Giving Thanks with the Knights of the Realm

November 25, 2007 at 10:47 pm | In holidays | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , ,

This Thanksgiving, being roughly 8 hours south of my family, 8 hours north of Mr. Andrews’s family, and inconveniently far from the Macy’s parade, we had our Thanksgiving dinner at Medieval Times. Neither one of us had been to anything like this, so we didn’t know what to expect. But to tell you the truth, it was pretty awesome.

thanksgiving2007 004
Medieval Times, already decked out for Christmas

It was surprisingly crowded – I was a sort of expecting that we would be the only two people there. But there was a long line by the time the King, The Princess, and the king’s right hand man (aka guy who told us what to do) came out to greet us and start the show. We were assigned to the green team – indicated by our stylish green cardboard crowns – which ruled because the Green Knight was a mercenary bad-ass and was the most fun to root for. Not like the skinny, hippie-looking Red Knight (who was our knight’s rival).

thanksgiving2007 006thanksgiving2007 007

They did an intro into the whole show, explaining that the king’s brother had been killed in the war and they needed to have a knight competition in order to choose a new heir.

thanksgiving2007 063

Medieval M.C.

Then they did lots of horse tricks and bird tricks with a hawk and elaborate intros of each of the six knights (Green, Red, Blue, Yellow, Red and Yellow, & Black and White) to keep us entertained while we ate.

The meal was fun. They served everything on pewter plates (which we were strictly forbidden from banging, as we would scare the horses) and we didn’t have any utensils. Yay, eating with our fingers!

thanksgiving2007 014

thanksgiving2007 087

The menu is set – everybody gets the same thing. We ate:

  • Garlic Bread
  • Vegetable Soup (drunk straight from the bowl)
  • Roasted Chicken
  • Spare Rib
  • Baked Potato
  • “Castle Pastry” (an Apple Turnover)
  • Pepsi

There was also a barmaid who served other drinks in funky cups (my favorite had flashing lights), but we just stuck with what we had already paid for. Everything was really good!

thanksgiving2007 090

My crown was a bit too big…

The main events started after the main course. The knights came out to compete in little games, like collecting rings on their lances, or picking up flags while riding on their horses and tossing them back anfd forth between riders. It was pretty entertaining.

thanksgiving2007 099

But the it was time to fight! There was sort fighting and mace fighting, hand to hand combat, and of course jousting!

thanksgiving2007 161

It was clearly choreographed and corny, but we had lots of fun.

thanksgiving2007 154

It was great to cheer and boo. Mr. Andrews, a veteran SEC football fan, is an expert at cheering with years of face painting, jumping, yelling, and screaming for his team under his belt. This made the experience all the more amusing, and came in handy, too. I couldn’t seem to get a good picture of the Green Knight so Mr. Andrews yelled to him and he looked right at me. I got the shot. I complimented Mr. Andrews on his good use of voice. His response: “This is not my first time.”

thanksgiving2007 129

The Green Knight

So, after all the fighting, there was a big surprise ending. Very showy. It was tons of fun, really. I am very glad we did it.

thanksgiving2007 228

So is jousting and finger foods our new Thanksgiving tradition? We’ll see…

What I Am Thankful For (2007 Edition)

November 22, 2007 at 4:21 pm | In Lists, holidays | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,

Happy Thanksgiving

November 22, 2007 at 12:01 pm | In Images, Places, holidays | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , ,

The Mayflower

November 21, 2007 at 10:24 am | In Images, holidays | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , , ,

Reservations for Two

November 6, 2007 at 8:12 pm | In Places, holidays | Leave a Comment
Tags: , , ,

The latest news on the living situation is that Mr. Andrews & Co. will be working here in New Jersey until at least the beginning of December. I heard this news at about 11 o’clock this morning, and spent the rest of the day researching Thanksgiving in New York City.

Eat.
Last Thanksgiving at my mom’s house

I am in love with New York. Since moving to the outskirts of the Greater New York area (at least according to LinkedIn) and becoming a perpetual tourist in the city, I have made obsessive use of Citysearch, OpenTable, and About.com’s New York City Travel section. I have found some cute, not ridiculously priced little restaurants like Mooncake Foods in SoHo (where we enjoyed our Pan-Asian dinner while trying to identify Noah Emmerich, who was eating at another table) and Peanut Butter & Co., an old-fashioned gourmet peanut butter sandwich shop, in Greenwich Village. I am kind of obsessed with food when I travel, and I don’t want to pull a Michael Scott, eating at Sbarro or something. Plus, I also discovered some cool activities like Shakespeare in the Park (free as long as you sit in line for a few hours in the morning) and Target Free Friday Nights at MoMA. Obviously, NYC can be overwhelming and expensive for those of us not in the know (the TGI Friday’s in Times Square charges $16 for a cheeseburger), so I like to get some insight before I go. I don’t want to get taken. Like the time we paid $15 for two hot dogs and 2 cans of soda at a cart outside of FAO Schwartz. I like to avoid stuff like that.

Anyway, from these resources, our Thanksgiving Day has been planned. Way back when we thought we’d be in Maryland by now, I had reserved a spot for Thanksgiving dinner at Georgia Brown’s in Washington D.C. (also located with the above websites). I have been reluctant to cancel that reservation (their Low Country menu has deep fried turkey with cornbread stuffing – mmm!). But even though it would be cool to celebrate Thanksgiving in the capital city, New York will most likely be more fun (and we can probably do Georgia Brown’s next year). I found out lots of good info about attending the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade (and watching them set up the balloons the day before). I also found a bunch of restaurants serving Thanksgiving dinner and made reservations at Brasserie. They are serving a 3-course meal for $58 a piece. Cheaper than kenneling the dogs for four days and driving to my mom’s house in Massachusetts, and, hey, I like parades.

Now, I just hope the company doesn’t change their mind. Please don’t send us to Arkansas, where I will have to watch the parade on a hotel room tv!

Christmas Tree
Last Christmas at my mom’s house

As a bonus, and because I am addicted, I also did a bit of research on restaurants open on Christmas in San Francisco, which is where we are tentively planning to be this year (hooray for a cheap company that gives Mr. Andrews three weeks of unpaid vacation over the winter holidays!). I think our best (most affordable) bet is to dine in Chinatown, which is said to be bustling on Christmas Day. This makes Mr. Andrews very happy, as Ralphie and family ate Chinese food in A Christmas Story.

The holidays look to be shaping up nicely. Thanks, internet!

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.