You Need a Little Lent in Your Life

Springtime in New Orleans arrives fast and early each year almost simultaneously with the Lenten season.  Lent is that time of year after carnival has come to a close and before festival season begins.  It is the only time in the New Orleanian’s cyclical calendar that is reserved for detox and rejuvenation, for the body, mind and spirit.

It is during this time of year that the weather begins to shift, the azaleas start to bloom, the Japanese plums sprout their fruit and the oak trees cover every surface of the city in a layer of yellow powder.  While your allergies may be going haywire, your taste buds are experiencing a revelation sent from Proteus himself-crawfish, shrimp, oysters and crabs flood the restaurants and find their way to every residents table.

As the Catholics abstain from eating meat on Fridays they join together in a shellfish feast that brings families and friends together in a celebration of the creatures of the sea and the abundant maritime resources from the waters that surround the crescent.  The ritual serves as a binder that reaffirms existing relationships and forms new connections, connections that are essential to the heart and soul of the city. There is nothing like a crawfish boil on a sunny 75 degree afternoon filled with quality people and good conversation – it is all that is needed to replenish the spirit of a NOLA-ite and just in time for the festival season that is rapidly approaching.

Tablet Hotels Features New Orleans- by Hallie Davison

New Orleans is a city that spoils the imagination. Its history is spirited, its food unrepentant, and its climate is sultry nearly all year long. It’s no wonder that so many creative minds (William Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, Louis Armstrong) have been unable to resist its romance. But lately New Orleans has been attracting a new kind: ambitious entrepreneurs who have found fertile ground along the bayou.

After a trifecta of trauma — Hurricane Katrina, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and a global recession — entrepreneurship has been key to the city’s cultural and economic revival. In March New Orleans hosts its fourth Entrepreneur Week, a conference where aspiring business owners receive coaching from big-name investors and hone their pitches with an audience of MBA students from programs at Tulane, Stanford and Northwestern, among others. It’s the culmination of a six-month-long “start-up season” organized by the non-profit Idea Village, whose ambition to create a sustainable ecosystem for New Orleans start-ups is beginning to come to fruition: they’ve overseen a portfolio of companies that have, between them, created at least a thousand new jobs.

In the new New Orleans entrepreneurship is up, and that can-do spirit just might be the key to the city’s rejuvenation

Like many a successful partnership, the foundation for Idea Village sprouted from a conversation at a local bar. That bar, in fact, is the beloved Loa, in the stylish International House hotel. Loa continues to be a place for hatching ideas, thanks to bartenderAlan Walter’s killer cocktails and to a fortuitous location a short walk from Entrepreneur’s Row, an office building shared by a number of start-ups. Across the street, the industrial-chic Loft 523is the top option for those hunting down that first round of funding. Generously sized studio-style rooms, a strong wi-fi signal, and a well-outfitted gym will more than satisfy the needs of today’s self-starter.

Beyond the conference, New Orleans’s “brain gain” can be spied — and, better yet, overheard — at various hotspots around town. Forgo the traditional beignets and start your day with their green breakfast sandwich (the usual, plus arugula, avocado and tomato) from the proudly locavore Satsuma Cafe in Bywater, one of the city’s most artistic neighborhoods. Be sure to stroll along Dauphine Street and soak up the 19th-century architecture that has earned the neighborhood its Historic District status. For lunch, head to the Warehouse District, where art galleries and start-ups are happy bedfellows, sharing oversized loft spaces that were once repositories for shipments of cotton, sugar and coffee. Cochon Butcher, a spin-off of Donald Link’s Cochon, has quickly become the midday spot of choice for the area’s young professionals.

The afternoon might entail buckling down with the computer, so drop into Launch Pad, a co-working space in The Intellectual Property, or IP, another new collaborative office building. In addition to finding a desk, you’re also likely to gain some new friends. Come happy hour, head to the nearby gastro-pubCapdeville for good company, an extensive beer list and gut-pleasing dishes like poutine fries and truffled mac & cheese. And last, since this is the city that prides itself on its late-night tinctures, don’t miss a nightcap at the cocktail bar Cure, where they’re quite insistent about challenging your expectations. Try a Vixen’s Heart, whose ingredients include 12-year scotch, Cynar and smoked grapefruit oil. That’s the sort of risk/reward calculation that doesn’t require an MBA.

— Hallie Davison, March 2012

This article was originally published for Tablet.  Read the original article here.

It’s the most wonderful time of the year….

Wait, Christmas songs?  Nooooooooooo……

No worries, Christmas is indeed over, but in New Orleans, just because we’ve rung in the New Year, doesn’t mean we are done celebrating.  Why? Because, on the twelfth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me….

One king’s cake!

Any NOLA-ite knows that Twelfth Night (12 days following Christmas) marks the beginning of the Carnival season in New Orleans.  Each year, on January 6th the city transitions from its Holiday haze into a carnival mindset.   Since Mardi Gras and the Carnival season are Christian celebrations, the start to the season begins on the Christian Epiphany and ends on Fat Tuesday, the day before the start of lent.

Today, most New Orleanians celebrate the start of Carnival with the infamous king cake!  One of the oldest krewe’s in New Orleans, the Twelfth Night Revelers, kick off the ball season with their annual masked ball where they present a kings cake.  At the ball all of the eligible maids are presented with a bean from the cake and the maid who receives the golden bean is to reign as the queen of the ball and the first queen of the Carnival season.

The king cake, and the plastic baby (used now instead of a bean), have been a staple of the New Orleans Carnival season ever since (but of course the king cake tradition can be traced back further than the 200 year history of Louisiana).   While the balls may not be open to the public, there is certainly no shortage of celebrations in this city!  Perhaps the best way to kick off the Carnival season is to watch the Phunny Phorty Phellows ride the St. Charles Avenue Street Car line.  Nothing can beat this party in the streets to kick off the season!

phunny.ride.JPG

NOLA, grab your king cake and claim your favorite parade watching spot, Carnival has arrived!