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Category Archives: Party Time

Memorial Day Buffalo Steak Dinner

31 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Buffalo, Grillin' and Chillin', Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, What's For Dinner?

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What a delightful day we spent today on this 2011 Memorial Day Weekend. Although it started out somewhat rainy and stormy, it ended up slightly warm and partly cloudy. And Margaret was here for dinner – what happened Cristi? – and Mac and Marnie stopped by. (Thanks for the 8gb, SDHC card for the camera!) It was great to have everyone here with us. And look what we had for dinner!!! The photo on the left shows the Buffalo Steaks and Grilled Asparagus hot off the grill.

Grilled Buffalo Steak with Sauce Diane and Sauteed Morel Mushrooms
Grilled Asparagus in Garlic and Balsamic Vinegar Marinade
Baked Idaho Potato with Garden Fresh Chives

Fresh Garden Salad
(Thanks Margaret!)

Chocolate Ganache Tart

Almond tart
(Robin did both tarts!)

Sliced Tarts

Indian Creek Winery Liquid Gold

An awesome dinner and really great friends and family with us. It really means a lot to me. Thank-You one and all!

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Tagine Cooking

27 Friday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Tagine, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

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Here is a brief explanation of what a tagine pot is. The pot pictured here is one we have. From Wikipedia,

“A tajine, or tagine (Berber: tajin), is a dish from North Africa, principally Morocca, that is named after the special earthenware pot in which it is cooked. A similar dish, known as tavvas, is found in the cuisine of Cyprus. The traditional tajine pot is formed entirely of a heavy clay, which is sometimes painted or glazed. It consists of two parts: a base unit that is flat and circular with low sides, and a large cone or dome-shaped cover that rests inside the base during cooking. The cover is so designed to promote the return of all condensation to the bottom. With the cover removed, the base can be taken to the table for serving.”

Well, that’s nice, but what is so special about the preparation? I’m glad you asked.

“Tajines in Moroccan cuisine are slow-cooked stews braised at low temperatures, resulting in tender meat with aromatic vegetables and sauce. They are traditionally cooked in the tajine pot, whose cover has a knob-like handle at its top to facilitate removal. While simmering, the cover can be lifted off without the aid of a mitten, enabling the cook to inspect the main ingredients, add vegetables, mix the contents, or add additional braising liquid.
Most tajines involve slow simmering of less-expensive meats. For example, the ideal cuts of lamb are the neck, shoulder or shank cooked until it is falling off the bone. Very few Moroccan tajines require initial browning; if there is to be browning it is invariably done after the lamb has been simmered and the flesh has become butter-tender and very moist. In order to accomplish this, the cooking liquid must contain some fat, which may be skimmed off later.

Moroccan tajines often combine lamb or chicken with a medley of ingredients or seasonings: olives, quinces, apples, pears, apricots, raisins, prunes, dates, nuts, with fresh or preserved lemons, with or without honey, with or without a complexity of spices. Traditional spices that are used to flavour tajines include ground cinnamon, saffron, ginger, turmeric, cumin, paprika, pepper, as well as the famous spice blend Ras el hanout. Some famous tajine dishes are mqualli or mshermel (both are pairings of chicken, olives and citrus fruits, though preparation methods differ), kefta (meatballs in an egg and tomato sauce), and mrouzia (lamb, raisins and almonds).
Other ingredients for a tajine may include any product that braises well: fish, quail, pigeon, beef, root vegetables, legumes, even amber and agarwood. Modern recipes in the West include pot roasts, osso buco, lamb shanks and turkey legs. Seasonings can be traditional Moroccan spices, French, Italian or suited to the dish.”

The plated photo is a Tagine of Lamb with Preserved Lemon and Olives on Couscous that Robin and I made last night. If you would like two tagine recipes, I have placed them in the Master Recipe List on this blog. One of the recipes is the one pictured here and another is for a Tagine of Chicken. But think also of doing maybe lamb shanks or beef shanks in a tagine style of cooking. An osso buco modified. Yum-O! And to spice this dinner up we served a 2000 San Sebastian Castillo Red wine from a St Augustine, Florida winery. One of the oldest wineries in the United States. This was a great premium red table wine that went extremely well with the spices of the lamb. We bought our tagine from Sur la Table online. You can spend upwards of $200.00 on one of these, but check the prices out listed on the web page. The one we have is a terra cotta one and it is plenty large enough for us. It can serve 4-6 people and is a 13″ size. We paid $24.95 for ours and now I see they are about $10 cheaper. Oh well! And just one last thing: There are at least two different spellings for tagine or tajine. Cheers and have fun with this cuisine.

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Bend, Oregon Brew Pubs

23 Monday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Beer and Ale, Brew Pubs, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, What's For Dinner?

≈ 3 Comments


Only the photo from our motel room is bleak and dark. (Great effect using black and white on this photo.) The weekend, however, was a super weekend in Bend, Oregon. Along with some other tasks to complete – see the Retirement in Idaho blog – we also had a great time visiting some brew pubs in Bend. As it turns out, we had a comparison tasting of beer. Look at these photos and the story should become clear. Cheers!

Mount Hood from Brothers, Oregon. It’s a long way to the mountain from this vantage point.

Buddy wanted to go to bed after an eventful day. This is the first time we have taken him with us for any distance or period of time. He did very, very well!

Our first stop was at the Pine Tavern in Bend. They have a good Happy Hour. I asked the manager, Rob, what beer he suggested to have with our appetizers. He suggested a 10 Barrel Apocalypse IPA and the discussion of this beer is in the previous post. It was an awesome brew!!

Fried Green Beans
Onion Rings
These were both very good!

Crab Taco

Beef Bites

Trader Joe’s in Bend, Not Boise! Why not?

Robin trying to make up her mind in Trader Joe’s.

Deschutes Brewery and Pub

Inside the pub.

Here is the Special! Only problem is, they were all out of the house sausage. Too bad, they were probably good!

Here is the flight we had. Reading the top row, left to right:
Deschutes Brewery Hefeweizen (Good with oyster shooters), Trees From Doom Dunkel (Sweet) and Green Lakes Organic Ale (Best with brats)
Front Row, Left to right:
Welcome Back Wit (Rated this best), Hop Henge Experimental IPA (Rated second), Inversion IPA (Rated at the bottom. This was supposed to be better than the 10 Barrel Apocalypse IPA. It was not.)
The Inversion just did not meet up to the 10 Barrel Apocalypse IPA. See below.

10 Barrel Brewery and Pub

The building. Look close if you are driving … You can miss it.

The patio with the fire going – it was cool – is very inviting.

Their pizzas are good, but not as good as the Flying Pie Pizza here in Boise. (We didn’t throw any away, though.)

Colorful T-Shirt!

Apocalypse IPA, 22 ounce is all they sell. This is an awesome brew! It definitely is a benchmark for me. Slightly – very slightly – sweet and very, very smooth. Light with a long finish. It went very well with the Pepperoni Pizza we had. I did tell our Waiter that we were there at the suggestion of the Pine Tavern Manager, Rob, and that we had done a comparison tasting between their Apocalypse and Deschutes Inversion. 10 Barrel won … substantially. He was happy!

So there you have our brewery tour in Bend, Oregon. I guess we will have to go back and finish our tour. That sounds like fun!! And let’s see if we can get the 10 Barrel Brewery Apocalypse IPA here in Boise! Bet you won’t keep it on the shelf. It’s that good. If it were a wine, it would be a 98! Cheers!

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Wine Dinner at the 36th Street Bistro with Joe Dewey

19 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in 36th Street Bistro, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, What's For Dinner?

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The 36th Street Bistro in Boise held their monthly tasting on May 18, 2011. And it was a really good wine dinner. The dinner selections went very well with the wines from Amador Foothill Winery and Ironsides Vineyards. Both in California. The photo on the left is a table centerpiece. Really pretty.

Joe Dewey did another outstanding job of presenting the wines and working with the Chef on the paring of the meal with the wines. Here Joe is showing one of the wines, a 2010 Amador Foothill Rosato of Sangiovese. Our dinner selections and the wine parings are below. Enjoy the photos and Left-Click on any of the photos for a full screen view. Thanks, Joe, for a great evening. And out of 20, the evening wine selections were an overall 18.3.

Salad Niçoise
olive vinaigrette on organic greens with feta and onion confit

2010 Amador Foothill Rosato of Sangiovese
this would be great with pizza. not smooth; pucker power. very Italian and great with the soup that follows

Braised cabbage-tomato soup
sweet potato polenta croutons and fresh basil

2010 Amador Foothill Sauvignon Blanc
blend of 76% Sauvignon Blanc, 24% Semillion. fruity nose, good balance, semillion comes through nicely, good paring with the soup

Rosemary-roasted lamb chops
buttered carrots, whipped Yukon potatoes, and Madeira glaze

2007 Amador Foothill ‘Katie’s Cote’ Rhone Blend
goes very well with the lamb chops, I got some aluminum on the finish

Alaskan Sockeye Salmon
espresso demi, coriander-parmesan cous cous and zucchini ribbons

2007 Amador Foothill Esola Zinfandel
pairs very well with the salmon – good choice, salmon does not overpower the zin, lite zin – not a big bold zin

Banana-cinnamon pudding
peanut butter cream and caramel

2009 Ironstone Obsession Symphony
little spritzy, good with a pear and peach on the nose, great paring. I think the best wine of the evening, although it was a close grouping

Dark chocolate cake
huckleberry ice cream and blueberry syrup

2009 Ironstone Reserve Zinfandel
black cherry on the nose, good and smooth zin

So there you have the wine dinner at 36th Street Bistro and the wine presentation by Joe Dewey. Good job Joe, and to the Chef, good paring of the food. Cheers!

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Grilled Buffalo and Roasted Sweet Onions

17 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Buffalo, Grillin' and Chillin', Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Vegetables, What's For Dinner?

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Since Bob and Gail missed our Christmas Open House and the tour of the wine cellar, we thought it would be nice to have them over for dinner. And that we did! It was great to have them. Here are some photos and recipes of what we had. This was a fun meal to prepare and even more fun to eat! Gail brought the dessert – Fresh Fruit Fondue. Thanks, Gail!

Here are the wines we had with dinner. They are listed in preference.
(1) 1992 Ridge Geyserville Zinfandel and Carignan 13.5% alc
Still very full bodied and rich. Deep purple color.
(2) 1980 Ravenswwood Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma County 13.4% alc
It is close to loosing its color. Light brown around the edges. It’s time to drink this one.
(3) 2006 Indian Creek (Idaho) Petit Verdot
It is definitely loosing it’s fruit. Turning out to be very light.

Here are the buffalo steak fresh off the grill. And yes, I can still smell them. So did the neighbors!

Buffalo Steak Diane

Serves: 4

For the steaks:
4 4oz Buffalo Steaks (your choice of sirloin or tenderloin)
¼ c Olive Oil
2 cloves Garlic, diced fine
1 Shallot , diced fine
Salt and Pepper to taste

For the sauce Diane:
¼ stick Butter
¼ c finely chopped Shallots
1½ T Dijon mustard
1½ T Worcestershire sauce
8 oz of Demi-Glace
½ c Madeira
2 t Lemon Juice, freshly -squeezed
2 T finely chopped Parsley
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

Directions:
Mix all of the steak marinade together. Place steaks in a zip lock bad and coat with the marinade. Place in the refrigerator for 8 hours or more, turning at least once. Bring to room temperature before grilling. Grill the steaks over med-low heat, turning just once. For med rare, just let the juices flow while cooking. You don’t want to over cook buffalo so be careful not to cook them much past medium-rare. When done, remove them to a plate tented in foil to keep warm and to let them rest.

Sauce Diane:
In a saucepan, melt the butter and sauté the shallots until they are translucent. Stir in the mustard, Worcestershire and demi glace.

Add the Madeira wine, lemon juice and chopped fresh parsley. Reduce until the sauce is thick enough to coat a spoon, about 15 minutes on simmer. Finish by tasting and adjusting seasonings with salt and pepper.

A photo of the Baked Potato and the Roasted Sweet Onion just out of the oven. YUM-O!

Roasted Sweet Onions

Serves: 4

Ingredients:
4 lg Vidalias – peeled and cored
½ lb Sugar snap peas, strings removed and cut on small diagonals.
½ lb carrots julienned – blanch pea pods and carrots in salted water strain.
½ lb Enoki or any white mushrooms – soak dry mushrooms in hot salted water – used to blanch peas and carrots, strain and chop.
½ lb Spinach – sautéed with chopped onion cores and mushroom pieces in:
2 T Honey
1T Vegetable oil, salt and pepper. Add peas and carrots.

Directions:
Rub cored onions with 1T vegetable oil, 2 T honey, salt and pepper. Place in pan and fill with sautéed vegetable mix.
Cover for 35 minutes cooking at 350 ºF until soft.
Garnish plate with some of the vegetable mix and spinach.

The Meal

Grilled Buffalo Steaks
sauce Diane

Baked Sweet Onion
carrots, sugar snap peas, spinach, mushrooms

Baked Potato
fresh cut chives, sour cream

Fresh Fruit Chocolate Fondue

This was an awesome evening with good friends, good wines and good food! The Sauce Diane is a classic French sauce that really goes good with wild game and this buffalo. It’s not hard to make, just takes some time. Enjoy!

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Sushi Joy – Chinese and Japanese Food, Boise

09 Monday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Celebrations, Chinese Food, Japanese Food, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Sushi Joy, What's For Dinner?

≈ 1 Comment


In some respects, I’m glad this weekend is over. It was like being in the winter holiday season – all we did was eat! Not that any of the food was bad. The food was absolutely awesome. And we finished it all off with a trip with our friend Margaret to Sushi Joy – Chinese and Japanese Cuisine located here in Boise. And in my NSHO (Not So Humble Opinion) it is one of the better Chinese/Japanese restaurants in town. Here are some photos of what we had. We also had green tea and mango ice cream. Three of us ate for $61.00. For the quality and the amount of food we had, I consider that very good. Just look at these photos. Left-Click any of the photos for a full screen view. Cheers!

Our friend Margaret.

Bob

House Salad
The dressing they use makes this salad, as it should. Tonight there was a sweet element to it. Honey?

Pu Pu Platter
egg rolls, crab rangoon, chicken fingers, chicken wings, teriyaki, fried shrimp

Lobster Tempura Maki
tempura lobster, mango, avocado, jalapeno wrapped in soy bean paper with twin sauce

Chef Roll
tuna, salmon, scallion, cucumber
wrapped in colored soy bean paper and deep fried and served with spicy unagi sauce

Sashimi Moriawase
the Chef’s choice of different fish. 12 pieces



Oh my. What a delightful dinner. This is the third time we have been here and we will absolutely return. They also have a wonderful lunch menu. Just remember, this is a wonderful blend of Chinese and Japanese cuisine. One you should not miss.

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Seasons Bistro Saturday Special

08 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cajun Food, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Seasons Bistro, Special Events, Things To Do

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I would be quite remiss if I did not say that we have not been to Seasons Bistro in Eagle for quite some time now. It has changed since we were there last ….. It is better! The floor plan in the main dining area now has a small stage where the cooler used to be and that opens the area up. The food is still as good as it was. So here are some photos we took Saturday while we were there. Much fun and excitement. Loved the band!

Along with the band and a book signing for Gretchen Anderson’s, The Backyard Chicken Fight and Patti Murphy’s, Mother Knows Best – Wit and Wisdom from Idaho Moms, there was a great wine tasting from the Houston Vineyards, Houston, Idaho. (Yes, there really is such a place as Houston, ID!) And Yes, there really is a road named Chicken Dinner Road, but “…. Therein lies another tale!”


Here is their wine list. The 2010 Chicken Dinner White is $22.99 and well worth that price. The 2009 Chicken Dinner Red is $25.99 and the 2009 Houston Vineyards Merlot is $38.99.

The appetizer plate. Yum-O!

The Bill McKeeth Band. A really good locally talented band. I loved the songs.

I think he “thumbed” a ride!

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Almond Macaroons [gluten and flour free]

25 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cookies, Dessert, Party Time, Recipe By: Robin Young

≈ Leave a comment


1 Cup raw Almonds-skins on
1 Cup granulated Sugar
2 egg whites, slightly beaten til frothy
1/2 tsp Vanilla
Pre-heat oven 300F Line a cookie sheet with a silpat or parchment paper.
Grind almonds with sugar in food processor. Pour into mixing bowl. Add frothy egg whites, vanilla and stir all until it becomes a rather sticky paste. Drop Tbsp sized balls 1 inch apart on lined cookie sheet. They will flatten and spread. Bake 20-25 min til light golden brown. Remove with spatula while still warm to a rack to cool. Store in a tin if they last long enough. Made for Passover/Easter dinner April 2011.

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Seghesio Wine Dinner at The Buzz

13 Wednesday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Main Dish, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

≈ 3 Comments


On April 12, 2011, The Buzz held another of their Wine Dinners. This year, they are featuring Family Wineries. The winery this month was the Seghesio Family Winery, located near Healdsburg, California in Sonoma. These wines were awesome and I think Robin and I found another benchmark Pinot Grigio. I will state my opinion of the wines and rate them, [20] being the highest score.

A beautiful smile.

Edd Lopez, District Sales Manager for the Seghesio Family Winery and Bob.

Here are the wines we had with our dinner.

Buzz’s Seghesio Sausage Bruschetta
2009 Seghesio Sonoma Zinfandel
15% alc, [19], $23.00 Would be great with any pasta dish. If you are in a quandry of what wine to have with dinner, try this one. I don’t think you’ll go wrong. Purchased 4 bottles.

Cold Summer Soup
2009 Seghesio Pinot Grigio
13% alc, [19] $20.00 This is a New Benchmark for us. Full of ripe fruit and pear. Lingering pear Would be great with an Avacado and Spinach Salad. The wine went extremely well with this soup. Purchased 4 bottles.

Chicken Marsala
Grilled Asparagus and Melon
Pasta Ponza
Popovers
2008 Seghesio Rockpile Zinfandel
15.6% alc, [19] $35.00 This wine went quite well with the chicken and all. Purchased 2 bottles.

Mixed Greens with Pickled Cauliflower and Pickled Red Onions
2010 Seghesio Arneis
13.3% alc, [15], $20.00. Sorry. I was not inpressed in comparison to the other wines we had tonight.

Chocolate Honey Almond Tart with Strawberry and Balsamic Vinegar
2008 Seghesio Homeranch Zinfandel
15.5% alc, [16], $35.00. One-half ton of juice per acre. Intense falvor. Hot wine. Even though it was a fairly low score, we did purchase 2 bottles.

The comment was made that, “… In California, you would pay $100.00 per plate for an event like this!” Believe me, we didn’t. $15.00 per plate! See what you missed? See you at the next Wine Dinner. Cheers!

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Awesome Birthday Dinner at Le Café de Paris

01 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Birthdays, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


Every year at our Birthday, we have the choice of where we want to eat; what restaurant. Mickey D’s doesn’t count! This year, I chose Le Café de Paris because they were having a special wine dinner with Michel-Schlumberger Winery from the Dry Creek area of California. As usual, it was a good choice. What a great dinner and some super wines.

Here Robin and I are with Jacques Schlumberger. Such an interesting person and great to talk to. He brought some awesome wines that went quite well with dinner. Oh yes, the dinner! See the photos below …. That’s all there is left!

2007 Schlumberger Chardonnay
(Front label)
This was a great chardonnay and went extremely well with all courses of our dinner. Long finish. Jasmine flowers. “Notes of dried flower, tarragon, quince and dried apricot. Expresses minerality and crisp freshness. Light on oak or buttery flavors.”

Back label explaining about the wine.

First Course
Plateau Apéritif
Crab
Cheese and Chicken Croquets
Potato and Fish Salad on Croustine, Crudite

Second Course
Brandade Stuffed Salmon
and
Roasted Tuna Filet
marinara sauce
Rice Timbale
small shrimp rice, leek, potato
(This was an awesome rice dish)

Main Course
Roulade de Bœuf
spinach-crème filling
xeres-bay leaf sauce
and
Gâteau de Canard
potato purée, zucchini flan, duck egg
(Such an amazing Main Course)

Dessert
Delice au Chocolat
chilled Spanish chocolate dessert
similar to a mousse

Daffodil
So what does this have to do with dinner? Probably nothing. But when we left for dinner, this was not in bloom. However, when we got home, it was as you see it here. One of the first signs of Spring. What a delightful way to end a perfect dinner. Thank-You to Robin and to all the folks at Le Café de Paris for this wonderful Birthday Dinner! (Anyone have a magnum of TBA? It’s my 70th next year.) Cheers!

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Find Your Local Farmers Market

Click on the graphic to find your local farmers market either by city or zip code.

Acme Baked Shop, Boise

Available at the Boise COOP. Some of the best bread in Boise and all local!! They make the bread for the 10 Barrel Brew Pub, Angell's Bar and Grill, Salt Tears, all here in Boise. Awesome rye bread that actually tastes like rye bread. And the baguettes .... Wonderful. (208) 284-5588 or runsvold2000@gmail.com

Brown’s Buffalo Ranch

Give them a call or EMail for awesome buffalo meat.

Desert Mountain Grass Fed Beef (formerly Homestead Natural Beef)

Desert Mountain Grass Fed Beef, with Bob and Jessica Howard of Howard Ranch in Hammett. The company will only sell whole animals to the Boise Co-op and Whole Foods stores in Boise and Utah. They will also be at the Boise Farmers Market.

Falls Brand Pork roducts

Click the image for pork recipes.

Kelley’s Canyon Orchard

1903 River Rd, Filer, ID 83328 Hours: 10am - 6pm, Phone: (208) 543-5330

Malheur River Meats

Matthews Idaho Honey

Matthews All-Natural Meats

Meadowlark Farms

All natural Eggs, Lamb and Chicken

Purple Sage Farms

True Roots Farm

Available at the Boise Farmers Market and online at https://www.trueroots.farm

True Roots is a local produce farm committed to sustainable and chemical-free farming practices. We raise pesticide-free and non-GMO produce fresh from the farm, offering a diverse variety of farm-fresh services to our local community. Since our founding in 2014, our mission has been to provide farm-direct access to clean, reliable, and affordable produce.

Reel Foods Fish Market

1118 Vista Avenue, Boise, ID 83705 (208) 713-8850 Monday-Friday: 10am-6pm, Saturday: 9am-5pm. Sunday: Gone Fishin’

Standard Restaurant Supply

Plenty of items for the home, too. Check them out. 6910 Fairview, Boise 83704 (208) 333-9577

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Some Awesome Recipe and Spice Sources. Culturally diverse.

Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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Crockpot Recipes

Many good recipes here.

A Taste of France

A collection of French recipes

Basque Recipes

Best Ever Recipes of Mexico

Malaysian Recipes

Awesome Malaysian recipes.

Memorie di Angelina Italian Recipes

My Best German Recipes Web Site

Regional and Oktober Fest Recipes

There are a lot of recipes here.

Sauer Kraut Recipes

Recipes By Robin and Bob

Recipes that we have collected and created throughout the years.

Recipes of Elizabeth W. Young, Bob’s Mother

These are the recipes that my Mother collected over 85 or so years. The photo of my Mother was one of the last I have of her. It was taken in July, 1987.

Recipes From The Mediterranean Area

Soup and Chowder Recipes

Recipes from "My Recipes"

Deep South Dish Recipes

The Recipes of Greece

Tasty Mexican Recipes

The Shiksa In The Kitchen

Great Jewish recipes!

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Some Great Boise Restaurants.

Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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Asiago’s – Italian

Bella Aquila, Eagle, ID

775 S Rivershore Ln., Eagle, ID 83616 (208) 938-1900

Bar Gernika – Basque Pub and Eatery

202 S Capitol Blvd, Boise (208) 344-2175 (Checked)

Cottonwood Grille

913 W River St., Boise (208) 333.9800 cg@cottonwoodgrille.com

Enrique’s Mexican Restaurant

482 Main St., Kuna (208) 922-5169 New name. Was El Gallo Giro. Same owners and kitchen. The Best Mexican restaurant in the Boise/Kuna area, bar none!

Flying Pie Pizzaria

Goldy’s Breakfast Bistro

108 S Capitol Blvd., Boise (208) 345-4100

Goldy’s Corner Cafe

625 W Main St., Boise (208) 433-3934

Guanabanas – Island Restaurant and Bar

960 N Highway A1A, Jupiter, FL

Janjou Pâtisserie

Janjou Pâtisserie, 1754 W State St., Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 297.5853

Mai Thai Asian Cuisine

750 West Idaho Street Boise, ID 83702 (208) 344-8424

Mazzah Grill – Mediterranean and Greek Cuisine

1772 W State St., Boise (208) 333-2566

Richards Inn by Chef Richard Langston

Formerly - Vincino's. New location at 500 S Capitol Blvd., Boise (208) 472-1463. Reservations are highly suggested.

The Orchard House

14949 Sunnyslope Rd., Caldwell (208) 459-8200

The Ravenous Pig

1234 N. Orange Ave. Winter Park, FL

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Think Local!! Boise Breweries, Brew Pubs and Wine Bars.
Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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10 Barrel Brewery Boise

830 W Bannock St., Boise (208) 344-5870

Cloud 9 Brewery and Pub

Opening Fall 2013 in the Albertson's Shopping Center, 18th and State in the old Maxi Java

Edge Brewing Company

525 N Steelhead Way, Boise, ID 83704 (208) 323-1116

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Miscellaneous Items
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