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The Catbird Seat has been through 6 kitchen teams in 13 years. Here's how it stays consistently good Best restaurants in Nashville: How the Catbird Seat stays consistent though change
The Catbird Seat, one of Nashville's most prized — and pricey — prix fixe tickets is ready to showcase its newest head chef. Or in this case, chefs. Nashville's The Catbird Seat restaurant ...
Over time, restaurant experiences blend together. Menu items, design flourishes, fonts—you worry that everyone’s borrowing from everyone else. ... David, formerly the chef at the Catbird Seat ...
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Google Books lists it as having been originally published in Issue 28 of Tales for Travellers under the title "A Couple of Hamburgers; and The Catbird Seat". "Tales For Travellers Collection 3" is listed as having something by James Thurbur, but I can't tell what.
The Oxford English Dictionary attributes the first recorded usage of the phrase catbird seat to this story. [1] Mrs. Barrows likes to use the phrase. Another character, Joey Hart, explains that Mrs. Barrows must have picked up the expression from the baseball broadcaster Red Barber and that to Barber, "sitting in the catbird seat" meant "'sitting pretty,' like a batter with three balls and no ...
The hospitality group, which owns acclaimed Nashville restaurants Locust, Bastion, The Catbird Seat, Henrietta Red and Kisser, has also recently added Chef Andy Little (formerly of Josephine) as ...
"The catbird seat" is an idiomatic phrase used to describe an enviable position, often in terms of having the upper hand or greater advantage in any type of dealing among parties. It derives from the secluded perch on which the gray catbird makes mocking calls.