Category Archives: eliz-a-trip

tales of my travels

Taylor’s Refresher

img_3984I was already pretty full when I hit up the original location of Taylor’s Refresher in Napa. But just the mere thought of garlic butter and parsley french fries was enough to spark my appetite. The place looks like an updated 1950s-style drive-in with a perpetual line of hungry winery-visitors looking to nosh on amazingly juicy burgers, fries (they have sweet potato and chili cheese too), and thick Double Rainbow gourmet ice cream milkshakes in flavors like strawberry, white pistachio and blueberry. They also have half a dozen beers on tap from Napa Smith wheat to Anderson Valley Boont Amber Ale served in corn plastic cups, and plenty of vino by the glass, bottle and half-bottle. The Napa Valley location has been there since 1949, but other locations have opened in San Francisco and Napa’s Oxbow market. Chicago next? Please? 644 1st Street, Napa Valley, Calif. 707.224.6900

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Garlic butter and parsley fries with a toasted egg bun burger slathered in a secret sauce

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Communal tables come with napkin dispensers and hungry guests waiting for their orders.

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The Model Bakery

img_4058I used to think English muffins were perfectly round, small, slightly stale, pre-cut disks dusted with dry corn meal that always end up stacked in their flimsy package in the center aisle display at the grocery store. But at The Model Bakery, smack dab on St. Helena’s, Calif.’s Main Street, the fresh-baked English muffins are hand-made and formed from ciabatta dough and griddled with cornmeal. Soft, slightly sweet, chewy and warm, they hardly needed the apricot jam that came with them. Everything else at Model, (which has been in downtown St. Helena for 80 years) looked amazing, from the cookies, pastries, cakes and endless stacks of breads baked with organic bread flours in original brick ovens from the 1920s, to the dried cranberry and golden raisin granola that may rival Milk & Honey’s. 1357 Main Street, St. Helena, Calif., 707.963.8192.img_3997

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Lola Bistro

img_3917Ok, just one more quick, cold-weather Cleveland bite before I move onto Napa and San Francisco, where we filled up on great wine, killer coffee, housemade English muffins and biodynamic vegetables (who are we kidding, it took a pit stop at Northern California drive-in style burger joint, Taylor’s Refresher to properly fill up). But before we get to that, Iron Chef Michael Symon’s Lola restaurant in the Tremont area may be one of Cleveland’s best, with a hearty seasonal menu that includes a beef cheek pierogi with wild mushrooms and horseradish crème fraîche that’s worth making the trip out again. The dimly lit dining room was full of great energy, especially at the open kitchen where diners can belly up to a glowing onyx bar. 2058 E. 4th Street, Cleveland, Ohio, 216.621.5652

The kitchen bar at Lola

The kitchen bar at Lola

Haloumi and melon with mints, almonds and scallions

Haloumi and melon with mints, almonds and scallions


18-Oz Rib-eye with potatoes Lyonnaise and salsa verde

18-Oz Rib-eye with potatoes Lyonnaise and salsa verde


Root beer float with vanilla ice cream, root beer granite and sablee cookie

Root beer float with vanilla ice cream, root beer granite and sablee cookie

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The West Side Market

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The West Side Market

Wandering through Cleveland’s historic West Side Market, I came across everything from meat pies to beet pasta. Butchers and bakers nestle up to pierogi stands, confectionaries (chocolate-covered Twinkies anyone?) and homemade, local products throughout the cool multi-building space, which has operated as a public market since 1840.

Fresh pasta from City Pasta

Fresh pasta from Ohio City Pasta

Ganache on the go

Ganache on the go

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A Cookie & a Cupcake

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While I don’t think I could tire of writing about Chicago’s food scene, I do plan to take Elizabites on the road when I travel. I had to hit up lovely Cleveland for a work conference last week, and somehow had a moment to stumble upon a very cute cupcake shop called A Cookie and a Cupcake. Syndee Klingenberg and Wendy Thompson, two former pastry chefs from Cleveland’s famous Dante restaurant, opened the tiny pink spot just a couple of weeks before. I saw way more cupcakes than cookies, but maybe that’s because I was paying more attention to the classic flavors from lemon to carrot, as well as creative varieties like PB lovers (chocolate cake, peanut butter crunch, and peanut butter buttercream) and the Grasshopper (chocolate chip cake with mint buttercream). I had to wait 20 minutes for the fresh batch to cool off, but I fell in love with the red velvets, first with the sweet cream cheese frosting and then with the dusting of dehydrated raspberry powder on top. The pastry chefs make gorgeous wedding cakes as well, great custom cupcakes and win the award for cutest logo. 2173 Professor Ave., Cleveland, Ohio, 216.344.9433

A Cookie and a Cupcake

A Cookie and a Cupcake

Red velvet cupcake with cream cheese frosting and dehydrated raspberry powder

Red velvet cupcake with cream cheese frosting and dehydrated raspberry powder

The PB Lovers

The PB Lovers

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Elizabites on the road

For work, play and a chance to extend my Red Velvet Cupcake report beyond Chicago, I’m traveling quite a bit this week and won’t have as much time to post as usual. But keep checking back as I will be blogging when I can about my cross-country eating adventures, from Cleveland’s best restaurants (Cleveland! Who knew?) to Napa and San Francisco. The Ohio report (almost as exciting as Tuesday night’s Ohio report) comes first, including the historic West Side Market (where I noshed on some damn good teriyaki turkey jerky) and Iron Chef Michael Symon’s Lola restaurant. Tasty tidbits from the West Coast to follow.

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Cedarburg eats

I discovered this weekend that there’s a lot more to Wisconsin then just cheese curds and beer. When my sister told me about the monster candy apples she spotted in a confectionary in Cedarburg (about a half hour north of Milwaukee), I had to check them out. We trekked up for a country-kitchen style eating adventure and found a lot more to munch on than just candy-coated apples. If you’re into small-town coffee roasters and wineries, raspberry cheese spreads, mini doughnuts sold street side, Amish furniture, 19th-century buildings, antiques, crafts and quilts (lots and lots of quilts), I highly recommend a road trip up there before it gets too cold.

A great brunch/lunch spot in a historic wool mill

Hot cherry cider at Cream and Crepe Cafe

Hot cherry cider at Cream & Crepe Cafe, crepes to follow

Broccoli and asparagus crepe with Swiss almond cream

Broccoli and asparagus crepe with Swiss almond cream

Pumpkin ice cream crepe with whipped cream and caramel sauce

Pumpkin ice cream crepe with whipped cream and caramel sauce

Chocolate covered cherries at a confectionary

Chocolate covered cherries at Mary Jane's Cedarburg Confectionary

Candy apple craziness

Candy apple craziness at Amy's Candy Kitchen

My opinion of a classic candy apple (but better than that Affy Tapple store-bought crap)

My idea of a classic candy apple (but way better than that store-bought Affy Tapple crap)

The stand had a mini-fryer fired up for everything from doughnuts to hot dogs.

This stand had a mini-fryer fired up for everything from donuts to hot dogs.

Mini-doughnuts topped with cinnamon-sugar

A bag of donuts covered in cinnamon-sugar for the ride home

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