About Beth

I grew up in Kansas City and have lived in the Denver Metro area for 25 years as of 2012. I attended Georgetown University and the University of Colorado at Boulder. I like birding, hiking, scuba diving, gardening and ecological restoration, and trying out new wines and chocolate.

Not a Complete Oyster Virgin

My food critic friend Denveater loves oysters, and I’ve been bugging her to take me out and introduce me to some. Sunday night we stopped briefly at Ocean Prime in Larimer Square but decamped when we discovered they served 1 type of oyster. One seated at the bar at Oceanaire, we ordered a happy hour chef’s choice plate of 8 oysters. Some of the oysters on the menu were new even to her, which made me happy.

As we waited for our first dish to appear, I made a fateful decision: I would take my photos without flash, in order to avoid having blindingly white plates in my pictures. All the pictures in this post were taken at 6400 ISO, mostly because I could. But then I had to go home and unleash Noise Ninja on them. As I was editing them, I thought, “Why am I taking pictures at such a high ISO, then using Noise Ninja to remove noise, and then sharpening them? It’s silly.”Beth Partin's photos, downtown Denver, Oceanaire

First up, Chef Creek from British Columbia. As Denveater said of West Coast oysters, it was a bit sweet, mild with just a touch of brininess. The Riptide, from Massachusetts, was my favorite of the four types. It was saltier and had a more robust flavor. It’s also prettier, though I don’t know why that should matter.adventures in photography, Noise Ninja, Beth Partin's photosThe second East Coast oyster came next: Alpine Bay from Prince Edward Island (shades of Anne of Green Gables!). It was less salty than Riptide but definitely had more grit. I liked it too.The Nootka Sound oysters, again from British Columbia, were my least favorite, with a less distinctive taste. After all, if you’re going to toss something rather slimy down your throat, it should have some flavor. Denveater thought the Nootka were a little chewy.

Of course, we didn’t stop with oysters; we took full advantage of the happy hour food and wine menu. We started with deep-fried asparagus, which were a little undercooked. Then we moved on to beef sliders, soft and oniony.

It may have been lowbrow, but I wanted to try the cornmeal-friend oysters and fries. Apparently, Sunday is no-carb-left-behind day.We finished up with friend green beans, which were perfectly cooked. The bacon-flavored aioli was just spicy enough. I’d give them the prize for best snack, though the fried oysters were good too; I especially liked the textural contrast. This was my second meal at Oceanaire. I went there two years ago for Denver restaurant week and enjoyed the food and drinks then as well.
Oceanaire Seafood Room on Urbanspoon

Tulip Double Exposure, or Not

I was out Sunday in extremely uncomfortable shoes, snapping tulips on the Pearl Street Mall in Boulder. They’re just about done for the year, and although I wished I had gotten there about a week earlier, there were still some beauties left. While I was there, I ran into Eli Vega, the instructor for the FRCC class “How to Sell Your Photographs.” He suggested I try shooting at a very small aperture and very low shutter speed while the wind was blowing. He said it might create the effect of double exposure. The picture below is my best effort. It looks a little bit like a painting. Although I don’t think it’s good enough to try to sell, it was fun to play with this technique.

Beth Partin's photos, Eli Vega, Pearl Street Mall Boulder

This photograph was shot at ISO 100, F36, 1.3 seconds.

I highly recommend Eli Vega as a teacher. You can take his classes at Front Range Community College and Boulder Digital Arts. (I think his class at BDA is new, so it might not be listed yet. You could email BDA to find out.)

Gourmet Cupcakes

I was tempted to title this post “Weird-Ass Cupcakes” because it seemed appropriate. But then I remembered all my foodie friends and thought I should temper my opinion.

I was in Boulder a month or so ago, longing to get the Hot Chocolate Soup from Belvedere Belgian Chocolate Shop, but it was closed by damage from the fire at Oak, which is next door on 14th Street. So I went to Tee and Cakes on the other side of Belvedere and couldn’t resist trying the cupcake with bacon on top.Beth Partin's photos, chocolate, gourmet cupcakes Tee and Cakes

Everything in the cupcake tasted fine by itself: the bacon, the cake infused with maple syrup, the chocolate frosting. It was a little like having French toast-cake with bacon and chocolate. I think I would have liked it better if the bacon had been chopped up fine and incorporated into the cake. I wonder if it’s possible to bake a cupcake with scrambled eggs in the middle too? Would the eggs taste good after sitting for a few hours? If so, then people could get this cupcake and have a shot of chocolate with their full breakfast!

Last Saturday, I visited the Boulder Farmers’ Market for the first time in 2011. In addition to stocking up on locally grown vegetables and cheese and salsa, I bought a few mini-cupcakes from the Boulder Shelter for the Homeless. I can’t recall seeing a booth for the homeless shelter at previous farmers markets, so I am assuming their donations are down and they need some extra cash. I give money to the Boulder Homeless Shelter every year because I like the fact that they shelter the homeless without imposing religion on them (unlike the Denver Rescue Mission).Boulder Homeless Shelter, Beth Partin's photos, babycakes

I don’t know who made these cupcakes. Perhaps one of the volunteers at the homeless shelter? I started out with these two babycakes, avocado and black pepper and chocolate with caramelized banana. I ate the avocado first because I believe in delayed gratification. Trouble was, I couldn’t really taste the avocado. The pepper came through, as did the cream cheese frosting. The chocolate cake with caramelized banana was so great that I went back to get one for Todd. (I swear I gave it to him!) The little crunch in the banana was nice with the moist sweetness of the cake.

I told the people at the booth that I couldn’t taste the avocado, and the woman at the booth said that was the thing she tasted most. Perhaps the fruit wasn’t evenly distributed through the batter, or maybe it was something I ate beforehand.

Note 1: The only Belvedere retail store open nowadays is in Glenwood Springs. The store on Colfax closed, and the store in Boulder will be closed until further notice. When I went by last week, I didn’t see many signs of renovation happening. I hope it reopens!

Note 2: For the record, my favorite cupcake shop in the Denver area is Mermaids, just off the 16th Street Mall on Champa. My favorite place for small chocolate oblivion cakes is Indulge Bakery at 95th and Arapaho in Lafayette.

In case you’re wondering when I’m going to write about some adventures on this blog…well, I am too. I should be having lots of adventures this summer, but right now I’m working on getting my house sold and finishing editing jobs.

Tee & Cakes on Urbanspoon

Shedding My Skin

I have a lot on my mind these days.

Todd and I are getting ready to sell this house and travel the western half of the United States for a year.

It’s not good timing. My father is in assisted living, and my siblings and I have to deal with all that sets in motion. Of course, in this situation, it’s hard to know what would be good timing. I’ve wanted to travel like this for years.

I will continue to copyedit while traveling, and I hope to be able to sell my photographs on the road, though I’m not sure how that’s possible without a permit, and how will I get a permit in each city when I’m there for only a month? Todd is trying to convince Polycom to let him work remotely and planning his next movie, to be shot on the road.

There’s some risk involved. It’s possible, though unlikely, that we could burn through all the profits from the sale of the house and not be able to afford to buy a new one. It’s also possible we’ll keep traveling after this year.

That’s what I like about this situation: I don’t know what’s going to happen.

We have a route planned, which you can see on our 12 Cities, 1 Year website. We have some general ideas of what we want to do in certain cities. That’s about it. We welcome suggestions about things to do in each city.

Right now, though, our focus is on selling the house. We were planning to take it to market next week, but I decided I needed another week to work on the yard. After that, we have to get rid of most of our stuff, which I think will be a bigger chore than selling the house.

When I moved to Boulder in 1987, my sister and I brought a carload of stuff. After my arrival, I bought a bed and a cardboard dresser. I enjoyed not having so much stuff, and I think I will enjoy going back to that state.

Delight in Downtown Denver

I had a wonderful evening in downtown Denver Thursday night. It was cool out but not cold, and the streets and bars and restaurants were full of animated people. I got off the B at Wynkoop and 15th and sped over to Translations Gallery between 17th and 18th on Wazee. I had been there the day before to see their photography exhibit, but the artist statements weren’t up yet, so I went back Thursday. Mark remembered me and came over to tell me that I had refocused his attention on the artist statements, especially on the kind of equipment they used (which was my primary interest).

One of the photographers used large-format film cameras (Bryan David Griffith); 2 others digital, a fourth used multiple exposures, and the last made prints from film, including a homemade film using arsenic.

My favorite Griffith image was of a pine tree against the sun shining through fog; the rest of the print was dark. It seemed to open up the more I looked at it.

Jillian introduced me to Diane Huntress, who photographs buildings in the Denver area and then cuts and pastes them together so that, at first glance, it appears she looked up through the camera and took a shot. Thus details of buildings combine to form an abstract composition. Other artists were Cecelia Feld, Alex Benison (the photographs on the website as of Thursday night were not the large prints shown at the opening), and Izah Gallagher (the artist who made some of her own film).

After talking to Diane for a while about how she had taken pictures of the Rio Grande building on Blake and the Union Station sign and juxtaposed them, I ran back to 16th Street and down to the Tattered Cover LoDo. There Jeremy N. Smith was talking about his book Growing a Garden City, which describes 15 people involved in the local food movement. Smith complimented Denver on its innovative approach to urban gardening. I’ll be writing more about that on my other blog, Restoration Nation, in the next few days. So keep checking the link in the sidebar to your right!

Turns out he is from Missoula, which is perfect, because the first stop on the year-long trip Todd and I are taking is to Missoula.

Three Movies: America, India, Afghanistan

On March 12 I saw so many movies about women, I was beside myself with happiness. It was the Voices Film Festival at the Denver Film Center on Colfax. Although the Denver Film Society has been doing Women + Film at the festival for years, it was the first time Voices has had its own festival.

I missed Soul Surfer, about the female surfer whose arm was bitten off by a shark. Take that, James Franco!

My favorite film was Waking Lions, directed by Allison Otto, from which I learned that a Colorado woman, Shannon Galpin, had sold her house to found Mountain2Mountain, which “invests in the world’s most underutilitzed resource: women and girls on the fringe.” The movie portrayed her adventures in Afghanistan.

Galpin has visited women in Afghan prisons (some of whom are victims of rape but were charged with adultery), supported a school for the deaf in Kabul, trained women in midwifery in rural areas (where male doctors are not allowed to see women under any circumstances), ridden her bike in rural areas (many people in Afghanistan consider it obscene for girls and women to ride bikes) because she hopes midwives might be able to travel that way, and has supported education and training in critical thinking for women and girls.

For a long time I had wanted to go to Afghanistan but was under the mistaken impression that you couldn’t just go, that you had to get permission from the military or something. Galpin said no, that there were even people who went as tourists to Afghanistan. That gives me hope that someday I’ll be able to go. I spent so many years of my life following what the Taliban were doing in Afghanistan, when hardly anyone in the United States had heard of the Taliban, that I would like to go there now that it’s safer and see what’s happening.

Mountain2Mountain also contributes to Beyond the 11th’s programs for widows. Beyond the 11th was founded by 2 American women widowed by September 11 who decided to help women in Afghanistan widowed by that country’s 30 years of war. Beyond Belief, the film by Beth Murphy telling the story of their organization, focused much more on the lives of the two American founders but also included emotional footage of their trip to Afghanistan and their relationship with an Italian aid worker who was kidnapped.

The film I was looking forward to most, Pink Saris, was the most disappointing. It may have had something to do with the structure of the film, which was essentially a collection of vignettes. The director, Kim Longinotto, has been directing documentaries since 1982, and that may be her style.

But I think the real problem for me was my disillionment with the founder of the Gulabi Gang, Sampat Pal Devi, whom I had read about and believed to be a defender of women’s rights in rural India. But in this movie, most of her work involved disputes with families abusing their daughters-in-law, and her solution most often was to yell at the family and then send the woman back.

It seems to me she could have spent that energy forming a women’s cooperative and could have used donations to buy a piece of land where these women could live and farm. Perhaps that is completely unrealistic.

There was nothing in the movie about the Gulabi Gang, that is, the group of women who wear the pink saris. They were shown from time to time, but their purpose was not explained.

I hope that you will check out these movies, especially Waking Lions, and attend the gala put on by Mountain2Mountain on April 28 at the Denver Museum of Art. “Streets of Afghanistan: A Cultural Exhibition,” will be showing.

From Casa Bonita to Colt and Gray

Todd and I visited both Casa Bonita (his idea) and Colt and Gray (my idea) one night in February, and the only other thing that connected them was that I acted like a crazed photographer at both, to the point of annoying Todd (and probably other people). And racing around that way didn’t do much for my photographs either.Beth Partin's photos, Denver attractions, Denver restaurants

I realized later I could have sat down at our table at Casa Bonita and eaten “dinner” (my taco salad was a relatively safe choice), Beth Partin's photos, Denver travel, Denver attractions, Denver restaurantstalked more to our dinner companions, and then taken photographs afterward. Probably, I would have gotten the same quality photographs without bouncing up and down like a Jill-in-the-Box. But I had just bought a new camera 5 days earlier, and I couldn’t wait to try it out.

It was a humbling experience. My new Canon 60D is a great camera, but the limits of its flash were fairly apparent at Casa Bonita. The pop-up flash wasn’t powerful enough for the dark interior. It worked well enough for members of the mariachi band, who stood close to our table. Denver attractions, visit Denver, Denver travel, mariachi bands
But it didn’t work so well when I tried to capture the acts near the waterfall.

Denver attractions, Casa Bonita cliff diver, visit Denverfire, juggler, juggling, Denver attractions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Those two photos had to be lightened up considerably, even after I bumped up the ISO to about 1,000.

Taking a photo from behind the waterfall gives some sense of the size of the place. Beth Partin's photos, Casa Bonita divers, Denver restaurants

I think that the waterfall is behind the tower shown here. Denver travel, Denver Mexican restaurantsOur seats were on the top level, and there is at least 1 other level, possibly 2—I can’t remember. I know that we entered the restaurant, stood in this line, which reminds me of the security line at DIA,flash photography, Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurants

and then walked up a ramp to get to our seats (right by the waterfall).

I wonder how much money Casa Bonita makes in an evening. There’s no reason to linger over dinner, but it’s worthwhile to hang around to watch more acts like this magician, Beth Partin's photos, Casa Bonita magician, Denver attractionsbuy cotton candy or toys, and play games in the arcade. One of our companions goes every year for her birthday. I can’t see myself going that often, but I would go back with a better flash and more time to concentrate on photography.

Colt and Gray is almost the complete opposite of Casa Bonita. The former is a small restaurant on an urban street in Denver’s Central Platte Valley neighborhood. It focuses on local, lovingly prepared food, and its bar features “mixologists” and locally made liquor such as the Leopold Brothers’ products shown here. Denver mixologists, Denver restaurants, gastropubs Its dinner menu includes the category “Offal.” There is one similarity, though, between CB and C&G: it’s fun to sit at the bar and watch the bartenders in action.

So far, I’ve had the Spaniard, the Martinez with Old Tom Gin (spilled on me by an overly vigorous bartender, who promptly replaced it with a mix of tequila and mezcal and spicy vermouth), and the Fernet cocktail. Todd has had the Fancy-Free, which like the Fernet is on the current cocktails menu. But my favorite drink by far came after I requested a drink with chocolate. What I got in the absence of chocolate in the bar was a mixture of Root liqueur, Upslope Brown Ale, Bourbon bitters, and a whole egg. Root liqueur, Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurantsIt was luscious, growing sweeter toward the bottom. It also caused the most annoying photo-incident of the night, because I had great difficulty getting the flash to focus. I finally managed it, but Todd was not happy about the strobe-light effect. And I was not happy when I went to edit this picture and discovered the white balance was set to tungsten (I had forgotten to change it to AWB after taking pictures at Casa Bonita). Thank goodness for RAW files.

I’ve been served one dinner at Colt and Gray (on an earlier visit) and lots of snacks. This burger was cooked properly (that is, I asked for medium and got a burger that was pink inside), Denver gastropubs, Denver gastro pubs, Denver gastro-pubsbut the real star of the meal was the broccoli with rosemary anchovy dressing. Broccoli is not my favorite vegetable, unless it’s grilled and has this salty dressing poured on it. Then I could eat it all day.

The gougeres crusted with blue cheese were nice enough, warm and bready, but I wasn’t as impressed by them as I expected to be. Denver restaurants, Central Platte Valley restaurants

What I wanted from Colt and Gray that night (besides something to wash the taste of Casa Bonita food out of my mouth) was a sweet, and the rich drink didn’t change that. I ordered the sticky toffee pudding with bourbon ice cream. bourbon ice cream, Beth Partin's photosThe sticky toffee lived up to its name, but the best part of the dessert was the whiskey-flavored ice cream. Colt and Gray is a Denver restaurant to visit again and again, for dinner or for snacks and drinks. As Todd said on our first visit, “It’s a good day when you get grease stains all over your notebook.”
Casa Bonita on UrbanspoonColt & Gray on Urbanspoon

Squeaky Bean Satisfies, for a Price

After two visits to the Squeaky Bean (one last fall, for brunch, and one the weekend before Valentine’s Day, for dinner), I recommend it for artfully plated, flavorful food. But the middle-class Midwesterner still lurking in me complains that if you spend more than $50 per person, you ought to be stuffed. That’s not an easy thing to do at the Squeaky Bean unless you have money to burn.

We showed up at the Squeaky Bean at 5:30 (the only reservation we could get, unless we wanted to wait until 8), and the hostess bowed to me when I complimented her argyle tights. We sat at a small table by the window.

I ordered the Smoking Frenchman, consisting of Pierre Ferrand Ambre 10-year cognac, Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur (fortified with cognac), Angostura bitters, lemon bitters, and a Talisker rinse (single-malt Scotch). It was sweet and smoky and strong. Beth Partin's photos, Highlands Denver restaurantsTodd ordered the Castelvetrano olives with Marcona almonds, and then we followed up with a small plate of pears and roquefort with walnuts and olive oil cake. Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurants, locally sourced foodThe globule at the bottom is pear juice, which our waiter said the kitchen compressed by wrapping it in plastic (this during Plastic-Free February). The cheese was pungent, and firm slices of pears contrasted well with the cheese mousse and the pear juice.

After that, I felt the need for something hearty and asked for the No-Bake Shepherd’s Pie. Todd chose the seared Hiramasa (yellowtail amberjack). Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurants, local foodYou can see the orange on top there, along with sliced fennel on top and a roasted leek on the bottom; the dish also included lentils and a tomato broth infused with proscuitto, which was poured into the bowl at the table. That was a nice touch.

Despite the variety of ingredients, Todd’s dinner was rather bland. Neither one of us could taste the ham in the tomato sauce.

The shepherd’s pie arrived, every bit as tasty as it looks here. Beth Partin's photos, Aspen Moon Farms, local produceThe lamb, which included shoulder and roasted leg, ranged from lightly seared to well done, and I thought the latter was somewhat better. I was struck by the use of Chex in the little dollops of mashed potatoes (to look like eggs, I suppose) and by the pleasant saltiness of the sauce. Even so, I couldn’t help but feel a little disappointed at its delicacy. I know chefs want to reinvent old standbys, and I thought this reinvention was lovely, but I wanted twice as much.

One of the things Squeaky Bean emphasizes on its website is the use of locally sourced ingredients, from its own garden or Aspen Moon Farms in Longmont. I couldn’t help but wonder just how much of this meal was local: the lamb, perhaps, and the veggies if grown in a greenhouse, but not the Hiramasa, certainly, or the pears or the oranges.

A truly local, seasonal menu would not offer nearly as much variety, of course, and given Americans’ expectation of fresh fruits and vegetables year-round, a restaurant that stuck to seasonally available foods might not stay open for long.

Our desserts were plated as beautifully as everything else, and since we weren’t at the Cheesecake Factory, we didn’t expect to them to be massive. I chose the chocolate and blood orange three ways (I think someone is imitating D Bar, which frequently has “threeways” on its dessert menu), and Todd wanted the peanut butter.Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurants

Is it just me, or has blood orange been overused lately? The orange gelee on the chocolate mousse was pretty to look at, but its texture put me off, and I preferred the truffle without the candied fruit. The drink was my favorite, nut-flavored with an orange finish.Beth Partin's photos, Denver Highlands restaurants, death by chocolate

If “romantic dinner” means “cuddling” to you, then I wouldn’t recommend the Squeaky Bean, with its cafe atmosphere and tables spaced too close for truly intimate conversation. But if you want attentive service and food prepared with care and imagination, then grab a seat on the patio the next warm weekend day. Here’s the version of Pigs in a (crepe) Blanket I had last fall, with fig. Todd had a frittata.Pigs in a Blanket, Denver brunch
The Squeaky Bean on Urbanspoon

Anita Is Both Wrenching and Hopeful

The Denver Jewish Film Festival, which ran February 10–20, 2011, always has an intriguing selection of films. The one and only movie I saw this year was Anita, an Argentinian film by director Marcos Carnevale.

Anita‘s star, Alejandra Manzo, is an actress with Down syndrome playing a character with Down syndrome whose mother is the mainstay of her life. When her mother doesn’t return one day after going to the AMIA Jewish Community Center to handle some family matters, Anita wanders the streets of Buenos Aires, finding disregard and compassion in equal doses, and learns to manage a little bit more on her own.

This is not a cheery film, especially at first, when Anita uses her limited communication skills to find help. Some of the early scenes were hard for me to watch. Chance plays a big role in the plot, but what matters most is Anita’s character. People misunderstand her, sometimes willfully, but always come to see her more clearly.

I wanted to see Anita because my niece has Down syndrome; I thought my sister might like to see this movie. When I told her about it, she said lots of people with Down syndrome are getting parts in movies and TV shows.

No Man’s Land: The Women of Mexico

Dana Romanoff has been traveling to Oaxaca since 2006, photographing the families left there in the wake of migration to the United States. She went there because she had been following the stories of migrants on the East Coast, and she wanted to find out how their families were doing.

I heard her speak at Su Teatro in Denver about her photojournalism project, “No Man’s Land: The Women of Mexico.” Previously I had taken a photography class with her at Boulder Digital Arts.

She will tell you things about Mexican farmers and U.S. food you didn’t know. For example, in the nineteenth century, Mexican peasants saw their land given to large landowners to grow crops for export to the United States. During the Depression in the 1930s, Americans blamed Mexican workers for taking their jobs and deported half a million of them. But only a decade later, we invited them back because the United States needed farm workers during World War II. And once the GI Bill was passed, former soldiers left the family farm behind to go to college and get a better, easier job. That contributed to the decline of the family farm, the growth of agribusiness, and an ongoing need for migrant workers.

As Romanoff pointed out, Mexicans and people from countries farther south have been coming here for a long time to work. But it’s only since the North American Free Trade Agreement went into effect in 1994 that immigration skyrocketed. From 1990 to 1994, about 400,000 undocumented immigrants came to the United States. But since January 1994, half a million per year have crossed our southern border. Some of these immigrants are not yet teenagers, but they travel north because so many other people in their families have done so.

That is especially true in Oaxaca, one of the poorest states in Mexico (located on the Pacific Coast, near the bottom of the country). Parts of Oaxaca are “Pura Mujer”: purely women. And their children.

What caused so many Oaxacans and other Mexicans to come north? Remember Ross Perot talking about the “great sucking sound” of jobs going south if NAFTA was approved? Well, that works both ways. NAFTA made it easier for US companies to sell corn (and other products) in Mexico, and since our corn is heavily subsidized, it costs about 25 percent less than Mexican corn. People found it difficult to make a profit off farms or even feed their families, and when that combined with drought, as it did in Oaxaca, the results were devastating. (Just to clarify, the people in Oaxaca whom Dana photographed grow agave for a living, not corn, but I suppose some of them grow corn for their families.)

I asked Dana if the government of Mexico was doing anything to make rural areas more livable and prosperous, and she mentioned both government and nonprofit programs but said they weren’t enough. Oaxacans are frustrated at the lack of opportunities in their area.

But getting north is more difficult than it used to be because of the border fence, and more expensive. Immigrants have to hire someone to take them across and often find it difficult to pay that person back. In addition, since the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) relocated to the Department of Homeland Security and changed its name to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), detentions of immigrants have increased, and that continued after the 2008 election. Apparently, Barack Obama does a more thorough job of deporting immigrants than George W. Bush.

So what, you say? They’re breaking the law? True. But detaining them is costing us a lot. Each migrant costs $141/night to detain. About 33,400 are detained each night, costing us $4.7 million/night. In a year, these detention costs amount to $1.7 billion. It’s good business for private prison companies, which Romanoff said helped write the controversial immigration bill in Arizona. But what is it doing for the rest of us?

I think it would be more sensible to let immigrants stay and work and pay taxes, because immigrants are estimated to be contributing $9 billion/year in tax revenues. Some people think the taxes paid by immigrants keep Social Security afloat.

I don’t know if that claim is true, but I have heard it before. Dana said her information came from a professor at Brandeis University and from government records.

Dana’s solution? More temporary work visas. In Virginia, she met two brothers who return to the same farm every year. They get to go home to see their families when work slows down, and they can come back to the same job year after year.

Right now, Dana is writing grant proposals so that her photos and short video can be exhibited across the United States. If you want more information, you can go to her website and see her photos of the women of Oaxaca. She is also publicizing a microfinance program in Oaxaca (I couldn’t tell if she had founded the program, but you can contact her for more info).

You might also check out Just Like Us: The True Story of Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America, by Helen Thorpe, the wife of Governor John Hickenlooper (which I haven’t read), or The Latinization of U.S. Schools by Jason Irizarry, forthcoming from Paradigm in Boulder this year (I did the copyedit on the latter). Both books present the stories of Latino/a high school students, some of whom are undocumented because their parents brought them here when they were young. It’s very sad to think those kids cannot get into/afford college because of their parents’ actions and U.S. policies. Let’s hope the DREAM Act passes soon. I want as many U.S. residents as possible to have good jobs and pay lots of taxes so that I can get Social Security in 20 years!

The Quiet of Winter

Savoring quiet—that’s what I did recently at Walden Ponds/Sawhill Ponds, a gravel mine turned wildlife reserve in east Boulder County.

Mine was the only vehicle in the snowy parking lot, around noon on a Friday. Cottonwood Marsh was white, as was the sky. Beth Partin's photos, Walden Ponds, wildlife reserve Boulder CountyI saw a red-tailed hawk on a power line and an eagle even farther away, but I couldn’t hear any birds calling. The ponds were frozen, with only a few cracks to indicate an upcoming thaw. The only noise was traffic pacing the edges of the wildlife reserve.

I hiked back to the “woods” and, to my delight, easily found a great horned owl sleeping on a broken snag that formed an inverted V. A jogger in red sped by so quickly I didn’t have time to point out the owl. He was the only person I saw for most of my hike.

I couldn’t find any signs of a nest, though owls have nested in this area for years. No doubt it was too well hidden. A hairy woodpecker’s high-pitched call broke the silence, and a chickadee buzzed its warning.

On my way back I noticed bird tracks intersecting mine. This great blue heron must have crossed the trail while I was hiking.Beth Partin's photos, great blue heron, Walden Ponds

Veg Shoes and Evil Plastic

When I reviewed Ahimsa Footwear (vegan, eco-friendly, sweatshop-free) in October 2008, I observed that the store wasn’t in a location that would get much foot traffic. When I went back in February 2011, I saw the “Store Closing” sale and heard one of the employees mention a lack of foot traffic as one of the reasons. Another was that the store was burgled recently, and the Denver police didn’t respond because they thought the store’s permit for an alarm was invalid.Beth Partin's photos, vegan shoes, eco-friendly shoes

So if you want vegan shoes (made with no animal products or testing), then get yourself over to Ahimsa in Uptown Denver between today and the end of March. After that, you’ll have to buy their stuff online.

On Saturday, I bought a pair of J-41 Eco-Design brown suede sneakers and some Vegetarian Shoes polish (made in Brighton, England; Veg Shoes also sells biodegradeable pens). I’ve been looking for eco-friendly shoe polish, so I was happy about that, but it comes only in black.

It was a little harder for me to find a pair of shoes that met my requirements for style, fit, and lack of plastic. You see, I have signed on to the Rodale Plastic-Free Challenge, and I am supposed to avoid buying anything containing plastic or contained in plastic packaging for the month of February.

So far I have not met this challenge, but I have spent a lot of time thinking about how plastic has invaded every part of our lives, such as my computer, the chair in which I sit, my shampoo bottles … you get the picture.

I don’t like the ubiquity of plastic, nor the fact that so much of it ends up in our oceans and in the stomachs of seagoing creatures. I have recycled a lot of plastic in the last few years, but Beth Terry at My Plastic-Free Life has raised the bar.

So back to Ahimsa. I wanted to buy some beautiful red patent(-vinyl? -polyurethane?) boots, but I restrained myself. I bought the J-41s because the outer sole contained recycled rubber (though I think there’s some plastic in there too) and the uppers were made of recycled fabric.cruelty-free shoes, vegan shoes, veg shoes, sweatshop-free

It’s tough to find eco-friendly shoes these days. You can try purchasing animal-friendly/eco-friendly shoes at Ahimsa or at Alternative Outfitters. You can try buying shoes made in Europe, which are more likely to have leather soles. You can seek out shoes made of fabric and/or rubber. You can try to find shoes made in the United States (good luck with that!); the J-41s were made in China. The best solution may be to buy shoes at a consignment store (I’ve found some beauties!), but that solution won’t work for athletes.

In short, my adventures for February involve avoiding plastic and looking for shoes made in the USA. I want to be less smug about all the eco-friendly things I do and more like Beth Terry, who really does inspire me.

Go Plastic-Free This February

I heard of Rodale’s Plastic-Free Challenge on the blog My Plastic Free Life.

Like Zero Waste, Plastic-Free is an aspiration, not a reality. For example, I posted something on Facebook about the plastic-free challenge this morning while wearing my plastic retainers. Am I going to give up my retainers and let my teeth go crooked again after spending thousands of dollars on them? No.

Plastic-Free Challenge Rules

1. Don’t acquire more plastic (and that includes packaging).

2. Don’t cook food in plastic or store food in plastic. (The first one seems pretty easy, unless Teflon contains plastic—all you have to do is remember to take your food now stored in plastic and microwave it on a plate or in a china bowl. The second is a little more difficult, but you can store your food in Pyrex and cover it with foil. I have Pyrex microwave-safe storage dishes with plastic lids. I’m going to use those because they are cool!)

3. Minimize other plastic use. (So what, I’m not supposed to type on my laptop?)

You see the problem here. Plastic is so pervasive in our lives that the best we can do right now is pay attention to how much plastic we use and start to remove it from our lives.

Beth’s Tips for Minimizing Plastic in Your Life and in Your Food

1. Consider whether buying frozen vegetables in plastic bags (a few brands come in paper bags, but they may be lined with plastic) is better than buying canned veggies. The cans are lined with plastic, and that lining will leach chemicals into the veggies. It’s possible that plastic bags can leach chemicals into the frozen veggies, but it seems less likely to me.

2. Buy condiments in glass jars.

3. Buy cosmetics in glass jars. Yes, I know they’re hard to find, but there are a few. Also, try buy Aveda’s makeup brushes. For a while there, they were selling some with handles made of renewable materials. Aveda also used to sell metal eyeshadow and blush containers made from recycled metal.

4. If you need to buy something plastic (say, a spray bottle), ask if the store sells any made of recycled plastic. These goods are a lot more common than they used to be.

5. If the item you need comes in plastic, buy it in bulk (less packaging).

6. Buy items based on their packaging. For example, do those socks you want to buy hang from a plastic hanger or a cardboard hanger?

Become Intimate with Light

Last Tuesday I finally attended a meeting of the Broomfield Photo Club. I had been thinking about it for months, but the meetings were on Tuesday, the same night as yoga class.

It wasn’t at all what I expected: a small group of people sitting around a table, like a writer’s workshop. Perhaps 50 people crowded the room to hear Estes Park photographer Eric Stensland* talk about light (and about wanting to be at the Continental Divide at sunset the next day—brrr). He was quite poetic about photography, advising us to “become intimate with light.”

I had never thought of a photograph as a picture of light reflecting off something. But, of course, the word itself means “light writing.” And when he said photography was a “dance with light,” I said to myself that it’s really a record of light hitting objects that somehow throw certain colors of light back at the camera.

Stensland emphasized the importance of choosing subjects that stir our passions. (This post is beginning to sound like a romance novel.) So here are mine:

1. Small details, like part of a flower
2. Lines (similar to my taste in music: I prefer a voice and a line)
3. Signs
4. Light and shadow
5. Streets and their spectacle
6. Texture (though I’m not any good at photographing it)

* Check out his iPhone app about all the places he’s photographed in Rocky Mountain National Park.

What My Back Tells Me About Travel

Fifteen years ago I injured my back while I was trying to strengthen it at the gym. I had just finished doing 75 pounds on the stomach machine (the one with the bar against your chest that you push forward), and I said to myself, “If I can do 75 pounds on the stomach machine, then I can do 75 pounds on the back machine.”

So I climbed aboard the back machine and leaned my back against the weight—a weighted back-bend, if you will. At first everything seemed fine. Then I felt the oddest sensation, as if someone had just closed a zipper across my back. It was distinctive, and it certainly didn’t feel right. When I descended from the machine, I found I couldn’t stand up straight, and my lower back felt weak.

A couple of weeks later I started having trouble walking. “Are you drunk?” my husband asked one afternoon, when I appeared to trip a couple of times in a row. My right thigh was numb and tingly, and sometimes the ground didn’t seem to be where it was supposed to be. I decided it was time to go to the doctor and ended up in physical therapy for a couple of months.

Since then, my back has bothered me about once a year, but only when I would do eminently sensible things like bending over at the waist to hoist a large TV. Or picking up the carpet cleaner the wrong way. For a few days I would walk as if I had a corncob up my butt, and then things would return to normal. It wasn’t great, but it wasn’t all that painful, and I could live with it.

Things changed in 2010. I’m not sure what happened. Perhaps I had come to believe my back was injured but somehow invincible after two years of doing Krav Maga, in which we regularly had to “sprawl” (go from standing to pushup position). Perhaps I had slacked off on the sit-ups more than I realized. Whatever the reason, my back decided to have mini-spasms twice a month. Then I drove to Kansas City and back twice in one month, and I couldn’t get my right leg to stop hurting. Back to the doctor and the physical therapist.

This course of physical therapy has been a revelation. I realized just how weak my core muscles have become (maybe it’s all the perimenopausal flab weighing them down). I learned names of muscles: multifidus, piriformis, quadratus lumborum, transversus abdominis. I had trigger point dry needling, in which the PT stuck needles into my sacrum and butt (she warned me she might go as deep as two inches). Only one location really hurt.

After about two months of exercises, I can feel myself getting stronger.

What I can’t seem to accept, however, is the limitations of age. Fifty is less than two years away. It is my firm belief that I should be able to lift my age in weight. So last Sunday I picked up a 50-lb. bag of birdseed and poured half of it into the container that I take out to fill up the feeder. I did my best to lift with proper body mechanics, but my back didn’t like it at all.

Then the next day I had to confess to my physical therapist. She laughed at me and suggested I wait a few months before trying that again.

Impatience is one of my greatest faults. I wonder some days how I will cope with the chaos of traveling if I can’t pace myself during recovery. I need to be strong in order to have the life I want, but I find it difficult to wait for anything.

Do you suppose travel will cure me of that?

How Salt in Boulder Fills Me with Nostalgia

I have lived in Boulder since 1987, almost 24 years. Salt, which opened in what used to be Tom’s Tavern in 2010, perfectly encapsulates how Boulder has changed since then.Boulder restaurants, Beth Partin's photos

Believe it or not, there used to be dive bars in Boulder, and not just the kind frequented by students. I didn’t drink at them, but I knew they were there. You could actually buy a house in Boulder for around $100,000.

As I walked up to Salt on my second visit (after risking truck and limb in the Broadway parking garage yet again—at least that hasn’t changed), I wondered if the windows at Tom’s were that open and shiny when I ate there during grad school and in the years following.Salt Boulder, Tom's Tavern, Beth Partin's photos, Boulder restaurants

I remember Tom’s as a dim place, with a bar in the back, on the left. I don’t remember being able to see out the windows. There were booths but not tables. My friends and I would go there and order the burger, a thin patty served on a fairly thin bun with mayo, etc., and a scoop of macaroni salad. Boulder plate lunch, with beer.

Since I moved to Broomfield in the mid-1990s, I hadn’t been back to Tom’s much, but I always thought of it as an old friend I really should visit. Salt reminds me of going to visit such a friend and finding out he’s had extensive cosmetic surgery. He looks good, but …

I haven’t ordered Salt’s version of Tom’s burger yet. I will one of these days, but I want to preserve the memory of Tom’s for the moment, just as I cherish the idiosyncracy of going to Winstead’s Plaza location in Kansas City and ordering one of the square burgers wrapped in paper.

I’ve been to Salt twice for lunch, once in December and once in January. Both times I had cannelloni filled with local butternut squash. Both times it struck me as more of a wrap than a pasta, but I loved the roasted finish and the delicate sweetness of the filling. It’s very satisfying.Beth Partin's photos, cannelloni, Salt Boulder

And, of course, there was salt, four different kinds. On our first visit, I bothered to ask their origin: the white flakes that melted on my tongue from Cypress, the pungent pink salt from Tibet. Beth Partin's photosIn January, I tasted the black and gray salts but didn’t inquire. The strong flavor of the black overwhelmed the gray. Oddly enough, or appropriately enough, I’ve never felt the urge to salt anything at this restaurant; sometimes I’ve noticed saltiness in the food, but not in a bad way. When I didn’t like a flavor, adding the namesake would not have helped.Beth Partin's photos, Salt Boulder, Boulder restaurants

As you can see from the menu above, the cannelloni is an entree, but I’ve only ever had it as part of the Winter Vegetable Tasting. The menu here dates from January, but the veggie platter from December had the cannelloni, white bean curry cake (bottom left), roasted cauliflower, wild rice risotto cakes over farro and lentil salad (upper right), and a saute of local chard and spaghetti squash (center).Beth Partin's photos, Salt winter vegetable tasting

I recommend the platter, if only to see what’s on it. I didn’t like everything: the squishy texture of the curry cake bothered me, and I kept tasting bell pepper in addition to spice. My two favorites were the wild rice risotto cake, Beth Partin's photos, Salt winter vegetableswith its creamy filling balancing the crunchy rice and going well with the firm grains of farro, and the roasted cauliflower (definitely salty). The risotto cake could have been a meal in itself.Beth Partin's photos, Salt vegetable tasting

So could the white bean and local vegetable farinata I had in January, a small plate big enough for a light lunch. I had to check with Denveater about variations on farinata, a thin, crispy pancake made from chickpea flour. I didn’t notice anything like that, but perhaps the polenta was meant to replace it? Boulder restaurants, Beth Partin's photos
The farinata had the consistency of a thin casserole and was very cheesy. There’s enough for several friends to use it as a topping for bread.

In short, Salt does some wonderful roasting, and everything is beautiful, from the décor to the servers to this unconventional chicken pot pie. Beth Partin's photos, chicken pot pieYou can mark up your own drinks on a reusable menu. It’s worth another visit to try the salads or the “never never” beef and, eventually, the burger.
SALT on Urbanspoon

When It’s Too Cold for an Adventure

The world feels stale and cold to me, a common problem in January, exacerbated by daytime temperatures below freezing. I’d like to be somewhere warm, but we just went to South Padre Island less than 2 months ago. In this mood, I turn to our brief trip to Valley View Hot Springs, in the San Luis Valley near Salida, Colorado.

Valley View used to require membership to visit its clothing-optional pools. Now it’s open to the public, and we were lucky enough to know someone who scored a free week there. So bravely in December we set out, stopping by Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument.

The name may give the false hope that fossils will be lying around for all to see. In reality, most of the fossils remain in the ground, where they are protected, and the rest can be viewed in the visitors center. Todd and I took a short hike to see the petrified stumps of redwood trees that grew in Colorado millions of years ago. Beth Partin's photosWe arrived late in the afternoon and had a nice hike, nothing special. But then things turned bad for me. I got into a mood and couldn’t shake it until we reached Sunset House at 7 pm, which has views that are magnificent even in the cloud of winter. Beth Partin's photos, Valley View Hot SpringsGotta love those glacier-scrubbed valleys. Tired from more than 8 hours on the road, we didn’t wait long to slide into the closest pool, appropriately named the Hot Tub. It was originally a kiddie pool.Beth Partin's photosMost of the pools at Valley View are cooler, about body temperature, which is fine during the day, especially if you just hiked up a steep trail. We stayed in the Top Pool for an hour one morning and didn’t even get that cold when we got out to get dressed. Here’s the road leading to that trail. The pool is up the side of that hill to the right, enclosed in trees, and visited by juncos and chickadees.Beth Partin's photos, Valley View Hot SpringsFriday afternoon, after we returned from Salida, I trekked up to the Party Pool to take pictures of the stream and its bright green plants. It was getting dark. Beth Partin's photos, Valley View Hot SpringsLooks mysterious, doesn’t it? But I wasn’t there to soak. I lay down on the ground and tried to get one of those cool shots of water bokeh (blur). Here’s the best I could manage. Beth Partin's photos, water shotsClearly, I need more practice. Perhaps fill flash would have sharpened up the plants; I’ll have to try that next time. Or just bring a tripod. And maybe if I ever visit Valley View again when temps are in the single digits at night, I’ll have the fortitude to soak in the Party Pool at night, as Todd suggested. It just sounded so coooooooooooold to me.

Desserts in All Their Guises

It’s January, the time of year when I usually feel like losing a few pounds (and that phase of the year lasts until the summer). It’s only the first day of my diet, and already I feel nostalgic for dessert. So I thought I’d put up some pictures to comfort myself and all of you in the throes of early January diets. All dishes are still on the menu unless otherwise noted.

The best bread pudding I ever had came from La Posada Hotel in Winslow, Arizona (the town mentioned in the Eagles song “Take It Easy”). The chef called it breakfast, but it was really a dessert: rich and filling and having that one touch that makes it special, in this case prickly pear fruit syrup (which the restaurant offers for pancakes and waffles as well). Beth Partin's photos, Arizona restaurants, La Posada, Turquoise RoomNext in the category of breakfasts that are really desserts: Root Down’s banana bread French toast with walnuts and organic chicory and crème fraîche (I asked for extra, which arrived when I was almost done), notable especially for its amazingly dense texture. It required a couple of hours of down time just to recover. Beth Partin's photos, Denver restaurants, Highlands Denver restaurantsIn the category of bona fide desserts, I present this lemon ice from Panzano. The plating was so simple and beautiful I couldn’t resist. (By the way, when we were there, Panzano also offered a cherry bread pudding, for dessert. It’s not listed on the menu now; I believe it was part of the tasting menu. You could always call and ask.)Beth Partin's photos, downtown Denver restaurants, Panzano, Denver dessertsAnd finally, something from D Bar. I wanted to show the palmond3 again, but it’s not on the menu now, so I settled for the “molten cake thingy that everyone has” with Malbec fruit compote and ice cream. The current menu mentions pistachio ice cream, but the topper here is some other flavor that I can’t remember. Currently D Bar offers 4 desserts I haven’t tried, including the bel canto mocha and the apple Sammy. So get over there and try them for me!Beth Partin's photos, Uptown Denver restaurants, Denver desserts, D Bar
Turquoise Room on UrbanspoonRoot Down on UrbanspoonPanzano on UrbanspoonD Bar Desserts on Urbanspoon

The Adventure of Beth’s Mind

Sometimes I think, What if I go out the door to go birding and there’s a revolution before I get home? What supplies can I carry in my coat to ensure I’ll survive?

I remember reading stories of Holocaust escapees ironing money into their pillowcases. Would cash be the best currency? Jewelry? Cigarettes? Bullets?

How about poetry? Or birth control pills for women and condoms for men? Or chocolate?

Beth’s List of supplies for the revolution:

Some of the spells from the Harry Potter books, such as Stupefy and Protect, as well as all the cooking spells and Hermione’s tent that fits into her purse

Real elvish rope

Walking shoes that support my heel and the arch of my foot

Self-cleaning underwear

A bird book that includes all the birds of the world and can play their calls

A lock-picking set

The tool RTD gave us when we finished their emergency responder training; it turns natural gas off and on and could be used to bonk someone on the head

A coat with a zip-out lining that could double as a pillow

A coat that can store all this stuff without appearing bulky (in other words, a coat that is either unfashionable or magical)

What I would really have with me:

Binoculars

Sibley’s Guide to Western Birds

Decent walking shoes

My black parka

Wallet, phone, tissues, lip balm, and possibly and water bottle

Jeans and perhaps long underwear, plus a couple of layers on top

Cotton underwear

Car and house keys

Gloves and a hat

Nuts and raisins, an apple, or a banana

What’s your list?

P.S. I posted this today because I’m finishing an editing job and don’t have time to post about all the restaurants I’ve visited but haven’t written up. So there. Merry Christmas.

The Adventure of Conquering Fear

I’ve always been afraid of heights. I don’t think I got it from either of my parents. But in my forties, it has become much worse.

In my twenties, when I was an exchange student at the University of Sussex in southern England, I climbed up to the top of St. Paul’s Cathedral. The stairs up to the dome are enclosed in a wire cage. I don’t think I would be able to do that today.

So it was quite an achievement for me to get up all 60 or so steps of the Port Isabel lighthouse. Doesn’t look too scary in this view from the other Port Isabel museums, does it?Beth Partin's photos, Port Isabel lighthouse, Rio Grande Valley attractions

How about this one, from a little closer? Beth Partin's photos, Rio Grande Valley attractions, Port Isabel lighthouseHere’s where it got really scary for me. I stood on the third step and stared up at Todd for a while. He was very encouraging. With his help I managed to climb all the way to the top, where I confronted a three-year-old who was completely fearless. Of course. And then after I came down, my legs hurt for three days because I had been clenching my muscles so much. Beth Partin's photos, Port Isabel lighthouse, Rio Grande Valley attractionsI had many adventures in South Padre Island, but this one will stick with me.

Of Porno Scans and BBQ

Friday morning the weather gods knew we were returning to Denver, so they decided to prepare us with wind and cold. I walked out of the hotel to visit the South Padre Island Birding and Nature Center one last time, and my hat blew off.

Now this hat is not your typical baseball cap. It’s soft and a bit gathered, so it stays on my head. When it came off and I just barely caught it, I admonished myself that I was the kind of adventurous woman who kept going despite a little wind. But I wasn’t Friday morning. Shivering and looking longingly across the street, I told myself I’d already visited the center 3 times this week and that birds don’t come out in the wind anyway. (That is true of most small birds, but I don’t know whether shorebirds mind wind as much as songbirds do.)

So after we checked out, where did we begin our 12-hour trek back home? Why, at Yummies, of course. I felt a slight pang as we drove past Café Kranzler because I also wanted to try the breakfast there. But I just had to have more of that sipping chocolate.

Neither one of us felt that hungry as we looked at the menu. Perhaps it had something to do with the Thanksgiving dinner we’d had at the Hilton Garden Inn the afternoon before. Beth Partin's photos, Hilton Garden InnI assure you I have never had crab for Thanksgiving before, and ripping the legs apart was messy enough to warrant a new napkin.

My favorite item on the menu was the gumbo, with its warm, earthy broth and lots of little shrimp.Beth Partin's photos, Hilton Garden Inn

And then after Todd and I had recovered, we ate our leftovers from Café Kranzler and drank a bottle of champagne.

So on Friday morning, we could have just lived off the fat we’d packed on earlier in the week. But I thought that might make us a little crabby, and we don’t want to be getting crabby with TSA agents now, do we?

With that in mind, I ordered these apple-wheat pancakes, with the emphasis on “cake.” South Padre restaurants, Texas restaurants, Beth Partin's photosAfter the European-style sipping chocolate (made with water rather than milk), the thick, slightly sweet pancakes hiding slices of apple were too much for me. I ate one and left the other two for later.

Our path to Harlingen airport was a leisurely one. We drove over the bridge to Port Isabel, past the sign that says “Watch for pelicans when flashing”—and we did, amazed at their dominion of the air. We stopped at the Harlingen Thicket, one location of the World Birding Center in the Rio Grande Valley. The wind had followed us there but had slowed enough over land that a black phoebe and a mystery warbler came out to play.

Beth Partin's photos, Harlingen Thicket, World Birding CenterFrom there it was only 15 minutes to the airport, and what to my wondering eyes should appear but a backscatter scanner. Seriously, why does a small town like Harlingen need a scanner? Do the authorities believe that terrorists will swim the Rio Grande so that they can fly out of Harlingen?

I submitted to the scan with uncharitable thoughts racing through my head. Too bad none of those thoughts involved flipping the bird with both hands while I was in “Don’t shoot me” pose. Todd, of course, got the scanner AND the pat-up. Why? Because his wallet was in his back pocket, blocking the scanner’s view of his butt. But the TSA agent couldn’t just ask him to remove his wallet and step back through the scanner. No, he had to feel him up.

Todd told me later that he finds security theater offensive because it’s done TO him. There’s nothing he can say that will make these people respond in a reasonable manner. When I asked if he felt violated, he said he feels just as bad standing with his legs apart getting wanded.

Once in Austin, we discovered we had enough time to drive to Lockhart and visit Todd’s favorite BBQ joint in the world, Black’s. We lucked out on our cabbie, Remi Manukian, who was born in Armenia near Mount Ararat and later fled the Soviet Union. He entertained us on the half-hour drive with his blend of liberalism and conspiracy-theory conservatism, saying the way the United States is going now, it’s like being back in the communist bloc.Texas restaurants, Texas BBQ, Black's BBQ

While the cabbie ordered ribs and also stocked up on turkeys, Todd sighed over the fatty brisket and got a little snippy when I asked for some sauce. “Really good BBQ doesn’t need it,” he said. Well, really good mashed potatoes don’t need gravy either, but I still prefer them that way. Besides, I wanted to taste it: it leaned toward vinegar, as did the nuclear coleslaw.Black's BBQ, Texas BBQ, Texas restaurants, Beth Partin's photos

But he was right: the brisket didn’t need BBQ sauce.

Remi returned us to Austin with time to spare, and metal detectors never looked so good. I still can’t figure out why Harlingen needed backscatter scanners more than Austin.

Our flight got in at 8 Friday night, and we were very glad we’d parked in one of the outlying lots. Thanks to the weather gods and the low humidity, it didn’t even feel that cold.

Café Kranzler: New American Cuisine on Padre Island

Open since July on South Padre Island, Café Kranzler is almost perfect. The outside is unassuming, like most of the buildings along the strip between the Gulf of Mexico and the uber-salty Laguna Madre.South Padre restaurants, Texas restaurants, Beth Partin's photos The inside, with its pale green walls and awning over one row of seats, had a European ambiance that reminded me of Indulge Bistro in Denver. The ceiling descended into strange round light features. (I’m sure there’s a name for them, but I don’t know it.) Speakers played light jazz, which seemed incongruous; I think I was expecting marches.

On the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, there were two servers and two tables being served. I liked the heavy plastic water glasses and the grilled bread brushed with oil. The seared scallops combined nicely with small pieces of grapefruit and pearl onion, but it was easy for the flavor of the latter to dominate.Beth Partin's photos, South Padre restaurants, Texas restaurants, Rio Grande Valley restaurants

Our entrees came too quickly, probably because the cook had too little to do. My cioppino broth was a balanced blend of tomato and vegetable stock and pernod, just a bit spicy. I could have slurped it up all day. Never having tried cioppino before, I didn’t know if the abundance of seafood was typical. I would have been satisfied with half as much, but I was able to take home 6 pieces of seafood for a snack after Thanksgiving dinner the next day. The seafood itself made a study in texture, with firm ahi, shrimp a bit overdone, and soft scallops and mussels.New American cuisine, South Padre Island restaurants, Texas restaurants

Todd’s lobster mandoria, with shrimp and lobster in a parmsan truffle cream sauce, was sophisticated comfort seafood. Usually I order that kind of dish, and he orders something more like the cioppino, but we had switched tastes for the evening, I guess.South Padre Island, Texas restaurants, Beth Partin's photos

We took a while to decide, in fact, because everything on the menu sounded good. I wasn’t really in the mood for wiener schnitzel (the only truly European entree), but I could have ordered the salmon picatta with mascarpone mashed potatoes or the pork tenderloin messicani with polenta cakes.

We couldn’t pass up the tiramisu, Todd’s favorite dessert. I’ve never had it served this way before. Beth Partin's photos, South Padre restaurants, Texas restaurantsI wish I had cut into it before taking a picture: the filling is what Cool Whip would love to be when it grows up. The ladyfingers were soft with rum and crunchy with sugar.

Café Kranzler’s founder used to own the amusement park on Padre Island. She came here from Germany 40 years ago, and this restaurant is her labor of love. It’s open for breakfast as well, and the menu looked good, but we went to Yummies again instead.
Cafe Kranzler on Urbanspoon

South Padre Restaurants, Off-Season

In the story I sometimes imagine for South Padre, all the hotels and tourist joints melt away into some future haze, and the entire island goes back to being a spit of sand. But that’s not the way it is now, and that’s not why I came here.

I saw a T-shirt at the SPI Birding and Nature Center that summed up my goals for this trip: Eat. Sleep. Bird.

The birding part is easy, since all I have to do is leave the hotel and cross the street or walk down a boardwalk.

The eating part is a little more of a challenge, since the area is not known for innovation in food. Reviewers on the Internet wonder if everything here really has to be fried, but if it’s not a requirement, you wouldn’t know it from the menus I’ve seen.

So far, though, every restaurant (visited only once, mind you) has had at least one bright spot.

At Longhorn Cattle Company on the way south from Harlingen, Texas, it was the salty, beefy, bean soup served in a white coffee mug, along with a pitcher of water that required a straw.Texas restaurants

The briscuit was silky on the tongue but not particularly flavorful; it didn’t have much of a smoke ring, so maybe it was oven-roasted. Texas restaurantsThe crunchy bits of celery in the otherwise dense scoop of potato salad provided textural relief from all the softness. The coleslaw—minced cabbage and carrots and other vegetables bathing in a sweet liquid—was rather appealing, almost a dessert.

At Yummies Bistro on South Padre, it was the sipping chocolate mixed with espresso. South Padre restaurants(And the great-tailed grackle doing its Star Trek red alert call; it wanted us to run for the shuttles so it could steal the sugar packets.) Belvedere Chocolate in Boulder makes a similar drink, called hot chocolate soup. This was better and came in three flavors: plain chocolate, Mexican (with chilis), and mocha (what I had).

Granted, it’s difficult to make eggs and bacon into anything special. When I order such a basic breakfast, all I ask is that the scrambled eggs be scrambled instead of slabbed, and that the bacon be crunchy AND fatty. South Padre restaurantsYummies delivered. Todd’s shrimp salad with dried cherries, grape tomatoes, blue cheese, and toasted pita triangles was refreshing, and the protein and cheese added flavor without overwhelming the lettuce. (It was also the first of Todd’s three meals in a row with shrimp.)South Padre restaurants

Daddy’s Seafood and Cajun Kitchen impressed me the least. I think it may have been our waiter’s first week, or maybe nobody goes to restaurants on South Padre and orders a Tanqueray and tonic or asks what kind of tuna they’re serving tonight. He was nice enough to ask the cook, who responded, “Red tuna” (maguro?), but the fish I got was not dense enough to be a tuna steak. There is a kind of tuna I’ve had only at Ooka in Broomfield, which the menu there listed as “white tuna,” but the thinness of the filet and its moist texture suggested tilapia or catfish.South Padre restaurants

In any case, the almond crust made the meal. It was light and crunchy and added just a bit of depth to the flavor of the fish. In hindsight, I wish I’d ordered the cheese sauce on the side, because a little went a long way, and I truly preferred the fish without it (and without the potatoes that come with it). Todd’s shrimp kebabs were OK. One thing I will say about South Padre restaurants: They know how to cook fish properly.

Todd had a good laugh when I wondered if this T-shirt slogan—“Big people are harder to kidnap”—could refer to drug crime in Mexico. He laughed harder when I asked the waiter if it meant anything specific and received a bemused nonresponse. “Suck Head, Eat Tail” I could figure out all by myself. At the end of the meal, the waiter got his revenge by asking us if we wanted waters to go. So we went.

(I should have known. Ruth Tobias warned that snarky T-shirt slogans might be a bad sign.)

The next day we ended up at South Padre Brewing Company for lunch. Luckily, it was easy to find by sight, because neither Google Maps nor the car’s GPS knew its exact location; the car thought the restaurant was two blocks south of where it actually was (and we had the same experience driving to Pier 19 later that night).South Padre restaurants

This place had almost all its cylinders firing. Of the five beers in the sampler, three were really good: Padre Island Pale Ale (second from left), Tidal Wave Wheat (with the lemon), and Speckled Trout Stout (front). The amber (far left), normally my favorite, tasted thin, and the blonde (second from right), although nice enough, was a get-drunk-quick light beer. South Padre restaurantsI was surprised by the fleeting sweetness of the pale ale; according to a home-brewing friend of Todd’s, some yeasts can impart a smell of banana peel. But the stout went best with my pesto chicken salad sandwich-wagon with its four wheels of tomato and cucumber. It was damn good: the bread was crisp, the chicken salad had about 1,000 calories of mayo, and the pebbly dressing was sour enough to offset all that creaminess.South Padre restaurants

You’ll have to excuse me for wondering where the pesto was. I assumed it must be somewhere in the dressing, but no, the waitress said, it was in the chicken salad. Maybe it was those tiny green specks? It doesn’t matter, though: the dressing they did serve, full of garlic and oregano, was delicious; I liked it better than the pesto vinaigrette she brought me later, made with enough Thai basil to taste of anise.

Note the coleslaw here, much chunkier and less sweet than its Longhorn counterpart.

Todd ordered the shrimp wrap (shrimp meal number three), and although he complained it needed more flavor, he liked it and the hot salsa well enough to order some homemade chips and salsa to go.

So, the moral of my tale of overeating is this: if you’re hungry on South Padre, go to the Brewing Company or Yummies. Or Cafe Kranzler, which I will be visiting tonight.
Longhorn Cattle Co. BBQ & Steakhouse on UrbanspoonYummies Bistro on UrbanspoonDaddy's Seafood & Creole on UrbanspoonPadre Island Brewing Co. on Urbanspoon