Category Archives: Local Restaurants

Local Central Phoenix, AZ Coffee Shops Review

By | Local Phoenix, Local Restaurants | One Comment

Today’s post covers two things about which I’m passionate – supporting local business and introducing you to some of the great people in our neighborhood of Phoenix. The review of the week is about the delightfully delicious drink many of us love – especially with a generous serving of real cream and a scoop of ice.  Yep.  We’re talking about Coffee, folks!

Alas, my queasy pregnant stomach (and nose) can only dream of such indulgences right now. Lucky for me, I’m privileged to know one of Phoenix’s foremost coffee connoiseurs, Jim Helman, earned by virtue of his passionate obsession with coffee. (I’m sure it’s a healthy one).

A while back, Jim and his wife, Colleen, embarked on a mission to explore some of the great local coffee shops we have in Phoenix and share them with other java lovers. He kindly agreed to share a little bit about himself and his favorite shops (so far!).  So – without further ado – meet Jim Helman.

Jim, how long have you been in Phoenix?  “I moved to Phoenix, Christmas 1977 to enroll at ASU for my Master’s degree in Music. My original plan was to go to ASU for a year and then move to Texas to work on a doctorate. Eventually I wanted to teach music at a Christian college or university.” (Monna: We are lucky to know Jim because he chose a job on the music staff at the church where Rob works.)

We are starting to talk a lot about building community in this blog space. What do you and Colleen do to contribute to this idea? “I have been meeting business owners in the area for a while … some examples, I developed an exchange with the owners of the Ace Hardware Store in the Cinema Park Shopping Center. That ended up with me officiating for a the wedding between two of the employees. I’ve know the owners of Cheese-N-Stuff family since those early 1980’s days. Also, Luci, after which Luci’s Marketplace is named, is also a breast-cancer survivor like Colleen. We’ve begun the relationship speaking with them… of course, it takes time to develop genuine rapport, as you can imagine.”

How did you come up with the idea to review local coffee shops one at a time? …Colleen and I took our weekly Saturday morning dates for coffee and mixed it with an idea to visit ALL the coffee spots within a five-mile radius from [our Central Phoenix] church. We make it a point to introduce ourselves to the owner, if they are present, and then just take it from there! The owners all want to reach out to the customers and I just want to introduce myself to the owners so it works easily enough. Social networking makes it easy to get recommendations from other coffee connoisseurs. I’m thinking there are probably 20 locally-owned coffee spots not counting eight or so Starbux in that five mile radius.

…Phoenix has it’s own personality but it’s leaning more and more like a Seattle-esque city with people walking, jogging and using light-rail and bus to get around that five-mile radius I mentioned.”

How long have you and Colleen been married? “Colleen and I have been married since 1981. She is a native Phoenician and can tell you stories about many of the buildings and the previous businesses that once occupied the space now being used by these coffee places.”

Isn’t it nice to meet new people? You’ll see Jim around town at some of his favorite coffee spots. To find the shops, just click on the name. They’re linked to their own websites. Check them out!

Jim’s Favorite Coffee Experiences

Best, consistent Americano:  Lux Coffee

 

Most romantic Coffee Place:  Fair Trade Coffee, Midtown

Best places to meet someone to talk:

North Valley: Next Coffee

Midtown:  Luci’s Healthy Marketplace – Summer cold drink happy hour from 5-close daily!

Downtown:  Cartel Coffee

Best Coffee +Plus something to eat : AJ’s Coffee Bar, AJ’s Fine Food Uptown Plaza

Three Downtown Coffee Spots you need just need to try out:

Two of Cartel’s awesome crew

Cartel Coffee Lab Downtown ~ NE Corner of 1st Street and Washington, this place is eclectic.  The baristas are super cool, love their work and make a terrific Americano.  You can meet someone here to talk, sit alone and study, drop by for a quick jolt, or hang alone to write your autobiography. It has weekday hours.

Cartel on Facebook

The cool view from Gideon’s

Gideon’s Coffee ~ Gideon’s Coffee opened about the middle of September, 2010 and really caters to the downtown, working crowd. It’s a block south of Sing High Restaurant and just south of the new Maricopa County courthouse. It’s hours are early morning to mid-afternoon Monday through Friday so we had to catch them some time other than our usual Saturday coffee time together. It has weekday hours.

209 West Jackson Street  http://www.gideonscoffee.com/

Jim’s lovely wife, Colleen

Lola Downtown ~ One spot that is worth the effort to find is the DOWNTOWN edition of Lola Coffee in the older Roosevelt district. It’s inside a brick building amidst a bunch of new loft condos and apartments. It reaches to a younger crowd, again in the 20’s & 30’s with the occasional Baby Boomer.  (I.E. Colleen Helman)

1001 N 3rd Ave   http://www.lolacoffeebar.com/

 

St. Francis on Urbanspoon

Windsor Restaurant Review

By | Local Restaurants | No Comments

Rob and I, like most parents we know, are on a budget. So, date nights when we actually go out for dinner are a special event.  When we do go out, we choose local restaurants.  We love meeting our neighbors and supporting the local economy. According to Local First Arizona, when we spend $100 at local businesses, $73 stays in the state. When we spend the same amount at a big box store, only $43 stays in state. It’s a painless way to invest in our own communites.

Don’t know any good local businesses? No problem! Over the next few months, I’m going to share with you some of my favorite local spots and introduce some friends who also love to shop local.

This week’s choice is Windsor Restaurant. Here are some of my favorite things about this restaurant.

Food: Craig DeMarco, owner of Postinos, opened Windsor earlier this year. So you know right off the bat that the service and the food are top notch. I’m always impressed with the servers at both Postinos and Windsor (and that’s saying a lot). They are friendly and efficient without ever making you feel rushed. The menu includes a variety of foods from burgers, salads and chicken sandwiches to a halibut sandwich and the porkwich  (Ahhhh….mouthwatering!).

The Halibut Sandwich

The Halibut Sandwich. My friend ate this the other night. My pregnant taste buds weren’t in the mood for fish but she loved it!

My favorite dish at Windsor is the grain salad, which sports a panoply of cooked grains like quinoa, pearled barley and kamut as well as veggies like carrots, beets and squash, topped with ricotta and an orange dressing. I fantasize about this salad when I haven’t been in a while.

The grain salad. This is a half portion. My friend and I split it. Never liked beets till I tasted this!

If you’re into spirits, they have a full bar and offer happy hour daily from 11-5. Cocktails or pitchers of beer are only $5.

My friend ordered the No. 11 – gin, blackberry and lemon. It looked very refreshing. Isn’t that fresh blackberry beautiful?

Local sources: As much as possible, Windsor sources their ingredients from locally owned businesses. Suppliers include Willie ItuleMJ Bread & Avalon gourmet, Mount Hope (spices) and Tenderbelly. Tenderbelly recently moved their processing operation from AZ to Iowa due to supply needs but they still get a thumbs up from me because they only use hogs that have been raised on good food and no antibiotics.

Kid friendly: When the weather is cool enough to sit on the patio, I’d say this restaurant is “older” children friendly (no booster seats or high chairs). The menu includes small hamburgers and little corn dog poppers. We actually took Destructo Girl (2yo) when they first opened this spring and while they were super sweet about accommodating her, they aren’t actually set up for small people. Thankfully, we were outside and she spent her spare moments dancing out of the way. Kids who can sit quietly in their own chairs (5 & up) are fine. That’s ok with us. We like going there for dates anyway. Still, the staff gets five stars from me for being so cool about it.

Elegant bar seating

Ambience: Windsor relies on the combination of exposed brick, retro style lights and dark wood to create a cool, upscale winebar.

Have some fun picking out some old favorites.

I know it might be hard to imagine right now (if the heat has fried your brain like it has mine) but most of the year, sitting on the patio is a lovely experience. The greenery and strings of white lights give Windor’s enclosed patio a comfortable, relaxed feel. And, they have misters! I love the touches of wood surrounding the seating area.

Cool patio seating            

Parking: Windsor is on Central and has limited parking so, like Postinos, they offer valet. It’s really the easiest option so bring a few extra bucks and save yourself a ticket. There’s no parking in the neighborhood.

Bonus: If you have room for dessert, stroll next door to Churn, the attached ice cream shop. They have delicious homemade style ice cream and even offer ice cream sandwiches. More on them in another post.

That’s it for today. Windsor is located on the southeast corner of Oregon and Central just a bit north of Camelback. If you’re going out this weekend, try some great local food and meet a few of your neighbors.

                  Phoenix, AZ 85013

http://windsoraz.com 
Windsor on Urbanspoon

Barrio Cafe Review

By | Local Restaurants | No Comments

This weekend, Robert and I were thrilled to have a babysitter on a Saturday night, a rare ocurrence since he works on Sundays. Once I’d styled my hair (no ponytail!), put on makeup and found a shirt that didn’t have toddler fingerprints on it, we made our escape. We drove away laughing at the game my sister had our girls enthralled in – a practice Easter egg hunt with pinecones. Then, it occurred to us that we had no idea where we wanted to eat. So, we Yelped and came up with the Barrio Cafe. What an incredible choice that turned out to be!

We arrived at Barrio and had to circle the block twice before we could find a parking spot – and we chose the street just to the north so that we could walk a bit. The restaurant is located in a strip of stores along 16th street just south of Thomas. When we arrived around 6:45 pm to put our names in for a table for two, the manager told us the wait would be around an hour. It was a beautiful evening so we parked ourselves on the patio and enjoyed the cool breeze. With us were a lot of other people who were clearly enthused about the coming dinner and unperturbed by the wait – or the view of the laundrymat across the street. After all, it is the “Barrio” Cafe.

In just over an hour, we found ourselves sitting at a table with a great view of guitarist and vocalist Gustavo Angeles and awaiting the creations of Barrio’s James Beard nominated chef, Silvana Salcido Esparza. As we sat there with our stomachs growling at the delicious fragrances wafting from the kitchen, we checked out our surroundings. The restaurant is small in a cozy sort of way and decorated like a neighborhood place – with Virgin Mary candles on the tables and awards framed on the wall.

There were so many delicious looking options on the menu, we had a hard time deciding what we wanted to eat. Robert chose the Torta de Pollo Jaiba, chicken breast seasoned with spiced hollandaise style sauce and topped with crab, avocado and Oaxacan cheese. Since it was a torta, it was on a soft artisan roll and came with steak fries and chipotle ketchup. Doesn’t it look good? His grin after the first bite confirmed that he was happy with his choice.

Um, we’d already devoured a lot of the steak fries before the pic!

I, on the other hand, wanted a real taco. So I went with Tacos de Cochinitapibil, slow roasted pork tacos after the Mayan tradition flavored with sour orange and served with salsa and queso fresco. As our waiter put it in front of me, I knew I’d picked the winner of the evening. The scent that reached my nose was the one that had been tempting me all evening. I squeezed a bit of the floral-fragranced lime on my taco, took a bite and found myself in Mexico.

Oh.

My.

Gosh.

Ok. That’s an exaggeration. I didn’t actually go to Mexico but I might have brushed the border.

Listen. I have had a lot of Mexican food in my life. Not only did I grow up in a Mexican church where I enjoyed the cooking skills of the amazing mamas there (and ate beans with every breakfast!), I have been on quite a few trips to Mexico and enjoyed the best of the taco stands there. My mama made homemade tamales every year at Christmas when we were growing up.

But this taco, my friends, is nothing like anything I’ve ever tasted before now. The pork, cooked to a melting tenderness, was perfectly seasoned. The white corn tortillas tasted like they’d just been made. Unlike typical Mexican food joints that smother their dishes in cheese to disguise the lack of flavor, the addition of queso fresco to this dish simply provided a creamy contrast to the sour orange, spices and salsa. And, there was just enough heat. In short, it is one of the best meals I’ve eaten out in a long, long time.

Sadly, I had promised to give two of my tacos to Robert in exchange for part of his sandwich. And, I’m a woman of my word so I did – hoping he’d say he preferred his food. Just my luck, he fell in love with the taco too. I ate some of his sandwich but saved the rest for him. It was very good and in truth, if I hadn’t already tasted the taco, I probably would have loved it. But, the flavors weren’t as distinct as those of the tacos and it was a bit too creamy for my taste buds that night.

When we finished, our waiter did his best to entice us with dessert options but we were truly so full, we simply had no room for it. And, since we’d promised my sister we’d be home at a decent hour, we headed to the exit. I just had to take a picture of the bar there. Apparently they have over 100 tequilas. I believe it, don’t you?

As we were leaving, Barrio’s manager, Richard asked us where we’d be dining this coming Thursday, April 28, 2011. Apparently that day, Barrio is participating in Dining Out for Life, a fundraiser supported by local restaurants that raises money for the Southwest Center for HIV/AIDS, Arizona’s largest non-profit AIDS service organization. They are donating 100% of their proceeds from lunch that day, served from 11a-5pm. So, if you want to get a taste of Barrio’s incredible food and support a local non-profit, here’s your chance.

While there are some pricey items on the menu, there are plenty of wallet friendly options. So, head on down and support this local restaurant. It’s worth the wait and it definitely beats Applebees. Does anyone really still eat there with options like these?

Barrio Cafe
2814 N 16th Street

 
Barrio Cafe on Urbanspoon