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Tag: post office pies

Avondale Spotlight: 41st Street Eats & Drinks

Spring Street, renamed Forty-First following the annexation to Birmingham in 1907, was the center of the new city. It extended from First Avenue, North, to the park, a distance of about five blocks. The surveyors made it wide to provide for the heavy traffic that they foresaw when Avondale grew to be a city of importance and Avondale Park should be developed into a popular pleasure and recreational place.

the Birmingham News-Age Herald, 1929

41st street

Avondale’s 41st Street commercial center maintains a comfortably rustic vibe that sets it apart from other Birmingham food scenes. It forgoes the fine dining peaks of Five Points South or the high design urbanity of the Loft District to forge its own foodie destiny, despite the popular Brooklyn comparisons. If Five Points’ drink identity alternates between a draft beer and a well-aerated Bordeaux, and the Loft District is a craft cocktail, then Avondale is the beer cocktail ⏤ self-assuredly casual and quirky and no less irresistible for it.

There’s an old-school, almost-kitsch food atmosphere in Avondale, a place where nostalgic references and comfort food can be taken to a deliberate excess. (Think Post Office Pies’ Swine Pie or Melt’s Mac Melt.) But there’s a sincerity to the food choices that’s hard to resist, a grounding in just-plain-good food and drink we always love. Rowe’s Service Station, for instance, describes its meals as “belligerently simple,” offering the no-frills comfort of a meat-and-three without the cafeteria line.

Our other favorite part about Avondale is that many of its offerings aren’t designed to be stand-alone options. Instead, it’s a kind of brick-and-mortar food truck park crossed with a modern main street. Its different specialty food and drink items are best mixed together, often when settling in at 41st Street or Avondale Brewing. (To help plan your Avondale experience, we’ve identified the most iconic food and drink options along 41st Street below this post.)

But it turns out we’re not the first to notice its main street feel. The Birmingham News raved about 41st Street in 1925 as the symbol not just of Avondale but of its progress. And, indeed, 41st Street’s emergence as a foodie mecca has transformed the neighborhood in recent years. So we’ll close out with the paper’s words, since many of them hold true today:

If every town has its ‘Main Street,’ few have any thoroughfare which has dominated its life and business as has Spring Street, Avondale, for more than a quarter of a century. It is what Twentieth Street is to Greater Birmingham, and then some. …It is really a remarkable street and its opening⏤paved its length⏤on Labor Day was significant in that at last Avondale was casting aside its swaddling clothes and putting on grown-up togs. The town was merging into city ways, and from now on keep your eye on it, for it’s going forward by leaps and bounds.

41st Street’s Most Iconic Choices:

41st Street Pub & Aircraft Sales: Moscow Mule

The Abbey: Coffee, Bagel with Bacon Jam

Avondale Brewing: Miss Fancy’s Tripel or Vanillaphant Porter

Avondale Grill: Tamales (Friday and Saturday only)

Melt: Mac Melt, Bham Bloody Mary

Post Office Pies: Swine Pie, Arnold Palmer or Pachyderm Pale Wheat

Rowe’s Service Station: Chicken Paillard, Eggs Vulcan, Fried Snickers, Build-Your-Own Bloody Mary

Satellite: Rocket Booster

Saw’s Soul Kitchen: Pork & Greens

Bham Eats: Vegetarian in the City

urban standard food
Image via Urban Standard

Remember when eating out as a vegetarian meant ordering grilled cheese and fries or a sad side salad? Those days weren’t that long ago, but thankfully, they’re no longer. The new Birmingham dining scene may celebrate the pork arts and other meat-loving specialties, but it offers delicious meat-free choices as well. Here’s our roundup of menu picks by neighborhood for a food-loving vegetarian in the city.

Loft District

Urban Standard is a standout option, offering the broadest array of non-meat entrees, including a veggie reuben, hippie gumbo, and a veggie burger of mushrooms and barley. And despite our complaint about the grilled cheese as a default option, you’ll very much want their grilled cheese.

El Barrio offers guacamole, chile rellenos, veggie quesadillas, and enough delicious meat-free sides to craft a meal of your choosing. We highly recommend either the sopa seca or the oaxacan donuts for brunch, depending on your sweet or savory preference.

Continental Bakery Downtown has a solid veggie option in every menu section, including peasant garlic soup, a salad featuring stone’s hollow goat cheese, a roasted eggplant sandwich, and red pepper farci.

Other neighborhood choices are the tofu base at Tau Poco, fill-you-up falafel at Pita Loco, veggie-filled mac ‘n cheese at John’s City Diner, and meat-free pizzas and pastas at Trattoria Centrale.

Avondale

Post Office Pies not only has a classic margherita pizza with house-made mozzarella but also seasonal salads like the roasted corn and tomato.

Melt is another grilled cheese feature, but it’s not relegated to the kids menu. Other options include pimento cheese, fried pickles, the mac melt (mac ‘n cheese grilled cheese), and tomato basil soup.

Hotbox has a small menu, but they’ve made room for five spice tofu and spicy soba noodles. Try a side of marinated edamame or cucumber kimchi while you’re at it.

Lakeview

Slice Pizza & Brew offers baked feta (!), raw kale salad, and an impressive array of veggie pizzas, not to mention the build-your-own option.

Babalu boasts tableside guacamole, a black bean burger, veggie tacos, and a host of meat-free small plates.

Cantina‘s molletes (basically a spanish bean sandwich), vegetarian tacos, and cheese enchiladas cover your entree base, along with great sides like saffron rice and beans and corn in a cup.

Five Points

Surin West is your place for vegetarian noodle dishes and tofu-based stir fries at varying degrees of spiciness, along with tofu coconut soup.

The Garage Cafe has loaded veggie sandwiches of your own design, served warm or cold on hearty Big Sky bread.

Other neighborhood favorites are pizza options galore (Cosmo’s, Mellow Mushroom, Little Italy’s), Golden Temple’s menu of meat substitutes and latin-inspired bean plates, and the falafel and seasoned fry arts at Mediterranean staples (Al’s, Purple Onion, Makario’s).

Highland Park

Rojo‘s veggie choices like black bean burgers, summer burritos, Kate’s salad, and totchos (tater tot nachos) are tempting even for meat eaters. The menu’s broad enough you could probably eat here weekly and still want to come back.

There you have it. If you’re a vegetarian who fancies living within walking distance of great local food, consider this your neighborhood cheat sheet.

 

Things We Love: Birmingham in the Fall

There are certain realities about Birmingham weather. One of them being that summers are hot, miserable, and best spent lying under/in front of/directly on top of a fan. By September, we’ve forgotten what it’s like to want to be outside. We congratulate ourselves on having made it to work most days and not making permanent pilgrimage to the beach.

Then fall finally hits, and we kind of wish we lived outdoors. Deep front porches and rooftop decks are the most valuable real estate, and all the best entertaining happens outside. At the same time, the city comes alive, and we can’t wait to go exploring. We humbly argue that Birmingham is possibly the best place on earth from late September through mid December.

We offer the following as evidence:

Image via Greek Food Festival

– Food festivals. The Greek Festival and St. George’s Middle Eastern Food Festival each offer delicious food to eat in or takeaway. They’re also handily located near parks (Railroad and George Ward, respectively) should you opt for an impromptu picnic. And you should.

Ruffner Mountain Nature Preserve. Nature’s refuge in the city steps up its offerings with first Saturday Wine and Cheese Hikes and third Friday Beer on the Back Porch. The hike is pretty self-explanatory. For the back porch nights, a $25 admission fee is worth dinner, music and three drink tokens, plus the warm, fuzzy feeling of helping nature by drinking beer. Everyone wins.

Image via BMetro

– Accessible culture. Festivals like Moss Rock and downtown’s ongoing Art Crawl bring art shows and local artists to everyday spaces. The Day of the Dead Festival adds Southern influences to the Mexican Day of Remembrance.

– Halloween without coats. Our Halloween costumes have infinite possibilities because they don’t need to be made of or covered by wool. Not that we’re endorsing sexy anything, but good old Batman looks better without a pea coat. (With this year’s cold snap, he might have needed a fleece, but at least he wasn’t battling snow flurries.)

Imave via What to Eat in Birmingham

– Fall menu items. The Brussel Sprout Kale Salad has made its triumphant return to Post Office Pies. Yes, you should still get pizza, but when was the last time you got excited about salad? Brewery menus count too, and we’re fans of the Pillar to Post Rye – aged in Bulleit Bourbon barrels – on tap at Trim Tab. Plus, the No Joka Mocha is back at Avondale Brewery, and it’s finally cool enough to crave a Coffee Oatmeal Stout at Good People.

That’s our list. What’s yours?