____________________________________________________________________________
It was months of planning and scheming (mostly by Megan
& Katie but Butch claims to have “helped”) a surprise birthday trip for me. I received a “Save the
Date” invitation via e-mail (May 6-May 9) from “The Birthday Committee.” A
second invitation came telling me a packing list would be forthcoming, which
was my the 3rd correspondence from The Committee.
A few days prior to the trip I received a package from
Katie with instructions to open right away. Inside were 3 bottles of nail
polish (gold for fingers; purple for toes; glitter purple if I felt brave) and
money for a mani/pedi. Katie
wondered if the Mardi Gras color choices would tip me off as to our destination, but I did
not give any thought to a color clue. {Mom is usually better with hints.}
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
On the morning of May 6th, my 60th
birthday, I opened a gift revealing the destination to be The Big Easy, New
Orleans. Also enclosed were 2 Mardi Gras masks to take on the trip. We headed
to the airport to catch a plane. When we arrived at our gate in
Dallas, there were Megan and Aaron to meet us wearing their Mardi Gras masks! Butch
and I returned the favor when we got off the plane first in New Orleans, and
greeted Megan and Aaron with our masks on as they came out.
Upon arriving at the lovely Bourbon Orleans Hotel in the
French Quarter, Katie and Jon were waiting outside, also wearing Mardi Gras
masks. They had several strands of beads to drape around my neck – made for a
Green Bay Packer fan – so I will get further use out of them! Katie and Jon had
been there long enough to do some preparations – our room was decorated with a
birthday banner and feather boa, camel’s milk chocolates from Dubai, and
laminated itineraries and pralines on our bed. {The birthday committee tried, but failed to acquire balloons & other more class decor so feather boa and beads it was}. Our room was 2 levels – a
gathering area downstairs, bed & bath upstairs. The hotel left a bottle of
inexpensive champagne, which never got opened.
captain of the welcoming committee |
We changed clothes and headed off to Commander’s Palace
for a 7:30 dinner reservation. They knew we were coming, with balloons on the
table. We ordered the tasting menu, which consisted of 6 courses.
~ The Chef’s
Playground ~
Crawfish
Beignets
Crispy beignets
filled with Breaux Bridge crawfish tails
and crawfish
boil vegetables with spicy rémoulade & garlic aïoli
Pork Belly
& Oysters
Louisiana
oysters and braised pork belly with Parmesan & chili butter
Escargot
& Gnocchi
Basil fed escargot with roasted mushrooms, tomatoes,
hand-rolled
gnocchi, and Louisiana soy beans
Saint 75 (to cleanse our palette!)
St. Germaine
Elderflower liquor,
Tanqueray gin,
crushed citrus, and basil syrup
Crispy Soft Shell Crab
A jumbo
Louisiana blue crab with Creole tomatoes, shaved mirlitons,
sweet corn,
& grilled onions with charred green onion ravigote
Creole
Spiced Veal Tenderloin
Truffle
potatoes, roasted mushrooms, and glace de viande with
smoked sea salt
& savory tomato jam
Blueberry
& Lemon Pound Cake
This was not up to
the chef’s standard, so we were able to order our own dessert of choice + an extra our waiter brought to the table.
I had delicious
strawberry shortcake.
We had a good laugh on our way out when Butch asked the first person in uniform - a police officer, not the valet - to hail us a cab!
i think he was going for bunny ears, but he missed and just looks like a crazy richard nixon. joke's on you, dad. |
The dinner was fabulous, but not the best part of the evening. We all
congregated in our room afterwards, and I was given about 40 birthday cards
that the girls had collected from friends and family. Katie had e-mailed the
request, and they were sent to Megan’s address. I had mused briefly about not
getting more birthday cards in the mail before we left Wichita, but again did
not catch on.
Katie and Jon also gave me a card
autographed by my first favorite football player, Bart Starr! “To Debbie, best
wishes, Bart Starr” It seems that by making a donation to his foundation, you
can send him an item and he will autograph it – so they sent a card (with his
#15 in uniform image on the front) for his signature.
Another totally awesome surprise – sneaky Megan had taken our old
family videos (VHS tapes and 8 mm tapes) and digitized them; then she organized
and compiled some favorite clips. It took her untold hours and hours, and some
frustration (Butch was supposed to get our video camera to her, and he forgot,
so he had an employee stop by the house for it – the girls knew this would
be a sure giveaway, but I was clueless). Katie and Jon had gone to Radio Shack
nearby the hotel and bought a DVD player, so we were able to watch half of them
that night. I cried through most of it – sentimental and happy tears. Wonderful
memories, and there was some very funny moments. We watched the rest of the
videos later in the week, and then Jon returned the DVD player. {This does not adequately begin to explain all the moving parts and frustrations this project presented, but it was more than worth it. And yes, I plan to share a few of best of the best clips with you.}
It was a perfect birthday. {This is exactly what we were going for.}
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
We stuck to the planned itinerary and had beignets at Café Du Monde –
lots of powdered sugar! We did some browsing around the French Quarter, and
went through the Louisiana State Museum off of Jackson Square, which featured
exhibits on Hurricane Katrina and Mardi Gras. We took a look next door to the
museum in the St. Louis Cathedral. We further enjoyed the street musicians
around the Square.
i won't name names, but someone at this table does not look excited for beignets. |
One of my favorite tourist attractions was the hour-long carriage ride
through the French Quarter. The carriage was pulled by a mule, and there was
one carriage to accommodate all 6 of us. Most of the tour guide’s stories
pointed out ghost stories associated with various homes/mansions in the Quarter
– there seemed to be a lot of murders/suicides! We made a stop at the St. Louis Cemetery No. 1, the oldest cemetery in
New Orleans. The graves in New Orleans are above ground. Many of the tombs were
crumbling with age. A famous voodoo queen is buried here (Marie Laveau – it was
creepy) and the future burial tomb for Nicholas Cage (also disturbing – he
spent a lot of money for the plot and construction of a “pyramid”). It was a
lovely weather day for a carriage ride.
our guide said marie laveau's grave is the 2nd most visited in the U.S. behind Elvis's. we're pretty sure he was lying. |
nicholas cage is weird. |
Lunch was at Johnny’s Po-Boys for another sampling of New Orleans cuisine -
between all of us we tried catfish, shrimp and oyster po-boy sandwiches.
Mmmmm……
After a rest we meandered in the Quarter and had happy hour food and drink to fill our tummies.
happy hour oysters. |
parents on the loose in the quarter! |
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Breakfast at Stanley – Eggs Stanley was a popular choice.
Anticipating rain tomorrow, we made a change in the planned itinerary. We took the
ride down St. Charles on a streetcar – the avenue is lined with beautiful and
charming homes. Unfortunately there was construction, so for a good part of the
ride we had to get off the streetcar and ride a city bus (streetcar > bus). We visited some shops on Magazine Street. {Yep, I came all the way to New Orleans to ride the bus...something I do every day in DC.}
Back in the Warehouse District, we stopped at Emeril’s to have his famous banana
cream pie for lunch. Of course when we saw the menu we couldn’t resist having
something else first (Aaron had chicken & waffles! I had crab bisque). The pie
was amazing!!!!
i call this look "pie drunk" |
yep, pie drunk. |
That evening we taxied to an uptown neighborhood for dinner at Clancy’s. It was crowded and noisy and classy and fun. And the food was superb.
étouffée at clancy's |
We had the taxi take us back to Frenchmen’s Street in the Quarter to check out the jazz music. In my naiveté I envisioned sitting around tables listening to music, but it was much more raucous and crowded than that! We listened to one band in a club that was hot and standing room only – the band was good. Butch: “I’m sorry, but this is just not my thing!” We didn’t last too long on Frenchmen’s Street, and the girls and Butch & I took bicycle taxis back to the hotel. {Good thing we didn't tempt fate on Bourbon Street. Not Mom approved.}
Friday, May 9, 2014
Rain was forecasted and it threatened all day, but there was nothing
substantial until later in the evening. Nevertheless, we opted not to try the
swamp tour. We started the day by going to Elizabeth’s – an old building
in an area called Bywater with a delicious brunch menu of southern cooking. We
feasted on fried green tomatoes, cheese grits, biscuits & gravy, and
praline bacon. {PRALINE BACON!}
Then we waddled through the World War II National Museum. It was
interesting and well-done – more buildings/exhibits are being added but were
not yet open. We spent 2.5 hours there and that was a fairly quick visit. Megan
was still recovering from her December hip surgery, so she toured the museum
riding in a wheelchair.
One more meal to go! Aaron & Jon went back to Johnny’s Po-boy’s,
and the rest of us went to Central Grocery for a muffuletta (filled with
Italian meat, olives, etc) – good and even a half was too much to eat.
Katie and Jon collected their luggage at the hotel and headed to the airport first. They enjoyed a direct, on-time flight with a free upgrade to first class. {Winners.}
Megan, Aaron, Butch and I weren’t so lucky…….{Losers.}
We spent some time in the hotel lobby playing pinochle until it was
time to go. We arrived at the airport around 6:30 p.m. for our 7:50 flight. The
flight was delayed, delayed, delayed waiting for its arrival from Dallas.
Eventually the heavy thunderstorm moved in. The incoming flight was in a
holding pattern overhead waiting for the weather to clear….. then they were low
on fuel so they went to Baton Rouge….. then they came back and deplaned…. then the
announcement was made that we would board after the plane was cleaned (by this
time we had rebooked knowing we would miss connections at DFW and expected to
spend the night in Dallas)….. then came the announcement that the flight was
cancelled, the airline (AA) only had a few hotel rooms available, and we might
want to get our own, which we did….. then there was a really long line at the
taxi stand….. then when Butch and I called to rebook a second time nothing was
available for Wichita from DFW so we were placed on a Saturday flight via
Chicago. We went to bed at 2:30 a.m. {Of course Mom's latest night in New Orleans would be because of an airplane cancellation, not a raucous night on the town.}
I wish I had a photo of our “shuttle” to the airport Saturday morning. The hotel shuttle was full so the desk clerk said someone else was coming to take us (I assumed hotel personnel). Turns out it was an unmarked taxi, and a small car at that. There was only enough room in the trunk for one carry-on bag – Aaron, Meg and I sat in the back seat each with a piece of luggage on our laps; another carry-on was stuffed in the back window; and a large suitcase was sandwiched between Butch and the driver. It felt like taxi service in a foreign country! But the driver gave us a “deal” – he only charged $8 per person rather than the usual $12.
This time the flights left close to on-time, we all made our
connections, and Butch and I arrived at our house at 6:30 p.m. – 24 hours after
we first arrived at the New Orleans airport.
A tired and crazy ending to a fabulous four days of family time – it
made turning 60 much more bearable and much more fun. I felt very spoiled! {Also what we were going for.}
0 comments:
Post a Comment