The Finest A part of the Marketing campaign Path (the Meals!) Comes House

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The Finest A part of the Marketing campaign Path (the Meals!) Comes House

It began on my birthday. I obtained, on the identical blessed day in April, a bundle of ribs from the Memphis restaurant Central BBQ, courtesy of m


It began on my birthday. I obtained, on the identical blessed day in April, a bundle of ribs from the Memphis restaurant Central BBQ, courtesy of my brother and sister-in-law, and a field of Jap North Carolina barbecue and hush puppies from Kings BBQ Restaurant, by means of my dad and mom.

That’s after I discovered methods to recreate what was top-of-the-line components of my job — and after I tried to make life on this time of dwelling confinement slightly brighter.

We’ve been fortunate. My spouse and I are wholesome, financially safe and enduring solely the comprehensible gripes of a youngster who has been denied the spring enjoyable of her senior 12 months.

However my life as a New York Occasions political reporter has modified drastically with the coronavirus outbreak. After masking the Michigan main in early March, I needed to forsake the marketing campaign path for my dwelling in Northern Virginia. And for some time that meant going with out one of many privileges of masking a presidential race: sampling, and sampling some extra, the native delicacies.

Many people are refashioning how we work. That’s slightly simpler in a job the place the primary device of 1’s craft is the cellphone. But I had concluded that my days of sitting down with mates and colleagues over a pork tenderloin sandwich in Iowa or a cone of black raspberry from Graeter’s, in Ohio, had been put on ice.

No, that is not all I have eaten — my Louisiana-born wife, Betsy, is a talented cook — and yes, there has been some exercise. But after being so impressed by how well those wet ribs from Memphis and the vinegar-infused barbecue from Kinston, N.C., held up in transit, I checked out the Goldbelly website, which my brother and parents had used to send me the goods.

Betsy and I have experimented some with mail-order food, but let’s just say that with some exceptions — looking at you, Jack Stack Barbecue — it did not often arrive in optimal condition.

The restaurants prepare, package and directly ship the food via the Postal Service or a parcel company, and pay Goldbelly an undisclosed fee for taking the order, processing the payment and other services. (You’ll pay a little more if you live in Alaska or Hawaii; you can’t receive packages at a post office box; and the company isn’t yet sending meals overseas.)

So, after that birthday bacchanal, I went a little crazy. I started phone conversations with sources by asking if they had tried long-distance food delivery. Scrolling through the state-by-state restaurant map on the Goldbelly site, I reveled in memories of meals past, and ordered dishes from places I had been planning to visit. A few days later, there were two stacks of boxes, piled three high, outside our door.

For the most part, the dishes come already prepared; this is not a gastronome’s version of Ikea, with assembly required. You can defrost, heat up and eat the food immediately — or throw it in the freezer.

The cheese steaks from Jim’s Steaks in Philadelphia? Pretty good the day they arrived, but it turns out that Cheez Whiz doesn’t age like Camembert.

Worst of all, while Goldbelly can send you just about any local food — even cheese steaks “Whiz wit,” as they say in Philly — they can’t deliver your friends. The best part of campaign-trail meals (besides the sheer gluttony) are the people who join you.

Some of my most cherished times on the road took place when the food was nothing to, well, write in the Times Food section about.

A late-night stop in Jacksonville, Fla., with two Waffle House first-timers comes to mind, as does the New Year’s Day brunch I once had in Des Moines, where the omelet I wolfed down was far less memorable than the journalist at our four-top whom I would later marry.

Thinking of friends and colleagues, I began to wonder how much they missed the taste of the road, or of their hometowns. So back on Goldbelly I went. And again, I got carried away: Key lime pies, gumbos, pimento cheese and some more of that black raspberry ice cream from Ohio. (Really, you’ve got to try it.)

This time, though, the reward was sending a surprise to some of the people I miss.

It’s not the same as putting down a few bratwursts and beers with them — as we hopefully still will at the Democratic National Convention planned for Milwaukee this August.

But it brought back some great memories, and made the social distance a little less distant.



www.nytimes.com