Sometimes you eat the bear and sometimes the hot chicken restaurants in Nashville are all closed for the 4th of July and you wind up eating Ethiopian food in a strip mall.
Posted on | July 5, 2009 | 1 Comment
When we arrived in Nashville last night I had almost forgotten that we spent most of the day driving through the Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains. That’s some good driving. We wound up stopping at a dozen scenic overlooks. It’s just impossible to drive through these mountains and not be completely taken with the views. The uneven weather meant the final views from Clingman’s Dome was less than spectacular but the crowds on the paved “trail” did give me the chance to observe the great American tradition of slapping children in public on vacation. Lovely.
Of course after you drive through the pristine wilderness, you have to drive through Gatlinburg Tennessee. Which is a little like Niagra Falls, Branson and Las Vegas all smushed together and sprinkled with crystal meth. The town seems to be comprised exclusively of motels, “museums” of the Ripley’s and Guiness varieties, theme restaurants and fudge shops. Apparently, there is a national touristy crap shortage and Gatlinburg is picking up the slack. Come on America, step it up. Gatlinburg can’t possibly keep up it’s current pace of fudge and air-brushed t-shirt production.
But why else would we be driving across America, if not to see the best of the worst this country has to offer. That’s why we had no choice but to visit the world’s only salt and pepper shaker museum. The cynic in me would like to pretend that I hadn’t researched this particular museum months ago and wasn’t thoroughly excited about the prospect of seeing tens of thousands of salt and pepper shakers…but I can’t. As promised on the internet, it was indeed a museum filled with salt and pepper shakers of every imaginable variety and it was awesome.
We headed to Knoxville for lunch. I didn’t go up in the sun sphere but I hear that it is no longer full of wigs. I did however research some barbecue joints in town. Knoxville’s bbq scene doesn’t get the attention of Memphis or North Carolina and finding reviews of local places was a challenge. Leesy and I eventually decided that M&M BBQ and Catering, a tiny take out only joint in the hinterlands of Knoxville, offered the best chance for great barbecue. The pork sandwich was wonderful and the beans were full of fatty porky goodness. It’s worth figuring out which of the three addresses on the website is the right one. I’m not telling, you can call and find out for yourself.
But we should have known we were going to be in trouble when an incredible rain storm nearly forced us off the highway outside of Nashville. Apparently the weather was trying to warn us that all the best hot chicken restaurants in Nashville were closed for the holiday weekend. Unfortunately, our hubris and our stomachs forced us to drive to Prince’s Chicken Shack only to discover it closed. I called four other places and got the same result. Closed. Damn you Nashville! I forced half a dozen people to watch a video about your hot chicken and now I’m going home empty handed. Hungry, tired and disoriented from a lack of hot chicken we headed to our hotel downtown where we spent a frantic thirty minutes determing that all the restaurants I had researched before we left were closed. We decided to skip the fireworks and raced to an Ethiopian restaurant that was, of course, only open for another half hour. After driving past it three times, we discovered our destination hidden in a strip mall. As strange as the cirumstances were, the food was wonderful. It was easily some of the best Ethiopian food I’ve ever had. We had the vegetarian platter with seven dishes including an interesting Ethiopian take on collard greens. Full of food and recovering from our hot chicken depression. we spent the remainder of the evening in a nearly empty move theater seeing The Hangover for the second time. As we watched a tiny naked Asian man beat Zach Galifanakas with a tire iron we laughed and wondered what kind of day tomorrow would be.
Tags: asheville > barbecue > dan > ethiopian > Food > gatlinburg > Journal > knoxville > nashville > nc > tn
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One Response to “Sometimes you eat the bear and sometimes the hot chicken restaurants in Nashville are all closed for the 4th of July and you wind up eating Ethiopian food in a strip mall.”
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July 6th, 2009 @ 3:05 pm
Not another place that violates my “Places to eat in strip malls are best avoided” rule?!? I thought that just the state of Delaware had that exemption!