Pair It! iPhone App
Pair It! is a very nifty iPhone application that contains a large database of wine and food pairings so you can make an educated choice when choosing either a wine or a food dish. The major feature list is found at the Pair It! home page so I don't want to bore you with all the descriptions of the modes, so I'll touch on what I really like feature-wise. First, the wine descriptions and pronunciations of wine varietals (so I can fake being cultured). Secondly, the Swirl feature where the application will pick a pairing for you. Finally, it allows you to take notes on all the wines, foods and pairings along with saving your favorite pairings for future reference. Of course, it also allows you to search for a wine based on a food or search for a food based on a wine. For $2.99 (regularly $4.99), the application is well worth it and it might even expand the types of wines you'll try.
Day Ten of the California Trip – UPDATE
I originally stated:
Now, in a bit of premonition, I am going to guess on what my tenth day of the trip is going to be… getting up, eating breakfast, getting to the airport, going through the lines at SFO and finally hopping onto and off of the plane a few hours later. At which point I’ll be able to get all my luggage and be ready to go home and get some sleep.
My premonition had a few issues. Mainly with the whole flying back home part. The airplane was delayed from 11:50a to 1:10pm bumping back my arrival time in Austin to a little past 8pm. Luckily, the person sitting next to me and I struck up a conversation on restaurants and food places in Austin and the surrounding areas and I came away with some new places to try out. My luggage (and wine) all showed up in one piece and one time, so I was able to be out of the airport shortly after landing and on my way home. It feels great to be back home in Austin and copying all of the photos from my laptop to the desktop.
Next time I go back to California I have a list of many other things to go see and do.
Day Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten of the California Trip
Thursday started out like the past few days have started out, eating breakfast in Allison's under-furnitured apartment then later on in the day, dropped our dad off at SFO and then came back to the apartment to find something good to eat. Using the wonderful website of Yelp, we decided on luch at Sweet Basil in Foster City, just a few blocks from her apartment (like most everything in Foster City from what I can tell). I had their curry and it was very good curry, although I should have asked for it to be a little more spice and heat.
A few hours later I was waiting waiting my friend, Michael at Coupa Cafe where I had their tasty Mayan Hot Chocolate. However, a few minutes after I ordered it, Michael showed up and we head out to Lake Tahoe. The trip was pretty good other than the multiple wrecks that seemed to get in the way of what was a nice fast trip. Once arriving in Tahoe we ate at T's Mesquite Rotisserie, which was a combination of Mexican food and BBQ. All the sides were typical mexican food sides like Spanish rice, black beans and tortillas and then the BBQ was pretty tasty, although not a very Texan-BBQ. After eating, we found the hotel and turned in for the night getting ready for the a day of hiking. I watched the first hour of the movie Tampopo (but I needed to go to bed, to get ready for the day of hiking).
Friday, started with a little more sleeping in and ate at Rosie's Cafe which was a few blocks away from the hotel. I had one of their "Three Egg Omlets" and some hashbrowns and toast. After breakfast we head out to Squaw Valley around 9:30am only to find out they don't really get rolling until 10:40ish-am. Once we rode up the cable car, we went right to work hiking to Squaw Peak (a good 2000 ft and 2.x miles away) from the high camp. The views from the high camp were great and even better once we got to Squaw Peak. From there you can see Lake Tahoe and the high camp. Of course, at Squaw Peak, you had watch out since there was a radiation source (aka RADAR for the FAA). Hiking back down to the main camp we then swam at the High Camp swimming pool which was cool but I couldn't swim as much because the water depth was only 4ft and I could only stay in for 30 minutes thanks to my fake pancreas. Finally, we rode down the tram back to the lower camp and took off looking for some food. Again, using the power of Yelp, we decided on Fasta Pasta since it was a 4.5/5. After eating it, I'd say it is what it is and for $10 for two people to eat, it fits the 4.5/5 score given to it on Yelp.
And, if you think the day was over after that, you'd be wrong. Since Tahoe basically shuts down after the ski places close down we drove around looking for things to do and decided to drive the perimeter of Lake Tahoe. We stopped at two state parks and a vista point. At the vista point I took some pictures of the sunset over Lake Tahoe, it was pretty although it wasn't as pretty as I had hoped since the fog (or maybe smoke from the LA fires) was hanging in the air blocking the sun as it fell below the mountains. Once the sunset was over and we got back to the hotel, we decided to walk around some and see what Tahoe had. Right next door we found a Wine Bar called Corkscrews. While there I tried a few different red wines and cheeses and ended up receiving a dessert wine from my friend for a birthday present. I suppose I'll have to try it out when I get back to Austin.
The day finally wound down with me watching the movie Tampopo. A noodle western from a Japanese director. What it had to do with westerns, I don't quite know because the movie often went completely off-topic to do some random scene (often very funny). I'll have to look for this film in the future.
Saturday was a lazy morning since we found out all the other hiking spots in the various resorts around Lake Tahoe were all shut down and hiking Squaw Valley again would be sort of boring since we had already hiked most of it the day before. We got out of Tahoe around 10am and took a scenic route to Terre Rouge Wineries. Along the way we stopped at Caples Lake around Carson Pass and took a few pictures of the lake. It wasn't near as clear as Lake Tahoe, but it was still very pretty (and the only pictures I took on Saturday). We finally made it into Terre Rouge Wineries around 2pm and did their wine tasting -- the main reason we came to this winery was their dessert wine we had at Chez TJ was very good and Michael noticed they were on the way back to San Francisco (albeit a little detour was needed). I bought a bottle of their Mourvèdre and Michael got a bottle of their Noir and we both split a case of their dessert wine (it is that good). I also purchased a container to allow me to take the wine as checked luggage on the airplane. Once on the road again we set our sites on China Village Restaurant in Berkeley in order to get some tasty Schezuan-style food and we ate a lot of it. My personal favorites of MaPo Tofu and water-boiled beef (or sometimes called Spicy Beef Fillet) were had along with a few other dishes I forgot the name of (but also tasty). This meal more than made up for missing lunch.
Finally, we made it back to Allison's apartment which is now filled with boxes and some furniture (more than the high class outdoor furniture that was there initially). I was tasked with setting up her wireless router with the Comcast service she has in her apartment. Since I'm writing about it, you know it can't be as easy as one would hope. After an hour and a half or so I ended up having to reset her router and set it up from scratch. Of course, the next step was to get the wine ready to be checked baggage (which seems a lot harder than I first thought). I placed every bottle of wine in a gallon ziploc container, then wrapped them in packing paper, then finally placed them into the aforementioned packing container. And right now I'm watching Chelsea Lately on E!, which is really damn funny and probably worth watching.. more so than the things on the main networks.
Now, in a bit of premonition, I am going to guess on what my tenth day of the trip is going to be... getting up, eating breakfast, getting to the airport, going through the lines at SFO and finally hopping onto and off of the plane a few hours later. At which point I'll be able to get all my luggage and be ready to go home and get some sleep.
You Don’t Have to be Diabetic to Love this Cookbook
I saw an interview with the book's author in the Austin American Statesman last week and at the end of the article it had a few recipes from the cook book. They looked very tasty and figured it would be worth a closer look. After lunch I stopped in at the Borders near work and as luck would have it, they had one copy left (it must destiny that I buy this book) so I looked at it and the other recipes all looked good so I purchased it (it was destiny). After getting it home and going through the book I decided on two recipes I'd like to make: Stuffed Chicken with Goat Cheese, Sun-dried tomatoes and fresh basil and Peach Cobbler (who needs appetizers or sides anyway when you have Peach Cobbler?).
On Saturday after my car driving adventures, I decided it would be a good time to cook. I convinced Allison she wanted to come to HEB with me to buy the ingredients for the two dishes, so we went to HEB and came back with more stuff than needed (I had a craving for Goldfish crackers and wanted to put them in the stuffing of the chicken dish). So I prepared the chicken dish, which was fairly simple with the exception of beating the chicken breast thinner.. the book said to pound it down to 1/2 inch, next time I'll pound it down to about 1/4 inch. The other issue was cooking the chicken in the simmering pot of water. The wrapping you put it in lets water seep into the chicken and the stuffing and makes it all soggy. Next time I'll put each individual piece of chicken in a zip lock bag to keep it from becoming water logged.
The cobbler I was going to make as well, but Allison made it since Einstein was becoming antsy and needed a walk. So I walked Einstein and she made the cobbler like the recipe, but after seeing how much crust it made I suggested we make more of the crust topping since the original recipe has almost no topping at all. So, she tripled the amount of topping made and it ended up being the right amount in my opinion.
After making and eating these two dishes I look forward to making more recipes from this cookbook. Even if you aren't diabetic, it always pays off to eat tasty, healthy food.