I'm a firm believer that if you have pets (birds, cats, horses, dogs, etc,) who enjoy toys, it's a good thing to give them new ones from time to time to keep them mentally stimulated and occupied. Kitai is a huge toy lover. He loves balls, Nylabones, rubber squeaky toys and plushies. He loves to squeak them, chase them, carry them around and he loves to tear them apart.
Speaking of tearing apart he also knows how to open his presents on Christmas morning. He is such a smart dog though it took me a while to figure out he could do this. Here he demonstrates his gift opening proficiency making short work of the two new toys he received this year. He is so funny!
Saturday, December 31, 2011
My 2011 top ten food tour favorites and a big surprise
What began as a simple endeavor to track down some San Francisco food trucks turned into a year long quest to discover new restaurants and dishes Bay Area wide.
The photo montage below is the sum total of what my foodie friend Carl Mindling and I ate at 54 restaurants trying 96 entrees, appetizers, desserts and drinks during our 12 months of Northern California food tours.
But here's a big announcement: As much fun as they were we're pretty darn full so we've decided to take 2012 off when it comes to our monthly food tours. We mutually decided there's only so much food we can eat and next year we're moving on to to a new type of adventure: photo tours! We want to go out and photograph all kinds of cool places to visit and things to do. The range will be wide and hopefully interesting to you! They're also bound to include a breakfast, lunch or dinner so we'll share what we ate but it'll be one restaurant at a time instead of 5 places in one day.
To pay tribute to the great dining experiences we shared, Carl suggested we each create a list of our top ten favorite things from our monthly food adventures in 2011. We chose four of the same items for our respective lists. Check out his Top Ten by CLICKING HERE. I knew this wouldn't be easy but here goes. . .
The photo montage below is the sum total of what my foodie friend Carl Mindling and I ate at 54 restaurants trying 96 entrees, appetizers, desserts and drinks during our 12 months of Northern California food tours.
But here's a big announcement: As much fun as they were we're pretty darn full so we've decided to take 2012 off when it comes to our monthly food tours. We mutually decided there's only so much food we can eat and next year we're moving on to to a new type of adventure: photo tours! We want to go out and photograph all kinds of cool places to visit and things to do. The range will be wide and hopefully interesting to you! They're also bound to include a breakfast, lunch or dinner so we'll share what we ate but it'll be one restaurant at a time instead of 5 places in one day.
I can't believe we ate the whole thing!
To pay tribute to the great dining experiences we shared, Carl suggested we each create a list of our top ten favorite things from our monthly food adventures in 2011. We chose four of the same items for our respective lists. Check out his Top Ten by CLICKING HERE. I knew this wouldn't be easy but here goes. . .
Artichoke Garlic Herb Bread at Norm's Bakery
"A Pescadero Food Tour: Where and What to Eat Off HWY 1"
Pescadero, CA
"A Pescadero Food Tour: Where and What to Eat Off HWY 1"
Pescadero, CA
Green Curry Noodles at Charlie Hong Kong
"Beyond the Beach: A Santa Cruz Food Adventure"
Santa Cruz, CA
Santa Cruz, CA
Grilled Cheese Sandwich at In-N-Out Burger
"A Bay Area Cheap Eats and Secret Menu Food Adventure"
Mountain View, CA
"A Bay Area Cheap Eats and Secret Menu Food Adventure"
Mountain View, CA
Oven Roasted Egg, Creamy Leeks, Crescenza Cheese & Truffle Oil Flatbread at Vin Antico
San Rafael, CA
Corkscrew Onion Rings at Corkscrew Cafe
"Eating in the valley or by-the-sea, Carmel is the place to be"
Carmel Valley, CA
"Eating in the valley or by-the-sea, Carmel is the place to be"
Carmel Valley, CA
Crimson Rhubarb Tart with Ginger Ice Cream at Chez Panisse Cafe
"Our May, East Bay, Berkeley and Oakland Food Adventure"
Berkeley, CA
"Our May, East Bay, Berkeley and Oakland Food Adventure"
Berkeley, CA
Honorable Mentions would include:
The Monticello Macaroni & Cheese at Eddie Papas, The Pasta Shop's Cheese Bread, the Bubble and Squeak at Aunt Mary's Cafe, the Molten Chocolate Lava Cake at the Cascade Bar & Grille and the Pumpkin Borani at the Oasis Grille.
The concept was so simple, find new places and things to eat. I think we all get stuck in ruts eating at the same restaurants over and over again. Nothing wrong with that, I have my favorites too, but if you go just a few blocks or cities further, who knows what you'll discover.
In case you missed a few, here is our entire year in review:
January - Gourmet Meat Street Food & Vegetarian Food Truck Favorites
February - Beyond the Beach: A Santa Cruz Food Adventure
March - Cowgirl Creamery: A Northern California Cheese Adventure
April - Beyond Sushi: A South Bay Japanese Food Adventure
May - Our May, East Bay, Berkeley and Oakland Food Adventure
June - A Palo Alto, Epicurean Food Tour
July - A Bay Area Cheap Eats and Secret Menu Food Adventure
August - A Pescadero Food Tour: Where and What to Eat Off HWY 1
September - A Surprisingly Delicious Pleasanton Food Tour
October - Where to Eat: A Willow Glen Food Tour
November - Where to Eat on Fourth Street • Berkeley, CA
December - Eating in the valley or by-the-sea, Carmel is the place to be
The concept was so simple, find new places and things to eat. I think we all get stuck in ruts eating at the same restaurants over and over again. Nothing wrong with that, I have my favorites too, but if you go just a few blocks or cities further, who knows what you'll discover.
In case you missed a few, here is our entire year in review:
January - Gourmet Meat Street Food & Vegetarian Food Truck Favorites
February - Beyond the Beach: A Santa Cruz Food Adventure
March - Cowgirl Creamery: A Northern California Cheese Adventure
April - Beyond Sushi: A South Bay Japanese Food Adventure
May - Our May, East Bay, Berkeley and Oakland Food Adventure
June - A Palo Alto, Epicurean Food Tour
July - A Bay Area Cheap Eats and Secret Menu Food Adventure
August - A Pescadero Food Tour: Where and What to Eat Off HWY 1
September - A Surprisingly Delicious Pleasanton Food Tour
October - Where to Eat: A Willow Glen Food Tour
November - Where to Eat on Fourth Street • Berkeley, CA
December - Eating in the valley or by-the-sea, Carmel is the place to be
Friday, December 30, 2011
Trailing light night photography
Last night I suggested to hubby we should go out and shoot some night photography. Our original intention was to head to downtown San Jose to take pictures at Christmas in the Park, an annual event full of decorations along Market Street in front of the Fairmont Hotel and the Tech Museum.
Once we arrived downtown I realized a much more interesting opportunity would be taking pictures of the carnival rides across the street along Park Ave.
I wanted to take photos where the lens was left open for a longer than standard amount of time to create light trails while using a tripod.
My ISO was set to 100 then I just played with my aperture and shutter speeds to create different amounts of trailing light and color. I used my pancake lens which, sadly, wasn't wide enough to get a full frame shot of the entire ride once it was in motion.
I felt a little motion sick just watching people ride the rides. No way could I do it. Well I could but I'd be crawling off and would have to lay down on the ground for about a half hour after. LOL
At one point I checked in with hubby. He had set his shutter slower than mine, so I left mine open longer and slowed things down to get this photo that looked like his. We got home and he showed me how after that he sped his up and took pictures that looked like mine. I love how the clown's face is peeking out LOL
The weird thing is that it was foggy last night in San Jose. Like really misty. So misty it almost felt like it was raining. It made our expedition not as much fun but I felt like it was still a successful outing.
Before we left we went to shoot a few more rides. This one was called "Foot Loose." When I was a kid I think they called this kind of ride "The Hammer" or something like that.
There are two cab areas where people sit. I wanted to photograph both at the same time but here's where you can tell I don't have a wide angle lens. And I didn't want to stand in the street to perfectly frame the whole ride because I would have been hit by a car.
Slowly they begin swinging back and forth like pendulums until they gain enough speed that they spin in complete circles.
I didn't change my settings at all this time. The ride moved so quickly it created all of the streaming light I wanted with my first attempt.
Ah, this was what I was after! Circles of light. What I didn't anticipate was how the people standing beneath it would be so sharp. I guess because they were all watching the ride too they didn't move at all which made for cooler pictures for me :)
I think hubby and I will be doing things like this more often. In so many ways we're so opposite that sometimes people ask me why we're a couple :) As I munched on a soft pretzel (I couldn't resist the corner vendor) I thought how cool it is that we now have photography in common as our first mutual hobby.
Oh and even though we walked past it we didn't take any photos at all of Christmas in the Park. We'll do that next year when the weather is better. You still have two days left to see it though. It's open every day from 9:00 AM. through midnight, until Sunday, January 1, 2012.
F stop 2.5 - Exposure Time 1/5
Once we arrived downtown I realized a much more interesting opportunity would be taking pictures of the carnival rides across the street along Park Ave.
F stop 4.5 - Exposure Time 0.4
I wanted to take photos where the lens was left open for a longer than standard amount of time to create light trails while using a tripod.
F stop 2.5 - Exposure Time 1/4
My ISO was set to 100 then I just played with my aperture and shutter speeds to create different amounts of trailing light and color. I used my pancake lens which, sadly, wasn't wide enough to get a full frame shot of the entire ride once it was in motion.
F stop 3.5 - Exposure Time 0.4
I felt a little motion sick just watching people ride the rides. No way could I do it. Well I could but I'd be crawling off and would have to lay down on the ground for about a half hour after. LOL
F stop 10 - Exposure Time 3.2
At one point I checked in with hubby. He had set his shutter slower than mine, so I left mine open longer and slowed things down to get this photo that looked like his. We got home and he showed me how after that he sped his up and took pictures that looked like mine. I love how the clown's face is peeking out LOL
F stop 3.5 - Exposure Time 0.4
The weird thing is that it was foggy last night in San Jose. Like really misty. So misty it almost felt like it was raining. It made our expedition not as much fun but I felt like it was still a successful outing.
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
Before we left we went to shoot a few more rides. This one was called "Foot Loose." When I was a kid I think they called this kind of ride "The Hammer" or something like that.
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
There are two cab areas where people sit. I wanted to photograph both at the same time but here's where you can tell I don't have a wide angle lens. And I didn't want to stand in the street to perfectly frame the whole ride because I would have been hit by a car.
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
Slowly they begin swinging back and forth like pendulums until they gain enough speed that they spin in complete circles.
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
I didn't change my settings at all this time. The ride moved so quickly it created all of the streaming light I wanted with my first attempt.
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
Ah, this was what I was after! Circles of light. What I didn't anticipate was how the people standing beneath it would be so sharp. I guess because they were all watching the ride too they didn't move at all which made for cooler pictures for me :)
F stop 8 - Exposure Time 1
I think hubby and I will be doing things like this more often. In so many ways we're so opposite that sometimes people ask me why we're a couple :) As I munched on a soft pretzel (I couldn't resist the corner vendor) I thought how cool it is that we now have photography in common as our first mutual hobby.
Oh and even though we walked past it we didn't take any photos at all of Christmas in the Park. We'll do that next year when the weather is better. You still have two days left to see it though. It's open every day from 9:00 AM. through midnight, until Sunday, January 1, 2012.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Eating in the valley or by-the-sea, Carmel is the place to be
Carl decided we should end the year with style so for our final food tour of 2011 we headed south to Carmel, CA. We began our day inland in Carmel Valley dining at the Wagon Wheel Coffee Shop, Corkscrew Café and dropping by the Earthbound Farm Stand. Then we headed west towards the water and the oh so very picturesque city Carmel-by-the-Sea. La Bicyclette and the Carmel Bakery and Coffee Co were our stops there.
We headed out bright and early to eat breakfast at the Wagon Wheel Coffee Shop on Carmel Valley Road.
The neat thing when you walk inside is that the Wagon Wheel doesn't have a stylized, wanna be kind of ambiance. You get the feeling that every thing on the walls is there for a reason. Each photograph and object have their own history and story to tell.
We started out ordering an Oatmeal Pancake ($3.50) with fresh bananas ($2.00). Here's the thing. I don't like oatmeal or pancakes, but I thought maybe I'd like them together. If you love pancakes or if you love oatmeal you'll probably think they're great! Turns out I didn't care for them but I kind of thought I wouldn't. But I wanted to give them a try :)
What I did love at the Wagon Wheel was the "Cookout" which consisted of baked beans and three poached eggs. The beans had a bit of bite to them with just a touch of jalapeno/chili heat which was just enough to bring out a flavor to contrast the sweetness of the sauce.
Next we headed further inland to the Corkscrew Café. There are, in total, 8 dining areas here. Two are small, each with a single large table. And a larger L shaped area divides into three areas that are each very quaint and rustic. The two outside sections, one along the entire side of the building and another larger section behind it with a large pond.
The interior is early mission in style. As you walk in you immediately see loaves of freshly baked bread lined up on the counter before you along with standing metal containers that each hold bottles of wine dusted in flour. The walls are painted a warm earthy red mixed with aged, raw, grey wood accented by shutters of turquoise framing a mirrored wood fire oven.
Here's the funny thing. The Corkscrew Café offers not only a cheese sampler, they also offer a bread sampler (available Weds-Sunday for $5.75). Out of curiosity we had to try it. What arrived were two slices each of the four kinds of bread we'd just passed on our way in with fresh butter and the most flavorful olive oil I've ever tasted. Clockwise from top left: Whole Wheat, Rosemary Olive Ciabatta, Sourdough and Baguette. The Rosemary Olive Bread was loaded with tiny bits of kalamata olives (my favorite) so Carl got each of us a loaf to bring home.
Our waiter highly recommended the Corkscrew Onion Rings ($7.00) and once we tried them we understood why. Served haystack style they're thin, crisp, sweet & salty. OMOR. I ate too many, Carl ate too many. We couldn't stop eating them. I would definitely go all the way back to Carmel Valley just to have these onion rings again.
On the way out I spotted this freshly baked, wood fire pizza sitting just outside the oven door.
And of course there had to be a cool corkscrew collection right? I especially loved the little dog shaped corkscrews. There was also a really cute pic one too. You can see them (behind glass) in the first dining area in a large armoire and a built in wall display area.
As we headed back towards the highway to go to Carmel by the Sea, Carl spotted our next stop on the side of the road. We'd noticed this sign on our way out to Corkscrew, but on our way back Carl noticed that earlier we had passed the Earthbound Farm Stand, without noticing it because the sign came after. We made a quick decision and Carl made a u-turn.
This is what we found. A very cute country store full of organic produce, a small coffee and salad bar, fresh meals prepared to go and lots of snack foods and for home chefs, lots of healthy ingredients. I purchased my first bottle of agave syrup to use as a sugar substitute. I found out that Agave Nectar, sweeter than honey and refined sugar, is often used as a honey substitute by vegans as the sweetener comes from a plant.
It was there I spotted the Jimtown Fig & Olive Spread ($4.95). Now remember how earlier I said I don't like oatmeal or pancakes? Well, I love figs and kalamata olives. So I knew this spread would be a winner for me :) We had the bread from our Corkscrew sampler that we'd brought along with us in the car and had an impromptu picnic. Mmmmm hmmmmmm. That's a little spread on a bit of baguette. Yum!
There is so much to do and see at the Earthbound Farm Stand. There are three outdoor seating ares, an herb garden, a play area for kids, a vegetable garden for the cafe inside, and all kinds of things to see like how to compost.
We were, as Carl said, dilly dallying along and had to push ourselves to leave and head over to Carmel-by-the-Sea. It is a beloved tourist destination full of quaint houses, adorable hobbit like architecture, shops, art galleries and restaurants.
A very cute bicycle parked in front of La Bicyclette.
Our first stop was a sister-restaurant to the Corkscrew Café. La Bicyclette is on the corner of Dolores Street at Seventh. Aside from being one of the most wonderful places in California (and probably the world) Carmel-by-the-Sea is unusual in that the houses and shops don't have street number addresses. So you'll see addresses written as cross streets. I've always wondered how the postmen know who to deliver mail to but recently learned that they don't. If you live in Carmel's "village" you have to go to the Post Office to pick up your mail.
The restaurant's sign is so cute!
The restaurant is divided into two areas. On the left is a more modern, bistro looking bar and dining area. On the right is a fanciful, kind of Snow White, cottage'ish dining room which is where we sat.
Nantes Carrot Risotto
I was craving fresh veggies at this point and we found them atop this order of Nantes Carrot Risotto ($14.00) with truffle marinated artichokes, greens, thin strips of peeled carrot and shavings of parmesan cheese. The risotto itself was more flavorful and tangy than creamy. I mean it was creamy, but the flavor was what I noticed first. You can't help it.
Also on the menu that day was a Wood-Fired Quince and Apple Tart with Vanilla Ice Cream ($8.00). Though I'd have to agree with another diner sitting beside us, that because it is a free form crust, it's what most people would recognize as a galette, rather than a tart. No matter what you call it it was warm and delicious. The crust was perfect.
Ah, this picture was taken with my new macro lens hubby got me for Christmas!
The ice cream was served atop a small bed of brown sugar, laid upon thin strands of gooey caramel sauce. Not a lot, just enough of the extra sweetness to make you go ahhhhhhhhh when you eat it.
So was this picture :)
And I'd been craving apple pie since Christmas. This was the perfect treat to satisfy my craving. I wasn't sure what a quince even looks like! Turns out they look like a slightly lumpy pear crossed with a lemon but without the thick peel of a lemon. They are thin skinned like apples and pears and I couldn't tell the difference between the two in our dessert.
Oh we were so full. So for our final stop we headed over to the Carmel Bakery (at Ocean Avenue and LIncoln) for a to-go treat I usually only have every other year or even less frequently.
We had to wait a bit for the looky-loos to stop gazing in the front window so I could show you the exterior unobstructed. LOL. This place is always busy but the line moves quickly.
There are always plates and pedestals piled high with pastries and their house specialty: giant, soft, Bavarian pretzels. Some are savory, others sweet.
And did I forget to mention the cute cookies for both humans and dogs? These are the human gingerbread men, snowmen and Christmas trees above.
But my personal favorite are these Fruit Stick ($2.95) pastries. They're like sugar crusted, rolled up, flakey turnovers filled with raspberry or apricot. I chose raspberry and had it for breakfast the next morning. We kept them in the car instead of the trunk on the way home and they made the entire ride home smell like we were in a bakery.
If you've never been to Carmel-by-the-Sea this is what it looks like. The sidewalks are always full of shoppers and buildings are beyond cute. We were lucky. Often Carmel is overcast and a little chilly so imagine our surprise, no, make that shock, that we were there for an unseasonably warm and sunny 70Âş day with blue skies in late December!
You can read Carl's recap here. There's a very funny little white lie his parents used to tell him about Carmel when he was a kid so they could have it all to themselves.
Want to go where we went? Here's the way:
Wagon Wheel Coffee Shop
7156 Carmel Valley Rd
Carmel, CA 93923
831-624-8878
Corkscrew Cafe
55 West Carmel Valley Road
Carmel Valley, CA 93921
Reservations: 831-659-8888
Earthbound Farm Stand
7250 Carmel Valley Road
Carmel, CA 93923
831-625-6219
La Bicyclette
Dolores Street at 7th
Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA 93923
Reservations: 831-622-9899
Carmel Bakery and Coffee Co.
Ocean Ave & Lincoln
Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA 93923
831-626-8885
For the camera curious: Still learning how to use my new camera and lenses. All images were shot RAW (but processed as .JPG's for the blog) in both manual and IA modes with a Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF2 camera using the following lenses:
- LUMIX G VARIO HD 14-140mm / F4.0-5.8 ASPH. / MEGA O.I.S (zoom lens)
- LEICA DG MACRO-ELMARIT 45mm / F2.8 ASPH. / MEGA O.I.S. (macro lens)
- LUMIX G 14mm / F2.5 ASPH (pancake lens)
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