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Shrimp and grits from the local Long Doggers in Palm Bay. |
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Countdown - less than one month to moving! Image pilfered from www.maxpixel.net. |
Patty joked about the grits being a heart attack about to happen. Thus, while I know how to make them incredible, I would not consider using that many irresistible artery-hardening ingredients -- specifically mass quantities of butter and cream -- much less keeping them around, taunting me to put them to good use.
Eating them out, however enables me to minimize the damage and by design enforce some portion control while I la-la-la ignore what makes them soooo velvety-smooth-melt-in-your-mouth-delicious.
Yet they were superb. To steal Nomad's description, they were "Creole Shrimp 'n Grits,spicy sausage, creole tomato ragout of local vegetables." My tongue stood up a took notice and the vibrant flavors danced across its pleased surface, and while I arrived quite hungry, I left quite full of grits and nothing else but one drink.
The Nomad Cafe grits. Spectacular. Inspired. Not traditional. Located in "downtown" Melbourne Florida. |
Okay, maybe I'm just justifying my excuse to eat shrimp and grits again. It had been about five years since I last indulged, when my best friend and fellow foodie Anna visited me in Jacksonville, Florida. I ordered up them up on our jaunt into St. Mary's, just over the border into Georgia. Ahem, yeah, I am making excuses for my indulgence!
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Classic shrimp and grits in St. Mary's Georgia. |
After a walk at Viera Wetlands for their annual festival, I was hungry and figured I'd pre-burned at least a fraction of the calories I was about to ingest.
Long Doggers delivered. They were not Patty Hamilton good, but at $12.99 plus tax and tip, they satisfied. The shrimp was spicy. The serving, with classic cheesy, buttery, creamy grits, was enough were enough to fill me up but not weigh we down.
"That must not have been a very big serving," Wayne commented when he saw my Long Doggers shrimp and grits photo. "It was a big bowl," I told him.
It's hard to believe that the first time I ate grits, making the sojourn from California to Florida as a twelve-year-old, I declared my dislike for them, describing them as buttered cream-of-wheat with sand added. It probably didn't help that despite the elegance of the a classic Georgian restaurant, surrounded by massive oak draped in Spanish moss, that I was disgusted to notice cockroaches clambering over the coffee cup tray. It was an unpleasant early introduction to the bug-infested South.
Update
Taste changes with time. This is what grits tasted like to me the first time I tried them as a kid -- sand! (Without conjuring up lovely beach images like this one in the Bahamas Jumentos)
Tried another shrimp and grits on multiple neighbor's recommendations -- Seafood Station across from Nomad in downtown Melbourne off A1A. It's one of three; the other is in the same center as the Walmart near me in Palm Bay/West Melbourne, their newest is in IndiaAtlantic. Seafood Station touts its low-country Florida boil. Their crab legs, which were not what I was there for, were definitely drool-worthy.
However, I was on a mission, and stayed true to it. I ordered a side of grits and a side of shrimp; together they were $12.99. There was still plenty.
Seafood Station is the turquoise building in the background, off Harbour Boulevard at the fringe of downtown Melbourne. |
Seafood Station's shrimp and grits. It's more garlicky than spicy |
For me, these grits came with an "Aha." Mabe like James Bond's "Shaken, not stirred" martini preference, mine is "Blended, not topped" when it comes to butter. I like my grits smooth. That means the cheese and butter and if they use it, cream, mixed in before serving. And I like my shrimp spicy.
Seafood Station's self serve. Those plain brown paper towels are much needed, as are the fresh wipes, I needed two. |
But my real "Aha" was talking to someone else about my quest for good grits. I admitted I like mine soooo much better with "a touch" of butter and and cheese -- and -- while I'd never add it at home -- cream. "Yeah," he said. "it's not the grits you like, it's the fat." Maybe he's right. Maybe that's why I don't like Seafood Station's drawn butter topping -- there's no mistaking how much is there.
So if you're a coarse grits, low-country purist, Seafood Station's probably the ticket. Though they should be lump-free. And don't take any phone calls while eating. But to me, they do harken back that childhood memory of Cream of Wheat with sand.
And if it's all about the decadence and you're more into spice and cheese and who knows what all else is wrapped in a silky fokd, then Long Dogger is more your speed.
Do you want a post on another local low-brow Brevard institution, Steak and Shake?
And do I dare indulge and share again on another must-try locally adopted classic, chicken and waffles?Location Location
Palm Bay,Florida, home for me until May 12, 2019.
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Canoe deck, at Turkey Creek Sanctuary. My favorite go-to place in Palm Bay for and evening walk near home. |
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