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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Here’s To Brunch, And Lunch!

Gone are the days when brunch was a once-a-year affair

Gone are the days when brunch was reserved for Mother’s Day or Easter — a once-a-year affair, typically an elaborate buffet at a hotel or country club. When I was a teenager, our family liked the Sunday brunch at the Ramada Inn at U.S. 41 and Lynch Road, with the Red Wick Orchestra playing around the indoor pool in the atrium. It was quite popular. Even today, New Harmony’s Red Geranium Restaurant remains a lovely, and very popular, choice when the holidays roll around. (And the scenic drive ensures you are in the spirit upon your arrival at this quaint town.)

But brunch has evolved. It’s no longer confined to white tablecloths and special occasions. Today, you can find and savor brunch almost anywhere, from fine dining establishments to neighborhood bars and taverns. In the feature story, “Let There Be Brunch,” Managing Editor Jodi Keen and Creative Director Laura Mathis curate a collection of brunch specialties that can be enjoyed in and around Evansville. A restaurant doesn’t have to advertise “brunch,” we learned, to deliver one. It simply needs a little sparkle in the glass — Champagne or mimosas (Bloody Marys work too, of course) — and the perfect mix of sweet and savory, breakfast and lunch. After all, that’s the beauty of the portmanteau itself. Order pancakes and that smashburger, and raise a glass to brunch.


Lunch also has been on my mind — not just normal food noise, but my annual date to host the Social Literary Circle (established in 1901), this year in early March. Members commit to dates to both host and present (we do not read the same book each meeting at SLC; rather, the presenter discusses a book she has read). Meetings are held at lunchtime either in the host’s home or, frequently, in Biaggi’s Wine Room or the Reitz Home Museum’s Carriage House. Last May, I hosted a meeting at Igleheart Gardens — a semi-private estate and childhood home of the late Phyllis Igleheart Kerdasha — with box lunches.

Three Gourmet magazines from the 1990s
Photo of 1990s Gourmet magazines by Kristen K. Tucker

This year, I became more ambitious. My program is about my favorite cookbook writer, the late Laurie Colwin, who is more accurately a kitchen storyteller. I enjoyed her columns in Gourmet magazine in the 1980s and knew she had died too young, in 1992 at age 48. To prepare, I read her books “Home Cooking” and “More Home Cooking.” I also ordered more than a half-dozen copies of Gourmet from 1989 to 1993 hoping to find her original essays. I did find one, a piece on Nantucket cranberry pie in the November 1993 issue, published after her death. After my research, I settled on a simple menu Colwin would approve of: Perfect Poached Chicken Salad; Laurie Colwin’s own Potato Salad; greens, like arugula; bread that I will not bake; and Katharine Hepburn’s brownies.

The stack of Gourmet magazines arrived during January’s snowstorm and provided a great deal of entertainment. The magazines are beautiful — written and designed in a way that looks current today. And the ads! It was a time when life was certainly good on Madison Avenue.

So, here’s to brunch, and lunch! Cheers!

As always, I look forward to hearing from you!

Kristen K. Tucker
Publisher & Editor

Follow Kristen on Instagram @kristenktucker. Email letters to letters@evansvilleliving.com. 

Kristen K. Tucker
Kristen K. Tucker
Kristen K. Tucker formed Tucker Publishing Group, Inc., along with her husband, Todd, in September 1999 and published the first issue of Evansville Living in March 2000. Kristen, publisher and editor of Evansville Living, holds a bachelor’s degree in public relations and English from Western Kentucky University and a master’s degree in liberal studies from the University of Southern Indiana. Kristen has recently served on the board of directors of The Catholic Foundation of Evansville, the Board of Advisors for the IU Medical School Evansville, and Indiana Landmarks. In 2007, she helped found the Women’s Fund of Vanderburgh County. She also is a member of the 125-year-old Social Literary Club. Kristen is the 2003 Athena Award recipient and the 2006 recipient of the Indiana Commission for Women’s Torchbearer Award. Tucker Publishing Group, Inc., magazines have won dozens of awards through the years from the City & Regional Magazine Association, the Advertising Federation of Evansville, the Evansville Design Group, and the Indiana Society of Professional Journalists. A native of Des Moines, Iowa, Kristen moved with her family to Evansville, her father’s hometown, in 1971. She attended Caze Elementary School, and Castle Jr. and Castle Sr. High Schools in Newburgh, Indiana. Kristen and Todd have two adult sons, Maxwell and Jackson. Kristen enjoys walking, travel, Pilates, and reading.

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