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    Dead People Eat

    What would zombie survivors eat? A must-read blog for foodie fans of The Walking Dead

    Marene Gustin
    Marene Gustin
    May 18, 2013 | 1:00 pm

    Nice to know I’m not the only one obsessed with what my favorite TV characters are eating. My May 6 column, Memo to TV execs: More food needed on NCIS, Castle, The Walking Dead and other TV dramas, got some interesting responses.

    Right afterwards I had my IT guy over and, hunkered over my laptop, he suddenly turns to me and says, "Gibbs eats steak, raw, and cuts it with his pocket knife."

    What? Ohhhhh.

    And then I get this email from a reader in Baltimore, Md. — Sherry Pennel, who designs packaging for a drug company and describes herself as a frustrated chef who loves to cook for friends and family.

    She has this fabulous blog called The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog. Its tag line? "The blog for everyone who wants to survive the zombie apocalypse and still pretend to be a gourmet."

    Catchy.

    She wrote, "I feel the same way! Which is why I started The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog. I could not stand not seeing how the Atlanta survivors made it without eating at least a little something."

    If you're a foodie fan of The Walking Dead this blog is a must read.

    If you're a foodie fan of The Walking Dead this blog is a must read. Not only does she recap every episode, she offers up three to four recipes on what the survivors might have eaten based on where they are and what foods might have been available to them.

    "I was sort of fascinated by the premise of the show," she told me in a phone call. "Our culture is so caught up in food, it's how we celebrate and connect, and I wondered what we would be eating if the world ended."

    She started the blog on May 4, 2012. Her brother Drew Pennel, also a fan of the AMC show, designed the logo for the blog: A zombie head with a spatula through one eye. The text next to the logo pretty much sums up the blog: "There are no more McLunches or Runs for the Border, and the only thing left that's Finger Lickin' Good is you. We all need to learn how to cook together. And I'm just the woman for the job."

    So how does she come up with the recipes?

    "I just watch the show and think of what kinds of food that would work with the episode," Pennel says. "In Season 2 they were on the farm so I got to work in a lot of fresh vegetables and fruits in the recipes. In Season 3 they're in the prison with a big pantry and they only have canned goods and packaged foods so that's what those recipes are based on."

    Like her dessert recipe for "The Suicide King Part 3," a Bartlett pear and blue cheese tart that uses eight simple prepackaged ingredients that could very well have been found in the prison pantry (find the recipe below).

    "I did try to add more dessert recipes this season," Pennel says. "Because you need a treat when things are going bad."

    She says it's hard to pick a favorite recipe, but admits the egg McMuffin pie comes pretty close. It's equally hard for her to pick a favorite character.

    "It would be Daryl and Carol," she says. "I'm fascinated that their lives actually improved because the world ended."

    Oh, and here's the real kicker: She was never a zombie fan.

    "I can't believe I love this show," Pennel says. "People kept telling me I had to watch it because it wasn't about the zombies but the relationships between the survivors. Watching it has gotten me over my fear of zombie movies and I've actually watched Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland!"

    And another foodie zombie fan is born.

    ___

    Bartlett Pear and Blue Cheese Tart

    For the crust:
    1 1/2 cups Bisquick baking mix (Heart Smart if you can scavenge it)
    1/2 cup warm water
    2 Tbsp. Butter-flavored shortening (softened or melted)

    For the filling:
    3 Tbsp. Butter-flavored shortening
    2 Tbsp. Minced, Dried Onion
    2 (14 oz) cans Bartlett Pear Halves, drained
    1 (5 oz) jar Roka Blue Cheese Spread
    1 bag shelled Walnuts, chopped*
    1 Tbsp Dried Parsley Flakes

    *If walnuts are stale you may toast them lightly over medium heat or coals to restore their flavor. This really works; trust me.

    For the Crust:
    If you have a working oven; preheat to 400°F. Alternately, heat campfire coals until red hot and allow to burn until covered with white ash. Grease a pie tin or a 9-inch baking pan with shortening. In a large bowl, combine baking mix, water and shortening. Blend well until mixture comes together in a ball.

    Gently (grease fingers if necessary) pat the dough into the bottom and sides (about 1 inch up) of the pie tin or baking pan. Bake for 10 minutes in oven or 15 minutes (sealed well in foil) over campfire. Remove from oven/fire while you prepare the filling.

    For the Filling:
    In a small saucepan, melt the shortening. Add minced, dried onion and allow to simmer VERY briefly. The moisture in the shortening will also allow the onion to reconstitute slightly. Remove from heat and set aside.

    Slice each pear half into fourths and layer the slices in concentric circles in the tart crust. Use all of the pears. Using a spoon, drizzle the onion mixture over the pears. Bake in preheated oven for 20-22 minutes. Alternately, seal well with foil and cook over campfire coals for 15 minutes, checking often so the tart crust does not burn.

    Remove from oven/fire. Sprinkle chopped walnuts over tart and bake for an additional 5 minutes. Remove from oven/fire again. Using a small spoon, drop teaspoonfuls of the Roka Blue Cheese Spread evenly over tart. Sprinkle with dried parsley flakes.

    Cut into wedges and serve warm or at room temperature.

    Sherry Pennel has this fabulous blog called The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog. Its tag line is “The blog for everyone who wants to survive the zombie apocalypse and still pretend to be a gourmet.”

    The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog May 2013
    Photo courtesy of The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog
    Sherry Pennel has this fabulous blog called The Walking Dead Survival Cooking Blog. Its tag line is “The blog for everyone who wants to survive the zombie apocalypse and still pretend to be a gourmet.”
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    Roll With It

    9 Houston restaurants luring diners with fluffy, buttery dinner rolls

    Brianna McClane
    Apr 30, 2026 | 10:30 am
    The Green Room dinner rolls
    Photo by Bear Media Co
    At the Green Room, diners can opt for a side of caviar to elevate the dinner rolls.

    Dinner rolls are having a moment in Houston.

    Perhaps it's because comfort food is necessary when life can feel so chaotic, or that ordering a basket of rolls for the table is more financially approachable than, say, a seafood tower — whatever the reason, rolls are back on the menu at some of the city's most exciting restaurants.

    At Latuli, the Memorial restaurant by chef Bryan Caswell and Allison Knight, the bread service consists of house yeast rolls with jalapeño and roasted poblano jelly, alongside a gruyère corn bread with whipped sorghum butter.

    “It’s our No. 1 seller every day, which is surprising given all the gluten-free diets and GLP-1 trends right now—it’s almost like its power is trend-immune,” Caswell tells CultureMap.

    The same is true at Fielding’s Steak, where the restaurant’s in-house bakery delivers brioche dinner rolls served with cultured butter, honey, and sea salt from Galveston.

    “Guests have always loved fresh-baked bread, even during the time when it was frowned upon,” CEO Cary Attar says.

    Dustin Teague, executive chef and co-owner of Relish Restaurant & Bar, recalls when free bread service was a constant on tables around town throughout the majority of his industry experience.

    “That was back in the good old days when rent, insurance, labor, and cost of goods were at reasonable numbers,” Teague says. “Now we don’t have any room for anything free but we still want to have it available for guests.”

    The Parker House rolls at Relish are accompanied by compound butters, with the current creation featuring a garlic confit, fresh herbs, and red pepper flakes.

    “Serving bread signifies welcoming guests into a home or establishment, hence the term ‘breaking bread.’ So it’s a must for any upscale dining experience,” Teague says.

    The cowboy butter rolls at western-themed restaurant Long Weekend are a no-brainer pairing on a menu with hearty fare like hickory-smoked quail and a 24-ounce porterhouse. It’s also an easy order for the family-focused restaurant that is likely to have tiny, pickier eaters as patrons.

    "We took a Texas staple and elevated it with duck fat, our house sourdough starter, and locally sourced Kelley’s Honey,” executive chef German Mosquera says.

    At Star Rover, every entree is served with a basket of milk rolls, along with salad, fries, and onion rings. Diners who want to participate in the “I Ate the 76'er” challenge have to consume a 76-ounce steak and the sides — yes, including rolls — in under an hour.

    “They are your fairly standard buttermilk yeast rolls,” executive chef Bobby Matos says. “We serve them because they’re delicious and a bit of a nod to Texas Roadhouse and that kind of vibe.”

    Speaking of Texas Roadhouse, the chain restaurant's complimentary rolls helped propel its rise to America's highest-grossing casual dining restaurant. The fluffy buns are baked every five minutes, enticing diners with shiny butter-basted tops and cinnamon butter that's made in house.

    The dinner rolls at surf-and-turf destination Truluck’s emerge from the kitchen as pull-aparts — brushed with butter and finished with a hefty dusting of parmesan.

    The dinner rolls at The Green Room undergo an overnight bulk fermentation process. The next day, the dough is rolled and portioned by hand before resting and proofing at room temperature for four hours, then slid into the oven.

    The newly opened 26-seat restaurant adds daily butters to the experience, with both a sorghum-and-sea salt butter, and a charred scallion butter currently in rotation. To make the dish even more luxurious, diners can add a caviar supplement to the bread service.

    Chef and owner Shawn Gawle offers another elevated version of the dinner roll at Camaraderie. Here, the 2026 James Beard semifinalist for Best Chef: Texas has put his pastry expertise on display with pain au lait, which involves laminating together a regular Japanese milk bread with a purple sweet potato variation into a delicate, colorful roll.

    “We wanted something where we could show value, substance and technique, but it also completes the meal,” Gawle says. “To share a meal with warm bread and butter is a universal, comforting experience.”

    The Green Room dinner rolls

    Photo by Bear Media Co

    At the Green Room, diners can opt for a side of caviar to elevate the dinner rolls.

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