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Feeling Nostalgic? The archives
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In search of the perfect blueberry muffin (which fancy grocery chain is the best?)
One of my favorite "Seinfeld"s was the one about the muffin tops and stumps.Sorry, that's all I got.
best are homemade Larry...w/ hand-picked blueberries from Maine or Nova Scotia.... Made by mom, or...um, me. If I make any this summer I'll be sure to send you some.
Oh yes. No doubt. You take it to a whole new level when you talk about homemade.I just may have to travel to Texas in the interim.
If it's fresh from the oven, or fresh & heated in the micro, it's so full of butter already in how it's made, any more would be de trop!yummmmmmmmmmmm!
I don't have a Texas standard for blueberry muffins. I like the kind from a box with the super-sweet batter and canned berries.
I like blueberry muffins both with butter and without them. Either way.Larry, I go through this same thing with burritos and pizza. I miss Chicago's Taco and Burrito House SOOOO much. Eating there is a combination of nostalgia and spiritual experience. I also can't get good stuffed pizza in Wisconsin, but there's a place right on the Illinois border, about an hour away, and if I'm in the neighborhood, I'll stop there.
Yup. It's those non-chain specialties that really get you. I mean, there's a Cheesecake Factory and a P. F. Chang's in every city. But there's a Tex-Mex place in Austin (Antonio's) that I've never been able to find a match for anywhere I've ever been. I have to say I miss it more than I do the family members who still live in the Austin area. :(
Well .. actually I have found a Mexican place that comes pretty close. It's The Blue Iguana on North Temple in Salt Lake City. It's a very small place, always with a line out the door waiting for a table.
I knew your pain for the short era when I moved away, Larry. The Mexican food was all different.
In most places it's far too bland. And you can't fix it with Tabasco, either.I remember once having tamales in a place on the square in Sonoma. The tears were streaming down my face from the heat. Loved it! Most people don't like that, I guess.
Here's a pretty good approximation for Antonio's of Austin, in Boulder and Longmont, CO:http://www.efrainsrestaurant.com/
That location in Longmont is where I once went when it was La Cocina. My favorite. They have this amazing quasi-Italian side dish called Vermacelli, short little angel hair noodles in a spicy tomato sauce. Makes my mouth water just thinking about it.
Larry, all this talk about blueberry muffins propelled me to make a batch. From scratch. I had to go to the store to get sour cream, but now they are almost done, in two minutes. mmmmmmm-hmmmmm.
Larry, all this talk about blueberry muffins propelled me to make a batch. From scratch. I had to go to the store to get sour cream, but now they are almost done, in two minutes. mmmmmmm-hmmmmm.
Oh man! Enjoy.I've only been to the original Ephrain's. I can't think of the town it's in. It's on the road between Boulder and I-25. What's the name of that town, Sally?
RA - are you talking stuffed crust pizza or deep dish pizza?
sally - i also like the boxed muffing mix. partly bacause, like chocolate chip cookie dough, you don't really have to bake it. taste pretty dag-gone good right offa the spoon.
I'll have to try it if I get down that far in the near future. We have a Pizzeria Uno's that I consider excellent deep dish pizza.
Larry, I feel the same way about tortillas. Weird, I know... but after eating H.E.B.'s tortillas, I can't stand to eat them anywhere else, even when they're being churned out fresh for diners at a Mexican restaurant.
Yeah, Jim, we have an Uno's too, out by the zoo...they're not bad, but I agree with Larry on Giordano's. Isn't there an Uno's up by the Dells, too? Maybe I'm thinking of something else.
Yes, Heidi, H-E-B makes them fresh right in front of you in some of the new stores.Yes, RA, UNO is everywhere. I went to my first one in Philadelphia of all places. I don't think it measures up to the big G.
We don't have Uno's or HEB. I've never heard of either. I want fresh tortillas now, though.
Mmmm... fresh tortillas. So warm and fluffy. Sure they've got lard in them, but that just makes them tastier! Dang, now I want some. To the tortilleria!
I don't know that I've ever had fresh tortillas. Now I'm afraid to have them lest they ruin regular tortillas for me forever.
Better to leave well enough alone, I say. Unless you just need to write sad poetry the rest of your days.
H.E.B. doesn't just ruin tortillas for a person. They also ruin grocery shopping for a person. GAH! They're heaven. And as if that wasn't bad enough, H.E.B. Central Market Stores ruin H.E.B. for a person, too.
I've only visited the one in Houston, and, well... my family plans outings to Central Market. It's recreation for us - like spending the day at DisneyWorld... even my 7 YOA nephew LOVES Central Market. He gets sooo excited when we go there. I usually walk away from a day there with a bottle of fresh squeezed juice (the carrot apple is a fave), some exotic fruit, a box of tea, and a stack of tortillas or a loaf of fresh bread or some yummy homebrewed cheese... or something from the olive bar. And then I hoard what I can. The juice never lasts through the ride home, though.
Oh, you don't have to convince me... I like visiting Houston, esp. the MidTown area (my sister works there). It's largely pedestrian, lots of beautiful trees and mom and pop shops everywhere. And people can take their dogs out with them while enjoying a beer with friends.
I hate Central Market. They set it up like a maze, forcing you to go down aisles you have no interest in. When they opened their idea was to copy Whole Foods but also have some junk like coke and cheetos, then they decided to go straight all natural like Whole Foods but they still have some random crap (no rhyme or reason). Their sweets suck. And then you have to get the codes to all the produce and label them yourself on those super nasty machines.
Shelly, if you lived here and had to do your grocery shopping here, you wouldn't complain. We don't have any super nasty machines to label the produce. Grocery store customers have to wait for a grocer to enter the produce pricing at the checkout... and then they weigh them on the super nasty scanners.
BTW, we do have Whole Foods here. We also have a Fresh Market. Trust me when I say that Central Grocery and HEB (exception would be Trader Joe's... and we don't have one) are both considerably better than the grocery stores in most other places, specifically here. The quality of the food and produce is what makes them better, hands down. If I want good quality produce at a decent price around here, I have to wait until summertime when the farmers' market is open. Otherwise, I'm left with the option of crappy produce at an affordable price or decent produce at a ridiculously jacked up price.
Never heard of Fresh Market, and we don't have a Trader Joe's here. I went to one once in Portland, though, and there was a roach in my bulk cereal. I'm a Whole Foods person.
I hate the produce code machines. I'm always worried I'm going to fuck up the code or whatever and look like I'm trying to rip off the store on my purchase of bananas.
I like Whole Foods. The one here jacks up their prices, though. On to more important things... you found a roach in your bulk cereal?!! GROSS! EWWW!
::marks Trader Joe's off list of fave grocery stores::
Trader Joe's is the bomb. I make a trip there at least once a week, even if I don't have to. I would even have my mail forwarded there, if I could.
All I've ever purchased at Trader Joe's is wine or liquor. When I lived in St. George Utah, we would drive the hour and a half to Las Vegas just to hit Joe's and B&N. Two-buck-Chuck!
Two-Buck Chuck rules! Seriously, for a $2 bottle of wine, the Charles Shaw Red is very good.
I love Trader Joes. It's so inexpensive for the quality! It's like Winco for hipsters and vegetarians!
I like Whole Foods, but it's too expensive for regular grocery shopping.
I like Whole Foods, but it's too expensive for regular grocery shopping.
TJ's remains inexpensive because they cut out the middle man. They negotiate their contracts directly with the producer. Most importantly, they're all about quality.
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Markets in Omaha really suck when it comes to muffins. The items they call muffins are all really dry and tasteless, like bad little mix cake cupcakes with a few blueberries in them. Yes, I know. It's because they don't have enough FAT in them ....
Anybody else have this problem? Tell me I'm not alone in this.
So now I realize that anyone who hasn't had an H-E-B muffin won't have a proper reference point here. Anyways ....