Places to Be: Dirty Don’s Oyster Bar and Grille

Dirty Don's Oyster Bar on 21st Avenue N in Myrtle Beach

Dirty Don's Oyster Bar on 21st Avenue N in Myrtle Beach

It seems like people are starting to catch on to what I have been saying since I started writing Places to Be.
Since the beginning, I have told people there are two ways to get me to write about their restaurant or club. I can discover it through the course of my random wanderings along the Grand Strand, or they can invite me to come check it out.
After Doug Kelly asked me to come see Elvis at Studebaker’s last week, I was invited to Dirty Don’s Oyster Bar and Grill to have lunch with the owner. Well, dang. There I was, not even into the next week, and I already had plans. I wasn’t used to this kind of popularity, but I think I can handle it. Especially if it fast tracks me to some great food.
And man-o-man, does Dirty Don’s have some great food.
Sitting just a block from the ocean on 21st Avenue North, Dirty Don’s is a cozy little place with a tropical “island” feel. I have seen the place at night during the summer and it is always packed. There is seating outside on the deck as well as plenty of booths inside.
I met Don and his girlfriend, Kelli, on Tuesday afternoon. It was a quiet time at the place, just after the lunch rush but well before the dinner crowd. And one of the benefits of eating with the owner is that you definitely get the inside track on what is good to eat.
The first thing I learned is that many of the sauces served are made from scratch, which includes the pleasantly spiced cocktail sauce set out on the table, and the wild “Dirty Don’s sauce” that came with the appetizers like Shrimp Fritters and Salt-n-Pepper Catfish fingers, which Kelli and Don ordered respectively. I got to try them both, and they were good, great even, but what came next was even better.
It was tough to choose as each appetizer sounded better than the last, but I finally decided on the Oysters Salsa. Somewhat like Oysters Rockerfeller, these giant oysters were topped with salsa and provolone cheese.
Billed as the chef’s secret creation, I have never come across anything like them. They were so good they were gone before I realized I had eaten them all.
The rest of the menu was just as tempting and hard to choose from. Doug had told me that I had to try the Dunking Pot, a pot of steamed shellfish topped with corn on the cob, hot sausages and garlic bread. I was told it easily serves two or more, and that was a bit more than I could handle for lunch.
Instead, I went with the ribeye sandwich. Both Don and Doug had talked up this sandwich. Don said he had recently upgraded the choice cut of steak for the sandwich, so I agreed to give it a try.
Now, I was putting a lot of faith in what they were telling me, because I never seem to have any luck with “steak sandwiches.” They are usually all right, but more often than not, I find myself having to discard the bun and eat it with a fork and knife. Most steak sandwiches don’t bite off that easily.
This sandwich was amazing. Cooked perfectly to my taste (on the rare side of medium rare), the meat was juicy and perfect. In addition, each bite came with little resistance.
I have had ice cream sandwiches that offered more resistance. This is definitely one of the best sandwiches I have had, if not one of the best steaks on the beach. Oh, and the fries were fresh cut and a perfect golden brown.
I also tried some of the Carolina crab cake sandwich, and was just as surprised and impressed. I am more than likely to pass on crab cakes, but this one had a spicy tang to it that really caught my interest.
Don assured me that crab cakes were made fresh at the restaurant, as was just about everything. Nothing was frozen or prepackaged.
I don’t think I have tasted this much amazingly good food in one place. Well, if it is fresh food you want, prepared perfectly with amazingly unique twists to the recipes, then Dirty Don’s Oyster Bar and Grill is the place to be.

Published in: on March 12, 2009 at 14:54  Comments Off  
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Movies to See: Watchmen

Watchmen: Silky Movie Goodness

Watchmen: Silky Movie Goodness

I have a problem.

“Watchmen” came out and it is a great movie. However, it is not that simple. It is not that simple to explain nor is it simple to tell you that you should go see it.

When most people think of superheroes, comic books and the movies based on them, images of Superman, the Hulk, Batman and Wolverine come to mind. However, the idea of kids films and “cartoon violence” are also closely associated with the genre. Fight scenes are fantastical and even Wolverine’s claws don’t seem to draw as much blood as you would expect. It was like that in comic books, too. In the Golden and Silver Ages of comics, super heroes never killed or said a bad word. They also had a lot of silliness. Superman couldshoot rainbow beams from his hands and break himself up in to thousands of little “mini-Supermen.” Comics tended to be more stand-alone and “for fun.” You could say the Golden Age was like a young child playing with a toy. It could be anything and that could change from moment to moment. The Silver Age brought some continuity to the genre, but life was still simple in the prepubescent age of comics.

Then came the Iron Age. This is a period of teenage rebellion of the comic book industry. This was the birth of the Graphic Novel and adult themes. Heroes were no longer black and white, good or evil. There was killing, sex and questionable morals. Anti-heroes became the norm. In what is often considered the quintessential and maybe the first true graphic novel, Alan Moore took the archetypes of Golden and Silver Age heroes and threw them roughly into an Iron Age world. Based on characters nearly forgotten in the annals of comic history, Moore took a look at the “Golly Gee, Whiz” age of comics and gave it a heavy dose of reality. Characters who had “knocked out Captain Axis” with a left hook now had dirty secrets in their closet. Rape, alternative lifestyles and sins never dreamed of in the prior ages of comic books were now there.

In “Watchmen,” Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley) is the last masked hero to remain active after President Nixon signed the Keen act during his third term as President. It is 1985. The Soviet Union is threatening the Afghanistan boarder, the threat of nuclear war creeps closer and someone has thrown one of the original masked vigilantes, The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), out of his apartment window. Rorschach suspects murder and seeks aid from his old, and retired allies. However, Nite Owl (Patrick Wilson) is uncertain and has lost his confidence and faith. Meanwhile, the ultra-powerful, and ultimate walking deterrent to nuclear war, Dr. Manhattan (Billy Crudup) growing power and insight in to the secrets of the universe are distancing him from humanity and from his girlfriend, Silk Specter (Malin Akerman). As Rorschach continues to investigate, Night Owl and Silk Specter begin to discover that they miss crime fighting and join Rorschach in his investigation, which may lead them to a truth they don’t want to face.

“Watchmen” is a vast story, and the producers cut little out. The story is not about action and adventure, but about mystery, betrayal and the lives of these heroes. Much of it is told in flashbacks, and the beginning is somewhat slow. You don’t get any real “superhero fights” until well into the second act. Nevertheless, this movie is not about superhero fights. It is more about what reality might be like if it had superheroes and what superheroes would be like if they had (our) reality. It is not Batman or the X-Men, and if you cannot accept that, this is not the movie for you. Overall, the movie is witty and beautifully directed and designed, but the story is not for everyone. There is brutality, sex and nudity in this “Full Metal Jacket” approach to superheroes. It is rated “R” for  a reason, so don’t think that superheroes means kid-friendly. In fact, if you can only think of superheroes and comic books as a “kids-only” genre, don’t waste your time. You won’t get this movie. However, even if you are not a comic fan, but love a good story and can enjoy an edgy movie with an open mind, you should be watching the “Watchmen.”

Published in: on March 12, 2009 at 14:37  Comments Off  
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