Chinese Busker in Frisco

Caroline Wise and John Wise at the Ferry Marketplace in San Francisco, California

After a rather short four-hour drive from our motel this morning, we’ve arrived here at the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market at the Embarcadaro here in San Francisco. We need some gourmet supplies for our Thanksgiving dinner in a yurt up in Oregon.

Mushrooms at the Ferry Marketplace in San Francisco, California

First up was Far West Fungi. This brilliant little shop offers the greatest selection of mushrooms anyone is likely to ever find in the United States. We chose three varieties after being advised they would cook well on the grill; our choices were porcini, lobster, and trumpet. Next door, we picked up rosemary salt, and a few shops down, we nabbed a small package of garlic butter; these were to be used in cooking up the mushrooms.

Other mushrooms on sale were a hedgehog, black trumpet, cauliflower, yellow oyster, pink oyster, matsutake, blue foot, bear’s tooth, shimeji, lion’s mane, portobello, white, brown, enoki, and yellow foot. From the world of truffles, Far West carries Himalayan Truffles for $25 an ounce, Oregon White Truffles for only $12.50 an ounce, while the Winter Black Truffles go for $112.50 an ounce, and the White Alba Truffles were about $156 an ounce. The last thing we bought was a 3.5-ounce small jar of Truffle & Salt made of sea salt and Black Summer Truffle – a bit pricy at $24. If you too are a fungiphile, Far West will soon be offering mail order, and if you are in the area during an upcoming December, the Oakland Museum of California and the Mycological Society of San Francisco hold an annual Wild Mushrooms Fungus Fair, this year marks the 37th annual fair.

Another important stop here is at the Cowgirl Creamery. One word describes this place – Cheesy. Ok, one more word is required – YUMMY. We tried and bought the first four kinds of cheese, which were excellent. First off was Cowgirl Creamery’s own Pierce PT; I had wanted the Saint Pat, which is a whole milk organic cheese wrapped in stinging nettle leaves; sadly, this cheese is only available in the springtime. To compensate for the disappointment, our salesgirl offered the Pierce PT – lucky us as this was a 1st Place award winner at the 2006 American Cheese Society Conference. Pierce PT is washed in a Muscato wine and rolled in dried herbs. The next cheese was a goat cheese called Bucheret from Redwood Hill Farm made by Jennifer Bice, mmmm, buttery goat. The third was Lincolnshire Poacher from Neal’s Yard Dairy in Ulceby, Lincolnshire in England. This aged cheddar-like cheese is awesome. Lastly, we bought the Pepato from Bellwether Farm in Sonoma County, California. Pepato is a semi-soft cheese made from Sheep milk made with peppercorns.

At Acme Bread, we picked up a loaf of sourdough dark rye bread and were ready to venture into the city by the bay.

China Town in San Francisco, California

Chinatown in San Francisco is a world unto itself. Dozens of grocery stores intrude onto sidewalks, pushing lotus roots, dried mushrooms, ginger, Pak Choy, bok choy, and assorted unidentifiable fruits and veggies – even live chicken. Cheap shoes, trinkets, jewelry, fresh bread, and scores of regional Chinese restaurants line the streets. A cultural sampling of the world’s inhabitants stroll the streets; some visitors might be tourists, but the majority sniff, poke, browse, and shop with a familiarity suggesting they are local residents and for them these exotic sights and sounds are commonplace.

Erhu player in San Francisco, California

The architecture in Chinatown is distinctly Chinese; there is no mistaking that. Most signage is in Chinese characters. The best we Westerners can do is figure out the business from the service being offered beyond the shop’s door. This old man – a Chinese busker or street musician – squeaks out a tune on his erhu, trying to earn a few extra dollars. America needs more busking.

China Town in San Francisco, California

I thought this was the intersection, but I was wrong. Back in 1991, on Caroline’s first trip to the United States, I took a picture of her here in Chinatown; I thought it was under this sign. The photo I was thinking of was taken about 400 feet from here under the Stockton Street sign. Click here to see that image.

City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco, California

Another stop from that trip in 1991 was our first visit to City Lights Bookstore because, as literary nerds, pilgrimages to such places are mandatory. And should you wonder if we’ve visited Powell’s in Portland, of course, we have.

Rental car in fortune cookie parking spot San Francisco, California

We’ve never parked in a fortune cookie parking spot until now; I’d wager this might end up being the one and only time.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Ghirardelli Chocolate shop in San Francisco, California

There was no way we were going to leave San Francisco without a quick stop at the Ghirardelli Chocolate shop so we could split a hot fudge sundae; now, we are finally ready to get on the road. Our destination for the night is up at a Super 8 Motel in Willits, California, for the exorbitant price of $63 plus tax, but if I look at it as just 4 or 5 of these sundaes, I guess it’s not so bad.

Yurtville

It is travel time. For the first time since July, we are taking a road trip. There were some short side excursions here and there, but this is the first real journey in months. It is also our 5th week of vacation for 2006. Where are we going, you ask? To the Oregon coast. Along the way, we will stop in San Francisco for some shopping at the Ferry Plaza Marketplace and some raw fooding at Cafe Gratitude; then, we’ll be on our way to the Redwoods National Park. Once in Oregon, we have yurts reserved for three evenings, starting at Harris Beach at Brookings, then Umpqua Lighthouse, and finishing at Beverly Beach near Newport. So, guess what? There won’t be any postings here until we return and I fill the gaps. Enjoy your Thanksgiving, or whatever it is you’ll be doing over the next week.

Hey, VISITORS from around the world – You stop in, look around, and never say a word – COME ON AND LEAVE ME A COMMENT.  Tell me where you come from, what you were looking for, how you found me.

Devil in a Blue Dress, uh hum, Kilt

Dawn and Ian Gordon on their wedding day

Not long ago I mentioned a guy who gifted Caroline and me a sign from a military installation in Germany. Shortly after posting that I was finally able to find a phone number for him after thinking we had lost all contact. And now, Ian Gordon has sent me a relatively current photo of himself, seen here, with his bride – Gayle. I have a more recent photo where Ian has shorn his locks for a more “conventional” look but with only so much space to post photos, I felt posting this one highlighting his knees was more dramatic. Don’t worry Ian, I won’t share any of our old photos from our midnight trip to Amsterdam where you wore little more than that famous leopard-print silk thong, some skin-tight mini bike shorts, and that hot spandex muscle-T emblazoned with “Rock Hard Love” across the front – yowza man, that was some trip.

Visiting the Silvas

Maria Guadalupe Madera and Bacilio Avila on their wedding day as painted by Maria Ines-Torres

Caroline and I finally made the drive down to Tucson, Arizona, today to visit the Silvas (Arturo, Guadalupe, Melissa, and Sophia) – although we were late, as usual. This photo of the day is of a painting inspired by a photograph from the wedding of Guadalupe’s parents. On the left is Maria Guadalupe Madera, and on the right is her husband, Bacilio Avila. These two were married in 1949 and are now retired, living in Nogales, Mexico, still a couple 57 years and ten children later. The painting was done in 1995 by Arturo’s mother, Maria Inés Torres, herself from a family of 13 children. Guadalupe prepared a great lunch that was so filling it acted as dinner, too. We brought down the Stollen and a couple of Advents Calendars for the girls while Guadalupe, Sophia, and Melissa gave Caroline a great gift of frog earrings.

Stollen

German Stollen, a Christmas treat available freshly made in Phoenix, Arizona

If you were in Germany this Christmas holiday season, you would more than likely try this seasonal favorite since around 1450 known as Stollen. Stollen is a bread-like fruitcake topped with powdered sugar and if you choose the marzipan version, there is a thick ribbon of the almond paste running the length of the Stollen. The best thing about this particular Stollen is that we did not have to go to Deutschland to fetch one; it is homemade right here in the desert at the local German store called Old Heidelberg Bakery, located at 2210 E. Indian School Road. This small but wonderful shop co-owned by two sisters offers up a full range of holiday sweets, spicy mustard (senf), jams and marmalades, sauce mixes to make Jaeger Schnitzel and Sauerbraten, almond horns, laugenbrotchen, German-style bread, meats, quark, Duplo and Kinder Eggs. Having a German bakery in Phoenix, Arizona is certainly a luxury that makes living here just a bit better – thanks, Heidelberg.