Posts tagged ‘new’

January 27, 2011

Aspen: Honeybee Juice Bar

Just what Aspen needs! Honeybee Organic Juice Bar is a (duh) juice bar that also serves raw treats.

Honeybee green juice

This is Chartreuse Juice. It has cucumber, apples, kale, celery, wheatgrass, and lemon. It is awesome!! ($8 for 16 ounce, $6 for 12 ounce)

Even more awesome, I went in to Honeybee Organic Juice Bar [which is in the atrium of the Ute City Bank Building, kind of between Little Annie's and Burberry], ordered a drink, and quickly realized they don’t accept credit cards. I told the woman to stop making my drink because I didn’t have any cash and she said, “oh, it’s okay, you can just come back sometime. You’re local, right?”

I was floored. I’ve never had someone do that! Gotta love Aspen.

So I went back about a week later and told her I’d like another Chartreuse Juice and to pay her back, and expressed my excitement that she was kind and trusting enough to let me come back to pay her. She said she does it all the time because so many people don’t carry cash.

Seriously. Gotta love Aspen.

And gotta love Honeybee, which actually has a functioning website (so rare here) and is stocked with delicious raw desserts (coconut chia seed balls and mango tongues with honey and nuts!) as well as heartier smoothie options with raw almond milk and “hot & steamy” drinks.

Seriously, go. It’s worth stopping at the ATM.

January 21, 2011

Aspen: BB’s Kitchen [updated]

BB’s Kitchen is Aspen’s newest top-floor establishment, and what a rooftop it is! It’s more like a complex: BB’s restaurant at the top of the stairs on Cooper Street, the BB’s lounge to your left, and a huge deck for sunning–when it isn’t snowing (it’s not open yet).

The Vermonster and I were lucky enough to snag some pre-opening breakfast nibbles, though I failed to post the blog before the restaurant opened so now this post is less of a teaser of what’s to come and more a description of what you, Aspenites, could enjoy for breakfast tomorrow. With me. 8am. (unreasonably early, blame the houseguests who want to ski a whole day.)

Menus: breakfast is horizontal, dinner tall. Check out the health square on the breakfast menu! So cute.

[Best ever] Bartender Dave suggested we start of with some monkey bread to share, so we did. It was ooey-gooey, sugary-sweet carbfully delightful. Make sure you’re skiing after this, it’s adding multo calories to your day.

Monkey Bread Aspen

For breakfast, I ordered shrimp and grits. Seemed a little odd to me too, but why not? The Vermonster ordered the spicy skillet, and he thought it was too spicy, but I loved it (well, the potato I tried). I am from Texas, after all. It wasn’t grassfed beef, though, so I didn’t eat any of it. Our mystery third person (the bartender’s girlfriend) ordered a waffle. I didn’t try it, but it’s pictured below in case you want to know about BB’s waffles. They offer a bananas foster with butter pecan ice cream version…

They’re not about calorie-counting here. They also make a variety of coffee drinks, grab-n-go tacos, and squeeze a ton of fresh juices, including the most delicious grapefruit juice I have ever had the pleasure of drinking in my life. It was so sweet that I asked if they added sugar and they assured me they did not. WOW!

That reminds me, I need to go get some more grapefruit juice from there … tomorrow.

[UPDATE] Farmer’s Omlette. More grapefruit juice. Delicious breakfast!

Farmer's Omlette at BB's in Aspen

January 1, 2011

Achachay! at Stubb’s

Achachay at Stubb's

May 2011 be your biggest year yet, Achachay!

p.s.- apparently my mom wore a toga to this New Year’s Eve Eve show?

December 30, 2010

Austin: New Year’s Eve Start to Finish

Ah, the start of a new year. If you don’t have plans already, don’t fret, Austin is totally a cool town to be plan-less in. Aspen, not so much. Where did my Caribou Club membership card run off to? Anyway, here are my suggestions:

Pre-Party: From 4-7pm, let Lovely Austin Boutique help you get ready for your big night out … $10 airbrush makeovers and eyelash application from award winning makeup artist Lecia Harkins with Beauty on the Go, plus release the stress of the holidays with $10 chair massages and complimentary cocktails.

Click here to RSVP.

Eat: The Carillon features Chef Josh Watkins’ New Years Champagne Paired Dinners: Nine Courses, $90; Seven Courses, $75; Five Courses, $65. Seating available 6-10pm. Some of the best food around at totally reasonable prices for food and booze.

For more NYE restaurants, click here for the Statesman’s list (with an egregious example of apostrophe abuse)

Go Out (Never Pay Cover!): Now get this. This is life in Austin & Aspen synchronicities NEVER END! Skip silly sixth and hit up Gibson on South Lamar, which is turning into a winter wonderland with 30 tons of real snow! [Sidenote: I will BE IN 30 tons of real snow. In the real mountains.] This Ski Lodge party includes complimentary commemorative ski caps, appetizers from Out There Catering, festive cocktails, music, dancing, and a champagne toast to ring in 2011.

No fancy cocktail dresses or tuxedos for this party … don your comfy and fabulous ski attire–let me tell you, bibs are sexy. Ski bibs. Not food bibs.

All for a good cause, the bash benefits The Trail Foundation. Parking available. Tickets at frontgatetickets.com

December 7, 2010

Austin: QRANK

Confession: I have never played QRANK. I do not get its appeal (perhaps because I have never played it). Nonetheless,

PLAY QRANK LIVE! AT JO’S DOWNTOWN, WIN PRIZES!

Join Jo’s Hot Coffee Good Food at 7pm TONIGHT, Tuesday, for QRANK Night, with each round there will be prizes as well as drink specials all night long including $3 house wine and $3 draft beer.

What is QRANK? QRANK is an addictive daily ritual designed specifically for the casual game player who craves quick, social gameplay. The game downloads 20 fresh trivia questions each day, many pulled straight from the day’s headlines. A single game of QRANK takes just a few minutes to play, so it’s the perfect daily treat whether you’re on the go with your iPhone or in front of the computer on Facebook.

QRANK LIVE! transforms the real-time trivia game into a live, interactive event. Download the free QRANK app at http://itunes.com/apps/QRANK.

December 3, 2010

Austin: Do You Want This Ring?

Because I love it. It’s rough yet refined. Go to new jewelry boutique Schatzelein (shots.a.line) to buy it.

Featuring high-quality materials, up-and-coming designers, and both new and vintage finds for gals and guys, Schatzelein is a must-see destination for jewelry and accessories.

1713 S. First / schatzeleinaustin.com

November 18, 2010

Austin: Gilda Grace Opens Friday

As if my neighborhood wasn’t cool enough already (Snap Kitchen? El Arbol?), a new boutique graces the Brykerwoods area. Gilda Grace Collections opens Friday, November 19th at 10am. Gilda Grace is assembled like a woman’s closet, albeit one curated by Austin-based entrepreneur and designer Nere Emiko.

The multi-level boutique features Emiko’s Beth Elis line, a high-end wedding dress line. Beth Elis has been featured in Brides, The Knot, and The Wedding Channel. Because Emiko is a study in contradictions–her degree from Carnegie Mellon is in Electrical and Computer Engineering–naturally her boutique would feature all sorts of fashions, from casual to formal, relaxed to stiff, practical to impossible … plus hard-to-find books, antique furnishings, and rare paper products.

Want some names? Try chocolates from Maison Bouche, leather pillows from Beirn, books from DAP and Assouline, and all sorts of goodies from Ittala, Lafco, Soolip, Libretto, Triple C Design, Modern Alchemy, and Design Abroad.

Of course, there’s still the outdoor garden for dinner parties, baby and bridal showers, teas, happy hours, and even small weddings. What more could you want, really?

Welcome to the nabe.

November 2, 2010

Aspen: CP’s Burger

Aspen needs some mid-price places to grab a quick bite, so I was thrilled to hear about CP’s Burgers, downtown next to the ice rink. We headed over one evening to check it out. It’s not cheap, but it’s relatively well priced–for Aspen. The presentation is gorgeous:

Burgers at CP's Aspen

Burger, tuna burger, parmesan truffle fries, sweet potato fries

But I have to admit that’s where the fun stops. EatAspen reported the meat was local, but at the restaurant they were certain that it wasn’t in fact local. So a burger was out for me, leaving me with the tuna burger as my only option.

Tuna Burger at CP Burger Aspen

The tuna burger (sans bun), while pretty, was nothing special. Not even the exciting-sounding wasabi mayo was good, and it was barely spicy. The fries were good, but again nothing out of the ordinary. We couldn’t taste the truffle in the parmesan truffle fries, though the parm was good. The sweet potato fries were a great, crispy texture but otherwise unremarkable.

Their adult milkshakes are highly touted, but at $11 seem a bit, erm, stiff. They have creative flavor combos, so perhaps I will give them a shot in the future.

Others have liked CP’S Burger far more than I did. But for me? I’ll stick to Belly Up’s amazing double burger and fabulous sweet potato fries, J Bar’s uberexpensive but astoundingly delicious burger, or making them myself (did you know Clark’s puts their old free-range meat on sale for $4/lb on Sundays?!).

October 27, 2010

Austin: New Restaurant backspace means pizza

I get a lot of press releases, and a lot of food-related press release (something about loving to eat …?). Anyway, a lot of times I save them until I can go visit the restaurant in question, using the info to write a photo-filled blog post about what I liked and didn’t. Rarely do I get a press release, immediately want to post the thing in its entirety, and do so. This might be a this is life in austin (&aspen!) first. But read the following press release and tell me you don’t want to go eat some backspace pizza RIGHT. NOW. Even you paleos. [Emphasis is mine. If you're a skimmer...]

the backspace: Put away your passport. Cancel your flight to Italy. Naples is coming to Austin. (October 27, 2010) Austin, TX — Inspired by the legendary pizzerias of Naples, Chef-Owner Shawn Cirkiel announces his newest restaurant, the backspace, serving authentic Neapolitan pizza and artisanal antipasti. Riding a wave of popularity around the globe, Neapolitan pizza even had a starring role in this summer’s blockbuster, “Eat, Pray, Love,” in which Julia Roberts gleefully devours a classic Naples pie.
Opening mid-November, the backspace will bring an authentic slice of Italy to downtown Austin. “I want to make food that has a sense of place,” Cirkiel says. “Reminiscent of food and travel experiences, but uniquely Austin.” Hip, casual and affordable, the backspace will offer a selection of pizzas, antipasti, salads and desserts – all meant for sharing. The star will be the Neapolitan pizza, known for its unique thin, chewy crust. Imported Italian “00” flour gives the dough its special lightness and lift, while baking it in a wood-fired oven gives it the desired crispy, charred crust.

The centerpiece of the backspace is its $12,000 Forni Cirigliano wood-fired pizza oven, custom-made and shipped over from Naples. The only one like it in Austin, its red clay dome heats to 900 degrees and bakes a perfect pizza in just 90 seconds. The backspace will offer seven Neapolitan-style pizzas, including classics like the Margherita and marinara, plus specialty pies like smoked ricotta topped with arugula.

A rotating selection of hot and cold antipasti will also be offered, such as creamy cannellini bean spread, homemade meatballs and ocean-fresh baked clams. For dessert, Italian favorites like tiramisu and budino pudding will be served in whimsical glass jars. The all-Italian wine list will feature 40 bottles, with almost half offered by the glass. On draft will be Moretti Italian beer.

Cirkiel shopped the globe for the finest ingredients, starting with two essentials of Neapolitan pizza: sweet Italian San Marzano tomatoes for the sauce and feathery Italian “00” flour for the dough. He sourced artisanal salami from Salumi Artisan Cured Meats of Seattle and Fra’ Mani Handcrafted Salumi out of the Bay Area in California; and Speck (a smoked prosciutto) from La Quercia in Iowa.

Closer to home, he found fresh cheese from Mozzarella Company in Dallas, ricotta from Wateroak Farm in Bryan, greens from Bluebonnet Hydroponics in Schertz, and arugula from Wood Duck Farm just north of Houston. Some ingredients, like sausage, will be made in-house.

Also gracing the backspace menu is espresso from Austin’s Cuvée Coffee. Cuvée’s Meritage blend, a Northern Italian-style espresso with new American characteristics, makes for a distinctive and delightful sipping espresso, and is the ideal base for a traditional cappucino. “I think our approach to espresso, along with Shawn Cirkiel’s affinity for the flavor, make Cuvée Coffee the perfect fit,” says Mike McKim, Cuvée Coffee founder and CEO. “This also helps backspace establish an espresso program that equals the level of quality of everything else they do.”

Easy and urban, the backspace seats just 30 diners, half at tables and the rest around the convivial bar. Local designers Michael Hsu and Kasey McCarty, who also designed Cirkiel’s parkside restaurant, restored the historic 130-year-old building to its original luster. A century of dirt and dust were removed to reveal original 16-foot tin ceilings, Austin brick walls and picture windows. Decoration has been kept to a minimum, allowing the building’s antique beauty to take center stage. A few flourishes have been added, an eclectic mix of Old World and new, like rustic flooring, gothic hanging lanterns and stained-glass windows on the south-facing wall.

Located just off Austin’s famous Sixth Street, the backspace sits behind Cirkiel’s acclaimed parkside restaurant, named by “Texas Monthly” magazine as one of the “Top 10 Best New Restaurants” of 2009. “Bon Appétit” magazine crowned parkside one of the “Hot 10 New American Taverns” in 2009. The “Los Angeles Times,” “Cooks Illustrated,” “American Way,” “Spirit,” and almost every local and regional publication have recognized Cirkiel.

The backspace is located at 507 San Jacinto Blvd., near the corner of East Sixth Street. For more information about the backspace call 512.474.9899 or visit www.backspace-austin.com. Valet parking is available. Operating hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 5 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.

Thoughts? Must I immediately beg for a sample until the restaurant opens in the ambiguous mid-November time frame? Will you go here pre-downtown-partying? Perhaps post?

September 20, 2010

Austin: Finally, Uchiko “I even ate one of those little buggers”

A confession, y’all. I’ve eaten at Uchiko twice now, and not blogged about it. I KNOW it’s the It restaurant, I know everyone wants to know how it is, but I just had a terrible, no good, very bad experience during their soft opening and I could not get over it. The food was delicious. But no one expected it not to be. The service was horrendous. And that, no one expected.

Now, recently I went to a blogger tasting, and tried an absolutely phenomenal antioxidant dish (salmon, kale, blueberries) that restored my faith. A place that could produce food THAT good could not POSSIBLY have poor service.

So I sent my parents to Uchiko.

Mama says:

“Uchiko was great, and a lot of fun too (because Marco was so good with us Novice sushi eaters, or non sushi eaters as the case may be.)

<—-This is Marco. My parents loved him. I showed this pic to my bro, and it turns out that THEY ARE FRIENDS. Hi, it’s a small world.

This is a picture of the avofry which was the best of everything to me. Marco recommended it, and it actually is a hot item and has no fish in it.

We mostly ate what Marco recommended and all was good.  My other favorite was the eggplant, but we ate it before I could take a picture of it. Dad had the crunchy tuna, and I even ate one of those little buggers.

Thanks for giving us the gift card. I had a glass of wine and Dad had a Japanese beer and the bill before tip was $100.67. Marco brought us the dessert [fried milk OMG to-die-for] on the house before we could order it.  All was wonderful, thank you!”

So there you have it. My mom who is not a sushi-eater loved it. My dad loved it.

All is well in Uchiko-land once more.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 63 other followers