Going home š½
Side Dish travels to the city of Schniper's birth and upbringing, to check out some recommended hip/new spots and compare the scene to C. Springs'
The week before last, I traveled to my hometown of Birmingham, Alabama. The Magic City ā yeah itās a dumb motto, Iād rather call it Home to Vulcanās butt ā is where I got my start in the industry. I was 15. I worked at a now-defunct Italian fine dining spot called Armanās. I started as a busboy and food runner and then became the expediter (the kitchenās orchestra conductor). I later jumped from front-of-the-house to back, moving from pantry (salads/desserts) to sautĆ© (pastas mostly) to the wood oven (pizzas/baked apps/entree specials). I got paid like shit, but loved the life.Ā
Anyway, when I go back to Bāham annually I always ask around about new and/or hip spots. Thereās never enough time between family programming to hit everywhere, but I get to what I can in a whirlwind.
Having focused on breweries, cocktails and barbecue in the past few trips, this year I caught up on craft coffee culture and otherwise hit a couple one-offs convenient to our family plans. Despite Bāhamās food scene maturing many years ago, its drink scene lagged behind. Craft breweries were absent when I left in 1997; C. Springs began its rise in ā93 with Phantom Canyon and Bristol, by contrast. While the hooch has caught up, with spots like Good People Brewing Company and Golden Age Wine, coffee culture lagged. Only in recent years have I noticed the opening of several legit third-wave spots that elevated from the Starbucks-level neighborhood places.Ā
A spot called Revelator really got my attention several years ago, but itās since closed shop in āBama. Now, Iām told ā by some young Bāham residents I recently hosted in the Springs ā the list of craft go-toās are June, East Pole (out of Atlanta, Bāhamās bigger-city culture feeder three hours away), Cala Coffee, Domestique, Punch Love and Seeds. Iām able to hit the first two.
Near the downtown gem Railroad Park, East Pole has a minimalist vibe and limited menu that evokes Loyal Coffee. Pourovers are on parade and itās just the traditional espresso drinks. The batch brewās excellent. As much as the Springsā finest roasters have plateaued at the high-end of coffee (there isnāt really a progression to a fourth and fifth wave; the ceilingās kinda set), East Pole gives me the feeling that Bāhamās scene has firmly arrived and that true bean worshippers now have ample nerdy refuges from the bullshit syrup slingers and mass-market caffeine peddlers.Ā
June reinforces that sense, with an impactful, industrial-influenced stylishness. Look at the chic wood panels and neat brick bar and European-feeling patio under a peeling vintage mural. Black sesame-date latte: check. Orange-fig latte: check. And whatās that? A āMatcha Peachuā with green tea, peach-almond syrup and sweet cold foam. Yup.Ā
But thereās another reason to venture to this revived downtown corner: Last Call Baking, recently listed by Eater Atlanta as among 30 Essential Restaurants in Bāham.Ā
I was warned to go early before everything sells out, which happens daily. (Think Nightingale Bread, with a shorter line and less inventory.) We arrive in time to nab a pain au chocolat, cinnamon roll, croissant and two berry Danishes: a blueberry-lemon and strawberry-ricotta.Ā
The croissant might be the best weāve ever had (I hate to be superlative, but what can I say, itās a checkmate moment.) Butter, lamination, airiness, pull-apart-y-ness, flakiness, texture, color, smell, flavor, weight, itās all there, what you want, painfully perfect and validating. The pain au chocolat is textbook stellar, the cinnamon roll less sweet than commercial glazed nonsense, and the creamy fruit elements of the Danishes are total delights.Ā
Itās true what they say about this place. The reverence is real. Oh the agony of great pastry moments because you canāt fully enjoy what you knowās about to end in crumbs when you donāt live nearby so you canāt get more. So you savor the edible ephemera and shrug off the sugar consumption ācuz thereās no calories on vacation. And surely this is health food when it buzzes the brain bits like this and excites the senses so. Am I being over-the-top? Donāt know, donāt care.Ā
That night, at Slimās Pizzeria in Crestline Village in Mountain Brook (which is kind of like saying in Buckhead in Atlanta or around the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs), we run back into the Last Call Bakery owners by total coincidence. Iām reminded that like the Springs, Birmingham (metro population roughly 1.1M) still feels like a small city where you often bump into people you know. And on that note, I meet the spotās co-owner John Rolen, former chef de cuisine at a highly respected spot called Bottega. Or I should say that I re-meet him, as we barely recognized or remembered each other though we worked together a little over 25 years ago at Armanās.Ā
We reminisce a bit about those wild times (formative for us both in the industry), and Iām glad Iām able to sincerely say good things about Slimās. Particularly about the peach pizza with pancetta, hot honey, jalapeƱos, ricotta and chives. The doughās awesome and airy and chewy crusted. I ask if heās buying the standard, Italian 00 Caputo flour and he says no, that he likes the higher protein content of a flour grown and milled in-state. He does a three-day cold ferment. Everythingās on point, including a Gulf shrimp appetizer (with hot honey butter and Calabrian chiles) and desserts made with local Big Spoon Creamery ice creams. My affogato reverses the normal presentation, filling a cappuccino mug with fior di latte ice cream but leaving a crater in the middle into which the espresso shot is poured. Bliss.Ā
We return in the morning to that same village for Crestline Bagel Co. for a whole wheat everything bagel and garlic bagel to take and toast back home. And we hit Church Street Coffee & Books for an oat milk latte and housemade lavender-chai latte. We peruse the tightly curated bookshelves as we wait, noting everything from Malcolm Gladwell to Wendell Berry and Cormac McCarthy, with a little Neil Gaimon thrown in for good measure. (Hell, they have a copy of Kent Harufās Colorado-set Plainsong.) Of course thereās a copy of Frank Stittās Southern Table; the James Beard Award-winner also owns Bottega (where Rolen worked; like I said, small world).Ā
Before leaving Church Street, I canāt help but notice that every man in the room is wearing virtually the same thing: creamy gray/white slacks with various collared shirts all in a blue tone whether patterned, striped or gingham. Despite slight variations in footwear, it makes me uneasy. (There were several others at the bagel shop also dressed this way.) What odd conformity is this? Oh yeah, the one I grew up around and rebelled against (wearing my houndstooth chef pants to high school in Dr. Martens with suspenders over a t-shirt). How do multiple grown-ass men, houses apart, wake up and put on virtually the same damn thing? I bet their wives vaguely resemble one another ā blond hair, you know it. (Malcolm Gladwell come back to Bāham, where I know youāve reported on civil rights and much more, and unpack this for us please in that way that you do.)Ā
I ask my dad about the same-dressed-dudes when I get home ā he sighs and rolls his eyes. Heās worked in the menās fashion industry for decades as a wholesale rep to retail stores. āThatās the Mountain Brook look, the uniform ā preppy,ā he says. āWhen people started wearing Lee jeans vs. Leviās back in the day, that was a coup.ā I confess in reading that now that I donāt entirely know what he meant by that (because we were too busy laughing) other than to say clearly thereās a tipping point (back to Gladwell) as to when a particular item hits critical mass locally and becomes the standard. But still, guys: why do you want to dress like everybody else instead of express some individuality? I donāt get it.Ā Be your own man ā man!
Sadly, our last meal in town isnāt from a recommended list, but eaten out of the utility of location and us being nearby and tired. I have mild hope for a decent meal at The Pita Stop Express because Bāham has always had decent Mediterranean eats by my recollection. But alas, all but the hummus and baba ganoush fall pretty flat. Thereās lipstick imprinted on my wine glass; the first pinot noir I order is so bad I have to push it aside and order a different one; the salad greens are starting to brown at the edges; the dressing is sappy commercial nonsense; the rice has to be Benās Original wild rice; they pair unripe fruit with entrĆ©es such that a co-diner says āI should not have to scrape rice off to eat cantaloupeā; and to cap it all off, the staff starts flipping chairs atop tables around us well before closing time in the ultimate uncouth move.Ā
It just goes to show that listening to those passionate about finding the best eats and drinks locally does make a difference. Gamble and of course you may lose. But follow a regional food journalist like Hanna Raskin when in the area and youāll be eating pretty. Charleston-based Raskin pens The Food Section, some of the finest food journalism being produced anywhere. Just for funsies, I reach out to Raskin (who Iāve dialogued with once before as a fellow Substack-er) to solicit some thoughts on Bāham as Iām concluding this visit. She writes back with the following tips:
"I was most recently in Birmingham to visit the city's storied Greek-owned restaurants, and have resolved to include at least one of those places on all my Birmingham itineraries going forward. It's easy to get distracted by fancy cooking when eating in town: Automatic Seafood & Oysters is one of the best restaurants in the region right now, and (at least until Highlands reopens) Chez Fonfon is where serious diners can and should express their gratitude for Frank Stitt's contributions to modern Southern dining. Plus, Pizza Grace. But the soul of the city's hospitality culture lurks in restaurants such as The Fish Market and Ted's."
So you see, Birminghamās not all barbecue, fried chicken and sweet tea, as out-of-towners often assume. Thereās James Beard winners and respected, legacy restaurateurs. You should go sometime. So file this blurb in your future folder for a long weekend away, as you would hit Nashville or Austin or wherever. (Oh, and make sure to go see Vulcanās butt.)Ā Ā
I would gladly pay to go on a āSchnip Tripā like this!
For a quick visit home you sure absorbed a lot of new info and as usual made it sound very appetizing where deserved.