Sun Style + various foods
There's an article in the New York Times this morning about a purported resurgence of bars and restaurants offering matches to their patrons. (I only say purported because the Times has a way of highlighting trends that sound good, but sometimes do not pan out as real trends...but hey, when they sound good, I'm in.)
For whatever reason Emily and I have always been fanatical about getting matchbooks from bars and restaurants when they're available — rarely the case since smoking bans have dominoed across the country. For the record, I was opposed to the smoking ban in New York — I don't smoke, I just always thought bars should be smokey — but I realized soon after it went into effect that it was a good thing because it meant less trips to the laundromat. Some other time I will explain how I came to the decision to not smoke cigarettes. I still like to get matchbooks, though, because sometimes other things need to be set on fire, and I like how they look. It's a small graphic space that presents interesting design possibilities, for one, and for two, I am a sentimental dude, as readers undoubtedly know by now. Matchbooks seem old. Incidentally, it's a great feature of many bars in Seattle that they still offer matchbooks.All of that to say that the article is worth reading — click here to check it out. And why don't we all please make a concerted effort to start asking for matchbooks so they stick around and/or come back.
It's funny they included a Virgil's matchbook in the article. No one likes to admit that Virgil's has some of the best barbecue in New York, because it's right next to Times Square, and it's a multi-story restaurant full of tourists — but they do, especially when immediately preceded by a visit to Jimmy's Corner:That's Jimmy with Muhammad Ali in the big photo above the bar.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009