Sunday, January 10, 2010

Fort Worth Museum of Science and History



TODAY -- the new Fort Worth Museum of Science and History got rave reviews from my daughter, her husband, and their children. "On a scale of 1 to 10, it's a 10 . . ."

From the museum "fact sheet":
 . . . located in the heart of Fort Worth’s Cultural District. The world-class, 166,000 square-foot facility features a collection of new, interactive exhibits and programs developed by the Museum’s staff and a team of nationally recognized designers in support of the Museum’s dedication to informal, discovery-based learning for all.
I can't wait to go. Has anyone else been since it has re-opened? They say the new planetarium is amazing.

http://www.fwmuseum.org/

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Artisan Bakery. Aduro Bean Coffee.

Is there a better food/beverage combination than fresh baked goods and fresh coffee? (okay besides a cold beer and a bratwurst).

I have finally had a chance to visit Artisan Bakery and to try Aduro Bean coffee and am happy I did. My wife and I visited Artisan Bakery for the first time two days before Christmas and bought two loaves of sourdough bread for the family Christmas dinner. It was excellent. The next day we toasted some for breakfast and it was even better. In case you haven't been to Artisan, owner, Gwin Grogan Grimes took an old Dairy Queen and converted it into a bakery and store. Artisan is west of downtown a few miles on White Settlement road and worth frequenting often.

We bought a one pound bag of Aduro Bean coffee while we were there and tried it for over the holidays, as well. I have to say that I think the Aduro Bean coffee is as good as my favorite brand, La Colombe.  

The best part is that Aduro Bean and Artisan Bakery are based right here in good old Fort Worth. Websites and additional information:

http://www.artisan-baking-company.com/about.html

http://www.adurobean.com/

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Feckless, for no particular reason.

The suffix, "less" is used in English to help us understand a thing or an idea in its absence. Hope/hopeless, care/careless, teeth/toothless, etc.  Sometimes the "less" suffix adds a more sinister connotation, as in, "my husband is a hopeless drunk," meaning the husband has not only lost hope but is an s.o.b. as well.

I got thinking about this because I came across the word "feckless," which means, without value, but I had to research it a little to find that "feck" is an obsolete word, meaning valuable. So the word with the suffix stayed even though we lost the original root word.

Makes your day, doesn't it?