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Dinner was simple and so good - my favorite kind of meal. Big pieces of chicken marinated in yoghurt, lemon and herbs, skewered with chunks of red peppers and red onions and grilled over charcoal. This was served with a really garlicky cucumber sauce, white rice and a salad of mixed greens tossed with Liz's vinaigrette. I love that vinaigrette. Dessert was coconut and raspberry sorbets.
In this crazy world, cooking and sharing food with family and friends has become a lost art along with letter writing and telling time. When I break bread with friends it is almost like stepping out of time and into an altogether different and welcome zone. Thank you!
Dad and I both selected the delicious Canadian Turbot special- delicate fillets gently pan fried and served atop a mashed potato island in a shallow pool of lemon butter with scattered haricot verts. Perched on the fish was an "herb salad," maybe my favorite part. Mom enjoyed the Chatham Cod with roesti potato, English pea puree, and bacon and Vidalia onion. The girls both had the Bistro Chicken (with "wilted spinach, olive oil whipped potatoes and natural thyme jus"), clearly the favorite dish at the Tewks and one dish that doesn't change and never comes off the menu even as the chefs come and go. I think it is safe to say that we all were pleased with our selections.
Nora, Maeve and Dad all rallied for dessert. Not surprisingly, the girls were immediately drawn to the milk chocolate mousse cake with whipped cream and fresh raspberries. Dad had three scoops of sorbet - lemon, mango and raspberry. Tasty but again, not mind-blowing. I also tasted the "cake" and it wasn't my favorite. It was neither mousse nor cake, it was too sweet and too rich and the taste of orange zest was overpowering to me. The girls loved it and were given permission by their grandmother to use their fingers to finish the drizzles of chocolate sauce. I was seated in between them. It was gross.
After a second day of biking, a cold swim at the beach and many rounds of dominoes, last night we headed to Sag Harbor in the rain for a bite to eat hoping to then take the ferry to Shelter Island for the fireworks. Destiny smiled and we managed to find two adjacent parking spaces and room for seven at the Corner Bar.
The Corner is so reassuring to someone who grew up going out to "The Hamptons." Someone who says Long Island before Bridgehampton and never exhales the dreaded H word. It is reassuringly unchanging and consistently unappealing to those who roam the streets in deep-cut, full-length patterned gowns and strappy metallic high-heeled sandals. Did I mention that the food is good too?
To start with, Rachel and I shared a dozen clams on the half shell and the boys had his and his Manhattan and New England clam chowders. Not much makes me happier than fresh raw clams with a cold draft (a pint of Bass Ale in my case) beer on a rainy summer night in a cozy bar with friends. Okay, the burger made me happier. The Corner Deluxe. I said I wanted it without fries which was stupid and just plain confusing to our server. I had to keep repeating the request. It arrived with potato chips instead of the fries and a side dish of the sauteed mushrooms and onions that are normally piled high on top. No harm done - I put the mushrooms when they belonged right on top of the bleu cheese on the perfectly medium burger. So good and complete. I was a vegetarian for 20 years but this made me forget all about vegetables for a night.
After dinner we learned that the Sag Harbor fireworks were to take place shortly just down the street so we abandoned plans for further travel, retrieved our beach chairs and joined the crowd for rounds of "ooh!" "ahhhh!" and "that one is so cool!"