418
I don't know, 17 is pretty bad through here too.

00:15:37.000 --> 00:15:38.065
Yeah, it has its moments.

00:15:38.125 --> 00:15:38.921
yes, All right.

00:15:38.921 --> 00:15:42.311
So then she said I've had enough of this, let's go south.

00:15:42.759 --> 00:15:44.582
No, no, I mean she had a career.

00:15:44.582 --> 00:15:52.225
She started doing government contract work and did work for NSA and all that type of stuff and she's still doing that now?

00:15:52.245 --> 00:16:02.695
Oh, she is Okay, yes, With the things going on with COVID and the one thing about DC it doesn't matter whether you're Republican, democrat, independent.

00:16:02.695 --> 00:16:18.283
Everything is based off of political climate and it was just a bad time politically and there was a lot of rioting and with COVID there was curfews and restrictions and you couldn't go out to restaurants and I really don't know what it was like down here.

00:16:18.283 --> 00:16:24.990
But businesses were closing left and right, and our last stronghold, georgia Browns.

00:16:24.990 --> 00:16:30.528
We had to close after almost 25 years, with a year left on the lease.

00:16:30.528 --> 00:16:32.692
We closed it and sold it.

00:16:32.692 --> 00:16:38.932
My wife and I just looked at each other and said all of our children are in the state of North Carolina.

00:16:39.379 --> 00:16:47.195
We vacationed in Oak Island for years and years and loved the area, I said why don't we move to coastal North Carolina?

00:16:47.195 --> 00:16:54.427
That's our end game, that's where we want it to be eventually, and my criteria was I want to be near with the water.

00:16:54.688 --> 00:16:55.129
Yeah.

00:16:55.671 --> 00:17:05.092
I said I don't care and she said, okay, this is where we're moving, because I love the ocean, I love fishing and I just I want it to be beach person.

00:17:05.092 --> 00:17:12.195
And it wasn't about the money for me and I didn't need to make gobs and gobs of it, thank God.

00:17:12.195 --> 00:17:21.529
It was time for me to just kind of chill out a little bit and try to enjoy some of the things that I didn't do my own doing when I was younger.

00:17:21.529 --> 00:17:22.961
Just enjoy life for a minute.

00:17:35.755 --> 00:17:39.893
All right, so let's talk about the James Beard Foundation, because there's probably some people who don't live in the culinary world and they want to just know who's James Beard.

00:17:39.893 --> 00:17:44.906
So what can you tell me about James Beard and why he is such an important figure in the culinary world?

00:17:45.375 --> 00:17:47.902
James Beard is a pioneer of American cuisine.

00:17:47.902 --> 00:18:02.141
He was a cookbook author and TV personality and just loved food and he was a big foodie and he was involved in a lot of events and galas and he really spearheaded a big movement in our country.

00:18:02.141 --> 00:18:09.422
He started in his house, his brownstone, on the East Village on 12th Street in Manhattan.

00:18:09.422 --> 00:18:19.718
He would host elaborate dinners and so on and so on and really was all about teaching people and that's what the real premise of the James Beard Foundation is.

00:18:19.718 --> 00:18:36.580
It's an ongoing celebration of learning, of giving back and being recognized for not only culinary excellence but also from a restaurateur standpoint and from being a sommelier, you know the celebration of't.

00:18:36.621 --> 00:18:58.403
as fortunate as others get that chance to really follow their dream, and that's what the true meaning of the foundation is.

00:18:58.934 --> 00:19:04.667
I know that there is the James Beard Awards, and that's a prestigious award for chefs to win.

00:19:04.667 --> 00:19:07.022
It's a great thing for the resume as well.

00:19:07.022 --> 00:19:09.723
What about scholarships?

00:19:12.355 --> 00:19:13.136
for the resume as well.

00:19:13.136 --> 00:19:13.698
What about scholarships?

00:19:13.698 --> 00:19:18.556
They do give scholarships to accredited universities, culinary or hotel restaurant management things that are indicative to the business.

00:19:18.556 --> 00:19:26.516
Cheryl really gets behind, supporting women and further enhancing their success in our business.

00:19:27.417 --> 00:19:35.125
I did read where the James Beard Foundation also has programs in place that support women specifically yes, and for Sherry, that's very close to her heart.

00:19:35.125 --> 00:19:44.575
In addition to the women's leadership programs I did notice too when I was doing my research they have a great diversity and inclusion program as well.

00:19:45.477 --> 00:19:46.838
Oh God, the foundation.

00:19:46.838 --> 00:19:52.067
What I just spoke about is really just a big overview of it, and there's so many subdivisions.

00:19:52.367 --> 00:19:53.148
There's a lot to it.

00:19:53.836 --> 00:20:04.407
Yes, that kind of fall into play under that umbrella and, yeah, it's good, it's great to get some recognition and notoriety from the James Beard Foundation.

00:20:04.875 --> 00:20:10.661
Who decided, and when did you decide that you want to have this James Beard benefit dinner at the Beach Shopping Grill?

00:20:10.881 --> 00:20:17.166
Well, cheryl and I just kind of spoke about it and I said do when did you decide that you want to have this James Beard benefit dinner at the Beach Shopping Grill?

00:20:17.166 --> 00:20:21.290
Well, cheryl and I just kind of spoke about it and I said do you want me to give him a call?

00:20:21.290 --> 00:20:21.872
And she said sure.

00:20:21.872 --> 00:20:23.393
So I called Isabella Wojcik and I said hi, jim Foss, remember me.

00:20:23.393 --> 00:20:25.695
And she oh my God, yeah, that's great how you doing and this and that.

00:20:25.695 --> 00:20:29.541
And I said we'd like to do a James Beard event and she said cool.

00:20:29.962 --> 00:20:33.808
If you're going to do something with that title attached to your event.

00:20:33.808 --> 00:20:34.809
What are the requirements?

00:20:34.809 --> 00:20:37.944
Is there anything specific outside of the proceeds are going to go.

00:20:38.234 --> 00:20:48.221
All proceeds, 100% of everything, goes to the James Beard Foundation, and their charitable causes Got it, so we do not see a dime.

00:20:48.796 --> 00:20:53.338
And you mentioned that your mentor is going to be at the event.

00:20:53.338 --> 00:20:56.435
Is there anyone else from the James Beard Foundation that's going to be at the event?

00:20:56.596 --> 00:20:57.578
From the foundation.

00:20:57.578 --> 00:21:03.060
Yes, they're going to be sending somebody who sits on the board of directors down to represent the Beard House.

00:21:03.261 --> 00:21:03.402
Nice.

00:21:03.422 --> 00:21:04.865
So it's going to be fun having them there.

00:21:05.414 --> 00:21:08.201
All right, let's talk about the event details.

00:21:08.201 --> 00:21:11.508
Give us the date and the time and the format for this event.

00:21:11.955 --> 00:21:13.259
Well, the event's going to be on.

00:21:13.259 --> 00:21:16.182
September 28th Starts at 5.30 pm.

00:21:16.182 --> 00:21:21.487
We're going to start out with an elegant, romantic champagne patio reception.

00:21:21.487 --> 00:21:23.423
We're going to have a live action station.

00:21:23.423 --> 00:21:27.021
Ghost Fleet Oysters are going to be there shucking their oysters.

00:21:27.021 --> 00:21:28.746
Nice, I love Ghost Fleet.

00:21:28.746 --> 00:21:31.181
They're great guys, cody and Carrie.

00:21:31.815 --> 00:21:33.439
I want to get them on the show and guess what?

00:21:33.439 --> 00:21:34.321
Put in a word for me.

00:21:34.521 --> 00:21:34.903
I will.

00:21:34.903 --> 00:21:35.664
You want me to call them?

00:21:35.664 --> 00:21:36.287
I'll call them right now.

00:21:36.287 --> 00:21:40.945
They're so passionate about it and they're going to be working the event.

00:21:40.945 --> 00:21:44.085
They come from a mile away from the restaurant.

00:21:44.085 --> 00:21:46.743
What people would say where do you get your oysters from?

00:21:46.743 --> 00:21:56.277
I do you get your oysters from?

00:21:56.277 --> 00:21:56.837
I love saying this.

00:21:56.837 --> 00:21:57.859
I say walk down to the end of that street.

00:21:57.859 --> 00:22:00.567
When you hit water, look at approximately one o'clock and you'll see the oyster pots right out there, that's our oysters.

00:22:00.586 --> 00:22:00.988
Wow, that's so cool.

00:22:00.988 --> 00:22:01.208
I love it.

00:22:01.208 --> 00:22:03.153
It's like it makes me gleam and shine.

00:22:03.153 --> 00:22:04.857
It's like, no, you don't understand.

00:22:04.857 --> 00:22:05.759
It's like right there.

00:22:05.880 --> 00:22:10.407
You truly are farm to table as much as we can be Sure.

00:22:10.468 --> 00:22:20.888
There's four seasons and with the seasons come different things, and we're not getting as much produce as we can get in late August or in January.

00:22:20.888 --> 00:22:24.934
So whenever possible, of course, and within reason, yeah.

00:22:25.255 --> 00:22:30.768
As we get to the menu, though, you'll see, like, how much you're utilizing local farms, but continue on.

00:22:30.768 --> 00:22:32.142
So we're going to have the patio.

00:22:32.142 --> 00:22:35.317
We're going to have the patio, we're going to have that action station.

00:22:35.436 --> 00:22:43.580
We're going to have past hors d'oeuvres mini chicken ballantines from Changing Ways Farm and Holly Ridge for featured nerd chicken.

00:22:43.580 --> 00:22:51.047
We'll have some foie gras lollipops with the hair William pop rocks on it Kind of a nice little fun thing to eat.

00:22:51.047 --> 00:22:54.664
New river clams from new river clam company.

00:22:54.664 --> 00:23:01.204
We're going to have a charcoal grill out there so we're going to be grilling some, some clams and oysters right in front of our guests.

00:23:01.204 --> 00:23:05.125
And it's going to be great when real celebration of our region.

00:23:05.857 --> 00:23:08.339
So about this reception before we move on?

00:23:08.339 --> 00:23:11.080
That starts at five 30, it's out on the patios.

00:23:11.080 --> 00:23:13.984
What are you giving with the oysters at the oyster station?

00:23:14.515 --> 00:23:16.241
Well, we're going to offer some condiments.

00:23:16.241 --> 00:23:20.125
We're going to do a pickled watermelon rind and moonshine mignonette.

00:23:20.454 --> 00:23:21.579
Let's talk about that for a minute.

00:23:21.579 --> 00:23:24.618
Certainly Does it ever have real moonshine in it.

00:23:25.060 --> 00:23:25.260
Yes.

00:23:25.561 --> 00:23:26.144
Does it really?

00:23:26.163 --> 00:23:26.324
Okay.

00:23:27.394 --> 00:23:29.740
Pickled watermelon moonshine.

00:23:30.301 --> 00:23:31.424
Can I say it's legal.

00:23:31.766 --> 00:23:33.740
Yes, yes, yes it's legal moonshine.

00:23:33.740 --> 00:23:36.685
Yeah, you can buy moonshine at the ABC store.

00:23:36.685 --> 00:23:37.269
I believe yes.

00:23:37.409 --> 00:23:41.449
Yes, we burn the alcohol off and then we mix it with watermelon juice.

00:23:41.449 --> 00:23:52.288
That we just juice watermelon with that and then we just take the watermelon, we take the rind and we almost make like a bread and butter pickle out of it and just dice it nice, small and sexy.

00:23:53.150 --> 00:23:53.871
That's amazing.

00:23:53.894 --> 00:23:56.624
Yeah, and that's going to be one of the condiments going with it.

00:23:57.275 --> 00:23:58.761
The grilled oysters.

00:23:58.761 --> 00:24:03.375
Talk about the country ham, part of that grilled oyster equation.

00:24:03.575 --> 00:24:05.441
Well, we again local.

00:24:05.441 --> 00:24:07.606
We're using Lady Edison country ham.

00:24:07.606 --> 00:24:11.222
That is America's version of a fine prosciutto.

00:24:11.222 --> 00:24:18.406
Whatever region I'm in or country I go right for, okay, what is this area known for?

00:24:18.406 --> 00:24:18.948
What does it?

00:24:18.948 --> 00:24:24.545
Do you know what are the foods that are indicative to this region?

00:24:24.545 --> 00:24:32.701
I don't care whether it's central Pennsylvania, new England, and country ham is a big one, it's huge here and there's people that just do it and do it right.

00:24:32.820 --> 00:24:38.505
So it's going to be that really briny oyster from the location of where Ghost Fleet's farm is.

00:24:38.505 --> 00:24:39.906
It's so close to the inlet.

00:24:39.906 --> 00:24:42.248
It really gives it that nice briny flavor.

00:24:42.248 --> 00:25:02.103
On there You're going to have that umami from the oyster plant also known as salsify, which is it's a tuber, it's a root, and we're going to roast that to give it that flavor and going to give it a little more of that salty, fatty flavor, that balance with the Lydia Edison country ham on there.

00:25:02.523 --> 00:25:07.660
So of course I see the oysters right there in the charcoal bubbling a little bit.

00:25:07.660 --> 00:25:15.686
You're hitting it with this beurre blanc made from the champagne that we're going to be serving with the reception having that roasted oyster plant in there.

00:25:15.686 --> 00:25:18.923
It's just a proper bite right there.

00:25:19.104 --> 00:25:22.820
That sounds amazing and I recommend you start with a raw one.

00:25:22.820 --> 00:25:26.028
Just go plain, jane man, eat it, celebrate it.

00:25:26.028 --> 00:25:31.326
Don't lie to the food, just let the food speak for itself and just kind of morph through.

00:25:31.326 --> 00:25:41.346
And then we're going to be tempting you with all those other delicious Scooby snacks for the reception Okay, one of the Scooby snacks is the foie gras lollipop with the pop rocks.

00:25:41.346 --> 00:25:41.886
Yes.

00:25:42.015 --> 00:25:47.897
Everyone remembers pop rocks, right it was so fun to eat, but you know how to create those yourself.

00:25:47.897 --> 00:25:51.540
Tell me how you came up with that concept for the lollipops.

00:25:51.580 --> 00:25:58.327
You know it's what's old is new and just going back to proper pate making 101.

00:25:58.347 --> 00:25:59.949
You're looking at me like I know this stuff.

00:25:59.949 --> 00:26:02.112
I have no idea how you make any of this.

00:26:08.775 --> 00:26:19.480
So for culinarians out of there, you're just making a basic foie gras pate and then chilling it and you're just using a little ice cream scoop and you can re-scoop it out and it's still going to be firm enough that you're going to get like a little jawbreaker size foie gras ball and then we'll just skewer it.

00:26:19.480 --> 00:26:23.323
The pear gelée it's just making like a pear jelly.

00:26:23.323 --> 00:26:31.387
Okay, with pear William and pear William it comes from France and they actually grow the pear in the bottle.

00:26:31.387 --> 00:26:37.327
So you'll see the pear trees with wine bottles tied to the tree.

00:26:37.327 --> 00:26:37.587
No way.

00:26:37.587 --> 00:26:39.118
So the bloom.

00:26:39.118 --> 00:26:41.244
And you can Google this afterwards and check it out.

00:26:41.244 --> 00:26:43.781
Oh my gosh, so that the pear grows inside of the bottle.

00:26:43.781 --> 00:26:46.711
And that's people look at, how did you get the pear like?

00:26:46.750 --> 00:26:47.433
that in a bottle.

00:26:47.453 --> 00:26:51.266
That's amazing they actually grow the pear in the bottle on tree.

00:26:51.434 --> 00:26:52.801
I have learned something amazing.

00:26:52.875 --> 00:27:05.726
And then they put that distilled brandy in it, and that's what a pear William is Got it so we're going to take that pear William and just kind of do as little as possible to it, Because again you're going to hear me say this don't lie to the food.

00:27:05.726 --> 00:27:07.657
Let that speak for itself.

00:27:07.657 --> 00:27:15.925
We're going to put a little bit of gelatin in there and let that kind of congeal, and we'll take the lollipop and dip it in that gelatin, that pear-william gelatin.

00:27:15.925 --> 00:27:21.832
I still haven't decided whether I want to put a little creme fraiche or sour cream in that gelatin to make it white or not.

00:27:21.832 --> 00:27:26.125
And then I'm just going to kind of, like a candied apple, just roll it in the Pop Rock.

00:27:26.946 --> 00:27:33.445
Oh my gosh, this is homemade pop rock too, and the pop rock is also it's going to be made also with the pear William and all that type of stuff.

00:27:33.445 --> 00:27:33.726
How?

00:27:33.726 --> 00:27:35.588
About that and the pop rocks.

00:27:35.588 --> 00:27:40.525
It's not the Captain Original here, it's been done.

00:27:40.525 --> 00:27:41.767
I've seen it before.

00:27:41.767 --> 00:27:48.067
I don't know if it's been done with foie gras, but I've seen it used on savory applications and I figured that would just be.

00:27:48.067 --> 00:27:48.970
It would be fun.

00:27:48.970 --> 00:27:49.672
How fun.

00:27:49.672 --> 00:27:53.119
That's a fun little note like, hey, here's what's coming on the journey.

00:27:53.559 --> 00:27:57.228
Yeah, you have the Mills, johnny Cakes and-.

00:27:57.515 --> 00:27:58.665
The Anson Mills Johnny Cakes.

00:27:58.934 --> 00:28:03.886
Anson Mills Johnny Cakes with Sloop Point Trout Again local.

00:28:04.394 --> 00:28:10.865
Yeah, the studio here is right off of Sloop Point Road, five minutes from my house, and there's right at that marina.

00:28:10.865 --> 00:28:13.269
Right there, you know, they're catching speckled trout.

00:28:13.269 --> 00:28:21.446
So again, we're going to celebrate that with Anson Mills, which is a South Carolina boutique, high-end milling company.

00:28:21.446 --> 00:28:25.967
When we order our grits for the restaurant they grind them on Monday.

00:28:25.967 --> 00:28:29.538
So you have to order, you know, and Sherry, she orders it for us.

00:28:29.538 --> 00:28:44.060
I tell her what to get Monday, so you have to order, you know, and Sherry, she orders it for us and tell her what to get, so they actually grind the grit to our spec, whatever kind of grit white, yellow, blue, red to order, and then they send it and it's perishable.

00:28:44.080 --> 00:28:44.382
So we have we.

00:28:44.382 --> 00:28:46.852
We keep our grits in the freezer, it's not like it could sit on the shelf.

00:28:46.852 --> 00:28:51.306
So that's again just a celebration of local and the quality that our region has.

00:28:51.934 --> 00:28:53.478
You mentioned the Changing Ways.

00:28:53.478 --> 00:29:00.450
Farm chicken with boiled peanut chicken liver, mousseline, mousseline.

00:29:00.654 --> 00:29:03.565
You go in any gas station around here and you see boiled peanuts.

00:29:03.694 --> 00:29:05.522
It's obviously a thing okay.

00:29:06.174 --> 00:29:09.105
And chicken livers fried chicken livers at the Scotchman, or whatever it's called.

00:29:09.105 --> 00:29:09.465
It's a thing.

00:29:09.465 --> 00:29:10.107
I love fried chicken livers.

00:29:10.107 --> 00:29:11.271
I love chopped chicken livers fried chicken livers at the.

00:29:11.291 --> 00:29:11.953
Scotchman or whatever it's called.

00:29:11.973 --> 00:29:14.021
It's a thing I love fried chicken livers.

00:29:14.021 --> 00:29:15.361
I love chopped chicken livers.

00:29:15.361 --> 00:29:19.246
I think I asked my wife to marry me because she said she likes fried liver.

00:29:19.246 --> 00:29:29.609
And you just take the two and you're making a mousse to smear in a local chicken breast and kind of roll it up and make it look like a fancy little pinwheel.

00:29:30.277 --> 00:29:33.940
To highlight that whole thing, it's Ghost Fleet, it's changing ways.

00:29:33.940 --> 00:29:34.875
Changing ways it's.

00:29:34.895 --> 00:29:44.126
Surf City Crab and Seafood Market and they're donating the crab and they're donating the hog nose snapper inland seafood out of Charlotte.

00:29:44.126 --> 00:29:47.105
They're donating local product.

00:29:47.105 --> 00:29:50.780
Nice Okay, and some artisanal product as well.

00:29:51.383 --> 00:30:02.950
Looking at the dinner menu too, like you've incorporated, like you said, like country ham is big here in our area, but so are black-eyed peas and buttermilk and pot liquor hoop cheese.

00:30:02.950 --> 00:30:08.319
Hoop cheese is a big thing around here If you were born and raised here, you know what hoop cheese is.

00:30:08.500 --> 00:30:09.402
Yeah, I met my wife.

00:30:09.402 --> 00:30:11.365
I didn't know what hoop cheese was.

00:30:11.365 --> 00:30:17.980
I'm like what is this strange cheese that I keep finding in these off-road gas stations?

00:30:18.261 --> 00:30:20.667
Duke's mayonnaise, like that's what you have in the kitchen.

00:30:20.815 --> 00:30:23.546
I grew up on Hellman's, but that's a bad word down here.

00:30:23.546 --> 00:30:30.887
So, yeah, it's just taking fundamentals and putting the ingredients that we have at hand as the stars.

00:30:31.255 --> 00:30:46.748
You've embraced them in this menu though yes, and I think if anyone thinks of a high-end restaurant as like I don't even know what's on the menu, I don't know these things Well, if you're local here, you're coming to an event that has these things that you've grown up with.

00:30:46.748 --> 00:30:52.015
They've just been incorporated in a very creative way, and I love that about this menu.

00:30:52.055 --> 00:30:57.615
I just played with your mind because I'm using a big word like mousseline and then Duke's mayonnaise.

00:30:57.615 --> 00:30:59.661
It's like what's happening here so great?

00:31:00.624 --> 00:31:03.961
Talk about pot liquor for a minute, because a lot of people don't know what pot liquor is.

00:31:03.980 --> 00:31:06.557
Well, pot liquor is the juice that you stew your greens in.

00:31:06.557 --> 00:31:20.715
Yes, you know collards, turnip greens, mustard greens, the way I make mine, and I refer back to Old Glory and Georgia Browns in DC, which were all Southern-inspired restaurants.

00:31:20.715 --> 00:31:22.440
Oh, okay, our potlicker.

00:31:22.440 --> 00:31:26.655
We cook our collard greens in chicken stock and Newsky's bacon.

00:31:26.655 --> 00:31:29.080
Onion garlic, a little bit of molasses.

00:31:29.080 --> 00:31:32.567
Cider vinegar White House cider vinegar it has to be White.

00:31:32.606 --> 00:31:32.707
House.

00:31:32.707 --> 00:31:33.388
It has to be White.

00:31:33.548 --> 00:31:33.930
House.

00:31:33.930 --> 00:31:40.392
Yes, and that's kind of the basic of what a pot liquor is, but it's not a pot liquor until after those greens have stewed in it.

00:31:41.193 --> 00:31:41.555
That's right.

00:31:41.895 --> 00:31:46.342
And we, even on the menu right now, our Buehler's pork.

00:31:46.342 --> 00:31:50.769
We take that pot, liquor we it out, we we marinate our pork in it.

00:31:50.769 --> 00:31:54.903
Wow, so so you know you're kind of doubling down on the flavor.

00:31:54.903 --> 00:32:09.320
You got this beautiful, fatty, delicate pork and then you got the collard greens, but then you're emulating that flavor of the collards by marinating the pork in the braising liquid of AKA, the potlicker that we cook those greens in.

00:32:09.320 --> 00:32:11.750
So it's a very harmonious dish.

00:32:11.951 --> 00:32:16.143
Marrying the two together Exactly, it's like how many things can I use this watermelon for?

00:32:16.143 --> 00:32:19.460
I'm going to use the juice, I'm going to use the rind and I'm going to do this.

00:32:19.460 --> 00:32:22.954
I'm going to make it with this and that, and it's like nothing went to waste.

00:32:22.954 --> 00:32:25.387
You're respecting the ingredients.

00:32:26.030 --> 00:32:27.656
So there's six courses in this dinner.

00:32:27.656 --> 00:32:34.279
Yes, they're all coming out in like one at a time, right Paired with a wine, if you choose to have the wine pairing.

00:32:34.299 --> 00:32:34.601
Correct.

00:32:34.601 --> 00:32:38.280
We're offering it kind of two ways, with the wine pairings and without.

00:32:38.630 --> 00:32:40.858
So let's just go through this menu really fast.

00:32:40.858 --> 00:32:45.051
So you're not serving black-eyed peas, you're serving black-eyed pea lard crust.

00:32:45.051 --> 00:32:46.894
For that, the Carolina tomato pie.

00:32:46.913 --> 00:32:48.675
We're making flour out of black eyed peas.

00:32:48.675 --> 00:32:49.777
I've never heard of that before.

00:32:49.777 --> 00:32:51.178
Just grind it and that's it.

00:32:51.178 --> 00:32:55.781
It's going to be a mix of black eyed pea flour and regular flour, and I don't know.

00:32:55.781 --> 00:33:01.247
My grandmother made pie crust out of lard, you know that's not a new thing, yeah.

00:33:01.247 --> 00:33:12.797
So it's just again, it's not a twist of words, or it's not anything fancy, it's.

00:33:12.817 --> 00:33:15.567
hey, man, I'm just making things your grandmother, great-grandmother, your mother made I'm just doing it the old way.

00:33:15.567 --> 00:33:16.289
Let's talk about the she-crab cake.

00:33:17.050 --> 00:33:19.498
It's not she-crab soup, unless you have crab eggs in it.

00:33:19.498 --> 00:33:20.701
Henceforth the name.

00:33:20.701 --> 00:33:26.711
Okay, okay so we're going to do a little riff on that and we're just going to make the crab cakes that we serve.

00:33:26.711 --> 00:33:37.038
They're delicious and we're going to wrap it in phyllo, but in between the phyllo layers I'm going to put the hydrated crab eggs in there to make it a she-crab galette.

00:33:37.159 --> 00:33:37.861
That makes sense.

00:33:38.410 --> 00:33:45.661
And that way you're going to have that nice light crispy, with that salty, crabby roe.

00:33:45.661 --> 00:33:48.779
That's just kind of like the quiet bass player in the back.

00:33:49.530 --> 00:33:51.357
Let's see the tea-smoked squab.

00:33:52.070 --> 00:33:52.994
Squab is pigeon.

00:33:52.994 --> 00:33:55.376
It's a petite game, bird.

00:33:55.711 --> 00:33:56.816
How are you going to serve that?

00:33:57.651 --> 00:34:01.512
What I'm going to do is I'm going to put a very light smoke on it with tea, this dish.

00:34:01.512 --> 00:34:13.137
Originally I was going to do it tobacco-smoked my wife being from growing up in a tobacco farmer's thing and everything else and I kind of changed my mind on that.

00:34:13.137 --> 00:34:17.722
I didn't know how people were going to take that or not.

00:34:17.722 --> 00:34:27.340
So I found some Carolina grown tea, so we're going to use some Carolina black tea and kind of use a little Asian accent on there.

00:34:27.429 --> 00:34:36.083
It's not going to have Asian flavors but the technique of using the Koshi rice and the tea and some orange peel to put a very light smoke on there.

00:34:36.583 --> 00:34:36.985
Interesting.

00:34:37.630 --> 00:34:52.204
Then we're going to take the carcasses, we're going to take a fancy word offal for guts, all the guts, the hearts, the livers and all that stuff out Offal O-F-F-A-L and that's going to be a part of the succotash that's going in there.

00:34:52.204 --> 00:35:01.418
So the dewberries my mother-in-law, gladys, has already picked them in the spring and I've had them in my freezer.

00:35:01.418 --> 00:35:08.556
She walks to the end of the street so I live right behind Carol Sue Farms in that neighborhood and they have all sorts of blackberry and dewberry bushes.

00:35:08.898 --> 00:35:09.259
So she.

00:35:09.498 --> 00:35:10.360
So she goes.

00:35:10.360 --> 00:35:12.445
She went up there and she picked a bunch of dewberries.

00:35:12.445 --> 00:35:16.358
That's the inspiration for that I'm like okay, let's do it.

00:35:16.358 --> 00:35:29.166
Again, everything is so local, yeah the berry is going to really accent that gaminess of the squab and the earthiness of the succotash and give that kind of sour, sweet twang to the nage.

00:35:29.166 --> 00:35:36.119
And a nage is nothing more than a very heavily reduced stock to the point it's almost the syrup.

00:35:36.139 --> 00:35:36.641
So yeah, that was kind of.

00:35:36.661 --> 00:35:37.891
That was kind of the inspiration.

00:35:37.891 --> 00:35:49.894
I just wanted to show off a toot to snoot kind of meal, you know it's a what Toot to snoot, toot to snoot, yes, and I'm kind of using all different elements of the pig.

00:35:49.894 --> 00:36:00.246
I'm really excited to showcase the flavors of my new home you know, and showcase the Beach Shop and Grill family and what it is that we do there.

00:36:00.510 --> 00:36:02.253
You really have Like.

00:36:02.253 --> 00:36:10.972
I've never seen a menu embrace so many different local farming, whether it's aquaculture or agriculture different local farming, whether it's aquaculture or agriculture.

00:36:10.972 --> 00:36:18.378
I've never seen anyone use it to this degree and incorporated not just in one part of a dish but in multiple parts of the dish to come together and create one dish.

00:36:18.378 --> 00:36:19.382
It's really beautiful.

00:36:19.730 --> 00:36:20.914
It was a collaboration.

00:36:20.914 --> 00:36:22.018
It takes a village.

00:36:22.429 --> 00:36:31.835
Have you tried all of these in different little ways and had everyone taste it and figure out which way was the best way, like, how did you test drive your menu?

00:36:31.856 --> 00:36:35.603
Through my life I've done many, many things.

00:36:35.603 --> 00:36:40.657
I mean I had like the French garlic sausage for the study in pork.

00:36:40.657 --> 00:36:43.003
I've made that a hundred times.

00:36:43.083 --> 00:36:43.465
Okay.

00:36:43.925 --> 00:36:50.677
Having barbecue restaurants and making my own sausages, for that I know, and I know how the flavors are going to come together.

00:36:50.878 --> 00:36:52.559
The black-eyed pea lard crust.

00:36:52.559 --> 00:36:54.862
Is that not brand spanking new?

00:36:54.862 --> 00:36:56.425
Or you've done that before.

00:37:00.389 --> 00:37:02.315
Gerald, if you're listening to this, you are going to help with the pie crust.

00:37:03.076 --> 00:37:05.902
You're not just doing desserts, but that's right Okay.

00:37:05.902 --> 00:37:07.996
So we're talking about Gerald's dessert.

00:37:07.996 --> 00:37:10.458
Here we have the cantaloupe semifreddo.

00:37:10.458 --> 00:37:13.391
Semifreddo which means half frozen.

00:37:13.391 --> 00:37:22.284
So you've got the cantaloupe frozen, semi-frozen treat that's on top of a buttermilk spice cake with the marshmallow cream.

00:37:22.284 --> 00:37:24.737
But then you have country ham.

00:37:24.737 --> 00:37:26.394
Who combines that?

00:37:26.831 --> 00:37:28.396
You know I'll tell you why.

00:37:28.396 --> 00:37:34.516
I mean Gerald, he has done this cantaloupe semifreddo and it's fantastic.

00:37:34.516 --> 00:37:36.900
And he gave me a few choices.

00:37:36.900 --> 00:37:38.023
He's like, hey, what do you think?

00:37:38.023 --> 00:37:45.713
And honestly I didn't even read the whole thing and I heard texting and I responded to him and I said you had me at country ham.

00:37:45.713 --> 00:37:50.784
You read it and in my mind I know how it's going to taste.

00:37:50.784 --> 00:37:55.282
You got that sweet kind of earthy umami from a cantaloupe.

00:37:55.282 --> 00:38:01.083
You got the chill from the semifreddo but that creaminess, that mouthfeel that it's going to give.

00:38:01.083 --> 00:38:04.719
You got that twang from the buttermilk spice cake.

00:38:04.719 --> 00:38:06.858
You're going to have those warm spices in there.

00:38:06.858 --> 00:38:08.635
That's great for the time of season.

00:38:08.635 --> 00:38:10.570
The event's going to be in Again.

00:38:10.570 --> 00:38:11.813
You got the earthy honey.

00:38:11.813 --> 00:38:20.039
You got that honey going into marshmallow, which he's making his own marshmallows, which is essentially almost like a meringue with gelatin in it.

00:38:20.922 --> 00:38:26.010
Then you got some heat coming in from that Asian spice and it's like, ooh, it's going to wake you up a little bit.

00:38:26.010 --> 00:38:29.317
And who doesn't like, nowadays, salted caramel?

00:38:29.317 --> 00:38:32.362
That's where the country ham's coming in.

00:38:33.489 --> 00:38:34.472
Boom, boom boom.

00:38:34.512 --> 00:38:39.864
So you're kind of getting hit, but it's all homogenized, it's making sense.

00:38:39.864 --> 00:38:41.074
That's a part of the journey.

00:38:41.074 --> 00:38:50.402
It's got to make sense and even though we're using fancy culinary terminology that you can Google and find out and be like oh, this is just a jelly.

00:38:50.402 --> 00:38:51.831
Oh my, why didn't you just say that?

00:38:52.353 --> 00:38:55.922
Because I would not be fine, that's true, that's true, that's true.

00:38:56.389 --> 00:38:59.759
We're very blessed to have Gerald In the words of Gerald McGuire.

00:38:59.759 --> 00:39:00.561
He completes us.

00:39:07.550 --> 00:39:14.083
It's not often that we get treated to an event such as this in our area and I think it's going to be spectacular.

00:39:14.083 --> 00:39:20.063
Let's tell the folks how to reserve their seat for an evening in coastal North Carolina.

00:39:20.063 --> 00:39:24.630
The price for that seat, both with and without the wine pairing.

00:39:24.911 --> 00:39:28.978
Sure Well, the easiest way to book a reservation, and it is limited.

00:39:28.978 --> 00:39:30.880
We're only selling 65 tickets.

00:39:30.880 --> 00:39:37.702
To keep this a very intimate night, is to go to the Beach Shop and Grill's website and just click make a reservation.

00:39:37.702 --> 00:39:38.572
It's right in front of you.

00:39:38.572 --> 00:39:45.458
Or you can do the same by going to the James Beard website click the event, do search Beach Shop and Grill and we'll pop up Again.

00:39:45.458 --> 00:39:47.302
The event is September 28th.

00:39:47.302 --> 00:39:49.253
It starts at 5.30 PM.

00:39:49.574 --> 00:39:51.420
How long do you think the whole experience is going to last?

00:39:51.510 --> 00:39:56.121
I'd say about the reception, about an hour and then probably about two to two and a half.

00:39:56.121 --> 00:39:58.838
It's going to be an evening on the Carolina coast.

00:39:58.838 --> 00:40:00.356
You know, don't be in a hurry.

00:40:00.952 --> 00:40:02.371
No, don't be in a hurry For something.

00:40:02.371 --> 00:40:04.152
This like this, you can't.

00:40:04.353 --> 00:40:08.097
Because, truly, I'm the one who's honored to be able to cook for my guests.

00:40:08.097 --> 00:40:11.702
It's that simple You're coming into my house, I'm honored to cook for them.

00:40:11.722 --> 00:40:14.965
You're going to be walking around and I'm going to be In it.

00:40:15.251 --> 00:40:16.429
I'm going to be knee deep in it, man.

00:40:16.429 --> 00:40:23.340
I may pop my head out the kitchen door and the price is, without wine, $110.

00:40:23.340 --> 00:40:28.523
With wine pairings, which I truly recommend, if you like, wine, is $170.

00:40:32.090 --> 00:40:33.612
This is a very it's reasonably priced of what you are getting here.

00:40:33.612 --> 00:40:46.992
And again, thank you to our vendors and their donations For those who haven't donated, I'll deal with you later and a hundred percent of the proceeds go to the foundation to better the future of our business.

00:40:46.992 --> 00:40:54.554
So if you guys enjoy really good restaurants, this is a great way to share your support for them.

00:40:54.574 --> 00:40:59.974
All right, insiders, you know the drill, so I will have those links for you in the show notes.

00:40:59.974 --> 00:41:02.199
They will be clickable and so you just go there and click.

00:41:02.199 --> 00:41:12.759
It'll take you straight to the reservations where you can get your tickets, and then also you'll be able to have just the link to the restaurant there if you want to just go and visit them outside of this special event.

00:41:12.759 --> 00:41:18.695
It's always a wonderful experience even without this and the six courses and the wine pairings.

00:41:18.695 --> 00:41:22.635
Just going to the Beach Shop and Grill is it's a special occasion place.

00:41:22.635 --> 00:41:24.384
It's where you just feel like you're.

00:41:24.384 --> 00:41:35.481
You're getting to do something really special, because the menu is always amazing and it does change throughout the year too, which is also nice, because every time you go in there you get to try something new, and it's special.

00:41:35.481 --> 00:41:38.518
So thank you, listeners, for joining us today.

00:41:38.518 --> 00:41:42.378
I really appreciate you always and thank you again, chef Jim.

00:41:42.378 --> 00:41:45.255
It has been such a pleasure getting to know you.

00:41:45.436 --> 00:41:46.259
It's been my pleasure.

00:41:46.259 --> 00:41:47.101
Thank you for having me.

00:41:47.121 --> 00:41:47.541
It's been fun.

00:41:47.541 --> 00:41:48.858
I've really enjoyed the conversation today.

00:41:48.858 --> 00:41:48.949
My pleasure.

00:41:48.949 --> 00:41:49.076
Thank you for having me.

00:41:49.001 --> 00:41:49.110
It's been fun.

00:41:49.110 --> 00:41:49.543
I've really enjoyed the conversation today.

00:41:49.467 --> 00:41:49.585
Thank you, me too.

00:41:49.585 --> 00:41:50.873
Just so everyone knows.

00:41:50.873 --> 00:41:57.539
This was supposed to be like a 20-minute conversation that we were just talking about James Beard and I'm like, nah, we're going to turn this into a whole episode.

00:41:57.559 --> 00:41:58.240
And I'm glad.

00:41:58.750 --> 00:42:00.737
I appreciate you giving me the extra time today.

00:42:00.737 --> 00:42:08.199
Thank you, you bet, and I fully expect the next time I see you and Cheryl with you.

00:42:08.358 --> 00:42:10.061
Oh, they already know that they're coming.

00:42:10.061 --> 00:42:11.664
Okay, I've done enough talking.

00:42:11.884 --> 00:42:13.065
All right, well, thank you so much.

00:42:13.065 --> 00:42:22.978
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00:42:22.978 --> 00:42:27.782
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00:42:27.782 --> 00:42:34.858
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00:42:34.858 --> 00:42:43.757
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00:42:52.985 --> 00:42:58.498
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00:42:58.498 --> 00:43:05.510
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00:43:05.510 --> 00:43:07.518
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