Pages

I have decided to live life to the fullest. I'm going to try and do new things on a regular basis, try and visit new places, try and not live such a boring life. In essence I want to live like a tourist in my own town. Visit places, see new things. Let's live this life to the fullest!!
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2011

Jenny's Wedding Weekend

Sorry that I have been MIA for a bit. I'll try and catch up. I've been visiting family in AZ for the past few weeks. The middle weekend I went to my sister in law's wedding. Here are some pics...

The girls

The guys

My brother and I at the rehearsal

At the wedding 
My brother (the best man) walking the mother of the bride (my mother in law) down the aisle

Bridesmaids at the wedding

The happy couple

Having fun, but missing my other half

Adding to the family

The wedding party

Best Man Speech

Maid of Honor Speech

Cake!

Mom and Me

Friday, February 18, 2011

An Overnight getaway to the coast

Mom came in town this week. It's been nice to have someone else around the house for a bit. Two weeks ago today is when I dropped Mike off :-( I'm making it through okay. This was good timing for her to come and visit though. I'm going to be in AZ in another 2-3 weeks for a bit.

Anywho, when Mom comes to visit we usually try to head down to Santa Barbara to visit her brother and his family. So that's just what we did. Yesterday morning we got up and headed south. But we didn't just drive straight there, we stopped a some wineries :-)

Stop #1: Niner Vineyards
Tasting Fee: $10, waived with 3 bottle purchase


I had been here once before and remember it being good. Mom had run into a wine distributor that told her if she was in the area she should stop here and try the Sangiovese. So that's what we did. We stopped and tasted one white and four reds. I remembered the wines being good, but it did not remember them being this good. Everything we tasted was nice and easy drinking, but could easily be paired with food for a slightly different flavor. 

We were the only ones in the tasting room at 10:45 am :-) and the gentleman that served us was really nice. We had a good time chatting, and he actually sent us in a different direction for the rest of our adventure. We had planned on hitting a few other wineries in Paso Robles, but he suggested we try Edna Valley which was another way to head south to Santa Barbara. So, after buying one of every bottle we tasted plus an additional Sangiovese, we headed to the Edna Valley.

Stop #2: Tolosa Winery
Tasting Fee: $8, waived with purchase

I liked this door.


Our first stop in the Edna Valley was to Tolosa. We had been informed that the Edna Valley dealt more in the white wines and Pinot Noir varietals of wine. Tolosa shown in those varietals. While I am not usually a fan of white wines I did enjoy one of the Chardonnays here. I purchased a bottle of their Syrah however because I enjoy drinking red wine. One of their Pinot Noir's was very good but it was about $50 a bottle, much more than I like to spend. I would recommend stopping in here if you are in the Edna Valley for wines. I would not put high praise in their customer service. Other than pouring our wine for us and telling the name, the woman behind the counter was not very friendly or talkative. 

Stop #3: Sextant Wine
Tasting Fee: $8, or $12 for reserves; tasting fee is not waived unless you purchase 12 bottles =0



We were starting get hungry and were unsure if we were going to stop at another winery or just get some lunch and move on to Santa Barbara. However, when we saw this cute little old barn we just had to stop. Mom and I enjoy wineries that have a smaller atmosphere, where you are more likely to talk to the person pouring your wine and learn a little about the winery, the wines, and the owners. We found that at Sextant. As with the other two stops we were the only ones in the tasting room. The gentleman that was pouring for us was a retiree who was doing this to pass the time during the day, and he just enjoyed wine and chatting with people. Sextant has a nautical motif (Mom and I didn't know what a sextant was; in case you don't know either it is the way in which they navigated and charted on the seas in the old days). 

We very much enjoyed that atmosphere at Sextant. We also enjoyed many of their wines. Since we had two people tasting we paid for one "Main Deck" ($8) and one "Upper Deck" ($12) tasting and shared. From the Main Deck flight we purchased a bottle of the 10knots Chardonnay and Wheelhouse Zinfandel. From the Upper Deck flight we purchased an Atlantis (red blend) and Holystone Zinfandel. 

It was not time to stop for lunch.

Stop #4: Ventana Grill in Pismo Beach
Price: $10-$18 for entree

The view from our table.

View looking out the other direction.
While at Tolosa Winery we had asked for a lunch recommendation along the coast with a bit of a view. We were not steered wrong. The view during lunch was amazing. The food was decent as well. I had a skirt steak sandwich that alright. Mom had a chicken sandwich that was very good. However, I will be coming back here to try their mexican dishes. We say many of them come out of the kitchen while we were there and they all looked very good. The lunch salads also looked incredible. For the location the price was not half bad. Sandwiches were about $10-$14 and for the fish dishes you were looking at a few dollars more. All in all, a great place to relax and watch the surf.

Stop #5: Doug and Jane's
Priceless time and fun!!

I always love coming to Doug and Jane's house and spending time with them and their kids. It is just so much fun. The town of Santa Barbara is amazing. We always have wonderful food. We just have a genuinely good time. The evening we were their Doug (who always makes amazing food!) made a Moroccan Lamb dish and black peppercorn salmon. Oh so yummy!! We had a lovely evening chatting and drinking tea. The next morning we had coffee at Via Maestro, and Jane's brother dropped off these from his bakery:

After some coffee, Mom and I started to head back up the coast to home. 

Stop #6: Hendry's Dog Beach



Mom brought her itty bitty dog with us for out little trip. (Sunset stayed home with some friends of hers) Rosie has seen the snow but hadn't been to the beach yet, so we decided to introduce her. She wasn't too sure of the waves. We had to drop her and run to try and get some pictures so you can see just how tiny she us up against the waves in the background.

Stop #7: Splash Cafe in Pismo Beach
Price: $3 for a fish taco - $7 for sandwich plates and chowder in a bread bowl


Said to have world famous clam chowder this was somewhere we needed to check out. Mom and I usually go to Brophy Brothers in Santa Barbara for clam chowder but didn't make it there this trip. This place had great reviews and came recommended by a few friends. Unfortunately I would disagree with the best clam chowder ever. For me it had way too much butter and that was about all I could taste. The bread bowl, however, was good. They butter and grill it! We ordered salmon tacos as well. They were stuffed to the brim and very, very messy. The salmon was good, but the avocado and cilantro relish on top was amazing. This is not somewhere I would go out of my way to go to. 

We made it back home and picked up Sunset from her friends house. 



Everybody had a great little overnight!!




Monday, October 25, 2010

It's been a week...let's go to Paso again!!

Yep we went again...only a week later! This time we went with Kevin and Jackie, who were getting ready to move and had never been! Our other friends Paige and Greg went with us as well.

Stop #1: Eberle

Great place. We've been here numerous times before! It's got great wines and a great military discount (40%!!!!!) One time we went and they were grilling tri-tip, ribs, and duck sausage but every time we went back they never had it...until this time!!! This meat is amazing. The duck sausage is a little spicy. The tri-tip is cooked perfectly. I haven't had the ribs but they also look really good. The bigger guy in the tye-dyed shirt is Gary Eberle, the owner of the winery. He was out there cooking and grilling throughout the day. 

Every year for the harvest season Eberle comes up with a theme...this year was Spongebob... so here's their truck that goes through vineyards to load the collected grapes on:


 Stop #2: Twilight Cellars (previously known as Thunderbolt Winery)

Mike and I have been here before as well. Their wines are amazing, and they pair their tasting with appetizers! So you got little bites of food with every glass you taste.

A shot of our group:

 It was actually the Harvest Festival weekend in Paso. Twilight was letting you bottle your own wine from a barrel. So of course we did that! What fun... We got to fill it up from the barrel and put it into the wine bottles...


Then we had to put the cork in it





 We had lunch at the Odyssey World Cafe, great stop! None of us had been here before so it was a good choice and the food was amazing. I had lamb gyro and Mike had a lamb burger. I highly recommend this little cafe as an eatery. It's on the main square in downtown Paso.


 Stop #3: Sculpterra

Neat place, sculptures all over the place, very neat sculptures. But their wines...not impressive. They also have pistachio trees on their property and had those as snacks in the tasting room, and those, those were very good.

A little bit more of the harvesting at work

 Mixing up the grapes in the fermenting tanks


 Stop #4: Cass Winery

Pet friendly. 15% military discount. Great wines. Friendly staff. They also have a lunch cafe that had what looked like a really good menu. Might have to go back and try that someday, with Sunset of course!

A favorite pastime...

Yep, we went wine tasting again! The weather was nice, it was a little warm out at times, but we had a good time none-the-less. Mike and I went with my mom, Kate, Clay, Will and Leslie.

Stop #1: Maloy O'Neill
Tasting Fee: $5 (waived for military)

This place was so cute! They had a couple of bar stools on one side of the bar so you could sit and taste. They had a few whites, but mostly reds (Paso is more a red region). Their reds were good. A few of their blends were really good.
Here is the winery dog, Trixie I believe.


 And this little guy was just crossing the drive-way headed to get some wine.

 We went during harvest season so a lot of the wineries were working their presses and such. Here are the guys at Maloy O'Neill getting the juices out of the buckets of fermenting grapes.



 Stop #2: Pear Valley
Tasting Fee: $5 (waived for military)

This place was so pretty. It sat up on a hill and looked down towards the valley of Paso and the other wineries. Pear Valley had a greater selection of wines, they had whites, a rose, and a dessert wine. They were all pretty good. I didn't taste the dessert wine though (not my style). I'm not usually a rose drinker either but theirs is decent and I would have a glass of it.

Close up of the grapes (like I said we went during harvest season so their grapes all over the vines)



Stop #3: Rio Seco
Tasting Fee: $5 (waived for military + military discount)

Great wines, great company, and an interesting story. This place had a few good red mixes that made for easy drinking and a great table wine. Now for the story of this place...the current owners bought it from the state? how had acquired it after a police raid. Yes, a police raid. This property had at one point been a pot farm and drug selling location. If you looked around at this red barn you could see bullet holes from the shoot out at the police raid.

If you like port wine, they had a Zinfandel port that I hear was good.



Stop #4: Peachy Canyon
Tasting Fee: $5 (waived for military + military discount)

This winery is mostly known for its zinfandel's, which I'm not a huge fan of but they were actually pretty good. Their other reds were only ok. The place was pretty cute, I especially liked this sign which asked "Who's the skipper?" Gave me a little laugh.

 This building, now the winery tasting room, used be an old school house.


 Stop #5: Zenaida Cellars
Tasting Fee: $5

This place was very neat. The owner is a veterinarian in a town nearby. It had great wines. Everything I tasted here was amazing. Even their simple table wine was good.



 Stop #6: Edward Sellars
Tasting Fees: $5

This new tasting room was beautiful set in the middle of their vineyards. Gorgeous views. We came here  on the recommendation of another winery, but we weren't all that impressed.




Another successful day of wine tasting. All the stops were new places as well, which brings my grand total to over 40...only about 200 to go!!

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...