Saturday, August 24, 2019

#142: Vixen's Wedding

The Bar


Vixen's Wedding. 1813 E 6th St, Austin, TX 78702

Visited 8/24/2019 @ 9pm.

UPDATE: Vixen's Wedding has closed.

The Drink



Goan Places. White rum, pineapple, lime, cucumber. $10.

On paper, this is yet another hurricane, minus the dark rum. Call it a cyclone? But good craftsmanship always elevates an otherwise off-the-shelf cocktail, and this was potent and smooth and very refreshing. I won't lie - this was not our first stop of the night, so our palates were not in the most discerning mode. But you don't have to be sober to appreciate a good cocktail (almost the reverse, actually), and after the bartender assured us that very few people only ordered one of these house specialties, the drink easily lived up to its reputation. A neat feature of this bar is that there are all kinds of fascinating liquors from across India, so if like me you had no idea that India had a rich distilling tradition, much less of rum, which is originally from the Caribbean, you should ask about their selection and get some of whatever looks most interesting. After we'd downed our Goan Places and convinced our bartender that we were still good for one more, we tried a fantastic rum from Bengal, putting us far past three sheets to the wind and into full monsoon mode.

The Crew


Travis, Kathryn, Neil, Aaron.


Notes


The last stop of the night! Vixen's Wedding is a Goan restaurant, which perhaps the clearest example yet that Sixth Street has come a long way from the dependable days of $1 Lone Stars with $3 you-call-its. Goa is an Indian state that was occupied by Portugal for over 450 years, making it roughly the Indian equivalent of Macao, and just like in China the mixture of European administration over Indian substrate produced new styles of food, culture, and even techno (I've probably listened to Paul Oakenfold's Goa Mix dozens of times over the years). Vixen's Wedding is clearly the showpiece of the three bar/restaurants in the hotel, by far the nicest on the inside with plenty of  neat cloth hangings and wall art. Cuisine is usually one of the few good byproducts of colonization, and their food is fantastic - we had one of basically all of their appetizers, plus some absolutely spectacular lamb that would have been worth raving about even if we all hadn't been pretty drunk at that point. I've written before about how hotels used to play a much larger role in culinary invention before the democratization of food with the quick-service restaurant category. Those days of hotels being the undisputed trend-setters are long gone, but restaurants like Vixen's Wedding can still be both a compelling destination for locals as well as an extremely convenient eatery for guests even if it means that they'll miss out on a chance to eat more typical "Austin cuisine". That in itself is an opportunity to ponder the intriguing paradox of diversity where as each city gets more diverse on the local level by importing people and cuisines they increasingly begin to resemble one another on the global level, but I digress - you should check this place out. 

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