Thursday, August 12, 2010

Iced Coffee

This summer, for the first time in my life, I have been drinking iced coffee.

It just happened one day that we were out of fresh iced tea, I was thirsty for a little caffeine, so I poured the leftover coffee from the morning's brew into a glass (it was room temperature), added a little sugar, ice, water, and dash of whole milk. Unlike hot coffee, I like iced coffee a little sweetened.

Coincidentally, a couple days ago the Wall Street Journal ran a whole section on iced coffee. Their suggestions included brewing it cold-pressed to eliminate the acidic tastes. That's way too much trouble for me. As long as your morning coffee is not sitting on a warmer too long it works just fine.

If you have any suggestions for iced coffee that don't include a lot of trouble to prepare it, please let me know. I'm kind of liking it.

Only 1% of coffee consumption is iced, so there's a good chance you haven't tried it. You might be surprised, I was.
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Monday, August 9, 2010

Bistro Bakery of San Antonio. Indigo Hotel on the Riverwalk.

Trust me on this one.

The next time you are in San Antonio, run, don't walk to the Bistro Bakery of San Antonio

Why a French bakery baguette served with butter and strawberry jam tastes better than a baguette bought at the local grocery store I do not know, but it does. And so does everything else I tasted at the Bistro. The two days we were in San Antonio we visited the bakery three times. I give credit to my son and his wife for leading the way.

Croissants, baguettes, hard-crusted french bread, and every imaginable pastry, all made by the mostly French-native staff under the guidance of Lucil Watel. Ms. Watel is the mother of one of San Antonio's most popular chef's, Damien Watel.

The Bistro Bakery is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The menu is hand-written on one of those erasable boards and hangs by the cash register. The Bistro looks, feels, and acts like a place that doesn't want a mission statement, or company policy manuals, or cookbooks with pictures. It is more of a family kind of place. I like that. All the food looked and tasted like someone cared.

The lemon tart pictured above? We ordered one -- and it tastes even better than it looks.

Bistro Bakery
4300 McCullough Ave (at Olmos Circle)
San Antonio, TX, 78212-1909
(210) 824-3884

http://www.bistrovatel.com/bakery/ 

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I'd also like to give a mention to Indigo Hotel / Riverwalk and their very friendly staff. It appears to me that the Indigo people have tried to re-evaluate every party of the hotel and gotten rid of things no one wants and added some color, texture, and atmosphere not found at the average Hampton Inn. This ain't your grand-daddy's hotel, that's for sure (wait a minute, I am a granddad, and I stayed there).

Anyway, I had read good things about Indigo Hotels, so I decided to try one.

They get high marks for the following:
1. Large walk in shower
2. Very comfortable bed
3. Large HDTV
4. No carpet in room. Hardwood-floor tiles, the floating kind used over concrete (much cleaner than carpet).
5. Self-parking. Nearby and inexpensive.

Some of the online reviews mention the hotel being in a rough neighborhood, which I do not think is true. It is a redeveloping neighborhood (the hotel itself is part of that redevelopment), but it appeared safe and comfortable to me. The Indigo Hotel Riverwalk is on one of the newly developed forks of the River and in my opinion is a great setting for a hotel.

Price: I'd put the Indigo in the middle price range. It was a good value.

Minor complaint: Quite a few of the rooms had large, beautiful balconies. Mine did not. I would have liked to have known the price difference between the balcony and non-balcony rooms. I didn't notice them until the evening.

 http://www.ichotelsgroup.com/h/d/in/1/en/hotel/satsm 

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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Yogurtland. Montgomery Plaza. Perfect frozen yogurt.

Marian's been out of town this week so I've been going out in the evening for an ice cream or frozen yogurt -- and most nights I've been going to Yogurtland at Montgomery Plaza on 7th Street.

I can't say one of the frozen yogurt places is better than another -- Yogurtland, Yogolait, Menchies, Pinkberry, Frogberry -- they're all good. But I do like self-serve, which Yogurtland has. Yogurtland serves about ten flavors of frozen yogurt and plenty of fresh fruit toppings. I always choose the tart-plain flavor because I like the contrast with the sweet fruit toppings. I also add a few crushed walnuts for crunch.

I like the buzz of the Montgomery Plaza, at least in the drive-through area, and Yogurtland is a good addition.

I never would have dreamed that I would choose this new frozen yogurt over old fashioned ice cream, but I have and I will.

Unless I'm at the beach.

Yogurtland link.

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