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Category Archives: Thought For The Day

Rudy’s – Food Trivia

10 Monday May 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Anthropology of Food, Food, Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ Leave a comment



I just love these little quips of trivia. Some of them are so unique. Enjoy!

This Week in the History of Food & Drink

May 10, 1850: Sir Thomas Johnston Lipton, grocer and tea merchant, was born.
May 11: National Mocha Torte Day
May 12, 1777: According to the International Dairy Foods Association, the first ice cream advertisement appeared in the New York Gazette on this date.
May 13, 1993: The Red Hot Chili Peppers play on the Simpsons TV show.
May 14, 1853: Gail Borden applied for a patent for condensed milk.
May 15, 1989: Hershey’s reduces the size of the Hershey bar to 1.55 ounces. The price remains 40 cents.
May 16: St. Honoratus’ Day. Patron saint of bakers, pastry chefs, confectioners, flour merchants.

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Mother’s Day

08 Saturday May 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Mother's Day, Party Time, Thought For The Day

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Happy Mother’s Day!

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We Are A Recipiant of a Blog Award From Foodista!

04 Tuesday May 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Awards, Thought For The Day

≈ 1 Comment


I received this from Melissa Peterman of Foodista today. See the award in the sidebar! All I can say is,”Wow!” We are honored and humbled!

Hello Bob!

We’ve selected Boise Foodie Guild as our Foodista Food Blog of the Day for this Wednesday, May 5th! Your blog post on Barbacoa Beef Cheek Tacos will be featured on the Foodista homepage for 24 hours. We’ve been following your blog and we are thrilled to post it on Foodista. Besides posting your blog on the homepage, we will also be posting shout-outs on our Facebook and Twitter pages.

Since you are now a part of the Foodista Featured Blogger of The Day Community, we’ve created a special badge for you to display proudly on your blog sidebar.

We are really enjoying your blog and look forward to seeing your recipes, tips and techniques on Foodista!

Cheers!

Melissa

—
Melissa Peterman
melissa@foodista.com
Editor and Community Developer
http://www.foodista.com
http://twitter.com/foodista
http://www.facebook.com/Foodista
Foodista- The Cooking Encyclopedia everyone can edit!

The posting and recipe that Ms Peterman is refering to was posted Tuesday, April 27, 2010 and titled Cinco de Mayo – Barbacoa Beef Cheeks Tacos. Besure to follow us on Facebook, too, in the group we have developed, Here’s What’s Cookin! Join in on the group. Cheers!

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A Brief History of Grilling

29 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Interesting Information, Smoking and Grilling, Thought For The Day

≈ Leave a comment


Really ….. Summer and the ritual of firing up the backyard grill is almost here ….. Almost! Here is an interesting article on the history of grilling, according to the Foodnetwork. At the end of the article are some recipes for some BBQ sauce.

The history of grilling begins shortly after the domestication of fire, some 500,000 years ago. The backyard ritual of grilling as we know it, though, is much more recent. Until well into the 1940s, grilling mostly happened at campsites and picnics. After World War II, as the middle class began to move to the suburbs, backyard grilling caught on, becoming all the rage by the 1950s.

In suburban Chicago, George Stephen, a metalworker by trade and a tinkerer by habit, had grown frustrated with the flat, open brazier-style grills common at the time. Once he inherited controlling interest in the Weber Bros. Metal Spinning Co, a company best-known as a maker of harbor buoys, he decided the buoy needed some modification. He cut it along its equator, added a grate, used the top as a lid and cut vents for controlling temperature. The Weber grill was born and backyard cooking has never been the same.

If man has been grilling since the Stone Age, he had to wait a good long time before he got his first taste of ‘barbecue.’ Just how long is a matter of debate, but the word’s etymology has been traced via the Spanish (‘barbacoa’) to a similar word used by the Arawak people of the Caribbean to denote a wooden structure on which they roasted meat. (The Arawak’s other contribution to the English language is the word ‘cannibal’.) Only the sense of a wooden framework survived the word’s transition to English; the context was lost. So, in the 17th century, you might use a ‘barbecue’ as shelving, or you might sleep on a ‘barbecue’ — but you definitely weren’t cooking with one.

Like so many of the most recognizably “American” of foods and foodways — hot dogs, Thanksgiving dinners, even milk on breakfast cereals — barbecue goes back to 18th-century colonial America, specifically the settlements along the Southeastern seaboard. The direct descendant of that original American barbecue is Eastern Carolina-style pit barbecue, which traditionally starts with the whole hog and, after as many as fourteen hours over coals, culminates in a glorious mess of pulled pork doused with vinegar sauce and eaten on a hamburger bun, with coleslaw on the side.

As the settlers spread westward, regional variations developed, leaving us today with four distinct styles of barbecue.

Carolina-style has split into Eastern, Western and South Carolina-style, with variations largely in the sauce: South Carolina uses a mustard sauce; Western Carolina uses a sweeter vinegar-and-tomato sauce.

Memphis barbecue is probably what most of us think of when we think of BBQ — pork ribs with a sticky sweet-and-sour tomato-based mopping sauce.

Texas, being cattle country, has always opted for beef, usually brisket, dry-rubbed and smoked over mesquite with a tomato-based sauce served on the side, almost as an afterthought.

Kansas City lies at the crossroads of BBQ nation. Fittingly you’ll find a little bit of everything there — beef and pork, ribs and shoulder, etc. What brings it all together is the sauce: sweet-hot, tomato-based KC barbecue sauce is a classic in its own right, and the model for most supermarket BBQ sauces.

——————————

And to go with that grilled beef or pork or chicken, you will need a BBQ sauce. I am partial to Kansas City Style sauces. Here are some suggestions. Cheers!

Kansas City Barbecue Sauce II
________________________________________
• 1 c Ketchup
• 1 T Worcestershire sauce
• 1 c Molasses
• ¼ c Onion, chopped
• 2 T Brown sugar
• 1 T Garlic powder
• 1 t Black pepper, fresh ground
• ¼ t Cayenne pepper, or to taste
• 2 T Lemon juice
• 1 (8.0 ounce) can Tomato sauce
• ¼ c Jack Daniels
• 2 t Salt
Blend all ingredients in a saucepan, bring to simmer for about an hour, stir occasionally.
________________________________________

Remus’ Kansas City Classic Sauce
________________________________________
Recipe Adapted From : Remus Powers, Originator of the Diddy-Wa-Diddy Sauce contest
• 1 c Ketchup
• ⅓ c Dark molasses
• ¼ c White Wine Vinegar
• ½ t Hot pepper sauce
• ¼ t Allspice
• ¼ t Cinnamon
• ¼ t Mace
• ½ t Curry powder, oriental
• ½ t Chili powder
• ½ t Paprika
Place all of the dry ingredients into a bowl. Add vinegar and stir. Add remaining ingredients and stir until mixture is thoroughly blended. This sauce may be served room temperature or heated.

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Food Trivia From "Rudy’s"

26 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ Leave a comment



Once again, we have some very interesting Food Trivia from Rudy’s in Twin Falls, Idaho. Enjoy!

This Week in the History of Food and Drink

April 26: National Pretzel Day

April 27, 1995: On ‘Seinfeld’ Kramer began sculpting with pasta.

April 28, 1944: Alice Waters was born. Executive Chef and Owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant, opened in 1971 in Berkeley, California. Waters is largely credited with the birth of farm to table movement.

April 29: National Shrimp Scampi Day

April 30, 1952: Mr. Potato Head is introduced to the world. Mr. Potato Head is the also the first toy to be advertised on television.

May 1: May Day! Also, in 1971, ‘Brown Sugar’ by the Rolling Stones is released.

May 2: National Truffles Day

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Mother’s Day Dinner At "Seasons Bistro"

22 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Celebrations, Party Time, Restaurants, Seasons Bistro, Things To Do, Thought For The Day

≈ Leave a comment


And just so You don’t forget, “The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world!” Mother’s Day is coming up, Sunday May 9, and here is a wonderful way to celebrate!

Greetings!
Join us
Sunday, May 9th
Mother’s Day Brunch Buffet

1117 E Winding Creek Dr. – Eagle, Idaho 83616
939-6680

The Buffet –

Stuffed French Toast

Apple-Sour Cream Coffee Cake

Soft Scrambled Eggs

Bacon, Sausage, Fruit

Caramel Apple or Berry filled Crepes

Smoked Salmon with mini Bagels

Cake Truffles and Chocolate Dipped Strawberries

Swedish Poached Ham with Dijon Mustard and Breadcrumbs
with
Scalloped Potatoes
Chilled Asparagus Salad with grated Egg and Vinaigrette
Artisan Bread

Mimosas
$25.99 per person
$9.99 – Kids 9 and under
10-am-2pm – reservations requested

Blaze and Kelly will be on the Patio

Sincerely,

Rachel Hurn
Seasons Bistro, Wine Bar & Catering
939-6680

Mother’s Day Salad

Ingredients:
2 Tbl. raspberry vinegar
2 1/2 Tbl.raspberry jam
1/3 cup vegetable oil
8 cups spinach, rinsed and torn into bite size pieces
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
8 strawberries, quartered
2 kiwis, peeled and sliced

Directions:
1. Mix together raspberry vinegar, raspberry jam, and vegetable oil in a small container.
2. Combine spinach, nuts, strawberries, and kiwi in a salad bowl. Toss with raspberry dressing.
You may add chicken, toasted pecans or chevre if you would like. ENJOY! You deserve it!

———-

Enjoy this outing. It certainly looks delightful. And thanks for the recipe, Rachael. Cheers!

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"Rudy’s – A Cooks Paradise" Food Trivia

06 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Anthropology of Food, Food, Food Trivia, Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ Leave a comment


By now, I suppose that you anxiously await each month the Food Trivia from Rudy’s – A Cooks Paradise in Twin Falls. This is an interesting month, because it includes an ancient delight – Twinkies!! Some of these trivia points of interest are amazing. I don’t know who keeps these “records”, but it would be interesting to see their library. Oh! There will be a surprise at the end of the trivia list. Cheers!

This Week in the History of Food & Drink

April 5, 1774: The Sugar Act passed in Britain, placing new restrictions on the import of molasses to America.

April 6, 1930: Twinkies go on sale for the first time. I wonder how they tasted back in 1930, before they had ingredients like this. The BBC article calls the ingredient list a “veritable who’s who of the chemical world”. Instead, why not try the Homemade Twinkie recipe below!

April 7, 1948: The World Health Organization was established.

April 8: St. Walter of Pontnoise’s Day, patron of vintners.

April 9, 1850: William Prout died. An English chemist, he was the first to classify food components into 3 main divisions – carbohydrates, fats and proteins.

April 10, 1633: Bananas were supposedly displayed in the shop window of merchant Thomas Johnson. This was the first time the banana had ever been seen in Great Britain. It would be more than 200 years before they were regularly imported.
In 1999 remains of a banana were found at a Tudor archaeological site on the banks of the Thames River. This would seem to date it 150 years earlier than Thomas Johnson’s banana. A classic food mystery!

——————————

And as promised, a “treat surprise”! Thanks to Rudy’s for the recipe and the photo.

Homemade Twinkies

Ingredients:
1 Cup Cake Flour
¾ Cup Sugar
1 Tsp Baking Powder
3 Eggs
¼ Cup Milk

Directions:
Whisk together the dry ingredients. Add eggs and continue to whisk to combine (or use a hand or stand mixer). Add half the milk. If the batter is too thick, gradually add the rest of the milk until the batter is thick, but easily pourable. Divide batter into nine mini loaf pans.Bake in a preheated 350°F oven for 15-20 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool for about 10 minutes and invert onto wire cooling racks. Cool completely.

To add filling (recipe follows), fill half a pastry bag & tip with the filling. Poke each loaf three times, squeezing out icing while pulling up and out. Stop pressure prior to pulling the tip out completely. If the cream overflows a little, use a butter knife/spatula to carefully scrape off.

For the Filling

Ingredients:
½ Cup Unsalted Butter, Softened
1 Cup Confectioners Sugar
2 Cups Marshmallow Cream Such As Marshmallow Fluff
1 Teaspoon Vanilla
2-3 Tbsp. Milk

Directions:
Beat together all the ingredients in a bowl with electric mixer at medium speed until smooth, about 3 minutes.

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Salt – How Much Is Too Much?

31 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cooking Styles, Food, Food Prep, Interesting Information, Salt, Spice Blends, Thought For The Day

≈ Leave a comment


So after I posted the article the other day, Robin asked if I was going to post an article on the side effects of salt. So after looking around, here is an excerpted article from the Mayo Clinic on salt. You can read the entire article by Clicking Here

Sodium: Are you getting too much?

Find out how much sodium you really need, what high-sodium foods to avoid, and ways to prepare and serve foods without adding salt or sodium.
By Mayo Clinic staff

Sodium: Essential in small amounts
Your body needs some sodium to function properly.

Sodium:
■Helps maintain the right balance of fluids in your body
■Helps transmit nerve impulses
■Influences the contraction and relaxation of muscles
Your kidneys regulate the amount of sodium kept in your body. When sodium levels are low, your kidneys conserve sodium. When levels are high, they excrete the excess amount in urine.

How much sodium do you need?
Various organizations, including the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine, have published recommendations on daily sodium limits. Most recommend not exceeding the range of 1,500 and 2,400 milligrams (mg) a day for healthy adults. Keep in mind that the lower your sodium, the more beneficial effect on blood pressure.

If you are older than 50, are black or have a health condition such as high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease or diabetes, you may be more sensitive to the blood pressure raising effects of sodium. As a result, aim for a sodium limit at the low end of the range recommended for healthy adults. Talk to your doctor about the sodium limit that’s best for you.

Three main sources of sodium
The average U.S. diet has three main sources of sodium:

■Processed and prepared foods. Most sodium in a person’s diet comes from eating processed and prepared foods, such as canned vegetables, soups, luncheon meats and frozen foods. Food manufacturers use salt or other sodium-containing compounds to preserve food and to improve the taste and texture of food.

■Sodium-containing condiments. One teaspoon (5 milliliters) of table salt has 2,325 mg of sodium, and 1 tablespoon (15 milliliters) of soy sauce has about 900 to 1,000 mg of sodium. Adding these or other sodium-laden condiments to your meals — either while cooking or at the table — raises the sodium count of food.

■Natural sources of sodium. Sodium naturally occurs in some foods, such as meat, poultry, dairy products and vegetables. For example, 1 cup (237 milliliters) of low-fat milk has about 107 mg of sodium.

Be a savvy shopper: Find the sodium
Taste alone may not tell you which foods are high in sodium. For example, you may not think a bagel tastes salty, but a 4-inch (10-centimeter) oat-bran bagel has 451 mg of sodium.

So how do you identify foods high in sodium? The best way to determine sodium content is to read food labels. The Nutrition Facts label tells you how much sodium is in each serving. It also lists whether salt or sodium-containing compounds are ingredients. Examples of these compounds include:

■Monosodium glutamate (MSG)
■Baking soda
■Baking powder
■Disodium phosphate
■Sodium alginate
■Sodium nitrate or nitrite

How to cut sodium
You may or may not be particularly sensitive to the effects of sodium. And because there’s no way to know who might develop high blood pressure as a result of a high-sodium diet, choose and prepare foods with less sodium.

You can cut sodium several ways:

■Eat more fresh foods and fewer processed foods. Most fresh fruits and vegetables are naturally low in sodium. Also, fresh meat is lower in sodium than luncheon meat, bacon, hot dogs, sausage and ham are. Buy fresh and frozen poultry or meat that hasn’t been injected with a sodium-containing solution. Look on the label or ask your butcher.

■Opt for low-sodium products. If you do buy processed foods, select those that have reduced sodium.

■Remove salt from recipes whenever possible. You can leave out the salt in many recipes, including casseroles, stews and other main dishes. Baked goods are an exception. Leaving out the salt could affect the quality as well as the taste of the food.

■Limit your use of sodium-laden condiments. Salad dressings, sauces, dips, ketchup, mustard and relish all contain sodium.

■Use herbs, spices and other flavorings to enhance foods. Learn how to use fresh or dried herbs, spices, zest from citrus fruit, and fruit juices to jazz up your meals.

■Use salt substitutes wisely. Some salt substitutes or light salts contain a mixture of table salt (sodium chloride) and other compounds. To achieve that familiar salty taste, you may use too much of the substitute and actually not use less sodium. In addition, many salt substitutes contain potassium chloride. Though dietary potassium can lessen some of the harm of excess sodium, too much supplemental potassium can be harmful if you have kidney problems or if you’re taking medications for congestive heart failure or high blood pressure that cause potassium retention.

Your taste for salt is acquired, so it’s reversible. To unlearn this salty savoring, decrease your use of salt gradually and your taste buds will adjust. Most people find that after a few weeks of cutting salt, they no longer miss it. Start by using no more than 1/4 teaspoon (1 milliliter) of added salt daily, and then gradually reduce to no salt add-ons. As you use less salt, your preference for it lessens, allowing you to enjoy the taste of food itself.

So there you have some information on the consumption of salt. Don’t get me wrong, I am not advocating eliminating salt in your cooking – just be aware of the consequences of salt and try to keep your intake to 1500mg a day. As the article suggests, use more herbs and spices and stay away from processed foods. Make your own. That’s why they made kitchens!! Cheers.

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"Rudy’s – A Cooks Paradise" Food Trivia

29 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food Trivia, Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ Leave a comment



Here it is …. another week and time to post Rudy’s – A cooks Paradise Food trivia. Do enjoy these words of wisdom and visit Rudy’s online or in person. Cheers!

This Week in the History of Food & Drink

March 29: National Lemon Chiffon Cake Day

March 30, 1868: The Pullman Palace Car Company introduced the first railroad dining car. (Happy 25th Anniversary to my favorite chef of all time.)

March 31, 1989: Chefs from Japanese restaurants in New York have finally persuaded the FDA to allow them to import and serve fogu. The first shipment of Japanese blowfish (tora fugu) arrived today. The chefs had to attend special classes to protect their customers from poisoning.

April 1: Trout season begins in Iceland. Oh, and it’s April Fools Day, among other things!

April 2: Emile Zola was born. French writer and critic who was also known as a gourmand. His detailed descriptions of simple meals, banquets and eating in his novels are among the best to be found anywhere. He was also known for his own luxury dinner parties. “What will be the death of me are bouillabaisses, food spiced with pimiento, shellfish, and a load of exquisite rubbish which I eat in disproportionate quantities.”

April 3: National Chocolate Mousse Day

There you have this weeks food trivia. Enjoy!

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Rudy’s Food Trivia

09 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food Trivia, Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ 1 Comment


Many thanks to Rudy’s – Cooks Paradise in Twin Falls for sending the food trivia. Lots of fun!

This Week in the History of Food and Drink

March 8: National Farmer’s Day

March 9, 1839: The Great Pastry War ended this day. A conflict began on November 30, 1838, between Mexico and France caused by a French pastry cook who claimed that some Mexican Army soldiers had damaged his restaurant. The Mexican government refused to pay for damages. Several other countries had asked the Mexican government for similar claims in the past due to civil unrest in Mexico, without any resolution. France decided to do something about it, and sent a fleet to Veracruz and fired on the fortress outside the harbor. They occupied the city on April 16, 1838, and through the mediation of Great Britain were promised payment of 600,000 pesos for the damages. They withdrew on March 9, 1839.

March 10, 1867: Lillian D. Wald was born. She was a scientist and nurse, and among her activities, she helped initiate the enactment of pure food laws in the U.S

March 11, 1853: Self rising flour was invented by Henry Jones.

March 12, 1894: Coca Cola was first bottled by Joseph A. Biedenham of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Before that it was only mixed to order at the soda fountain. On the same date in 1929: Asa Griggs Candler died. In 1887, Asa Candler, a wholesale druggist, purchased the formula for Coca-Cola from John S. Pemberton, an Atlanta pharmacist, for $2,300. He sold the company in 1919 for $25 million.

March 13, 1764: Charles Grey, 2nd Earl and British Prime Minister was born. He reputedly received a gift, probably a diplomatic perquisite, of tea flavored with bergamot oil, taken from bergamot, a citrus fruit typical of Southeast Asia, now grown commercially in Italy. The tea has since been called ‘Earl Grey Tea’.

March 14: ‘Tequilla’ by The Champs is # 1 on the music charts.

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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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