Archive for the ‘Shoestring Austin News’ Category

Barton Creek Farmers Market: GO TEXAN “Market to Menu” event


2010
05.27

TGI-friggin-F, peeps. I normally wouldn’t use this expression, but I’ve been working non-stop for over 7 days, and yo! I need a BRIZZEAK!

Luckily, it’s a big-ol’ 3-day weekend for us working stiffs, and I plan on spending at least part of mine hitting up the Barton Creek Farmers Market (formerly the Sunset Valley Farmers Market) for their annual GO TEXAN “Market to Menu” event.

Just try to tell me you've seen anything THIS good-looking at your local grocer! (photo by Flickr user Bonita Sarita)

As if you needed an excuse to buy organic (you don’t, do you? if so, you may want to check out Food Inc., and particularly their “Get Involved” section), farmers markets are a great way to get to know your farmers in person and buy real food straight from the source. Starting bright and early at 9 AM (rain or shine!) on Saturday, May 29, the Barton Creek event will be featuring the food magic of Beets Café chefs, as well as a wide variety of local vendors, including:

  • Way Back When Dairy—fresh springtime butter plus non-homogenized, low temp pasturized milk, cream, buttermilk and yogurt
  • Rocking B Ranch—chuck steak, ground beef and beef ribs on special for Memorial Day cookouts
  • Smith & Smith—lamb and fresh chickens
  • Lenny and his Hot Rock’n Kettle Corn
  • Full Quiver—fresh and aged cheeses, grass fed pork and beef, and cultured products high in probiotics like sauerkraut, kimchi, salsa, ginger carrot, pickled beets and beet kvass
  • Gundermann Farms—peaches, herbs, a small amount of tomatoes and much more
  • Acadian Family Farm—field-grown cucumbers (come early!), green beans, fresh 1015 onion bunches, yellow and zucchini squash, french carrots, beets, radishes and swiss chard
  • Fruitful Hill Farm—summer squash, cherry tomatoes, white salad turnips, onions, garlic, beets, radishes, basil and eggs
  • It’s About Thyme—antique roses, tomato and pepper plants, potted culinary herbs, spearmint (mojito) baskets and sweet basil
  • Star Market—strawberries, new potatoes, squash, onions, cucumbers, fresh garlic, green beans, kohlrabi, turnips, beets, collards, blackberries and peaches
  • Caskey Orchards—peaches, apricots and blackberries (limited supply)
  • Rocky Hill Orchards—Fredricksburg peaches
  • Comanche Creek—pickling cucumbers, green beans, and other veggies

NEW VENDORS include:

  • High Country Bison—grass fed and finished ground bison
  • Bush Farms—potatoes and tomatoes
  • Attagirl—natural line of body and home products
  • Gardener’s Feast—all-natural tamales
  • A Wild Soap Bar—wildly aromatic, truly natural, native soaps and body balms (with special farmers market pricing!)
  • Village Baking Company—”the most delicious bread in Texas,” according to the Barton Creek Farmers Market email! The newsletter goes on to note that Village Baking Company is “an artisan boulangerie producing the finest quality all-natural, Old World style bread. They search for the very best hard white winter wheat flower from farmers across the Great Plains. From mixing the ingredients to baking, their breads are handcrafted by artisans obsessed with quality.” Gotta try some!

ACTIVITIES, for those looking for a good time (outside of shopping for delicious foods, that is), include:

  • Jimmy Joe and Alan Roy play at 9:09 AM
  • Jiminy Crisket at 10:10 AM
  • Special guest at 11:11 AM will be Barton Creek Farmers Market’s very own ceramic artist Roger Holcomb on fingerstyle solo guitar

Fore more info on all the farmers featured at this outdoor market, please check their farmers’ listings here. And don’t forget to download (and print up) the latest coupons direct from the Barton Creek Farmers Market website before you go!

This is why the farmers market is your best bet (photo by Flickr user mysticwit)

Barton Creek Farmers Market is located at the back side of the Barton Creek Square mall parking lot overlooking the city, at the intersection of S. Loop 1 (Mopac) and S. Capital of Texas Highway (Loop 360).

P.S. If you’re not feeling up to an early-morning trek to the farmer’s market near you, you may want to consider shopping online with our sponsor, FromTheFarm.com, which brings premium agricultural products directly from family farms across the country straight to your door. How’s that for time-saving convenience?

FromTheFarm.com

New Sprouts for an organic New Year


2010
01.11

It’s been a while since I last posted, thanks to New Year festivities, new job responsibilities, the darn Horns getting our hopes up and then not Hookin’ ‘Em (as per the local chant) over in Pasadena, and generally just not having any time to myself to jot down notes, so first I must apologize for my absence. I do plan to update at least once a week now that it’s 2010, though, just to keep the momentum going.

So welcome to a new year, a new decade, and a shiny new Shoestring Austin space! This seems like a great time to talk about another new guy in town, at least up in my neck o’ the woods: Sprouts. This “farmers market” styled grocery store opened the doors of their new location at 10225 Research Boulevard (Suite 1000) on January 8, and started off strong with free drinks, food, and even a little music. My Dining Companion (DC) and I went to check it all out and were pleasantly surprised by their prices, which were even lower than those at the nearby HEB and Randalls—and for organic groceries, no less!

Muir Glen organic diced tomatoes, va MuirGlen.com

Month-long specials at the new store include:

  • -Muir Glen organic canned tomatoes at 2 for $5 (these are normally about $5 each!)
  • -Frontera salsa at 2 for $7
  • -Sprouts brand organic salad dressings are all 2 for $5
  • -Seeds of Change Indian-style simmer sauces are $3.29 each
  • -Brown Cow yogurt is 4 for $3
  • -15% off all Good Earth teas

You can also pick up a variety of discounted dog treats for all your furry friends. Plus many of their vitamin brands are between 20 and 25% off for the month of January, so now is a great time to stock up on all your Vitamin C, zinc, echinacea, etc. for cold and flu season.

Weekly deals, through 1/12/2010, via Sprouts.com

If you hurry, you can still score some of these specials (only until Tuesday, January 12):

  • -4 for $1 Russet potatoes
  • -$3.99/lb for smoked Cheddar cheese (sliced)
  • -$2.99/16-oz. bag of Torn & Glasser dried cranberries
  • -$2.99 each for Canadian petite lobster tails!!!

Obviously, you can tell which one of those specials is exciting me the most!

There were lots of great surprises in the store, like their mix-and-match 3-for-$10 wine selections, which DC and I snapped right up, as well as their brown eggs at 2 for $4 and a gallon of organic whole milk for only $3.99. Their prices on ground beef and chicken were the lowest we’ve seen in Austin, outside of Walmart, and their veggies were gorgeous, organic and über cheap (99-cent romaine and 39-cent avocados, w00t!). Since the new store is really close to our house, we’ll undoubtedly be shopping here frequently and loving the savings.

As an added bonus, I think the neighborhood HEB and Randalls may have lowered some of their prices, in response to Sprout’s unbelievable deals, as we popped in today to grab some butter at HEB and got 4 sticks for only $1.99. Even the cashier was double-checking the receipt, scratching her head over that one!

Oh, and if you go into the store on Wednesdays, you’ll score double deals—how sweet is that?

All in all, Sprouts really impressed DC and I, both because of their competitive prices and their “all-in-one” approach to nutrition. You can pick up quality vitamins and dietary supplements while you’re grabbing the basics like milk, cheese, meat and veggies, for one-stop shopping. Their vitamins were also competitively priced with the Vitamin Shoppe next door, which may mean some price wars between the two, and extra savings for consumers. Hooray! If you’re in the Great Hills area, definitely check out Sprouts for all your organic grocery items.

Shoestring Austin’s bargain New Year’s Eve drink recommendations


2009
12.31

First Night Austin, an annual New Year’s Eve event, is scheduled to go on tonight as planned, despite reports that the event’s budget has been scaled back by one-third. Of course, for those of us who are too cheap (or intelligent?) to make the trek downtown, only to be anally penetrated by jacked-up NYE prices at bars and clubs across the city, or “revel”  in the cold with a bunch of strangers, there’s The A.V. Club’s Austin city coverage of some of the best and worst places to spend the transition from this decade to the next.

In a similar vein, and for all those out there who are spending New Year’s Eve quietly at home, Shoestring Austin presents some inexpensive holiday drink recommendations, plus great deals on wine and beer you can find at area groceries (get ‘em while they’re still open!).

MIXED DRINKS

Taaka Vodka (photo by Flickr user Swift Benjamin)

First on any drinks list at Shoestring HQ are the vodka standbys, the Screwdriver and the Vodka Cranberry. Utilizing even the cheapest of vodkas (we like Taaka, which costs only $9.99 for a 1.75 liter bottle at our neighborhood liquor store), mixed with your favorite OJ or cranberry juice, respectively, these two drinks are fast and easy to mix up for one, two, or even an army of drunkards.

If you’re looking to fancy it up a bit for the holidays, you could go for the gold and use a local favorite, Tito’s Vodka, instead of the cheap stuff. Or try a Sex on the Beach (vodka, cranberry juice, OJ and peach Schnapps) or classic Cosmopolitan (just add Triple Sec or Cointreau) to vary the recipes and get your booze on.

Basically, you can’t go wrong with vodka, OJ, cranberry juice and any assorted fruit slices you may want to wedge on your glass.

WINE

Almaden Chardonnay in a box - ghetto looks, fab price!

For those who prefer to stay away from the hassle of mixing drinks, wine is always a good bet. Here at Shoestring Austin, we enjoy a variety of bargain-priced wines that can be found at all area grocery stores, including a number that have been recommended by Consumer Reports for their tastiness.

{HOT TIP: Austinites can check out issues of Consumer Reports, including their “Holiday wine bargains” article free via the Austin Public Library—all you need is a library card and your PIN to read up online, even from the comfort of home.}

Check out the 1.5-liter-sized Frontera Cabernet Sauvignon if you’re having people over; it’s only $8-10, depending on where you pick it up, and it’s one of Consumer Reports’ “Top Value” wines for the holidays.

{HOT TIP: Walmart’s got it for only $8.47!}

If you’re looking for a nice white to keep party-goers refreshed, you can’t beat Almaden Chardonnay in a box. It may look a little ghetto, but at only $15 for a whopping 5 liters, it’s tough to beat the price. More chardonnay (box-style) recommendations from Consumer Reports include Fish Eye ($16 for 3 liters), Banrock Station ($19 for 3 liters) and Black Box Monterey County ($25 for 3 liters).

Non-boxed varieties recommended include Santa Rita 120 ($8), Beringer Founders’ Estate 2007 ($11), and their “Best Overall” went to Mud House Marlborough 2008 ($14), which is one we have yet to try, but with its description in CR as “excellent; a near-perfect blend of fruit flavors and acidity,” we’re looking forward to picking up a bottle soon!

BEER

Most hated beverage of 2009? The Budweiser Chelada (photo by Flickr user konomike)

Though we’re not huge beer drinkers here at Shoestring Austin, there are a few that have caught our fancy recently. Beer snobs like those at the Beer Advocate and The Onion’s A.V. Club will undoubtedly bash our love of the Budweiser Chelada, a relatively new offering that combines good ol’ reliable Bud with the relatively elusive Caesar (which is basically a Bloody Mary made with Clamato, a drink that seems to enjoy much more popularity in Canada), but we stand by our man. The drink is a kind of pre-mixed Michelada, a popular Mexican beverage (which you can make more authentically with a little Camaronazo from our affiliate, MexGrocer.com.) This unusual combo of beer, tomato, clam juice and spices is oddly appealing, and its tall-boy format makes it a great party drink for those who enjoy a good chug.

If you’re not one for mixing beer and spicy tomato/clam beverages, we’re also partial to Budweiser’s low-carb offering, Budweiser Select. It’ll keep the beer gut in check, even as you chug your way through a case of the damn things, and it tastes pretty much like plain ol’ Bud. Score!

For those who enjoy something a bit more stout, you can’t go wrong with a Guinness to ring in the New Year. Sure, it may be made of equal parts bog water and chocolate syrup, but it’s an Irish tradition!

CHAMPAGNE

Champagne? We may dream of one day being able to afford the $100+ bubbly that the likes of Lady GaGa guzzle by the case, but here at Shoestring Austin we’ve found an inexpensive alternative: Domaine Ste-Michelle Brut sparkling wine ($12).

As reported by Austin360′s Forklore blog, “Put together by Robin Goldstein and Alexis Herschkowitsch of the Fearless Critic restaurant guide series, ‘The Wine Trials’ reports, for example, that a $12 Domaine Ste. Michelle Brut sparkling wine was preferred over a $150 bottle of Dom Pérignon champagne by 41 out of 62 tasters when the bottles were hidden.”

If it’s good enough for The Fearless Critic, it’s good enough for us. Now we just have to find a bottle, as it seems this information has caused a run in the area!

For more bargain champagne recommendations to look for, check this article from Forklore to stock up.

Got any recommendations of your own for a happy New Year’s Eve celebration? We’d love to hear about ‘em, so feel free to leave us a comment! Happy New Year, and best wishes for a stellar 2010!

New digs


2009
12.29

Howdy, y’all! We’ve recently moved to our very own space on the web, and hope you like it. Take a look around and let us know what you think of the new digs. We’ve added a few links to places we think you might be interested in shopping, including places like Chocolate.com and Greensbury Market that offer quality food at affordable prices, and Kitchen Universe, where you’ll find great kitchen goods for all your home cooking. We’ve also included links to Hotwire and CarRentals.com for those who may be traveling to Austin from out of town. Feel free to check ‘em out, or pass the links on to your friends!

As always, if you’ve got any suggestions for restaurants for us to review, or ideas about how to make our site better, please get in touch via our contact form. We’re looking forward to hearing from you!