Friday, July 31, 2009

Fort Worth Downtown Review

Click on image to go to website.
j
T
he premier issue
of the Fort Worth Downtown Review is out and on the newstands. Well, actually in the restaurants and hotels of Downtown-South.

Look for a copy --- or go to http://www.fwdowntownreview.com and click on "Pages."

Many Fort Worth food and Fort Worth news weblogs were included in the "Lists" section. The magazine is oriented to Fort Worth visitors as a guide to enjoying our fair city.

Please make comments and suggestions to rsmith@fwsummit.com. She would love to hear from you.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Fort Worth's Best Beer

Fort Worth has its fair share of establishments where a cold pint can be enjoyed in the summertime.

Flying Saucer, Houston Street Patio, Ginger Man, Bull and the Bush, Paddy Red's,
to name just a few, are all places that highlight the enjoyment of a fresh draught. The Ginger Man even has the occasional event, such as next week's, " Beer Tasting, Summer Sippers." (August 1, $30, for more information: gingermanpub.com)

The Star Telegram, July 22, ran a good article on the best summer selections for beer drinkers. Included: our very own Rahr Brewery, Summertime Wheat, and Shiner's Smoakhaus.

http://www.star-telegram.com

Have a little known favorite? Please pass it on.


Saturday, July 18, 2009

On Writing Instruments.



I was cleaning out a drawer the other day and realized something.

I have too many pens.

I had ten barely used pens in that drawer alone. Elsewhere, in jars, boxes, briefcases and other drawers I have hundreds of them -- and most likely so do you. I have pens from banks, law offices and businesses of every kind, click pens, roller balls, felt-tip, ball point, highlighters, and my favorites, the traditional fountain pen.

Pencils? I like them too. Wood pencils that require sharpening, and the mechanical kind that advance with a click or a screw. And there are the accessories to pens and pencils: ink wells, cartridges, sharpeners, erasers, and rulers. I love rulers.

My favorite pen is the Parker clip-on click pen with a fine-point, blue-ink cartridge. It has the right size, color, weight, look, and ease of use. And it writes very well. They cost about $5 at office supply store. For letter writing, my favorite pen is an old-fashioned Flair with a medium tip. I like the original Pilot pen with the fine tip but they tended to flatten too quickly.

Everyone once in a while I'll think about Thomas Jefferson sitting in a quiet room writing the Declaration of Independence. He had a couple of big sheets of paper, a quill tip pen, and an ink well. Back then, men had time to think as they wrote. I do know Shelby Foote, author of Civil War - A Narrative, wrote with an no-cartridge, fountain pen. Dip and write. He said it helped his writing.

As usual I have wandered off my point about pens, but now that I think about it. I wonder if the quality of writing has gone down as the ease of writing has gone up?