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Ring in the New Year at our house!

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

The Fish House celebrates New Year’s Eve with a four-course wine dinner, live music, and complimentary champagne toasts at midnight!fishhouse_nye_30x40_2011

On December 31, beginning at 6:00 p.m., the Fish House will offer a special dinner in celebration of New Year’s Eve. This special menu, created by Chef Billy Ballou, features four delicious courses paired with wines selected by Beverage Director William Morse and Premier Beverage Company.

Some highlights of the menu are an appetizer selection of a Butternut Squash Tart with roasted butternut squash, Alabama chèvre, and fresh herbs paired with Peter Lehmann Layers White 2010, Barossa and Adelaide, Australia. A dessert selection: Roasted Pear and Hazelnut Parfait, layered with roasted-pear mascarpone, hazelnut nougat, and zinfandel-poached pears paired with Marqués de Cáceres Satinela 2009, Rioja, Spain.

The full menu is available on our website: Click here
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Welcome to our house

Thursday, December 15th, 2011
Holiday Greetings!

General Manager, Jean Pierre NDione Photo: J.D. Hawyard Photography

General Manager, Jean Pierre NDione Photo: J.D. Hawyard Photography

We are right in the middle of a bustling holiday season at our house. What a wonderful time of year! It’s my favorite. We have had so many of you coming over to celebrate the season! Guests come in their holiday finest, bringing gifts, laughing, sipping champagne. Such a happy time! For our complete holiday hours, click here.

We are getting ready to celebrate the beginning of a new year with a four-course wine dinner on New Year’s Eve. We will have two seatings to accommodate those wishing to participate in this year’s Pensacola Pelican Drop Celebration on Palafox. We will also have a complimentary champagne toast and live music from  Jerry Dawson of The Shiz accompanied by band members of The Astronauts. For reservations, call Melissa or Bianca at 850-433-9450. To view the menu, click here.

Down on Palafox Street, our Great Southern Events team will be hosting New Year’s Eve in the courtyard on the corner of Palafox and Government streets. There will be a bar serving delicious raspberry margaritas, mixed drinks, beer and wine. Chef Irv Miller from our sister restaurant, Jackson’s Steakhouse, will be serving a Pensacola Cheese-Steak Sandwich with caramelized onions and hot pepper cheese sauce for $7.00. The courtyard will open at 5:00 p.m. for bar service with sandwich service beginning at 6:00 p.m. Be sure to stop by and say hi so we can wish you a happy 2012!

2012 will bring Great Southern Restaurant Week. The Fish House, Jackson’s Steakhouse and Atlas Oyster House will once again team up to present Winter Restaurant Week, January 24 – 28, 2012. In step with similar events in cities all around the country, Restaurant Week is a culinary celebration that offers residents and visitors alike world-class dining at a great value. For more information, including menus, click here.

We hope that you and your family have a wonderful holiday season. Happy New Year from our house to yours!

Jean Pierre Ndione
General Manager

Perfect Parties: Great vendors make wedding spectacular

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Melissa Martin’s bridesmaids hold parasols designed by Jen Naar at Gaboodles, Ink as the bride and groom pose behind a parasol at right. Gaboodles, Ink offers personalized stationery, invitations and gift baskets. / Special to the News Journal

Melissa Martin’s bridesmaids hold parasols designed by Jen Naar at Gaboodles, Ink as the bride and groom pose behind a parasol at right. Gaboodles, Ink offers personalized stationery, invitations and gift baskets. / Special to the News Journal

Written by Melissa Martin Bailey

I officially am a married gal.

I will now get back to writing about football parties and new ideas for celebrating the holiday season, but before I do, I thought I would take the opportunity to write about planning my wedding reception to finish out this wedding series.

Because I’m in the event-planning business, it was easy to choose the right vendors for our wedding.

Hiring a wedding planner was a necessity, and Megan Kennedy of Megan K. Events was at the top of the list. With her fresh eye and knack for detail, it was a no-brainer to have her on board. Not only can you hire her event company for the planning portion; she also specializes in floral decor and design. But even though Kennedy and company do impeccable work, Shannon Pallin from Fiora always will have a special place in my heart. Though Fiora was the chosen florist for the reception, I had Kennedy’s team transform my rehearsal dinner venue, 5 Eleven Palafox, into a page right out of a bridal magazine.

After meeting and working with Pallin years ago, I knew she would do the floral design for my wedding. Her long-term experience and knowledge in her field make her one of the best floral designers in the country. After 10 years in California, Pallin moved to New York City and worked as a designer and stylist for Martha Stewart, Preston Bailey and Katie Brown. Her 22 years of experience shine in your consultation as she verbally paints a picture of your event.

For the wedding venue, she decided to capture the natural beauty of the Barkley House by enhancing its beauty with cafe lights and rich, bold colors. The centerpieces alternated between fresh flowers and antique birdcages as well as black urns with manzanita branches, complementing florals and mixtures of foliage and vines on the bases.

As many of you can guess, my choice to cater my wedding rehearsal and reception was The Fish House. Not so much because I have been with the company for more than 10 years, but because I have been lucky enough to see the amazing culinary skills of the chefs, who create the best of Southern cuisine.

Because it was hard to choose what we wanted our guests to experience, Josh and I decided on several action stations and food displays as well as passed hors d’oeuvres.

To start, we served mini Southern crab cakes and barbecue beef satay. The guests also were treated to an antipasto station during cocktail hour. When the stations opened, the guests were able to try homemade Asian stir-fry as well as Grits à Ya Ya served in a martini glass. We also took advantage of the fall vegetables available at the local farmers markets to create a large fall-inspired salad bar.

Chef Billy Ballou and team put together eye-catching displays of fresh-caught seared tuna and coastal shellfish — fresh-cracked oysters, clams and snow crab.

Last but not least, I have to talk about the sweetest woman in town: cake baker Betty Weber, a lady so good at what she does, you have to book her months in advance.

Well, friends, I hope you have enjoyed the journey we have taken over the past few months, and while you read this, I imagine I will be lying under the Jamaican sun, sipping an umbrella cocktail, enjoying my honeymoon.

Until next time, friends, no worries.

Cocktail Corner: Bacardi Oakheart Punch

Monday, October 31st, 2011

Written by William Morse DownloadedFile

In 1830, 15-year-old Don Facundo Bacardi Massó left Spain to join his brothers in Cuba. Upon his arrival, rum was the most popular spirit even though it was crude and unsophisticated. Here he saw an opportunity and dedicated several years to refining the spirit. Ultimately, in 1862, he established the Bacardi Co.

One of Cuba’s oldest drinks was the Draque, which was named after its inventor, the English corsair Richard Drake, and is the predecessor of the widely popular mojito. Much like today’s mojito, the Draque, or Drak, was made with mint leaves, lime and a rough sugar-cane spirit called aquardiente (meaning fiery water). During the mid-1800s and around the same time that the Bacardi Co. became established, the Draque recipe was changed to use rum in place of aquardiente, thus becoming the mojito.

Another classic cocktail originating in Cuba — and allegedly with Bacardi Rum — was the daiquiri. The account goes that in the summer of 1898, an engineer named Jennings Stockton Cox, who was leading a mining expedition in the town of Daiquirí, Cuba, began experimenting with Bacardi Rum and concocted a mixture of rum, fresh-squeezed lime juice, sugar and shaved ice. He aptly named it the daiquiri.

Another historical drink developed around this time, and purportedly with Bacardi Rum, was the Cuba Libre (meaning “free Cuba”). Well, maybe the drink’s name has more historical relevance than the drink itself. It is simply Bacardi Rum, cola and lime.

Over the years, Bacardi has developed many different-flavored rums, such as cherry, peach and raspberry, as well as many others. Their newest debut is Bacardi OakHeart — a smooth, silky spiced rum.

Bacardi OakHeart Punch

1 1/4 ounces Bacardi OakHeart Spiced Rum

1 ounce Southern Comfort

Fill glass with equal parts:

Orange juice

Cranberry juice

Splash of grenadine

Build ingredients in a tall glass over ice.

The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St. 470-0003, or visitwww.goodgrits.com.

Chef’s Corner: MOMA salad

Monday, October 31st, 2011

Special to The Pensacola News Journal

MOMA salad by Jim Shirley of The Fish House. / Bruce Graner/bgraner@pnj.com

MOMA salad by Jim Shirley of The Fish House. / Bruce Graner/bgraner@pnj.com

Written by Chef Jim Shirley

Funny how things get their names. You’re flipping through a menu and find a name that makes you pause and wonder how that happened. An example would be one of my favorite salads, the MOMA. Here’s how that came about.

A few years back — in the late ’90s — I had a spot called Stella’s Bistro in the Pensacola Cultural Center. It was a casual little place where all the sandwiches were named for theaters and all the salads were named for museums. This little jewel of a salad, made with applewood-smoked bacon, Gorgonzola cheese, toasted walnuts, caramelized pears and a Gorgonzola vinaigrette, was named the MOMA after the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan. The salad came with me to The Fish House and has resisted efforts to be renamed. We’d rather have you come to us, but if you’re cooking at home, here’s the recipe.

MOMA salad

8 slices applewood-smoked bacon

2 cups Gorgonzola (divided)

4 hearts of romaine lettuce

2 Bosc pears, cored, peeled and quartered

1 tablespoon butter

2 tablespoons brown sugar

3 ounces white balsamic vinegar

1/2 cup walnuts

1 tablespoon minced garlic

1/2 teaspoon onion powder

2 teaspoons dried parsley

1 cup olive oil

2 teaspoons Fish House hot sauce

1 pinch white pepper

1 pinch sea salt

First pop a bottle of Ponga sauvignon blanc, a crisp adult beverage from New Zealand winemaker Alan Scott. This will help you get into a salad-making mode. I follow Hemingway’s lead and drink my sauvignon blanc (his was Sancerre) crackling cold.

Now throw a skillet on the stovetop, crank to medium heat, line up the 8 strips of bacon across the pan, and cook fully. Chop and reserve. Strain off the bacon drippings, and wipe the skillet clean. Put the drippings back in the pan, and add butter and brown sugar. Sauté over medium heat for a minute. Toss in the sliced pears, and cook till lightly browned (about four minutes). Remove from pan and chill.

For the dressing, whisk together 1 cup Gorgonzola, minced garlic, onion powder, white pepper, hot sauce, dried parsley and white balsamic vinegar. When well mixed, slowly whisk in the olive oil. Reserve.

Toast walnuts in a pan for a minute or two, and hit with a pinch of sea salt.

To build the salad, first sip on the wine to calm yourself for the arduous task ahead. Toss lettuce in a bowl with 6 ounces of the dressing. Split into four plates, and cap each with 2 slices of bacon and remaining Gorgonzola (split four ways). Lay the caramelized pears over the top, and sprinkle with walnuts to finish. Pour up the grape and fall to.

The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St., 470-0003, or visitwww.goodgrits.com.

‘Morning Joe’ live from Pensacola

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

Written by Troy Moon – The Pensacola News Journal

MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' starring former U.S. Rep. Joe Scarborough of Pensacola broadcast live from The Fish House in Pensacola this morning. / Tony Giberson/tgiberson@pnj.com

MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' starring former U.S. Rep. Joe Scarborough of Pensacola broadcast live from The Fish House in Pensacola this morning. / Tony Giberson/tgiberson@pnj.com

“You’re with ‘Morning Joe’ from beautiful Pensacola, Florida.’’

That’s the message sent out across the nation early Thursday morning as the MSNBC morning news/talk show broadcast live from The Fish House in downtown Pensacola.

About a dozen people nibbled on muffins and bagels inside the waterfront restaurant, watching the program on television screens. Outside, just feet away, Scarborough sat behind a bistro table with notes and paperwork in front of him, bright lights and cameras shining his way.

The show airs from 5 to 8 a.m. weekdays on MSNBC.

“It’s a tremendous opportunity to be showcased on a nationally renowned show like Morning Joe,’’ said Laura Lee, communications director for Visit Pensacola, a local tourism and marketing group. “We were up there in New York in June and Joe showcased our local seafood and celebrity chefs. And to have him back in Pensacola in October with (more…)

Laura Bogan, Why I Love Grits

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Written by Shelley Yates: The Fish House Grits Girl

Laura Bogan - Owner of Boco Networking, lover of grits.

Laura Bogan - Owner of Boco Networking, lover of grits.

Recently, in an ongoing effort to get to the bottom of why Pensacolians love grits so much, the Grits Girl had a chat with her good friend Laura Ragan Bogan. Many people around Pensacola know and love the Bogan family. We all still miss seeing the family patriarch, Perk Bogan, who passed away in April of 2005. His two sons, Chris and Ben, are regular fixtures around town. Chris dated and then married his high school sweetheart, Laura Ragan. For as long as any of us can recall, there was never a time when Chris didn’t belong to Laura, and Laura didn’t belong to Chris. The couple has one son, Winston. From our perspective, their life together looks like one big Ralph Lauren photo shoot: a beautiful, stylish couple living a lovely life, raising their son, helping others, and rescuing pets. Recently, Laura embarked on a new challenge and started her own social media marketing company, BOCO. The Grits Girl wanted to know what fuels her passion for social media, child rearing and helping others — could the secret lie in the grits? Let’s find out.

GG: What’s it like starting a new company?

LB: Scary and exhilarating at the same time. But most importantly, it doesn’t feel like work. I love what I do and am having a blast doing it.

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