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Here’s how to book a room at the FLWright-designed hotel in mason city

Here’s the scoop on staying at the new  FLWright-designed hotel that’s reopening in August for business (101 years after it opened.) The hotel – which falls under Stoney Creek Inn auspices – just started taking reservations this week, through one person who I’ve yet to reach. The rooms are available in August (don’t know when specifically). There are 27 guest rooms according to the website. Prices still unknown.

To find out info go to : http://www.stoneycreekinn.com/locations/parkinn.cfm; to call for a reservation call 1-800-659-2220 (press 3 after the first spiel; then press 4 after the next spiel.)

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From chilly nyc (and missing cobra at the Bronz zoo) back to snowy Iowa

Didn’t expect snow when we landed at 10 this morning in Des Moines. Hope it melts soon. I got up at 3:45 a.m. for a 6 a.m. flight from LaGuardia.

Yesterday we braved the Bronx Zoo – and my friend who had the idea conveniently neglected to tell us that an Egyptian cobra had gone missing from the Reptile House. No joke.  Which may explain why the place was so empty. I thought it was the cold weather and a March Monday. The good part is we had the place almost to ourselves – and we did not chance upon any cobras (although we did see some snakes, safely behind glass enclosures.)

I wandered around the charming narrow backstreets of the Meatpacking District, passing by various foodie havens included The Spotted Pig (restaurant) and Murray’s (cheese shop) for a few hours before meeting my brother and his lovely wife at Barbuto – a fashionable restaurant on Washington and 12th Streets. The crowd was a little too self-consciously fashionable for me and the ambiance a little too stark (post car-garage interior) but the food, by bigname chef Jonathan Waxman – was terrific.  And the company, the best! My brother loved the roasted chicken, which had skin that was crispy without appearing breaded or battered or even fried. I had pot roast atop creamy white polenta that I initially mistook for mashed potatoes. Delicious. The side order of potatoes appeared to be prepared similarly to the chicken – very crispy but also not greasy and served with fresh dusting of Parmesan and sprigs of Rosemary. Yum.

 

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Where to eat in Memphis’ Germantown…

This comes courtesy of my friend Kathy who is on a road trip with her family from Des Moines to Houston via some of my favorite places, including most recently,   Memphis.  Before they left, Kathy’s family got some road food recommendations from a well-known BBQer in Des Moines who owns Woody’s.  Here’s the first restaurant they tried in Memphis’ Germantown area. Can’t go wrong with a place that offers complimentary deviled eggs!!

The Germantown Commissary, 2290 S. Germantown Road in the Germantown area of Memphis. According to the menu, a commissary is another term for a Southern general store. Interesting decor, with twinkle lights, and bleached animal skulls, movie posters and old tin signs on the wood-paneled walls. Great dry-rub ribs and tamales smothered in chili and cheese. Excellent coleslaw. Almost every dish comes with a deviled egg. Homemade lemonade and sweet tea. We didn’t have room for dessert, but they looked great: tall layer cakes and cream pies.

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Panama: our best and worst dining

During our ten-day visit to Panama – including Panama City, Boquete, and Bocas del Toro – here’s our best/worst list:

Best Restaurant: La Posta in Panama City – the food was as good as we’d heard. And the best service by far we had in Panama. And lovely elegant Havana-style dining room with cream-colored walls, purring ceiling fans, big palms, old photos. The smoked pork chop was huge and perfectly seasoned; the seafood risotto was creamy but the rice still al dente – with big bits of calamari, shrimp, scallops; very thinly sliced beef carpaccio with shaved parmesan, artichokes and a light vinaigrette; a cube of tuna carpaccio that put all other ceviche we had to shame.

Runner-up Best Restaurant: Il Pianista in Boquete – okay, my old adage that when in Rome eat like the Romans just didn’t hold up in Panama. After a few Panamanian restaurants, I wanted to eat in Panama like the Romans. This little almost-hidden Italian restaurant was a welcome respite from rice-and-beans, plantains, and slabs of meat with sauce. On the edge of the road, this tiny place has rough-hewn stone walls, and a handful of tables looking out on what was a raging waterfall when we visited. The outdoor deck was closed due to rain. I had the most delicious Pasta Pomodoro – very simple.  Spaghetti with a very fresh sauce made of local tomatoes, garlic and basil. D had pizza.

Best Entertainment at a Restaurant: Tinajas in Panama City – where we took in the floor show of traditional Panamanian dancers and musicians. The food was fine – I had the ceviche and shrimp with coconut sauce – but didn’t knock me over and I fear may have contributed to my stomach upset the next day.

Biggest disappointment: Boquete Bistro in Boquete – we’d heard good things about this American-owned restaurant offering American dishes and the place was packed on Valentine’s Day with both Latin and Anglo tourists. But the service was very slow – the staff seemed overwhelmed by all the diners – and the food was a pale imitation of the real thing. My Mediterranean pasta – spaghetti with feta cheese, oil, tomatoes, Kalamata olives – had an odd sweet taste to it that totally put me off. D’s tacos were passable – but odd meat. Maybe it’s harder to duplicate American than Italian dishes in a faraway place?

Best restaurant atop an old bus: Bocas Blended – a clever place inside an old bus parked on a corner of a busy intersection in Bocas del Toro. Cheerful young ex-pats – one from New Jersey – whipped up wraps (veggies with a feta-based pesto was my fav) and blended fruit drinks  akin to smoothies known as a batido – inside the bus and served them at counters tacked onto the sides of the bus and atop the bus at a small table with four chairs (the food was lifted up by a rickety pulley) that had a good view of the town and the ocean beyond. Also good homemade lemonade made with bits of mint.

Best Breakfast and view: at Cocomo B&B on Bocas del Toro (fresh pineapple, a wide selection of homemade entrees from omelettes and soft-boiled eggs to french toast and pancakes) on the open air deck overlooking the Caribbean.

Other good breakfast with a view: A spread laid out for the Iowa farmers we initially traveled with at the Vistors Center overlooking the Miraflores Locks on the Panama Canal. Very good french toast. (And a nice break from some very mediocre breakfasts we had at two pricey resorts that should have known better.)

Worst service/best fish: The Reef in Bocas del Toro. We waited over an hour at this busy restaurant where again the staff seemed both overwhelmed and at times inept. Fortunately the view – from an open air deck on the water – was lovely and the fish and lobster (although very small portion) was well-prepared when it finally arrived.

Others:

– Tammy’s in Boquete – an Israeli-run place with good hummus, okay rotisserie chicken and patacones (disks of fried plantain that were too dry and seasonless for me. I’ll stick with french fries.)

– Central Park in Boquete – overlooking the main square. Good fry bread, s0-so scrambled eggs

– Shalom Bakery in Boquete – sorry, the bagel was a pale imitation of the real thing but the cinnamon roll got a thumb’s up from D

–  Mr. Douglas’ Golden Grill in Bocas Town – good ice cream that hit the spot after a hot day on the beach

– Cafe at Red Frog Beach on Isla Bastimentos (Bocas) –  the chips were good. The salsa turned out to be not the tomato-based dip we expected but a tangy mayonaise-based one.

– The restaurant terrace at La Coralina hotel, a lovely hotel on Isla Colon (a short bike ride along the beach from Bocas town near Bluff Beach)  – great views and the best craft shop we saw anywhere!

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Exploring my Lithuanian roots?

My friend Francine in London blackberryed me today from her local gastro pub which is run by a Lithuanian guy who also has a sideline in mini breaks in Lithuania .  She’s keen on going to an “amazing folk festival” in Lithuania in June. One branch of my family hails from Vilnius.  The gastro pub guy’s website is http://www.aoootravel.com and I see that his trips include a stop in Vilnius.

Here’s the description:

Our summer trips take you back to nature in a beautiful yet undiscovered Lithuanian countryside. Mushroom challenges with a two-day combination of gentle kayaking, cycling and walking. Springs reduces activities to one day, offering you a more relaxed second day in Druskininkai, the famous Lithuanian SPA resort. Visit to Unesco-listed political capital Vilnius is on both routes.

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A good reasonably priced hotel in Chicago?

A NYC friend is visiting Chicago with her high school son this spring and looking for a reasonably priced, well-located hotel in Chicago. She  found three options for about $150 per night: Swissotel Chicago, Fairmont Chicago and Ambassador East. Friends from Des Moines report having good luck with Swissotel although they thought it was a little pricey for what you got.

Another option I suggested to my NYC friend is maybe taking her son on a college visit to U of Chicago, which as part of its offerings has a deal with Hilton Chicago to provide discounted rates.

 

 

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Inexpensive restaurants in NYC

The NYTimes ran a list of the best new inexpensive restaurants in NYC this week so here are a few for future reference. (A list of non-inexpensive restaurants also ran but I’m assuming they’re not in my budget.) I skipped most of  the ones beyond Manhattan:

BAOHAUS  … bun (the bao) brimming with Niman Ranch pork belly, glossy with fat and topped with the classic Taiwanese condiments: sweet pulverized peanuts, pickled mustard greens and cilantro. 137 Rivington Street (Norfolk Street), Lower East Side; (646) 684-3835, baohausnyc.com.

CAFE ‘AT YOUR MOTHER-IN-LAW’ two blocks from the boardwalk; Eastern European, Korean and Uzbek dishes from Russian-speaking ethnic Koreans hailing from Tashkent.  3071 Brighton Fourth Street (Brighton Beach Avenue), Brighton Beach, Brooklyn; (718) 942-4088. (HAS to be better than the awful place we went to in Brighton Beach in 2009.

CAMPO DE’ FIORI pizza and more in my brother’s neighborhood…. 187 Fifth Avenue (Berkeley Place), Park Slope, Brooklyn; (347) 763-0933, pizzacampodefiori.com.

DOS TOROS ….fresh, quick and cheap eating akin to that found at Mexican joints in the San Francisco Bay Area. (Oliver Strand) 137 Fourth Avenue (13th Street); (212) 677-7300, dostorosnyc.com.

HECHO EN DUMBO big flavors of Mexico City  stripped down…short-rib tacos 354 Bowery (East Fourth Street), East Village; (212) 937-4245, hechoendumbo.com.

HILL COUNTRY CHICKEN  fried chicken and other Southern dishes. 1123 Broadway (25th Street); (212) 257-6446, hillcountrychicken.com.

KUTI’S Tmarries West African and Middle Eastern flavors from  Ivory Coast, and insinuates a few French techniques in dishes like shrimp piri-piri,  355 West 116th Street (between Manhattan and Morningside Avenues); (212) 222-1127.

THE NORTHERN SPY FOOD COMPAN Greenmarket-driven restaurant 511 East 12th Street (Avenue A), East Village; (212) 228-5100, northernspyfoodco.com.

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Old Crow Farm for rescued junk – in Central Iowa

Okay – so here’s the scoop on Old Crow Farm which I found out by trekking to Earlham Iowa today. The three-times-a-year sale that used to happen at the Old Crow Farm is no more I was told. Which was a bit disappointing. It’s been replaced by a soon-t0-be once-a-month sale at Old Crow Farm’s new in-town location, a former 1900’s hardware store that now goes by the name “Rescued Junk” and that’s just what was in there today during the grand opening. Place was packed with people – and there was cider and sweets to mark the occasion. The rescued junk was okay – not as much stuff as I expected, mostly salvaged metal furniture and knickknacks – old tool kits, stools, signs, the kind of old things that were lying around your grandma’s house for years, that need fixing up. The store will be open the next two weekends (Thursday-Saturday)  12/9-12/11 and 12/16-12/18

 

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About that drive through France: a change of plans

Word has it my brother may have changed his plans to drive across France this week – even the fuel shortage and overall chaos – and stayed in Spain.  May be a wise idea – and certainly not a bad alternative. I’m wondering how many other vacationers are vacating France – or avoiding it altogether right now.

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Best Burger in Iowa City?

A writer for Edible Iowa magazine says the best burger in Iowa City can be found at Short’s Burgers and Shine on Clinton Street, made with local beef and home-baked bun and apparently there’s a $6 Burger special on Monday nights. Don’t forget the hand-cut fries and the Iowa-brewed beer including the venerable Amana Colonies’ Millstream, as well as Court Avenue Black hawk Stout, Old Man River Helles and Dunkel, and Peace Tree Hop Wrangler (I recently tried a Peace Tree sweet corn brew.) Sutliff Cider also gets a nod.

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