People arrive at thankfulness in a myriad of different ways. Weโre not naturally born with a heart of gratitude or a spirit of thanksgiving; itโs our life experiences and influences that teach us to understand the true meaning of being thankful. Continue reading “A Spirit of Thanksgiving”
Tag: Experience
Explore A Taste of Tybee January 17-26

Seafood on the Georgia coast with good company gets me more excited than a child on Christmas morning. Moreover, restaurants that want to show off their menu offerings at affordable prices are that much more enticing. Tybee Island Restaurant Weekย begins this Friday, and I can’t imagine a better way to enjoy a little taste of Tybee, from beer battered oysters at North Beach Bar and Grill or Killer Key Lime Pie at Fannie’s on the Beach to homemade pizza at Huc-A-Poos Bites and Booze. Why not join in the fun atย perhaps the most laid-back destination on the Southeastern seacoast?


From January 17 โ 26, 2014, each participating restaurant will offer 3-course, prix fixe dinner menus for $25-$30 per person (not including tax and gratuity). “Prix fixe” simply means the chefs have predetermined a few of the most delicious selections to showcase in each categoryโappetizer, entrรฉe and dessert. You choose whatever suits your palate, then sit back and enjoy the experience. It’s a fantastic time to explore a new restaurant and experience variety in a wallet-friendly way. On my list of places to stop? Tybee Island Social Club and Coco’s Sunset Grille.ย Bacon wrapped scallops or fried strawberries, anyone? Yes, please!

As it turns out, many of the restaurants I’ve reviewed right here on “Some Kinda Goodโข”are participating! Check them out below:
The Crab Shack – “Where Friendship and Fine Food Collide”
Huc-A-Poos Bites and Booze – “A Heavenly Vibe at Huc-A-Poos Bites and Booze”
Sting Ray’s Seafood – “White Zinfandel and Wild Georgia Shrimp”
North Beach Grill – “Pastured Poultry Week: So God Made a Farmer”


Get a complete list of participating restaurants, including the restaurant week menus by visitingย this pageย on the Tybee Island Restaurant Week website. See you on the coast!
My Taste of Hollywood

Six days. Five airports. 4,830 milesย round trip. 35 people nationwide.ย
Over the summer of 2013, I auditioned for Season 2 of ABCโs The Taste, a cooking competition reality show. After a two-month process of interviews, loads of paperwork and intense anticipation and waiting, I was selected out of thousands to be among the Top 35 contestants in the nation to compete on the Audition episode which premiered on Jan. 2, 2014 at 8 p.m. They flew me to Los Angeles, California and put me up in a 24-story hotel in the Hollywood Hills where I had a view of the pool, the palm trees and seven lanes of interstate.ย

This is my story.
Filled with big dreams, confidence and high hopes,ย I left rural Georgia with my California-titled iPod playlist including Kelly Clarksonโs Breakaway, Eminemโs Lose Yourself and Jay-Z and Alisha Keyโs Empire State of Mind. From the airport, I posted LeAnn Rimesโ One Way Ticket music video on Facebook and sang the โWest bound trainโ lyrics in my head.
Fast forward through Day 1: I traveled through four time zones, experienced plane delays, checked in at the hotel and got somewhat acquainted. Day 2: I shopped for ingredients. Day 3: On scene at Universal Studios, I felt like a movie star in a hair & make-up trailer and had my outfit approved by two British people in the wardrobe trailer. On-camera interviews were completed. Day 4: Showtime.

The first 15 minutes of the season on set were mine. I was the first contestant to face the mentors. Iโll never forget the moment I entered the set through the โpantry,โ and rounded the corner to step on stage.ย There were big lights, lots of extras and over 15 camerasโfrom every angleโALL pointed at me. That made some contestants nervous, but I reveled in it. โThis is it,โ I thought. It was my moment to shine. Everything Iโd waited for. I gave it to them. I smiled. I played my Southern character with pride, relishing in the fact that I was the only contestant there from Georgia. I lived every moment. As I walked on set, I heard one producer shout to a camera man, โWe got a good one!โ
Aside from the challenges I faced, like my first time cooking on a gas stove, using pots and pans Iโd never used before, along with shopping in a region where ingredients are titledย โSouthern Style Grits,โ I kept a level head and remained cognizant of the time. I was given an hour to cook and plate my signature dish: Shrimp and Grits with a Creamy White Wine Sauce. While chopping vegetables and talking with producers, I burned my first pan of bacon. I also almost mistook lemon grass for my garnish because I couldnโt find green onions in the refrigerator. Nevertheless, I kept going.

My signature dish of Shrimp & Grits with a Creamy White Wine Sauce.
I finished the challenge with five minutes remaining, having successfully plated my dish and all six tasting portionsโtwo for beauty shots, four for tasting. I put forth the best creamy white wine sauce Iโd ever made. Some memories fade and some feelings are fleetingโbut one that will remain with me forever is stepping off the set and feeling that rush of fulfillment wash over me. I had done what I came to do, and I had done it well.

Then I exited the stage and was escorted to the friends and family room where I would see my boyfriend, Kurt, and two of my very best friends, Chad and Charity. They were flown out for a three-day period during my stay. Following a brief touch-up with the make-up artist, I opened the door to the family room and saw the people I love sitting on the edge of their seats with expressions of expectation so vivid. We had been separated since the previous day, and the emotion and excitement I expressed was nothing short of real.
After that high, I faced my fate. I would wait for the producerโs cue, then walk forward and stand on the spoon-shaped โx marks the spot.โ There, right in front of my face, just steps away, sat Anthony Bourdain, Nigella Lawson, Marcus Samuelsson and Ludo Lefebvre–in the flesh. It was one of those moments where youโre present, but beside yourself. I saw their lips moving and heard them speaking, but had it not been recorded, I would question if it ever really happened. There I was, a food blogger from small town Blythe, Georgia and Twiggs County farm country, in Hollywood on a set at Universal Studios, in front of these well accomplished, renowned culinary experts. They had just tasted my food.
British home cook, food writer and bestselling cookbook author Nigella Lawson was the first to tell me what she thought. Nigellaโs team is the one I had hoped to join. Nigella and I were wearing the same colorโboth royal blue dresses, so right off the bat, it was meant to be.
She asked me to introduce myself and tell her a little bit about my dish. She was interested in โthe powdered seasoningโ Iโd used and the spice in the dish. Unfortunately, sheโd decided that my shrimp were โslightly overcooked,โ and the Old Bay seasoning Iโd used was too much. โAs you know we made our decisions before we met you,โ she said and with what seemed regretful, she pushed her red “No” button.
I was crushed, and I knew my chances of joining the othersโ teams were dim. Sure enough, with every comment followed the dreaded red button.
After everything Iโd heard about Anthony Bourdain, I must say, I thought heโd be the toughest judge. As it turns out, he was one of the kindest to me. We agreed that food was such a personal thing. โUnfortunately for you, I didnโt have an emotional connection to your shrimp and grits,โ he said. He had been surprised that I wasnโt professionally trained though, noting that the Old Bay gave my dish a restaurant quality. That was HUGE coming from a man whoโs traveled the world. Iโll take it.

Marcus Samuelsson said my passion was evident, and that he liked how my dish represented the region of the country from which I came. With a quick and succinct comment, Ludo Lefebvre said โIt wasnโt my thing. I didnโt like it. Itโs a no.โ
Everyone has their taste buds, and America would be a boring place if we all liked the same things.
So, as show business would have it, all four of the judges rejected me. It was time to pack it up and head on back to the Peach State, but not before I drank a Shirley Temple on Hollywood Blvd., got my picture taken in front of the notorious HOLLYWOOD sign and took pictures of the stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. I exited the hotel with my 50-pound suitcase in tow, containing clothes with the tags still on them, as Adeleโs Chasing Pavement played over the elevator like the well-timed beat of a drum.
I wonโt forget the talented people I got to compete with and the connections I made. I will carry this experience to the grave.
My appreciation for the South has never been greater than when I travel outside the South. I came home with new eyes. At the grocery store in my hometown, as I pushed my buggy through the produce department where Iโm known by name, where hardly anything is gluten-free, organic or vegan, and where Johnny Cash plays on the radio, I was home. Home in my Southern, two-lane, suburban, football-loving town. If ever I needed a reminder of exactly who I am, traveling serves it purpose.

One word of advice: No matter the outcome, go after it. Always go after the things that make your heart beat.
โFind something your passionate about and keep tremendously interested in it.โ โJulia Child




