Jul 30, 2009

LOVE IT: The Eat Well Guide®


The Eat Well Guide® is a free online directory for anyone in search of fresh, locally grown and sustainably produced food in the United States and Canada.

Eat Well’s thousands of listings include family farms, restaurants, farmers' markets, grocery stores, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs, U-pick orchards and more. Users can search by location, keyword, category or product to find good food, download customized guides, or plan a trip with the innovative mapping tool, Eat Well Everywhere!



LOVE THEM: Terra Verde Farms


About Terra Verde Farms:

We began as a small family owned and operated organic farm located in the Texas Hill Country in 1996. Our interest in food and cooking led to the development of Terra Verde Farms' gourmet specialty foods. While many conventional commercial farmers stress uniformity of size and appearance, we emphasize flavor. "Beauty is skin deep, but flavor goes all the way to the taste buds." The intense flavors of the organic produce we use to grow are incorporated in each of our specialty foods. Gourmet Magazine featured us in their April 2004 issue. They said our products "are natural, taste fresh and be careful you will eat them straight from the jar". Our artisan foods enable you to close your eyes and remember Grandma's Peach Cobblers, Aunt Annie's Wild Plum Preserves, or that juicy, plump, fresh picked blackberry you stuck into your mouth instead of putting in your pail.

Terra Verde Farms' gourmet products are true artisan foods handmade in small batches from our recipes. Minimal sugar or other sweeteners are added to our products. Several have no sweetener added at all. We only use natural ingredients… no artificial flavorings, colors or preservatives. Fresh ginger, lemon, peppers, onion, garlic, and the finest quality fresh and dried herbs are incorporated into our foods. The tomatoes used for our Green Chili Salsa and Tomato Basil Garlic Sauce are roasted then slow cooked to develop the richness only that style of slow cooking can give them. Your first and last impression of Terra Verde Farms' foods is the taste of ripe fruit or fresh vegetables.


http://www.terraverdefarms.com/

Some of the BEST EGGS I have ever had: Chino Valley Ranchers




Chino Valley Ranchers has been producing quality eggs for more than 50 years. During this time we have constantly improved our ability to achieve the highest quality egg for you, our customer. We focus a great deal of attention on the care and feeding of our flocks. Our aim is to keep our chickens healthy, happy, and stress-free.

LOVE THIS SITE: Chefs Collaborative

Chefs Collaborative is the leading nonprofit network of chefs that fosters a sustainable food system through advocacy, education, and collaboration with the broader food community.

www.chefscollaborative.org



Live a Little More Green

Greenopia is your local guide to green living. Their mission is a basic and big one:

We set out to create a directory of eco-friendly retailers, services, and organizations and conducted extensive research on those we listed in the guide. This guide is not a paid directory; companies cannot pay to be included and all listees are included because they met our strict standards of eco-friendliness. They have already been screened for their sustainability in the product or service arena and are now being compared with "the best of the best."


http://www.greenopia.com



Jul 25, 2009

Skyline Chili - from Cincinnati with love



The Story of Skyline Chili

From a small kitchen in the village of Kastoria, Greece, a fascinated young Nicholas Lambrinides watched as his mother and grandmother prepared authentic Greek dishes. Their recipes had been passed down from generation to generation. These were unique, wonderful dishes that had the power to bring his whole family together.

Nicholas dreamed that one day he would bring these recipes and traditions to America, where he could share them with friends and family. In 1949, his dream came true when Nicholas opened his first restaurant overlooking the skyline of Cincinnati, Ohio and began serving his delicious secret recipes to appreciative customers.

Since then, Skyline Chili's Coneys, Ways, Chilito's and table-side service have been enjoyed by generations. Skyline Chili continues to be made from Nicholas's original recipe, using a secret blend of spices and only the highest quality ingredients. Skyline is dedicated to bringing friends and families together for an experience like no other and Skyline will always be devoted to the American dream of that young man from a small village in Greece.

From the Skyline Menu – a little preview and some lingo for your order:

Cheese Coney: Skyline's classic Cheese Coney is a specially-made hot dog in a steamed bun, with mustard, covered with our original, secret-recipe chili, diced onions and a mound of shredded cheddar cheese.

3-Way Chili: Our signature dish...steaming spaghetti, covered with our original, secret-recipe chili and topped with a mound of shredded cheddar cheese.

4-Way Chili: A 3-Way with diced onions or red beans.

5-Way Chili: A 3-Way with diced onions and red beans.

Chili Spaghetti: Steaming spaghetti covered with our original, secret-recipe chili. With diced onions or red beans

http://www.skylinechili.com/menu.pdf

Goetta....made with love in Cincinnati

Goetta recipe and background

Goetta (pronounced gétt-aa, ged-da or get-uh) is of German origin, similar to mush and almost identical to what the Pennsylvania Dutch call scrapple. Goetta was originally a peasant dish, meant to stretch out servings of meat over several meals to conserve money.

Goetta vs. Scrapple: Goetta is made with oatmeal and pork; Scrapple is made with cornmeal and pork…

The present popularity of Goetta in Cincinnati has led to it being called "Cincinnati Caviar". Glier's Goetta, the largest commercial producer of Goetta, produces more than 1,000,000 lb (450 metric tons) annually, around 99% of which is consumed locally in greater Cincinnati.

For those who are Goetta obsessed, you can visit Goettafest: The "Original" Goettafest is an annual cultural and culinary celebration held in Covington, Kentucky, just across the river from Cincinnati, Ohio. Covington has a rich heritage of German immigrants. Today the festival is held each summer in Newport on the Levee, just across the Ohio River from downtown Cincinnati and near Covington.

The recipe itself is easy to make, but the oatmeal will stick if you don't stir more than occasionally.

The recommended oatmeal, pinhead, isn't available in all areas, but a similar oatmeal, steel cut, is sold widely and may be used as a substitute. Steel cut oatmeal can be found in specialty stores, health food stores and some large grocery stores.


Goetta
1 pound ground pork (or fresh ground pork sausage)
1 pound ground beef
8 cups water
2 1/2 cups pinhead oatmeal (you can use steel cut)
1 large onion, sliced
1 to 4 bay leaves
1 teaspoon dried rosemary
1 teaspoon dried thyme
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon of ground peppercorns

In a large pot with a lid, boil the water; add salt, pepper and oatmeal. Cover and let cook for two hours, stirring often.

Add the meat, onion and bay leaves. Mix well. Cook for another hour, stirring often. Remove bay leaf.

Pour into bread pans (size doesn't matter).

Refrigerate overnight.

To serve: Slice the Goetta and fry it until crispy or just until heated through. Goetta may be served with pancakes and eggs, on sandwiches or in place of meat at dinner. It is popular on pizza, as the meat in a Reuben, in a breakfast burrito, casseroles, in spaghetti sauce.....

Jul 21, 2009

How to Be a Regular

How to Be a Regular
7/19/09

Any self-respecting eater is a Regular somewhere. It might be at his or her one favorite restaurant, or it could be at a small handful of beloved go-tos. But at these places, the Regular knows the staff, the best and worst seats, the menu's standouts and chef's blind spots. The Regular never waits for a table, desserts or drinks are perhaps “compliments of the chef,” and maybe the Regular even gets a discount (one top-level Soho restaurant in New York customarily knocks 50 percent off the bill for its top-level VIPs). Dining as a Regular is, obviously, a great pleasure. So how do you do it?

As conventional wisdom goes, there are three golden rules that are fundamental to being a Regular.

1. Go to the restaurant a lot.
2. Don't be a pain in the ass: Show up on time, say please and thank-you, respect the house and its rules (such as dress code).
3. Always tip 20 percent on the total bill, and tip in cash.

Okay, so the rules are a bit obvious — nevertheless, they are indeed essential behaviors of a good Regular.

But, if you're really serious about your bid for the house's undying love and affection, there's more you can do to make it happen. Herewith, five other very important things you can do to become a very important person.

1. Name-drop
As in, both yours and theirs. Restaurants have customer-tracking software these days, and if you're trying to become a Regular but not regularly using your name, you might as well be six shoes in at the $100 minimum table having not even pulled your Players' card. Moreover, you need to know the staff — a little personal attention from you goes a long way toward getting "VIP" next to your name in the computer. Take advantage of the system and they'll know you like your Caesar without the anchovies without you having to say it twice.

2. Make a good exit
Restaurants may be the only place on earth where the last impression is the most important. Admit it: Your opinion can be swayed, or at least rescued, by excellent desserts. Similarly, it's true for the house, and if you make a strong exit, they'll remember you next time on the way in. So, in addition to the aforementioned good tip, this means a few things: When you sense the restaurant wants the table back, give it to them (once you're a Regular, you'll have the corner booth for as long as you need it). Thank your server by name if he or she is in earshot when you get up to leave. And also thank — and tip ($20 minimum) — the maître'd or manager. Let us emphasize here, you're doing this on the way out. And do tell him or her what you liked and what you didn't — feedback at this point is always appreciated. Finally, the best time to book a table for next time is on the way out, in person. If you're coming back, make it known before you walk out the door.

3. Lubricate the staff
If you've been treated well or had an exceptional meal — or both — send a round of drinks to the kitchen. Procedurally, this is as easy as saying to your server, "Hey, I thought the food tonight was exceptional. I'd like to buy the kitchen a round." Also, if you've ordered a bottle of wine, make sure you offer your server a taste of it if she asks if you like it. Always offer a taste of any bottle over $80 to the sommelier. If you're finishing your meal after 10 p.m., offer to buy your server a round. To kick this move up a notch and consider yourself an advanced would-be Regular: At a new restaurant, bringing in a congratulatory bottle of good, hard liquor will always be appreciated. Remember that chefs tend to like the brown stuff — rye, whiskey, bourbon, Scotch, or the like.

4. Have a good memory
Or, if you don't, write things down. (A tip, for the serious: Create contacts in your BlackBerry for your favorite restaurants and use the notes field.) Remember the number of a table you like, so you can put in a gentle request for it next time. Remember the names of the staffers you met — the front men, especially. Remember a dish you liked, and, when you order it again, you might mention how much you enjoyed it last time.

5. Be a local
The smaller the restaurant, the more this holds true. Restaurants — any one worth becoming a Regular at, anyhow — reward their local customers above all others. If you live in the area, make sure the house knows (something you can casually mention to the maître'd on the way out); if you eat out in the area consistently, that's good to mention, too: "It's been a long time since the West Village had a steak tartare this good," for example. The house knows that after the place cools down and the restaurant hunters move on, you're the key to their longevity.

By: Ben Leventhal

Jul 20, 2009

Now Online | Air Yakiniku, Food for Thought


T:Style
The Moment: Now Online | Air Yakiniku, Food for Thought
By By Rocky Casale
Published: July 20, 2009


When the virtual restaurant Air Yakiniku appeared online last January, it became both an instant success in Japan (where else?) and one of the more curious signs of these globally lean times. The “restaurant,” a Korean barbecue, works like this: once you’re on the site, you’re given an apron to print out and wear to keep “grease” from splattering on your clothes. I’m not joking. Then you’re asked to choose from slices of pork, chicken or beef, which a hand splays out on a full-screen sizzling BBQ spit. Visitors are encouraged to have (real) bowls of rice and miso soup on hand as they watch and listen to their beef crackle and char. A bell softly dings when the meat is cooked, a hand with chopsticks appears, and it’s time to … um … eat.

In addition to virtual restaurants, there are virtual bars, like the Sapporo Beer bar, which is open online during regular Japanese bar hours, 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. It’s hard to know if the trend is a smart-aleck social satire, interactive performance art, a diet gimmick or all three. Whatever the reason, Air Yakiniku is now ranked the 29th most searched site on Yahoo.

http://airyakiniku.cosaji.jp/



Jul 19, 2009

The Little Diner and Tortilla Factory


The Little Diner and Tortilla Factory


Located at Canutillo, Texas, Little Diner and tortilla factory has become a must-stop for locals and tourists alike. With more than 30 years of experience they offer the best Mexican food around. Enchiladas, tacos, gorditas, flautas and more! They grind and process their own corn for tortillas and gorditas, so the fresh taste is impossible to compare. The Little Diner is known all around El Paso and Las Cruces for great tasting homestyle Mexican food. The family owned business lovingly makes all of their sauces and salsas by hand as well. While it’s hard to find, you'll glad you made it. The Tortilla factory is a locally owned business that is committed to bringing the highest quality foods for the best possible price... Everything on the menu is home cooked just after its ordered at the counter.

When I was a child, my family would drive to the tortilla factory to have a bite, to buy tortillas (go early as they run out), pick up tamales we ordered for the holidays

Located 40 minutes by car north west of El Paso Texas or 40 minutes south east of Las Cruces, NM

7209 7th Street • Canutillo, Texas • (915) 877-2176 11:00 am to 8:00 pm - closed on Wednesdays

Jul 17, 2009

Julia Child Biography 1912 to 2004

Julia Child Biography
née Julia Carolyn McWilliams
(1912–2004)


Popular TV chef and author Julia Child was born Julia McWilliams, on August 15, 1912, in Pasadena, California. The eldest of three children, Julia was educated at San Francisco's elite Katherine Branson School for Girls, where (at a towering height of 6 feet, 2 inches) she was the tallest student in her class. In 1930, she enrolled at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. Upon her graduation, she moved to New York, where she worked in the advertising department of the prestigious home furnishings company W&J Sloane.

In 1941, at the onset of World War II, Julia moved to Washington, D.C., where she volunteered as a research assistant for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a newly formed government intelligence agency. She and her colleagues were sent on assignment to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), an island off the coast of India. In her position, Julia played a key role in the communication of top secret documents between U.S. government officials and their intelligence officers. In 1945, she was sent to China, where she began a relationship with fellow OSS employee Paul Child. Following the end of World War II, the couple returned to America and were married.

In 1948, when Paul was reassigned to the U.S. Information Service at the American Embassy in Paris, the Childs moved to France. While there, Julia developed a penchant for French cuisine and attended the world-famous Cordon Bleu cooking school. Following her six-month training (which included private lessons with master chef Max Bugnard), Julia banded with fellow Cordon Bleu students Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle to form the cooking school L'Ecole de Trois Gourmandes (The School of the Three Gourmands). With a goal of adapting sophisticated French cuisine for mainstream Americans, the trio collaborated on a two-volume cookbook titled Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961). Published in the U.S., the 800-page book was considered a groundbreaking work and has since become a standard guide for the culinary community.

Then living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Julia promoted her book on the Boston public broadcasting station. Displaying her trademark forthright manner and hearty humor, she prepared an omelet on air. The public's response was so enthusiastic that she was invited back to tape her own series on cookery for the network. Premiering on WGBH in 1962, The French Chef TV series, like Mastering the Art of French Cooking, succeeded in changing the way Americans related to food, while also establishing Julia as a local celebrity. Shortly thereafter, The French Chef was syndicated to 96 stations throughout America. For her efforts, Julia received the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award in 1964 followed by an Emmy Award in 1966.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Julia made regular appearances on the ABC morning show Good Morning, America. Her other endeavors included the television programs Julia Child and Company (1978), Julia Child and More Company (1980), and Dinner at Julia's (1983), as well as a slew of bestselling cookbooks that covered every aspect of culinary knowledge.

In 1993, Julia was the first woman inducted into the Culinary Institute Hall of Fame. Her most recent cookbooks were In Julia's Kitchen with Master Chefs (1995), Baking with Julia (1996), Julia's Delicious Little Dinners (1998), and Julia's Casual Dinners (1999), which were all accompanied by highly rated television specials.

Following a 40-year career that has made her name synonymous with fine food, Julia received France's highest honor, the Legion d'Honneur, in November 2000. And in August 2002, the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History unveiled an exhibit featuring the kitchen where she filmed three of her popular cooking shows. Child died in August 2004 at her home in Santa Barbara, California; she was 91.

In August 2008, the National Archives de-classified 750,000 pages of personnel files. The documents revealed that Child was, in fact, a spy during World War II. She served with the Office of Strategic Services, the huge spy network created by President Franklin Roosevelt and forerunner of today's CIA.

Julia's memory continues to live on, through her various cookbooks and her syndicated cooking show. In 2009, a film directed by Nora Ephron entitled Julie & Julia is slated to hit theaters. The movie chronicles Child's life, as well as her influence on other aspiring cooks.

© 2009 A&E Television Networks. All rights reserved.

http://www.biography.com/articles/Julia-Child-9246767?part=0

Julie and Julia - Aug 7, 2009

http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/julieandjulia/site/

Julia Child

“I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate.”

- Julia Child

Julia Child

"The only time to eat diet food is while you're waiting for the steak to cook"

-Julia Child

Julia Child

"Such was the case with the Sole Meunière I ate at La Couronne on my first day in France, in November 1948. It was an epiphany. In all the years since that succulent meal, I have yet to lose the feelings of wonder and excitement that it inspired in me. I can still almost taste it. And thinking back on it now reminds me that the pleasures of the table, and of life, are infinite - toujours bon appetit!"

— Julia Child

Jul 11, 2009

Totally awesome tool perfect for avocado season


Avocados and the Pitter/Slicer tool

Right now when avocados are in season and the best of them are not a fortune in some markets big ripe and delish - really good ones come from California - is a great time for eating avocado salad's and more...

When it comes to pitting and slicing avocados, this is the perfect tool.One end of the handy device pits an avocado, while the opposite end creates perfect uniform slices of the fruit. The best slicer/pitter that I have found is constructed of stainless steel and heavy-duty plastic.

I have used it to slice avocados onto a tomato salad on a grilled corn tortilla topped with the juice of a lime. Yummers Perfect for sandwich slices

The tool can be purchased at a number of places online. For example:

http://www.google.com/products?q=avocado+slicer+gadget&hl=en&aq=f

Coffee from coast-to-coast: BLUEBOTTLE COFFEE SF Bay Area


THE STORY OF BLUE BOTTLE COFFEE
In the late 1600s, the Turkish army swept across much of Eastern and Central Europe, arriving at Vienna in 1683. Besieged and desperate, the Viennese needed an emissary who could pass through Turkish lines to get a message to the nearby Polish troops. Franz George Kolshitsky, who spoke Turkish and Arabic, took on the assignment disguised in a Turkish uniform. After many perilous close calls, Kolshitsky completed his valiant deed, returning to give the Viennese the news of the Poles' imminent rescue of their city. On September 13, the Turks were repelled from Vienna, leaving everything they brought: camels, tents, honey, and strange bags of beans which were thought to be camel feed. Kolshitsky, having lived in the Arab world for several years, knew these were bags of coffee. Using the money bestowed on him by the mayor of Vienna for his heroic deed, Kolshitsky bought the Turks' coffee, opened Central Europe's first coffee house (The Blue Bottle), and brought coffee to a grateful Vienna.

319 years later, in Oakland, California, a slightly disaffected freelance musician and coffee lunatic, weary of the grande eggnog latte, and the double skim pumpkin-pie macchiato, decides to open a roaster for people who are clamoring for the actual taste of freshly roasted coffee. Using a miniscule six-pound batch roaster, he makes an historic vow: "I will only sell coffee less than 48 hours out of the roaster to my customers, so they may enjoy coffee at its peak of flavor. I will only use the finest organic, and pesticide-free, shade-grown beans. If they can't come to me, I will drive to their house to give them the freshest coffee they have ever tasted." In honor of Kolshitsky's heroics, he names his business The Blue Bottle Coffee Company, and begins another chapter in the history of superlative coffee.

ARTISANAL MICROROASTING
At Blue Bottle Coffee, Artisan Microroasting simply means that we take a hands-on approach to every step possible to discover and preserve the true nature of excellent coffee -- no matter how inconvenient or time-consuming.

We take Freshness and small-batch roasting to an extreme not considered practical anywhere else in the coffee business. We use only the best certified organic coffees, occasionally using beautiful coffees that are farmed traditionally without pesticides.

After roasting, coffee beans exhale CO2 for several hours. Instead of keeping our beans in bins, we mix the blends and bag them within 4 hours of roasting to harness the CO2 to keep oxygen (and, hence, oxidation) out of the bags.

We never preblend our coffees thus assuring the ideal roast profile for each bean used in a blend. All varietals are roasted individually, and then mixed into our blends.

*** Blue Bottle Coffee can be found in the Bay Area: SF Ferry Building, the SFMOMA, Hayes Valley and more…

*** Blue Bottle has a great website: preparation instructions and on-line shopping!!

http://bluebottlecoffee.net/

Coffee from coast-to-coast: New York City Gourmet Street Coffee - The Mud Truck -


From the owner of MUD:

Were we chosen to be the anti-establishment coffee machine of NYC's East Village or did we plan it? A little of both.

Sure it was a bit of a right time, right place story, but it was also a fundamental philosophy.

See, the generic coffee monster already was. Then it was again. Directly across from each other and up the avenue down the street. Nothing but green logos and upscale prices.

Then came the orange truck and it parked directly in the middle shining like the sun. It served everybody with a smile and it had fair prices. It made the best cup of coffee in New York City and it didn't discriminate. The smokers smoked, the dogs had bones, and it played sweet soul music. And the chain was broken.

And MUD was, is and MUD will be.

PS....I love the color!

West Village MUD Truck
Sheridan Square
7th Ave & West 4th Street
Mon-Fri 7am-6pm
Sat & Sun 10am-6pm

Astor Place MUD Truck
4th Ave & 8th Street
Mon-Fri 7am- 6pm
Sat & Sun 10am-6pm

Coffee from coast-to-coast: Palm Springs Koffi



Palm Springs Koffi

Imagine a tranquil, yet fun, café setting with a minimalist modern vibe that is exclusively Palm Springs. Koffi represents the best of Palm Springs. And the best of Koffi is a total café experience unlike any other. It's a café experience founded on three principles:

• Source The Best Coffees In The World.
• Prepare Beverages To Exact Standards.
• Serve Them With Style.

They have an on-line store to buy beans and more: http://store.kofficoffee.com/merchant2/

Palm Springs Koffi
515 North Palm Canyon Drive at Alejo
Open Daily at 5:30 a.m to 8:00 p.m.

Coffee coast-to-coast: New Orleans French Market Coffee

French Market Coffee products
I was first introduced to this product by my dear friend Robert. For years, I had enjoyed coffee with chicory as a uniquely "only in New Orleans" treat, however, while traveling together in Mexico Robert pulled a few cans of this “juice” from his bag and I have been hooked since! Now Robert is not the only one to travel with his own coffee.

History: In 1890, the first can of French Market Coffee & Chicory was roasted, blended and packaged. The Bartlett and Dodge families, incorporated as the American Coffee Company, moved that famous coffee to 800 Magazine Street in 1941. In this post-Katrina age of fascination with our city and its history, we recognize the strength of our 117 years of calling New Orleans home. Our customers are fiercely loyal, both individually and institutionally. We are enjoyed in the iconic restaurants of a city known for its cuisine. As some like to say; all the flavor of New Orleans in a cup.




Jul 8, 2009

Heirloom Tomato Guide


Heirloom Tomato Guide

While there are over 10,000 varieties – heirloom tomatoes have become very popular and widely available. An heirloom is generally considered to be a variety that has been passed down, through several generations of a family because of its valued characteristics. Since 'heirloom' varieties have become popular in the past few years there have been liberties taken with the use of this term for commercial purposes. TomatoFest Garden Seeds (see the link) has adopted the definition used by tomato experts, Craig LeHoullier and Carolyn Male, who have classified down heirlooms into four categories:

1. Commercial Heirlooms: Open-pollinated varieties introduced before 1940, or tomato varieties more than 50 years in circulation.

2. Family Heirlooms: Seeds that have been passed down for several generations through a family.

3. Created Heirlooms: Crossing two known parents (either two heirlooms or an heirloom and a hybrid) and de-hybridizing the resulting seeds for however many years/generations it takes to eliminate the undesirable characteristics and stabilize the desired characteristics, perhaps as many as 8 years or more.

4. Mystery Heirlooms: Varieties that are a product of natural cross-pollination of other heirloom varieties.

PS….All heirloom varieties are open-pollinated but not all open-pollinated varieties are heirloom varieties.

http://www.tomatofest.com/heirloom_tomato_seed_store.html

Liguria Bakery San Francisco

Liguria Bakery

This San Francisco landmark, opened in 1911, makes focaccia, and only focaccia. Period. No pasta, no pastries, no nonsense. Only focaccia, period. . It's a long standing family run business in the North Beach neighborhood. They make their Focaccia bread by hand daily, like they have since the day they opened. Get here early (before noon) or there won't be much left to buy. They are almost always sold out before their closing time of two o'clock – or whenever they feel like closing.

The original storefront is still in place, including the old phone exchange painted on the window. The storefront is so non-descript and you might pass it if you didn’t know what you were looking for. Inside, you should expect a couple

of cantankerous ladies talking about the people they know (AKA gossip) wrapping your focaccia bread with simple white paper and string. When you buy some, you will be made to feel “lucky” just to get some….but frankly, if luck tastes like this; I am very cool with it.

There are only seven choices of focaccia on the simple sign and they don’t tell you they are sold out until you select what you want. Oh and it’s a cash only. Don’t even think of pulling out some plastic.


Simple. Classic. Delish.

Liguria Bakery
1700 Stockton Street @Filbert St on Washington Square Park - San Francisco, CA 94133
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8am-2pm Saturday, 7am-2pm Sunday, 7am-noon

Jul 7, 2009

Brenda's French Soul Food in San Francisco


KILLER FOOD - Especially breakfast - Brenda's French Soul Food in San Francisco - Polk street and Eddy - only 40 seats - no reservations but worth the wait....