Category Archives: Fish & Bicycles
Sehome Arboretum II
Brandywine Kitchen: Locavores Rejoice!
I LOVE discovering a new restaurant with certain characteristics that keep me coming back on a regular basis. Those characteristics typically include: a nice, friendly ambiance; unique, well-prepared food; healthy options alongside more indulgent choices; some measure of organic and local ingredients; and, particularly in these tight economic times, reasonable prices.
Bellingham, Washington’s own Brandywine Kitchen simply nails it on all accounts! And while this post may seem to only be relevant for folks here in Bellingham, I actually think it speaks to a fairly universal business principle.
Now, I’m a total proponent of paying extra for organic, locally produced food. Consider it a tax I gladly pay to support a more sustainable future.
That said, it seems to me that most of the locavore restaurants that I have been to — eateries that feature locally-grown and organic food — have been of the high-end, fine dining variety. And while I like that experience from time to time, on special occasions, for instance, I simply can’t afford to eat like that regularly, and neither can most people.
Enter, Brandywine Kitchen! Their tagline: From Seed to Plate
Founded originally as a small, organic heirloom tomato farm, owners Azizi Tookas and Chris Sunde then started selling prepared foods at the Bellingham Farmers Market, and eventually opened up the restaurant last year.
The space is elegant without being stuffy, and the first economizing element you notice upon entering is that there’s no wait service. Customers simply walk up to the counter, order their food, receive a number, visit a smaller counter for napkins, water, or fountain drinks, and then select their own table. On the tail end of the dining experience, customers are asked to do their own busing.
The most expensive entrée on the menu is $10.95, and several entrées and most of their sandwiches are $8.95 to $9.95. And while this could make for a pricey lunch, it’s hard to find a good restaurant that serves dinner for less than $12.00, and locavore restaurants more typically run as high as $15.00 to $25.00, not including starters, beverages, and desserts.
So, this business principle that I was speaking of is the recognition that 99% is much, MUCH bigger than 1%, and therefore it makes more sense to cater to the 99%, with affordable prices and a relaxed, casual atmosphere.
The other notable thing about the Brandywine Kitchen menu is that it is supremely accessible. Instead of fancy, nouvelle cuisine, with tiny but gorgeous fusion concoctions, the Brandywine serves recognizable favorites, such as Mac & Cheese, Fish & Chips, and Chicken Pot Pie, all made with the best, healthiest ingredients available, mostly coming from a list of local farmers and other vendors, whose names are listed proudly on a chalkboard near the front counter.
I had the special, a bison meatball sub, and unlike most restaurants, the special was the same price as most of the other entrées. The sub was absolutely delicious!
Again, this is the kind of food that most people eat on a regular basis. It’s a brilliant, sustainable business formula, the place is packed with people raving about it, and I wish the owners continued success, for very selfish reasons, of course.
Sehome Arboretum
Video Fridays: Jimi Hendrix Plays Bob Dylan
I’ve been listening to a LOT of Bob Dylan lately, and in today’s Video Fridays installment I’d like to feature one of the greatest Dylan covers of all time.
This version of the classic Like A Rolling Stone, performed by Jimi Hendrix at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, is remarkable in a number of ways.
Hendrix, as he’s introducing the song, tongue firmly in cheek says, “I’d like to bore you a little bit for about six or seven minutes…” I don’t have any evidence for this, but I think there’s a good chance that he might be referring to the fact that there are so many words in the song. Some Dylan detractors thought his wordiness bordered on tedium, and let’s face it, most people at Monterey were there to hear Hendrix’s virtuoso guitar playing.
Jimi, himself, seems a little conflicted. He can’t even make it through the introduction, and unexpectedly says, “Excuse me for a minute and just let me play my guitar, alright?” It’s a funny moment, but it’s also a moment of complete abandon to the music. He literally has to stop talking because the guitar is begging him to play it.
Then he steps on the breaks long enough to finish the intro, before launching into an unbelievable, commanding performance, his lush, layered guitar licks mixing resonating chords and melodic fills that drip with honey, honey so sweet that you don’t even notice that he uncharacteristically does not do any extended soloing.
Anyway, enough words.
Happy Friday, everyone! Enjoy!
Tweet of the Day: #JohnLennon
Discovering the following two tweets within minutes of each other was chilling and deeply, deeply sad.
#JohnLennon killer, Mark David Chapman transferred to #Wende correctional facility from #Attica. Will be eligible for parole in August.—
1310News (@1310news) May 16, 2012
Walking in Iceland, March 2012: I thought "I'm alone." yoko instagr.am/p/KsDir2Dzi6/—
Yoko Ono (@yokoono) May 16, 2012



