Surf City Cuisine
I did a lot of dining out during the family week at the beach so I’m splitting the blog into two parts rather than turning it into picture laden novella. Our tradition is breakfasts and lunches are “on your own” events and we tend to split up into loners or small groups. Suppers are everyone at the table family events where we take turns cooking for the whole group. This year we added the grown kids to the rotation and it was a joy watching them working together, playing music and having a great time cooking for all of us.
Sentiment out of the way let’s talk about the food scene in Surf City. The house we rented was located such that over half the places I visited were within walking distance including the first place I hit with my sister and brother-in-law for breakfast, Fractured Prune. This is a doughnut shop where they make the doughnuts to order and you pick a glaze flavor, a drizzle & topping. They have some pre-named combo like the Peach Pie which has peach glaze, powdered sugar & pastry crumbles. There are hundreds of combos. The kids they had working here were all really friendly and willing, nay eager, to explain how it worked and help you pick the flavor combo that fit your want. So many calories, so little time.
For lunch we walked to the end of the road to the Hot Diggity Dogz stand. The weather was pleasant and there was a nice breeze blowing so dining outdoors was not a problem. At first I couldn’t tell if the young guy working the order window was fake enthusiastic or really that dang happy with his job. Turns out he was that dang happy. After we got served and no one else was at the window he came out to check out how liked the dogs and chat for a bit. Nice kid. For my part I got a Beach Dog & a Surfer Dog.
The dogs are all beef and served on a potato bun. The Beach Dog is further dressed with chili, mustard, onion & slaw and quite tasty. The Surfer Dog was decked out with mustard, melted cheese and bacon and as you no doubt assumed it was worth the walk.
The next morning after a cup of coffee and wave watching therapy on the deck I strolled down to the New York Corner Deli for some breakfast. It has the New York deli at the beach feel I’m sure they were going for. They have a deli set up where you can get meats, cheeses, salads, etc that you’d expect and they have a simple but something for everyone breakfast menu. I didn’t spend much time looking at it though because I knew what I wanted; a toasted sesame bagel acting as a delivery vehicle for sausage, egg & cheese.
The bagel was nice and chewy with toasted sesame seeds on the exterior. I very much like toasted sesame seeds and when you throw in the breakfast ingredients it was delicious. I was surprised to find the sausage was sliced up links rather than a patty. I just assumed they’d use patties since they are roundish like the bagel but the substitution did not hurt the overall experience at all. The coffee was nothing special but it was coffee so it served its purpose. I did get a dozen bagels to take back for the others and discovered at that point the bagels are not necessarily made on site since a couple of the types I selected were still frozen. In fairness they did let me know up front that was the case in case I wanted to change my mind. I didn’t and when toasted back at the house and smeared with cream cheese they did the job.
After some beach time and reading lunch was courtesy of Spudees a few blocks away. Another outside dining experience but the tables & picnic tables had umbrellas to provide some shade from the sun so it was pleasing. I checked them out online before heading there and they had me at poutine.
This was likely the most Canadian poutine of the several I’ve had. It consisted of french fries topped with a generous serving of cheese curd and both of those covered with hot beef gravy. The fries were well cooked but not crispy. The cheese curd initially had the consistency of mozzarella but softened and melted under the heat of the beef gravy which also had a hearty flavor profile. I got the medium size and brothers & sisters let me tell you I needed the walk back to the house because it was a boatload of food and good enough I ate every single bite. They had several other types of poutine as well but I had to try the original.
The next day after another grueling regimen of wave watching and a stroll to the beach some of us headed to The Shuckin Shack for some shuckin seafood.
It would have been wrong to go to a place called the Shuckin Shack without trying the oysters so I had a half dozen steamed. They were ok if you baptized them in butter and added some of the provided horseradish. I’ve honestly had better served up by my grandfather & cousin but as I said they weren’t bad. For my real food I got the crab cake sliders. They had good crab flavor and held together reasonably well considering they got a bit squeezed being a sandwich and all. The tartar sauce they brought was tasty as well and unlike most was laced with horseradish. There was no hurry up in the game of our waiter but about half way through we picked up a second server who was helping things along and she was great. She had some pep in her step, a smile on her face and a pleasantly professional demeanor. It didn’t change the flavor of the food but I liked the metal serving trays they used and of course there was a bucket recessed into the table to toss your various shells and detritus into. Overall it was a better than average lunch.
That’s a wrap on part 1. In summary the first half of the trip was loaded with great to good service and delicious food.