Fork It Over The Intrepid Adventures of a Professional Eater-Mantesh Unknown (books to read for 13 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Unknown
Book online «Fork It Over The Intrepid Adventures of a Professional Eater-Mantesh Unknown (books to read for 13 year olds .txt) đ». Author Unknown
1 0 9
culture. Helpful contacts directed me to Max Baer, Jr., who played Jethro on The Beverly Hillbillies, and who retains a well-earned reputation as one of Hollywoodâs great Polynesian-restaurant regulars.
Baer once ate ribs with Elvis in a Polynesian restaurantâhe thinks it was Kelboâs, although he isnât sure. Mostly he hung out at the Luau, on Rodeo Drive, with his friends from Warner Brothers, drinking Polynesian cocktails and eating whatever followed. âLetâs face it,â he says,
âafter three or four of those drinks, you could eat Alpoâyou didnât know what they were feeding you.â
As a Hollywood insider, Baer considered the Luau as much a club-house as a restaurant, a place where heâd meet up with Troy Donahue, Natalie Wood, Cesar Romero, and Broderick Crawford, among others.
Crawford was the easiest to find. Heâd be planted at the bar, drinking until he couldnât drink anymore. Not that Baerâs self-discipline was much better. âI crawled out of the Luau more than once,â he recalls. âMostly I remember drinking mai tais and Scorpions. As far as I can tell, one was made with pineapple and one was not. Iâd sit there getting shit-faced. Once, I remember, I was there with Lance Reventlow and Jill St.
John, and I think Tony Curtis was there, too. The Luau had a walk with palms, and in the middle of the walk was a shipâs steering wheel. I remember standing there one night at the helm, saying, âIâll get this motherfucker to shore!â â
These days heavy drinking is considered untoward, but back then the fine-tuned alcoholic stupor validated a manâs celebrity status (witness, for example, Dean Martin, Jackie Gleason, et al.). With cocktails at the core of every fine-dining experience, inebriation was a kind of Zen state, and the Polynesian cocktail was the most painless path to Nirvana.
Todayâs theme restaurants offer essentially the same kind of drinks, but theyâre no longer called the Zombie or the Suffering Bastard. The names are more obvious: the Die Harder, at Planet Hollywood; the Hot Pants, at Fashion Cafe; the Cannibal Concoction, at the Jekyll and Hyde Club; the 10W40, at the Harley-Davidson Cafe; and the Midnight Train to Georgia, at Motown Cafe. Iâm certain that Trader Vicâs endures because it has always done the cocktails better than anyplace else, 1 1 0
A L A N R I C H M A N
particularly the communal cocktails for two or four that the restaurant chain calls âthe ancient Polynesiansâ ceremonial luau drinks.â Bolstered by Baerâs enthusiasm, I continued my search for Polynesian perfection at the Trader Vicâs in Beverly Hills. When I walked in, the air smelled as smoky sweet as a Texas barbecue shack, and the bar was packed two deep. Young women were drinking from real pineapples, while young men were encouraging them to drink more. Except for the pricesâ$8.95 for one of those Pino Pepe pineapple jobsâI could have been in some sort of tiki time warp. I ordered a Scorpion, described on the illustrated drinks list as a âfestive concoction of Rums, Fruit Juices and Brandy, with a whisper of Almond, and bedecked with a fragrant flower.â I thought it tasted the way Annick Goutal perfume smells.
Besides pineapples, Trader Vicâs serves drinks in ceramic coconuts (the Kamaaina), earthen bowls (the Tiki Bowl), and rum kegs (the Rum Keg). It has them in tall glasses and in small glasses, with long straws and with regular straws. Theyâre garnished with sprigs and leaves and parrots and fruit and, of course, maraschino cherries. (The importance of maraschino cherries cannot be overemphasizedâthey are to Polynesian drinks what olives are to martinis.) Theyâre made with light rum and dark rum and sometimes with a splash of 150-proof rum. They come, allegedly, from Montego Bay and Rangoon and Samoa and Barbados and Hawaii and Havana and Jamaica and Tahiti and SibonyâI donât remember anyplace called Sibony from the sixties, but Iâm sure it was there even then. Thereâs even a drink called the Chinese Itchâwho knew that China was an exotic tropical isle?
Trader Vicâs has everything anybody could want in a Polynesian drink, everything but undersized umbrellas. When one of my dinner guests requested any drink at all, as long as it came with a tiny parasol, our waiter replied, â Trader Vicâs doesnât have umbrellas.â I thought this was indeed a sign that the Polynesian apocalypse was upon us, but the waiter added, âTrader Vicâs has never had umbrellas.â
âSurely at one time . . .â I began.
âNever.â
F O R K I T O V E R
1 1 1
âHow long have you been here?â I asked the upstart.
âSince 1972,â he replied.
I guess Trader Vicâs has never had umbrellas.
The drinks, even left unprotected from the elements, continued to please. Not so the cuisine. As much as Iâd like to praise food that I once liked so much, I cannot. Not only did Trader Vicâs food taste bad, it looked bad. In memory I see beautiful dishes. I see Shrimp Bongo-Bongo. At Trader Vicâs, visually unappealing food was shoved together on the plate in such a manner that the half-empty dishes leaving the table in the hands of busboys looked pretty much the same as the full dishes that arrived in the hands of waiters. Only the coconut shrimp reminded me of classic Polynesian foodâsweet, succulent, oily, and absurdly delightful.
Cuisine asideâand, admittedly, thatâs a big asideâthe absolutely best spot to experience the nearly lost mysteries of Polynesia is the Tonga Restaurant & Hurricane Bar, located in San Franciscoâs Fairmont Hotel.
The place has abandoned Polynesian cuisine in favor of the sort of indeterminate Chinese fare thatâs available on almost every corner in San Francisco, but the preparations are skillful and the prices extraordinarily low. Anyway, I didnât go
Comments (0)