Peter Dale

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chef:
The National, Athens, GA
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Empire State South
Atlanta, Ga

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    • 04.27.2012

      Congratulations to 2012 Atlanta Rising Star Chefs, including our own Chef Peter Dale and friends Ryan Smith {Empire State South} and Whitney Otawka {Farm255} 

“Rising Stars have attributes that make us believe they will be the future leaders of the country’s culinary scene. Put simply, they’re not just surviving the Atlanta restaurant industry, they’re defining it, with exciting cuisine, pours, and culinary concepts.”

Here’s what they had to say about Peter Dale and The National:

Mediterranean flavors may not immediately come to mind when you think of the New South, but Peter Dale is on a mission to change that, and to change what the tiny market of Athens thinks about those flavors altogether. Dale originally worked on Capitol Hill, then started his culinary career as an stage for Hugh Acheson at 5&10. After travelling throughout Europe, he came back to Athens and opened The National with Acheson. But he’s not cooking the tabbouleh and gyros you had on vacation last summer; instead he sources as locally as possible, then uses the Mediterranean as inspiration to create something altogether new. And Dale succeeds tenfold, combining the bold spices of the region into bright, clean flavors. And as The National continues to influence the Athens community, Dale looks to the future of what the town can become.

Dishes that Clinched It:

Grilled Lamb Chop, Lamb Kefte, Spring Tabbouleh, 
Feta, and Pecan Muhummara

Orange and Aleppo Marinated Sapelo Island Clams and 
Cucumber and Georgia Olive Oil Gazpacho

Want to experience the food of the country’s culinary scene first hand? Purchase your tickets for the 2012 Rising Stars Revue Gala on Wednesday June 13 at The Goat Farm Atlanta {1200 Foster St, Atlanta, GA 30318}. Each Rising Stars Chef and Pastry Chef will serve one dish paired with beverages from the Rising Star Sommelier and two signature cocktails prepped by the Rising Star Mixologist.



{Read more about all of the winners here}

      Congratulations to 2012 Atlanta Rising Star Chefs, including our own Chef Peter Dale and friends Ryan Smith {Empire State South} and Whitney Otawka {Farm255}

      “Rising Stars have attributes that make us believe they will be the future leaders of the country’s culinary scene. Put simply, they’re not just surviving the Atlanta restaurant industry, they’re defining it, with exciting cuisine, pours, and culinary concepts.”


      Here’s what they had to say about Peter Dale and The National:

      Mediterranean flavors may not immediately come to mind when you think of the New South, but Peter Dale is on a mission to change that, and to change what the tiny market of Athens thinks about those flavors altogether. Dale originally worked on Capitol Hill, then started his culinary career as an stage for Hugh Acheson at 5&10. After travelling throughout Europe, he came back to Athens and opened The National with Acheson. But he’s not cooking the tabbouleh and gyros you had on vacation last summer; instead he sources as locally as possible, then uses the Mediterranean as inspiration to create something altogether new. And Dale succeeds tenfold, combining the bold spices of the region into bright, clean flavors. And as The National continues to influence the Athens community, Dale looks to the future of what the town can become.

      Dishes that Clinched It:

      Grilled Lamb Chop, Lamb Kefte, Spring Tabbouleh,
      Feta, and Pecan Muhummara

      Orange and Aleppo Marinated Sapelo Island Clams and
      Cucumber and Georgia Olive Oil Gazpacho


      Want to experience the food of the country’s culinary scene first hand?
      Purchase your tickets for the 2012 Rising Stars Revue Gala on Wednesday June 13 at The Goat Farm Atlanta {1200 Foster St, Atlanta, GA 30318}. Each Rising Stars Chef and Pastry Chef will serve one dish paired with beverages from the Rising Star Sommelier and two signature cocktails prepped by the Rising Star Mixologist.

      {Read more about all of the winners here}


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    • 03.05.2012

      Today FOOD & WINE invites the dining public to select The People’s Best New Chef. An extension of the FOOD & WINE Best New Chefs program, The People’s Best New Chef award honors talented up-and-coming innovators who have run their own kitchens for five years or fewer.

The National’s Chef Peter Dale has been nominated as one of the top innovators in the southeastern culinary field this year. Read about all the nominees and vote at http://www.foodandwine.com/the-peoples-bnc March 5 through 11.

      Today FOOD & WINE invites the dining public to select The People’s Best New Chef. An extension of the FOOD & WINE Best New Chefs program, The People’s Best New Chef award honors talented up-and-coming innovators who have run their own kitchens for five years or fewer.

      The National’s Chef Peter Dale has been nominated as one of the top innovators in the southeastern culinary field this year. Read about all the nominees and vote at http://www.foodandwine.com/the-peoples-bnc March 5 through 11.


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    • 02.29.2012

      Thank you, thank you Athens for voting us one of your favorites again this year! It is such an honor to be voted a favorite chef, particularly as second only to my mentor and the other pillar of our restaurant family, Hugh Acheson.

We love being the place for Athens to celebrate…be it a date night, birthday or any special occasion! And for all you adventurous eaters out there, don’t worry, this year we’ll have plenty more exciting menu items for you to try!

      Thank you, thank you Athens for voting us one of your favorites again this year! It is such an honor to be voted a favorite chef, particularly as second only to my mentor and the other pillar of our restaurant family, Hugh Acheson.

      We love being the place for Athens to celebrate…be it a date night, birthday or any special occasion! And for all you adventurous eaters out there, don’t worry, this year we’ll have plenty more exciting menu items for you to try!


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    • 02.15.2012

      “Jeweled” Quinoa SaladServes four

The dried fruits, pomegranate seeds, and pistachios are the “jewels” in this Persian-inspired salad, perfect as an appetizer or side dish. When pomegranates are out of season, simply use red quinoa instead of regular quinoa (as pictured) to compensate for the loss of color. This salad is a great way to introduce some color and a touch of sweetness into a winter meal.

Ingredients
1 cup quinoa, rinsed
2½ cups water
¼ cup dried currants, plumped in warm water
¼ cup golden raisins, plumped in warm water
¼ cup dried apricots, diced
¼ cup pomegranate seeds
¼ cup pistachios
½ cup Italian parsley, coarsely chopped
2 scallions, diced
Juice of one lemon
3 T olive oil
3 oz crumbled feta
Salt and ground black pepper to taste

Directions
In a saucepan, bring the quinoa and water to a boil. Cover and cook over low heat until the water is absorbed and the quinoa is tender, 20 minutes. Let cool.

Meanwhile, combine the lemon juice and olive oil in a bowl, set aside. 

In a large toss bowl combine the quinoa, fruits, pistachios, parsley, scallions and feta. Toss the quinoa mixture with the lemon juice and olive oil until well combined. Season with salt and pepper to taste.    

Recipe originally published in B’Nai B’Rith Magazine
Photo courtesy of Emily Hall.

      “Jeweled” Quinoa Salad
      Serves four

      The dried fruits, pomegranate seeds, and pistachios are the “jewels” in this Persian-inspired salad, perfect as an appetizer or side dish. When pomegranates are out of season, simply use red quinoa instead of regular quinoa (as pictured) to compensate for the loss of color. This salad is a great way to introduce some color and a touch of sweetness into a winter meal.

      Ingredients
      1 cup quinoa, rinsed
      2½ cups water
      ¼ cup dried currants, plumped in warm water
      ¼ cup golden raisins, plumped in warm water
      ¼ cup dried apricots, diced
      ¼ cup pomegranate seeds
      ¼ cup pistachios
      ½ cup Italian parsley, coarsely chopped
      2 scallions, diced
      Juice of one lemon
      3 T olive oil
      3 oz crumbled feta
      Salt and ground black pepper to taste

      Directions
      In a saucepan, bring the quinoa and water to a boil. Cover and cook over low heat until the water is absorbed and the quinoa is tender, 20 minutes. Let cool.

      Meanwhile, combine the lemon juice and olive oil in a bowl, set aside.

      In a large toss bowl combine the quinoa, fruits, pistachios, parsley, scallions and feta. Toss the quinoa mixture with the lemon juice and olive oil until well combined. Season with salt and pepper to taste.


      Recipe originally published in B’Nai B’Rith Magazine
      Photo courtesy of Emily Hall.


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    • 01.19.2012

      Check out Flagpole Magazine this week as cook at The National, Nathan Brand, gets featured in their series Everyday People. 
Nathan Brand came to Athens to study English at the University of Georgia. Although he has always wanted to be a writer, he became frustrated with literary studies and left school. Now, he works as a cook at The National, and he finds a strong and profound connection between literature and food. He has even begun writing recipes and other food-focused pieces. He is considering returning to school to finish his degree, but he feels strongly attached to his culinary studies as well. In an ideal world, he says, he would be in Paris, London or Copenhagen next year studying under one of Europe’s acclaimed Michelin chefs.

Flagpole: Could you explain what you do for a job?

Nathan Brand: Oh, it is really the best job I’ve ever had, and that’s really why I haven’t gone back to school: because it’s so hard to leave, even for, you know, 10 hours a week. It totally took me by surprise. It was an ad in Craigslist. I found out later–I heard about the opening [by] word of mouth downtown. I’ve always wanted to work at The National. I’d probably turned in five resumes–I knew they were doing something special–and they never called me back. I’d always wanted to be a server over the years, and then I finally heard that they were hiring for cooks, and I was like, “Okay, I’ll check it out.”

FP: Had you ever been a cook before?

NB: I had never cooked anything in my life. Not even in my life. Me and my brother were like Jacob and Esau: I would trade anything for him to cook breakfast for me. I couldn’t deal with it. I couldn’t scramble eggs, and then all of a sudden, here I was in this fast-paced [environment]. As soon as I found out about the opening, I got interested in cooking sort of overnight. I suddenly realized that so many of my favorite memories from being a child and growing up were about food. I spent summers in New York and Idaho when I was a kid, so one of my favorite meals was rainbow trout in Idaho. We would go catch them. And I vividly remember being served a gyro in an upside-down frisbee at some terrible Greek restaurant that my grandpa took me to. So, I started to realize that I had all these really cool food memories, and I started to get interested in the intellectual and the thoughtful side of food, so I grabbed a cookbook–The French Laundry [Cookbook]–and I was hooked. It was like reading an amazing story.

FP: That’s what I’d been wondering: as a former English major, do you think there is a connection between the way you experience food and the way you experience literature?

NB: I do now, but when I started I was so overwhelmed I couldn’t even think. I [had been] working at a coffee shop and a bakery, so I was kind of all over the place before I settled down and focused on just cooking. But I didn’t think so before: I thought that writing was writing and cooking and eating was cooking and eating. And maybe wine was the bridge between the two. But I never thought that you could think about food as much as you can think about literature, and that’s what has kept me going and kept me totally hooked.

FP: Could you explain what that connection is?

NB: I think that connection is creativity, and I’ve started to understand that flavors are kind of like words, and they can be put together beautifully, or they can go together in kind of a messy way. They can be very pure, or they can be kind of muddled. It’s all about technique, and that’s one of the things that writing and cooking have in common. I spent my whole life trying to be a writer. When I was a kid, that’s all I ever wanted to do was practice and practice and practice, so now I’m pretty good. But now, I feel the exact same way about cooking. I’ve had to practice and practice, and that was really discouraging at first, but I started to get better exponentially after awhile, and that’s an encouraging thing.

FP: You’re not from Athens originally, are you?

NB: I’m not. I’ve lived all over the country, and then Gwinnett for the longest time, which is kind of depressing to me, but I totally grew up in Gwinnett. That was another huge part of my sense memory as a kid. We had a huge garden that fed the whole family.

FP: People garden in Gwinnett?

NB: Well, my parents were, like, the only ones. We sold that house, and that garden’s gone, of course, but when I was a kid, I was home-schooled until I went to high school… A large part of my day was spent in the garden, and I hated every minute of it, but now I would give anything to go back and be a part of that.

FP: So, what do you think about Athens?

NB: Athens is one of the best places to be passionate and learn about something in the world. Everything’s cheap. Everyone is passionate about something. Everyone is doing something they love if they’re not students, especially. Usually it’s music, and sometimes it’s art, but probably third down on the list is cooking, since this is totally a service-driven economy. It’s really cool to be able to talk to other cooks about what you’re doing.

FP: You mentioned working for free or for low pay. Is that something you could do only in Athens, or would you find it gratifying anywhere?

NB: On the one hand, I do think it’s only that way in Athens and other select cities. In Athens–I live on Pulaski Street, in the best house I’ve ever lived in for so cheap, with a garden and chickens.

FP: Did you always know that you could work for a low wage and feel good about it, or did you arrive at that point gradually?

NB: I was very worried. I’ve been a server in the town for a long time, and you make very nice money for the town doing that, so I was very worried that I was going to run out of cash [when I became a cook]. But, I lived very cheaply for a year and a half–that’s how long I’ve been doing this–so I’ve been able to travel a lot. I’ve been to New York; I’ve been to Chicago; I’ve been to Charleston, Atlanta, Savannah, just because I’m not spending all my money here in town. I’d go there for food, and I’d go there for coffee because I’m a big coffee nerd, and I have learned so much. Every lesson has been amazing.

By Emily Patrick, Flagpole Magazine (everydaypeople@flagpole.com)

      Check out Flagpole Magazine this week as cook at The National, Nathan Brand, gets featured in their series Everyday People.

      Nathan Brand came to Athens to study English at the University of Georgia. Although he has always wanted to be a writer, he became frustrated with literary studies and left school. Now, he works as a cook at The National, and he finds a strong and profound connection between literature and food. He has even begun writing recipes and other food-focused pieces. He is considering returning to school to finish his degree, but he feels strongly attached to his culinary studies as well. In an ideal world, he says, he would be in Paris, London or Copenhagen next year studying under one of Europe’s acclaimed Michelin chefs.

      Flagpole: Could you explain what you do for a job?

      Nathan Brand: Oh, it is really the best job I’ve ever had, and that’s really why I haven’t gone back to school: because it’s so hard to leave, even for, you know, 10 hours a week. It totally took me by surprise. It was an ad in Craigslist. I found out later–I heard about the opening [by] word of mouth downtown. I’ve always wanted to work at The National. I’d probably turned in five resumes–I knew they were doing something special–and they never called me back. I’d always wanted to be a server over the years, and then I finally heard that they were hiring for cooks, and I was like, “Okay, I’ll check it out.”

      FP: Had you ever been a cook before?

      NB: I had never cooked anything in my life. Not even in my life. Me and my brother were like Jacob and Esau: I would trade anything for him to cook breakfast for me. I couldn’t deal with it. I couldn’t scramble eggs, and then all of a sudden, here I was in this fast-paced [environment]. As soon as I found out about the opening, I got interested in cooking sort of overnight. I suddenly realized that so many of my favorite memories from being a child and growing up were about food. I spent summers in New York and Idaho when I was a kid, so one of my favorite meals was rainbow trout in Idaho. We would go catch them. And I vividly remember being served a gyro in an upside-down frisbee at some terrible Greek restaurant that my grandpa took me to. So, I started to realize that I had all these really cool food memories, and I started to get interested in the intellectual and the thoughtful side of food, so I grabbed a cookbook–The French Laundry [Cookbook]–and I was hooked. It was like reading an amazing story.

      FP: That’s what I’d been wondering: as a former English major, do you think there is a connection between the way you experience food and the way you experience literature?

      NB: I do now, but when I started I was so overwhelmed I couldn’t even think. I [had been] working at a coffee shop and a bakery, so I was kind of all over the place before I settled down and focused on just cooking. But I didn’t think so before: I thought that writing was writing and cooking and eating was cooking and eating. And maybe wine was the bridge between the two. But I never thought that you could think about food as much as you can think about literature, and that’s what has kept me going and kept me totally hooked.

      FP: Could you explain what that connection is?

      NB: I think that connection is creativity, and I’ve started to understand that flavors are kind of like words, and they can be put together beautifully, or they can go together in kind of a messy way. They can be very pure, or they can be kind of muddled. It’s all about technique, and that’s one of the things that writing and cooking have in common. I spent my whole life trying to be a writer. When I was a kid, that’s all I ever wanted to do was practice and practice and practice, so now I’m pretty good. But now, I feel the exact same way about cooking. I’ve had to practice and practice, and that was really discouraging at first, but I started to get better exponentially after awhile, and that’s an encouraging thing.

      FP: You’re not from Athens originally, are you?

      NB: I’m not. I’ve lived all over the country, and then Gwinnett for the longest time, which is kind of depressing to me, but I totally grew up in Gwinnett. That was another huge part of my sense memory as a kid. We had a huge garden that fed the whole family.

      FP: People garden in Gwinnett?

      NB: Well, my parents were, like, the only ones. We sold that house, and that garden’s gone, of course, but when I was a kid, I was home-schooled until I went to high school… A large part of my day was spent in the garden, and I hated every minute of it, but now I would give anything to go back and be a part of that.

      FP: So, what do you think about Athens?

      NB: Athens is one of the best places to be passionate and learn about something in the world. Everything’s cheap. Everyone is passionate about something. Everyone is doing something they love if they’re not students, especially. Usually it’s music, and sometimes it’s art, but probably third down on the list is cooking, since this is totally a service-driven economy. It’s really cool to be able to talk to other cooks about what you’re doing.

      FP: You mentioned working for free or for low pay. Is that something you could do only in Athens, or would you find it gratifying anywhere?

      NB: On the one hand, I do think it’s only that way in Athens and other select cities. In Athens–I live on Pulaski Street, in the best house I’ve ever lived in for so cheap, with a garden and chickens.

      FP: Did you always know that you could work for a low wage and feel good about it, or did you arrive at that point gradually?

      NB: I was very worried. I’ve been a server in the town for a long time, and you make very nice money for the town doing that, so I was very worried that I was going to run out of cash [when I became a cook]. But, I lived very cheaply for a year and a half–that’s how long I’ve been doing this–so I’ve been able to travel a lot. I’ve been to New York; I’ve been to Chicago; I’ve been to Charleston, Atlanta, Savannah, just because I’m not spending all my money here in town. I’d go there for food, and I’d go there for coffee because I’m a big coffee nerd, and I have learned so much. Every lesson has been amazing.

      By Emily Patrick, Flagpole Magazine (everydaypeople@flagpole.com)


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    • 12.10.2011

      Fall Chopped Salad Recipe

      This simple, yet exquisite chopped salad is a great way to showcase the wealth of hearty vegetables we are so fortunate to enjoy in the autumn to winter months.


      Ingredients

      Pita Croutons…

      2 6-inch pitas
      olive oil
      Salt and freshly ground black pepper

      Fall Vegetables…

      1 cup ½ -inch cubed beets
      1 cup extra virgin olive oil
      Salt and freshly ground black pepper
      1 cup ½ -inch cubed sweet potato
      ½ pound Lacinato kale, chopped into 1-inch strips
      1 cup ½ -inch cubed hakurai turnips
      1 cup ½ - inch cubed radishes
      ¼ cup pomegranate seeds
      ¼ cup fresh mint leaves
      1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar

      Finishing…
      ½ cup goat’s milk labneh (cow’s milk labneh or Greek yogurt is a good substitute)
      1 teaspoon ground sumac
      1 teaspoon white sesame seeds, toasted
      Salt and freshly ground black pepper

      Preparation


      For the Pita Croutons…

      Heat the oven to 350°F. Tear pita into bite sized pieces and toss with 1 tablespoon olive oil, salt, and pepper. Toast pitas in the oven until golden brown and crunchy. Cool.

      For the Fall Vegetables…
      Heat the oven to 350°F. Toss beets with 1½ tablespoons olive oil, salt, and pepper. Spread out on a sheet tray and roast in the oven for 30 minutes or until tender. Cool.

      Toss sweet potatoes with 1½ tablespoons olive oil, salt, and pepper. Spread out on a sheet tray and roast in the oven 30 minutes or until tender. Cool.

      Heat a large sauté pan with 1 tablespoon of the olive oil. When the pan is very hot, add the kale and sauté until just slightly wilted, working in batches. Cool.

      Combine the remaining ½ cup olive oil with the Sherry vinegar and reserve. Roughly chop or tear mint leaves; reserve. In a large bowl, combine beets, sweet potato, kale, turnips, radishes, mint, pomegranate seeds, and olive oil-Sherry vinegar mixture. Season to taste.

      To Assemble and Serve…

      Place vegetables on individual salad plates or in a serving bowl. Place a dollop of labneh in the center of the vegetables. Spread croutons, sumac, and sesame over the salad.


      {This recipe was originally published on StarChefs.com}


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    • 12.02.2011

      Chef Dale gets a word in about kumquats as a welcome winter citrus in this month’s Garden and Gun, Dec 2011/Jan 2012

{“Kumquats arrive in the cooler months when dishes tend to be richer,” says Peter Dale, chef at The National in Athens, Georgia. “They bring just the right amount of bright citrus flavor to balance a hearty dish like braised white beans with ham hocks.” Dale also likes to serve them in a salad tossed with roasted beets, pomegranate seeds, pecans, arugula, and feta cheese.}

Look out for this beet and kumquat salad on our menu, as well as kumquats served with fish and other hearty winter dishes in the upcoming weeks.

      Chef Dale gets a word in about kumquats as a welcome winter citrus in this month’s Garden and Gun, Dec 2011/Jan 2012

      {“Kumquats arrive in the cooler months when dishes tend to be richer,” says Peter Dale, chef at The National in Athens, Georgia. “They bring just the right amount of bright citrus flavor to balance a hearty dish like braised white beans with ham hocks.” Dale also likes to serve them in a salad tossed with roasted beets, pomegranate seeds, pecans, arugula, and feta cheese.}

      Look out for this beet and kumquat salad on our menu, as well as kumquats served with fish and other hearty winter dishes in the upcoming weeks.


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    • 09.06.2011

      Athens earns another well-deserved shout out in the September issue of Everyday with Rachael Ray. The article highlights some Classic City “classics” from Michael Stipe and R.E.M. to Jittery Joe’s to the superstition of UGA’s arch. We are so excited to have been included in this list as the “place linger over dinner.” They recommend the vegetable plate along with a little bit of everything to share…and so do we!

Pick up a copy of Everyday with Rachael Ray to read the full article. It’s available on newsstands through Sept. 15.

      Athens earns another well-deserved shout out in the September issue of Everyday with Rachael Ray. The article highlights some Classic City “classics” from Michael Stipe and R.E.M. to Jittery Joe’s to the superstition of UGA’s arch. We are so excited to have been included in this list as the “place linger over dinner.” They recommend the vegetable plate along with a little bit of everything to share…and so do we!

      Pick up a copy of Everyday with Rachael Ray to read the full article. It’s available on newsstands through Sept. 15.


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    • 08.08.2011

      Chef Stirs in Flavors from Home and Abroad

Check out this wonderful article about our own Peter Dale, written by Julie Philips over at The Athens Banner Herald. It really captures our everyday philosophy at The National.

      Chef Stirs in Flavors from Home and Abroad

      Check out this wonderful article about our own Peter Dale, written by Julie Philips over at The Athens Banner Herald. It really captures our everyday philosophy at The National.


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    • Taste of the South magazine recognizes Athens and The National as regional tastemakers.

“Peter Dale, the handsome chef and partner at The National, runs this restaurant like one of the family-owned Spanish neighborhood standards that inspired it. It maintains its Southerness, with a comfortable and friendly atmosphere, and the menu boasts patatas bravas (crispy potatoes) with spicy tomato aïoli.”

http://www.tasteofthesouthmagazine.com/food/tastemakers/athens.php

      Taste of the South magazine recognizes Athens and The National as regional tastemakers.

      “Peter Dale, the handsome chef and partner at The National, runs this restaurant like one of the family-owned Spanish neighborhood standards that inspired it. It maintains its Southerness, with a comfortable and friendly atmosphere, and the menu boasts patatas bravas (crispy potatoes) with spicy tomato aïoli.”

      http://www.tasteofthesouthmagazine.com/food/tastemakers/athens.php


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