• Home
  • Year in Food & Music
  • San Francisco
  • Portland
  • Austin
  • New York
  • Huichica
Menu

SWIMMINGLY | A generation raised on the ideals of independent music is pioneering a new era in food culture.

Street Address
A generation raised on the ideals of independent music is pioneering a new era in food culture.
Phone Number
A generation raised on the ideals of independent music is pioneering a new era in food culture.

Your Custom Text Here

SWIMMINGLY | A generation raised on the ideals of independent music is pioneering a new era in food culture.

  • Home
  • Year in Food & Music
  • City Guides
    • San Francisco
    • Portland
    • Austin
    • New York
  • Huichica
Screen Shot 2014-11-29 at 11.08.06 PM.png

Year in Food & Music

The Year in Food & Music

EVAN RAIL

January 14, 2014 Colby Mancasola
  

Evan Rail is a food and travel writer, specializing in Prague, Central Europe, and the region’s great beer and wine trails. Photo: Ian Willoughby

What was the food highlight of your year?

Lunch at Nagaya in Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf is a cool city with a great arts and music scene — die Toten Hosen are from there — but it’s also home to one of the largest Japanese communities in Europe. Yoshizumi Nagaya’s place is the only Michelin-starred Japanese restaurant in Germany, and his food mixes straight-up Japanese with European techniques and ingredients. Plus I got introduced to high-end sake, which I know absolutely nothing about. 

What was the music highlight of your year?

After many years off, I bought a little Vox amp and started playing guitar again. My kids love it. 

Was there a moment when food and music came together in a memorable way?

Several, but the biggest was a Sunday-morning visit to In de Verzekering tegen de Grote Dorst, (“In the Insurance against Great Thirst”) a small village pub in Eizeringen, Belgium, with one of the largest gueuze and kriek selections in the world: decades-old bottles, rarities, stuff from breweries that no longer exist, flat lambic, everything. People from the village head there after church, and after a pint they’ll start singing songs about their region, the Pajottenland. You’re sitting there, drinking one of the world’s oldest beers, listening to these old, ballad-style songs, and it feels like it could be a hundred years ago, two hundred years ago, three hundred years back, no problem. 

@evanrail

Tags evan rail, new york times, beer, prague, Nagaya, Yoshizumi Nagaya, vox
1 Comment

Subscribe

#FOODANDMUSIC DELIVERED FRESH

Thanks! You want we send you free stickers?

Featured
mark-trombino
MARK TROMBINO

Mark Trombino owns Donut Friend in LA and plays drums in the recently reunited Drive Like Jehu.

Read More →
jennie-kelley
JENNIE KELLEY

Jennie Kelley is a founding member of Polyphonic Spree, a reality TV survivor (MasterChef season 2), and creator/co-chef at frank, an underground restaurant in Dallas.

Read More →
steve-sando
STEVE SANDO

Steve Sando is the founder of Rancho Gordo New World Specialty Food and the author of the Heirloom Beans cookbook.

Read More →
nate-farley
NATE FARLEY

Nate Farley has played guitar in Guided By Voices and The Amps. He currently runs the kitchen at a specialty market in his native Ohio.

Read More →
jason-vincent
JASON VINCENT

James Vincent was named 2012 Grand Cochon King of Porc, a 2013 Food & Wine best new chef, and a 2014 James Beard semi-finalist, Great Lakes region.

Read More →



SWIMMING.LY - SAN FRANCISCO, CA     {  ABOUT  |  CONTACT  | MOTO  }