Not too long ago, Friday nights
were when I wanted to rage in abominable weekend warrior style and get home in
the early hours of dawn after partying harder than Robert Downey Jr. with a
40-pound crack rock. Not so anymore. I’ve become mellowed with age and
exhausted by child wrangling and by Friday evening I want nothing more than to
sit at home and try to catch up on sleep.
So this past Friday I was reluctant
to leave home with our brood to attend Flushing Night Out that was held on
the campus of Flushing High School, not far from where we live. I did not want
to deal with a large crowd and trying to supervise two active toddlers amid a
mob of festivalgoers. But my wife insisted we go support this thing.
The five of us plus my
mother-in-law took a bus less than a mile to the corner of Northern Boulevard
and Union Street.
Flushing High School is the oldest
high school in the city and unlike most city high schools, it sits on a large
piece of land that has a nice lawn. That’s where the Flushing Night Out was
held.
The event was well attended but not
horribly crowded, a welcome relief. It was an overwhelmingly Asian crowd, which
was no surprise since it was Flushing, and it was largely Flushing High School
students and people active in community events. The mobs of ill-mannered
drunks, arrogant thugs, and hipster abominations I feared never materialized,
and while the DJ music that was there was aimed at a younger audience and
therefore pretty shitty, it wasn’t hard to get away from it. Things sounded
much better once the live music started.
The food offerings were impressive
and things are usually $5 or less. I had some excellent classic mac and cheese
as well as fried mac and cheese from House of Mac, ate a tasty scallion pancake
from Seoul Pancake, a seafood and pasta mix that had an Asian name I can’t
remember from Teinei Ya and an amazing banana-flavored homemade pastry from Jai
NYC Eats. The food booth that caught my attention the easiest was Karl’sBalls. Karl’s balls are delicious octopus balls. Meticulously tended to
by the chef, the balls lived up to the hype. I can’t wait to have Karl’s Balls
in my mouth again.
There was a $1 dollar All You Can
Craft table that allowed us to keep our small children occupied and allowed
them to leave with some hand-made jewelry. They also enjoyed painting their own
and their grandmother’s arms with paint. Helpful volunteers were incredibly
good-natured and patient with rambunctious toddlers who wielded paint brushes
like machetes. Not far away, a vendor
used a real machete to slice coconuts for special drinks.
There were also a lot of different
vendors selling various inexpensive crafts. There was some seating available
and space for people to bring picnic blankets. It was an all-around pleasant
evening.
Flushing Night Out will be held
several more Fridays this summer: July 29, August 12 and August 26. They run
from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. It is a good way to experience Flushing and family
friendly too. It’s organized by the Greater Flushing Chamber of Commerce.
There is also a QueensInternational Night Market that is held in Flushing Meadows-Corona
Park, on Saturdays. Our family tried to go there once but we drove and there
was no parking available. My wife got out and walked through and found that the
lines were incredibly long because there were not enough vendors. However, it
has improved and my mother-in-law attended a more recent night market there and
reported that there were many more vendors and that the crowd situation has
improved.
The Brooklyn Night Bazaar was very
popular and featured a lot of food vendors, beer, and music. It closed though
it appears to be on its way back as its web site says it will be revived thisSeptember. Queens doesn’t need to duplicate Brooklyn to prove its
worth, but these night markets can be a lot of fun if done right, and the
Queens night markets are proving to be successful.
Queens has the most to offer of any
borough in the city as far as food and different crafts. If something exists in
the world, you can bet someone in Queens can cook it, get it for you, or show
you how to make it. Night markets like Flushing Night Out are a good way to
discover new foods, restaurants, or other fun things that may already be close
by.
No comments:
Post a Comment