Cheetah Stroll at Wildlife Safari

As a gift, F made reservations for us to go to Wildlife Safari in Winston, Oregon (Southern Oregon – not far from Umpqua Valley wine country) to take part in one of their animal experiences, a Cheetah Stroll. After our visit, we then went on various winery visits. I wanted to share this activity as something to do besides or as for us, on addition to winery visits in the area.

The description on the site explains that the Cheetah Stroll animal encounter is the following:

Take a stroll with one of our cheetah ambassadors. These strolls are the closest you will get to these magnificent cats inside the park. They will come within 5 to 6 feet of the animal, close enough to hear them purr and marvel at their lean athletic bodies. The keepers will share their knowledge of these cats during the stroll. This adventure includes one 8 x 10 photo with the cheetah for you to take home.

Price $80 per person (Pech note: sometimes there are Groupons or Living Social Deals – we used one ourselves)

Minimum Age Requirement: 13 years

We made our reservations for our walk to be early in the day – in fact the first walk of the day. This is because we have found that generally animals are active early on when everyone first comes in because it’s a bunch of activity (also not as hot so more likely to not be napping in shade), and then the only other times you can count on are when they get fed and for many animals, at night (many are nocturnal).

The two trainers had our cheetah friend Cayenne on a leash, with each person holding a leash.
On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. The two trainers had our cheetah friend on a leash, with each person holding a leash. We would follow behind a couple yards away On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. The two trainers had our cheetah friend on a leash, with each person holding a leash. We would follow behind a couple yards away

Then, F and I walked behind them a few yards. As we walked, a trainer would sometimes plop a small piece of meat in front of the ambassador cheetah to reward him for his good behavior and probably keep him walking since he wanted to flop down and relax even though it was 9 am.
On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. Our Ambassador Cheetah was a bit tired/lazy and often did a Cheetah flop!

Then, every time he found the piece of meat, he got into this low crouch like this… so it was often a constant up and down because of how he wanted to lie down flat and eat instead of stand and eat.
On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. One of the trainers would sometimes throw out a piece of meat, and each time he would crouch down like this to eat, and then have to get back up to continue the walk. Cheetah crouch as he snacks on some meat

He also would often stop and stare out into the woods, listening – probably for deer the trainers explained, and there was even one time we saw a deer about 30 feet away.
On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. Our Ambassador Cheetah is looking at a deer to the back left in the woods... On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. Our Ambassador Cheetah is looking at a deer to the back left in the woods...

Pretty much all of us got into the habit of everytime he stopped to stare, we would be staring too, to see if we could spot if he was looking at another deer, or bird, or what… What! What’s out there!?
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Our walk occurred along a trail in the woods and because it was early, it was very quiet and peaceful. We just heard the wind through the trees and our cheetah purring, if the trainers were not giving us information (most of the information came early on, and then based on questions we had, they are very knowledgeable). We loved watching him walk as he is very slinky (if you have a cat, you know exactly what this is like – F kept comparing him with his/our own cat Lobo) and the cheetah’s tail was constantly twitching back and forth with curiosity.
On the Cheetah Walk at Wildlife Safari. Our Ambassador Cheetah tail is twitching with curiosity and interest

One of the fun things we learned is how he and his sister are very close, and how when they call to each other they sound like chirps!

In fact, here’s a video of the brother and sister waiting to be reunited- and one of the trainers explaining how they get anxious and jealous when one gets to go out, but how they always take turns (in the video, the ambassador cheetah brother is the one waiting for his sister’s return).

Recently the Wildlife Safari got a friend for a cheetah cub they have (the cheetah’s name is Pancake…) – a Rhodesian Ridgeback puppy named Dayo. So if you and your kids (or just you, no kids) want to see real life unlikely animal friends, consider visiting Wildlife Safari soon to catch the latest ambassador duo in their cubhood/puppyhood. You can find out more about this couple and the very successful cheetah breeding program at Wildlife Safari that they have had since the 1970s at their Web page on cheetahs.

Other photos of some  animal friends at Wildlife Safari Village, which is FREE to visit. The fees are for the animal encounter experiences they offer (for instance feeding giraffes or bathing an elephant) or their main experience, the drive thru Safari (drive in your own car, can drive through twice, there is an area to kennel your dogs as no pets allowed) and the feeding areas (available in the village or an area on the Safari drive).
Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village, like Flamingos Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village, like a silly goat Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village, like this lemur Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village, like this lemur Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village, like this lemur Other animal friends at the Wildlife Safari Village

To finish off this Travel Tuesday post, I’ll show you the other sights we saw on our trip back from Winston up to Roseburg, which is where we were staying for the night in this Umpqua Valley region. As a side note, I love the reds from this area – our visits included Becker Vineyards, Abacela Vineyards and Winery, Girardet Vineyards & Winery, Hillcrest Vineyard, TeSóAria Vineyard & Winery, Glaser Estate Winery and Distillery and Reustle Prayer Rock Vineyards. You can grab an Umpqua Valley wine tour map (or print one out here) to map your path, and if you visit 5 and get stamped, you can wine a little gift and entry to win a prize!

If you don’t have any plans for Memorial Day weekend this weekend, this holiday is always a great time to visit the wineries as many are doing special events in their tasting room (including more food and perhaps live music) and open houses.
Umpqua Valley visit, View of Becker Vineyards Umpqua Valley visit, View of Becker Vineyards Umpqua Valley visit, Abacela Winery was peaceful Abacela Winery, view from the deck of the tasting room Girardet Winery. Excellent tasting room. Hillcrest Winery Tesoaria Winery Reustle - Prayer Rock Vineyards Reustle - Prayer Rock Vineyards

Have you ever visited the Umpqua Valley area that includes Winston and Roseburg? Have you heard of Wildlife Safari and their cheetah ambassador program, or about Pancake? What are your plans for Memorial Day Weekend?

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Dim Sum in the SGV at King Hua Restaurant

As I covered in my other post, since my youngest sister lives in Los Angeles California, I tend to get down there at least once or twice a year. Every visit, there is inevitably a visit to Thai Town and eating Thai food, which I covered a bit in my last post with a look at Isaan Station. The other certainty is that I will get to the San Gabriel Valley, also known as SGV.

Located to the east of the Los Angeles area, Asian immigrants have been settling into this area for more than 150 years. In fact, SGV has the highest concentration of Chinese Americans in the US, and in general SGV is one of the most ethnically diverse regions in the country. There are approximately 2 million people living in the 400 square miles that is the San area.

Besides the Chinese, other ethnic groups who call this area home include Vietnamese-, Korean-, Filipino-, Japanese- (notice all the hyphens) Americans. So yes, a super Asian-American area, but also the home to Armenian-Americans and Native-Americans and a large Latino-American contingent. Latino actually outnumber the Asians and together the Asian and Latino Americans outnumber all others in this area to be the non-white majority. There’s even a SGV For Life brand that celebrates this mix of the life here that is a mix of Latino and Asian American cultures.

The SGV boasts not only many minority ethnicities, but also multiple generations since the original immigration. After all, there are people descended from those have been settling here since the last 1800s and early 1900s, as well as newer settlers from a few decades to just arrived recently.

One of the side benefits of this area is the amazing food here. You can find food that is deep in its roots to its native heritage. Many times the dishes are almost exactly the same as if you have traveled to that country’s roadside restaurants, thanks to the ethnoburbs here that are built in demand and financial support for such food businesses (both in terms of groceries and prepared foods like bakeries and restaurants). People in the SGV are very proud of their strong cultural foundations that persevere outside their historical country.

Roast duck. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles. BBQ Pork. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

At the same time, you can find new perspectives thanks to the large population of ethnic-Americans who take their history and culture along with their 1st and 2nd and 3rd generation American experience and update it to the 20th and now 21st century. Flavors and presentations and service evolve as they continue to pass it on to the next generations with better ingredients and bringing in new techniques and ideas from the culinary world.

An example of this is the intermingling of flavors such as the famous Kogi BBQ, which here in Portland is represented by KOi Fusion. The idea is mixing up burritos and tacos with marinated Korean grilled meats but without sacrificing the original strong and distinctive flavor profiles from which inspiration came from – no “Americanized” food here.

Another example is a newer updated dim sum experience that is emerging. The traditional dim sum has the iconic women and men, usually in little vests and bow ties (I don’t know why…) pushing carts through the dining room. As they arrive at each table, they pause to sell you their items from that cart, letting you peek at what mysteries they may have in their steamer containers and dishes. You get immediate satisfaction of taking that very container onto your lazy susan turntable on your dining table, and with a quick pick of your chopsticks, enjoying it mere minutes after seeing it.

There is no menu during traditional dim sum – just the adventure of ordering based on what you see and maybe a few ingredients that may be shared by the cart’s server.  It may end up being described as simply as “shrimp” or “chicken”… But buyer beware because what is described as “fried taro” turns out to not be vegetarian because it also has the surprise ingredient of pork throughout. Yes, eating dim sum is pretty much a vegetarian nightmare. You wind up accidentally eating meat or one of the few vegetarian options pointed out to you is the dish to the right below- “gluten”.
Taro cake. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles Taro filled sesame balls and Gluten dish (vegetarian). Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

A few stamps or scratches of a pen onto your dim sum card to add those plates (which come in generally small, medium and large sizes and prices for S, M, L and SP -Special) and the carts move on. As you eat your eyes scan for the next cart. It means there may be no order to what you get to eat as it’s up to the whims of the pushcart timing and routes to where you are sitting. Some food may be fresher than others. It also pretty much means you have no idea what the final bill is until the head server comes does the math.
rice noodle rolls (cheong fan. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles Shrimp and pork dumplings, shu mai. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

Newer generations don’t have this patience. I have seen some people get up and hunt down their desired dishes as they walk to carts they see, semi “cutting in” on the route – but also ensuring it doesn’t run out and is still hot and fresh by the time it arrives on our turntable.

Thankfully, some restaurants have updated the traditional dim sum process by offering menus when you are seated so you can also mark off everything and anything you want (taking a cue from filling out sushi and sashimi cards from the Japanese restaurants perhaps). Some of those menus even helpfully have photos to help you recognize items you want, just like when the cart lady lifts the top off a container.
Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

Anything ordered from these menus is then made to order and delivered straight to your table, guaranteeing the desired dim sum dishes. You can imagine this is probably a great cost-savings to the kitchen as well in making things that they know people will definitely eat, rather than having some items get pushed around in carts, getting cold and tossed.

I certainly love the ability to see and get everything and anything among the offerings of they are all listed on a menu. But, I still like the adventure of cart service top, including not knowing what surprises lie under the lid, and I like the personal service of the carts rolling to the table and the cart lady pointing out items that you haven’t had that are new to her cart, or that she thinks you might like.
Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, one of the neighborhoods inside the SGV, was my stop with my family for Saturday lunch during my latest trip. King Hua bridges the divide between the traditional and modern dim sum by offering both of what I described above, so definitely the best of both worlds. Their dim sum menu is also massive, with more than 130 options. They even have six options for your tea to go along with your dim sum.
King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, dim sum menu.

With a mix of 5 of us ordering (my brother, who always over-orders, my new brother-in-law who at least had been to King Hua before, myself, and then 2 vegetarians peering a the menu on their own) and a total of 10 of us at the table, the photos you’ve seen throughout are some but not all the dishes that landed on our table. Several dishes as you can guess we had multiples of, and you can also be sure that there were times I had no idea what I was about to eat. There were familiar dishes that are staples of dim sum, and new dishes that I haven’t seen since being in Asia or just ever.
Roast duck. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

My own favorites in ordering dim sum always include shimp dumplings (har gow), shrimp and pork dumplings (shu mai), rice noodle rolls (cheong fan), steamed spare rib, Shanghai soup dumplings if available, taro or turnip cake if available, wrapped crab claws if available, roast duck, crispy pork, and garlicky stir fried greens like ong choy or bok choy or Chinese Broccoli (Gai Lan) as usually the lone vegetable plate on the table.

As always, dim sum starts slow, usually with a few dishes picked off a cart, as the dishes ordered from the menu eventually begin to arrive. Then more and more of the ordered dishes come, and there are more carts visiting that you may pick some dishes here it there still. Now becomes a bit of a race and spatial puzzle in trying to fit dishes on the turntable and finish some dishes to stack or get the container off the table as you try to courteously spin the lazy Susan turntable to share dishes.

One thing I also really liked about King Hua is that several of the pastries they offered to cut into smaller portions for sharing. This is a great strategy as particularly the buns with that bread can be filling so you want to share so you can get more variety as part of your meal.
Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles. One thing I also really liked about King Hua is that several of the pastries they offered to cut into smaller portions for sharing Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles. One thing I also really liked about King Hua is that several of the pastries they offered to cut into smaller portions for sharing

I liked the touch of putting the soup dumplings in individual containers to make sure there is no sad loss when trying to roll these out of the steamer and accidentally breaking it, and watching that precious delicious soup filling bleed from the dumpling being lost instead of filling your mouth.
Shanghai Soup Dumplings. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles Shanghai Soup Dumplings. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

Another particular favorite was that there were 2 versions of Egg Custard Tarts – a more yellow another orangish one (#67 and 69). Both were great, though I lean towards the King Hua egg custard version.

King Hua egg custard tarts. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles King Hua egg custard tarts. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

A newly discovered favorite is a dim sum item that I’m sure is a special edition to showcase bringing together the old and new: King Hua Baked Chicken Salad buns. Yum. That’s not something you see at a dim sum usually!
King Hua Baked Chicken Salad buns. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles King Hua Baked Chicken Salad buns. Dim sum at King Hua Restaurant in Alhambra, a mixture of push carts and being able to order off the menu for the best of both worlds in dim sum eating adventures in Los Angeles

Overall, a successful dim sum adventure for my family and I at King Hua. If you are in the Los Angeles area, I highly recommend you do a search for some good eats in the San Gabriel Valley and give the area a try: there are so many possibilities, including listings from LA Eater’s guide to the SGV, a list by LA Weekly of restaurants in the San Gabriel Valley, FoodRepublic’s 13 Best Dishes East San Gabriel Valley, Time Out Magazine did a listing based on whether you are looking for breakfast, lunch, or dinner among some of the many resources out there.

Have you been to dim sum? What would you prefer, push cart service or being able to order from a menu list? Are there any particular dim sum favorite dishes you have?

Did you know about the San Gabriel Valley, and have you been in that area of LA?

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Isaan Station in Los Angeles and Advice for ordering from a Thai menu

For today’s Travel Tuesday I am taking you to Los Angeles, California, and sharing you my strong recommendation when in LA to visit Thai Town. Have you heard of Thai Town? Located within central LA and centered generally on Hollywood and Sunset Boulevards and Western Avenue, this area is the only Thai ethnic neighborhood in the US. It’s basically a Thai version of what many metropolitan cities have as a Chinatown. LA is the home to the largest Thai population besides Thailand itself – it seems Thais have been immigrating and living in this other City of Angels (Bangkok, capital of Thailand, also translates to City of Angels) since the 1960s.

Whenever I visit LA and my sister, there is always inevitably a stop in Thai Town. It’s the closest thing to eating food in the same exact flavor profiles of flying 16-17 hours to the other side of the world (or alternatively getting a Thai mom or auntie to make what specific dish she is known for while hearing how you may have gained weight or need to exercise while simultaneously getting unasked for food put on your plate and encouraged to eat more).

A few weeks ago, when I was in LA, that stop in Thai Town for my trip was at Isaan Station. Ok, their location of which is probably technically in the bordering Koreatown, but let’s move on from geography shall we.

Isaan means “Northeast” in Thai, so this Thai restaurant specialize in Northeast Thai cuisine (most Thai restaurants serve Central Region food, with the other popular region being Northern Thai food). Isaan food is less Chinese influenced then Central and Northern Thai food and leans more towards Laos and Cambodia. Sticky rice and being very spicy are particularly recognizable as a common hallmark of Isaan food.

So no surprise when you look at the big laminated menu of Isaan Station and see the words “All Dishes Good With Sticky Rice” and a warning of “Please let us know what style of level of spiciness you prefer” along with “If you have allergies or fear please ask for a list of ingredients”.

Seriously though, be careful how spicy you make the ingredients because they really do make it spicy – what Isaan Station calls medium is the hot spicy level of most Thai restaurants.

When reading a Thai menu, my advice is to first read through and see what items you see that you don’t normally see on other menus. Sure, Isaan Station has Pad Thai and Pad See Eew and Pad Kee Mao and Pad Kra Prao, those common Thai dishes. But, the menu has a whole section called Som Dtum (also commonly seen as Som Tum) that offers 7 versions of this spicy but sweet shredded papaya salad. The additions in the various dishes include salted egg, pickled blue crab, fermented fish- lots of funky fun. That’s a sign.
Som Dum or Som Tum Thai, a green papaya salad with peanuts and dried shrimps, both spicy and slightly sweet from Isaan Station in LA

Isaan Station also has a whole section called Larb Nham Dtok offering 7 kinds beef, pork, and chicken dishes, though most of it is pork. Larb is a spicy minced meat salad (pretty much all meat, despite the salad term which is what the Thai word Larb means). Nham Dtok means waterfall, referring to the the juices running like a waterfall from the meat.

You should also not expect a traditional salad of greens from Isaan Station’s other section Thai Salad (Yum), as these are also all boasting meat or Seafood. Yum here is not am adjective meaning delicious but a Thai word that refers to a type of Thai dish that has lots of lime and chili in so it’s a bit more sour with your spicy food.

Below, Larb Woon Sen of spicy glass noodle with minced pork, red onion, mint leaves, lime, rice powder, cilantro, coriander and green onion. Larb is the minced pork meat, and Woon Sen is the glass noodles. So good!
Larb Woon Sen at Isaan Station in LA, a dish of spicy glass noodle with minced pork, red onion, mint leaves, lime, rice powder, cilantro, coriander and green onion

An unexpected surprise at Isaan Station is that they also serve Thai Street Food. I’m always drawn to this section of a menu if I see it in any Thai restaurant. Here at Isaan Station this refers to a lot of charcoal and deep fried meat dishes you can find in the Grilled and Deep Fried section of their menu – you probably have not seen some of these dishes before listed. On Thailand these were grilled on the street, enticing you from many blocks away like those aroma hands that tickle your nose and float you towards them, like in Looney Toon cartoons. I was most thrilled about the Kohr Moo Yang, a charcoal grilled pork neck (we also had  the Crying Tiger charcoal grilled beef and the Khai Yang Ob Oong charcoal grilled tumeric marinated chicken).
Kohr Moo Yang, Charcoal grilled pork neck. From Isaan Station in LA Crying Tiger, Charcoal grilled beef tenderloin from Isaan Station in LA Khai Yang Ob Oong, a charcoal grilled tumeric marinated chicken at Isaan Station in LA

But we were all taken aback at the table by how delicious the Mhu Daad Diew, a marinated pork sirlion that is first air dried (almost like jerky in chewiness) and then deep fried to crispiness. We ended up ordering and finishing 2 dishes of it, no problem. Definitely must order again and again.
Nua Daahd Diew, a marinated sirloin dish air dried and deep fried from Isaan Station

When ordering the Khao Niew sticky rice accompaniment, you generally want 1 basket for every 1-2 person, depending on how much rice each person is planning to eat. The rice is going to usually come in a little steamer basket as shown below (behind the Sai Grok Isaan, a homemade sausage of fermented pork and glutinous rice – the sausage is not something I would order again as other dishes had more flavor). When you open the little basket, you’ll find all the sticky rice balled in a little plastic bag that you then squeeze out the portion of rice you want onto your plate.

I like eating sticky rice with my hands where almost like a combination of sushi, I smush the grilled meat of my choice with the morsel of sticky rice in my fingers and eat them together. Another option is to eat a forkful of meat, in your fingers with the rolled morsel of sticky rice dip it into the chili sauce the shared plate, and then pop that in after chewing the meat.
Sai Grok Isaan, deep fried sausages of fermented pork and glutinous rice eaten with a basket of sticky rice (behind) at Isaan Station in LA

For fun, consider the sweet Honey Toast dessert. You have to order it ahead of time as it takes 30 minutes to prepare in the kitchen, but it’s a mix of doughy softness inside the toast with crispness and sugar and honey along with cold ice cream (your choice of vanilla and or chocolate – we went with all vanilla). This is enough for 4 people.
Honey Toast dessert from Isaan Station in LA Honey Toast dessert from Isaan Station in LA

Isaan Station is unfortunately Cash Only – there is an ATM outside to use if you need it. There is a very small parking lot since they are in a strip mall, but that lot can get full (and it’s only valet in that lot, not self parking, but it’s free) so you might have to do street parking. They have dine in, take out, online ordering off their website and free delivery within a 2 mile radius.

One last tip: follow the crowds or particularly in LA Thai Town or any of its great ethnic neighborhoods what restaurants have people waiting and parking is full as that’s also usually a sign. Go where the locals are lining up!

Have you ever had any of these dishes or been to Thai Town in LA? What is generally the go to Thai dish you like to order, or the Thai dish you sometimes crave?

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Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe in Astoria

Are you traveling to the Oregon Coast? Going to or passing through Astoria?

Let me share one of my favorite places in Astoria: the Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe. If the parking lot for Pig ‘N Pancake is full and there is a line out the door, consider going down just 5 minutes further to this gem. You can gaze at all the goodness of the menu on the chalkboards and the baked goodies lined up like treasures in the L shaped case as you approach the register, where you will order, pay, and get a number to get your food and drinks delivered and then bus your own table. Here’s what we had on our Saturday morning visit (same morning as the Fort George Festival of the Dark Arts, but that’s a future post).

exterior of Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe in Astoria Some of the baked goods you can ogle as you approach the register of Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe to order

Yes, the banners do say Pastries to Die For and Bread to Live For. We had 3 different pastries while we were there in Astoria for Valentine’s Day weekend/FODA and they were all moist, flavorful, and could easily use the adjective “to live for”. Let’s take a look at what’s behind the case. Is that a Savory Croissant that includes pesto, caramelized onions, cheddar cheese, asiago cheese, and egg? Did that not even last 24 hours in my possession? Yes.
Some of the baked goods you can ogle as you approach the register of Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe to order Some of the baked goods you can ogle as you approach the register of Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe to order. Including a Savory Croissant that includes pesto, caramelized onions, cheddar cheese, asiago cheese, and egg

What, Cubes of Deliciousness (gluten-free, it uses tapioca starch and potato starch, but contains hazelnuts)? F and I agreed after devouring one that the name is completely correct. And holy moly look at the size of the scones and rolls (ranging from mini  to regular size Cinnamon Walnut to Cardamon Almond) and Almond Bear Claws…
Some of the baked goods you can ogle as you approach the register of Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe to order. Including these gluten free Cubes of Deliciousness

Don’t worry, they have plenty of beverages for you to enjoy with your food, including various caffeines from $2-6 or smoothies, various lemonades and ice tea, kombucha, even beer or wine by the glass. Seating includes tables as well as a children’s play area with little couches and toys, and also some seats at a counter by the window to gaze out at the sea just a couple blocks downhill.
All the beverages at the cheery and homey Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe are written on the chalkboard above the register Interior of Blue Scorcher Cafe

Our breakfast included Almond Milk Mocha, fresh rosemary lemonade, and OMG this super moist merely $3 Chocolate Chip Applesauce Cake, SO good. So DELICIOUS.
Almond Milk Mocha in all it's beauty at Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe in Astoria, Oregon This super moist chocolate cake made with apple sauce at Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe in Astoria, OR. SO good. So DELICIOUS. This super moist chocolate cake made with apple sauce at Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe in Astoria, OR. SO good. So DELICIOUS.

And oh, just this lil plate of French toast with brioche, homemade whipped cream, and local boysenberry and a dusting of powdered sugar served with maple syrup.
Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe, French toast with brioche, homemade whipped cream, and local boysenberry and a dusting of powdered sugar served with maple syrup Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe, French toast with brioche, homemade whipped cream, and local boysenberry and a dusting of powdered sugar served with maple syrup Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe, French toast with brioche, homemade whipped cream, and local boysenberry and a dusting of powdered sugar served with maple syrup

We’ve only been to Astoria twice, but both times we stopped at Blue Scorcher Bakery Cafe, and I’m pretty sure every future trip, we will also be stopping in. Blue Scorcher is open every day, 7 AM – 3 PM. To give you fair warning, this is a worker owned co-op so the people who serve you may vary on the knowledge of what’s in any of the food item if they were not involved in making it.

Everything here is sourced to be organic and mostly local. Everything is also vegetarian, so even on their pizza of the day or reuben, there will be no meat (the reuben is made of tempeh). If you are looking for big portions at a good value, you should go back to wait in line at Pig ‘N Pancake. It is a cafe so it might be hard to accommodate big groups, and there are times, just like any cafe, that you may be sitting at a 4-top and share the space communally (it’s seat yourself).

If you are in Astoria, definitely consider stopping in!

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Drinking from a Skull at Rx Boiler Room, Las Vegas

Sadly, this post ends my Las Vegas travel post series from my last trip to Las Vegas. I sure did do a lot in my long weekend visit, and I would love to return to eat and drink and see more! But, time was limited, and so I will just have to put the rest on my Las Vegas wishlist for the future.

There is one more highlight I wanted to share before I’m done. I had mentioned previously we were staying by Mandalay Bay, and so very conveniently located to us was a restaurant which really looked different from anything else I had seen on the strip. This was Rx Boiler Room, a concept by celebrity chef Rick Moonen that combines the alchemy of food and drink and classic food meets creative science.

Part of the biggest draw for us to go to Rx Boiler Room is that the space is all Steampunk inspired. Steampunk, if you are not familiar, is a sub-genre of science fiction and fantasy combined where rather than computer chips, steam and gears and electricity are the main power behind technology. The aesthetic is a combination of the Wild West and Victorian Age, of both industrial art and functionality rolled into one.

I am utterly shocked there is a not a steampunk restaurant in Portland honestly, since I know PDX does have its steampunk stores, steampunk festivals and balls and conventions, and steampunk social groups. That has left my only experience to be movies like what is hinted with the devices in the recent Sherlock Holmes with Robert Downey Junior,  and Will Smith’s Wild Wild West movie (the latter was playing on one of the TVs inside Rx Boiler Room during my visit), Full Metal Alchemist anime, and two of my favorite videogames, Final Fantasy 6 & 7 and Bioshock series. I feel the geek in me peeking out here.

Well, Vegas let me venture into that steampunk world at least for a little bit in real life. Here’s a look at the atmosphere. The last two shots share the alchemist circle on the floor as you walk into the restaurant, and some of the chalk drawings on that same ceiling.
Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas - on the floor as you enter Rx Boiler Room, a steampunk restaurant in Las Vegas - on the celing as you enter

After oohing and ahhing over the details of the decor, it was time to eat and drink. The eats are on a normal printed menu, but all the beverages are on a tablet.

For appetizers, we started off with a Rx Guacamole with Big Ass Chips, Chicken pot pie nuggets with natural jus with peas and carrots, and my favorite, the Bacon wrapped Bacon and Egg with brioche toast, tomato jam, and sunny side up quail egg.
Chicken pot pie nuggets with natural jus with peas and carrots at the Rx Boiler Room Chicken pot pie nuggets with natural jus with peas and carrots at the Rx Boiler Room Rx Guacamole with Big Ass Chips at Rx Boiler Room in Las Vegas Rx Boiler Room in Las Vegas, Bacon wrapped Bacon and Egg with brioche toast, tomato jam, and sunny side up quail egg

For a main, the standout was the Inside out French Onion Grilled Cheese. The Mac and Cheese x 5 with pinwheel pasta and blue, parmesan, brie, cheddar and blanc cheese was decent but I didn’t think anything special, and for me the Smoked salmon under glass with sea beans, bagel chips, and chive cream cheese was too salty in terms of how many sea beans they put in the dish, though the presentation was cool with them lifting a glass cover to let out the smoke.
Inside out French Onion Grilled Cheese from the Rx Boiler Room

 

The best best part? The drinks. For instance, you can’t beat the presentation of this Smoked Whiskey and Coke which pours out of a crystal skull with George Dickel Tennessee Whiskey, housemade cola syrup, bittercube cherrybark vanilla bitters, Fever Tree soda water and smoked cherrywood chips. The skull makes enough drinks for 2 – which you can share or just have 2 drinks, heh.

In terms of flavor though, the winner at our visit was the Poire Drakkar with Hennesy Black, Pimms #1 liqueur, curry-pear shrub, honey shrup, lemon juice, baked apple bitters, black walnut bitters, and black pepper. This savory drink with its complex layers of flavor was very unusual to give that curry flavor in the background with the sip. For something more refreshing rather than savory, try the Strawberry Switchblade with Belvedere Vodka, lemon/lime juice, strawberries, cucumber medallions, mint, goji berries, benedictine, bitermens, burlesque bitters, thyme syrup
Libation from the Rx Boiler Room of the Smoked Whiskey and Coke which comes in a crystal skull with George Dickel Tennessee Whiskey, housemade cola syrup, bittercube cherrybark vanilla bitters, Fever Tree soda water and smoked cherrywood chips Rx Boiler room libation of Poire Drakkar with Hennesy Black, Pimms #1 liqueur, curry-pear shrub, honey shrup, lemon juice, baked apple bitters, black walnut bitters, and black pepper. Fave drink with its complex layers of flavor of the night Rx Boiler room libation of Strawberry Switchblade with Belvedere Vodka, lemon/lime juice, strawberries, cucumber medallions, mint, goji berries, benedictine, bitermens, burlesque bitters, thyme syrup

Do you know anything about Steampunk, what do you think of the decor and the interesting take on food and drink here at Rx Boiler Room?

My Guide to the Free and the Food on the Las Vegas Strip

  • Las Vegas Hotels at the South End of Strip: Mandalay Bay, Delano, Luxor, Excalibur, New York New York, and MGM Grand and what each offers in terms of feel
  • A look at some of the breakfast options at Della’s Kitchen in the Delano, including juice, Doughssant, bacon cheddar biscuits, and Pecan Raisin French Toast
  • Take a little trip to Europe with the offerings and recommendations for free stops in the Middle of the Las Vegas Strip like Paris, Caesar’s, and the Bellagio properties. Did I mention they are all free, and include the World’s Largest Chocolate Fountain?
  • Photos recapping my lunch at Giada Las Vegas inside the Cromwell, including the G signature cocktail, flatbread with pesto, burrata, grilled cheese, gelato
  • Art Walking Tour at The Shops at Crystals and Aria, Las Vegas, including Gallery Row with Richard MacDonald and Dale Chihuly to the various art in Crystals and Aria
  • The garnishes of the Bloody Marys at Todd English PUB in Las Vegas are outrageous, ranging from bacon, onions rings, sliders and corn dogs to chicken wing
  • My tour of The Wynn in Las Vegas, including details on The Lake of Dreams, Parasol Down, the Conservatory, Jeff Koons sculptures, and Le Reve The Dream show
  • Lunch at Beijing Noodle No 9, Caesar’s Las Vegas of Shanghai Wave cocktail, Sichuan Dan Dan Mein Spring Noodles, Shanghai Soup Dumplings, and Lamb Pancakes
  • A Steampunk restaurant of Rx Boiler Room by Mandalay Bay brings an opportunity for a cocktail from a crystal skull
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