Skip to main content

Eating Your Way Along 30A

One of the appeals of this place is the food—because the entire area has become such a draw to vacationers, and so many of those vacationers come from metropolitan areas where great restaurants are plenty, 30A has great restaurants. I won’t attempt to name them because I’ll leave most out by mistake and ignorance. Also, we moved here during the Covid pandemic, and although too many people around here claimed such a thing didn’t exist, we are just now getting out and trying new places.

First, when I say “vacationers,” I’m including the people who have second homes here and visit here quite often throughout the year, not just people who come here for a week or two in the summer. The second-home types generally have means, so their standards are means-worthy, and that’s why I believe there are so many remarkable restaurants here. There are people who will pay high prices to eat good food.

That means locals have to pay high prices, too, of course, but some places quietly offer 10% discounts to us. We have never asked for that discount but don’t turn it down when it’s offered.

Now about this food—you will find everything from delicious carpaccio and filet mignon in Inlet Beach to Italian dishes not involving spaghetti and meatballs in Grayton to sushi at Blue Mountain Beach to down-home dishes all along the way. For me, at the moment, I am drawn to the down home.

I am northern by most standards, and when I tell people we moved here from Ohio, I’m sure they assume some things. What they don’t know is that I was born in Alabama, and while raised in Indiana, I was brought up with the Food of My People—fried chicken, shrimp, and oysters; fried okra, hush puppies, honest to goodness coconut cake with seven-minute icing, fried corn (which is really more like creamed corn but fresh from the cob, frozen, and then cooked in a skillet), catfish, and biscuits. Just to name a few dishes from my mother’s kitchen.

I have done without these things for a long time, and now back in the South, I am making up for lost time. I have yet to find the corn or the coconut cake of my childhood, but everything else is available. This is not to say I don’t thoroughly enjoy more sophisticated dishes.

Have the hush puppies at Stinky’s Fish Camp for sure while you’re here, and the catfish tacos at Red Fish Tacos in Blue Mountain Beach. Shunk Gulley has a great shrimp basket, and their slaw is the best I have had, although it’s nothing like what my mother made. It’s better.

Another thing that is plenty here is fresh fish straight from the Gulf or the bay, either on menus or at seafood markets for meals at home. Oysters are everywhere in season, and shrimp and crawfish as well. Be sure to order crawfish pie at a place that’s known for making it well, and buy some shrimp and try your hand at making shrimp and grits.

I continue to answer the question “what’s it like to live here” because people ask it online quite often. So, food wise, it can feel like you’re on vacation all the time even though it’s just a typical Tuesday, which can get expensive. We enjoy the many local restaurants and look forward to discovering more, but we quite often have dinner at home because we aren’t bad cooks ourselves.

#30A #EmeraldCoast #FloridaPanhandle

Comments

dive said…
Darn, I'm glad I read this when I'm just about to start cooking. If I'd read it at work I'd have howled with hunger.
Stinky's Fish Camp? Sounds good enough to tempt me to swim there from England.
Bon apetit, Robyn!

Popular posts from this blog

Happy Birthday To...

Pope Leo IX (the Pope) JCF Bach (German composer) Jane Russell (of Gentlemen Prefer Blonds fame) Daniel Carter Beard (founder of the Boy Scouts of America) Jean-Paul Sartre (French philosopher) Maureen Stapleton (Academy Award winning actress) Mariette Hartley (who?) Prince William of Wales (the prince) but most importantly, HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 45 years ago today, I was born in Alabama in a small town on the banks of the Tennessee River. Yesterday, someone asked me if my family has any birthday traditions. The answer is no. My family never cared very much, but I do remember a few birthday highlights. I was given a birthday party in the back yard when I was ten years old. Two years later, my sister got married on my birthday, so I was just a bit overlooked, although I did get a stuffed animal--it was a white Yorkshire terrier with an AM radio in its stomach. When I turned 20, a different sister took me to an outdoor performance of Dvorak's New World Sympho...

Right Brain Dominant

I am reading A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future , by Daniel H. Pink. I wouldn't have chosen this book had I been book hunting because I lean toward fiction—it was a gift from someone who, like me, is right-brain dominate. I haven't gotten very far, just far enough to learn that in Hippocrates' day, the left side of the brain was considered the true source of thought, the thing that separated us from the animals and made us human. It was the source of reason and logic. The right side was considered a useless left over, a parasite. Now we know that both sides of our brains are equally important and equally involved in our daily thoughts and functions. But some of us do seem to be governed by one side more strongly than the other. Me, sometimes I think the left side of my brain has completely atrophied, that the right side governs everything. But I am learning that I don't give that other side enough credit, that logical mathy side. As I read on ab...

Everybody Needs A Little Crème Brûlée

I went out to dinner with some friends the other evening and ordered crème brûlée for dessert. It was lovely—crispy sugar crust and creamy custard underneath. I'm a bit of crème brûlée fan and order it more often than I order any other restaurant dessert, which is not to say I always order dessert—only now and then. On my way home, I remembered I had a crème brûlée kit at home with ramekins, a torch, and a basic recipe. I love the torch. So, now I have made my favorite dessert at home, and I recommend that everyone have crème brûlée. It makes the world better. I used the recipe on the box, which was simple and basic. My only suggestion for improvement is to use less sugar for the caramelized crust. It was so thick, it was like chipping away at glass. An ice pick would have come in handy, or a diamond. Other recipes suggest 1/4 cup to be divided among six ramekins, making just over 1 tablespoon per serving. Crème Brûlée serves 4 1 cup heavy cream 2 extra large egg yolks (I used 3 re...