Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Ba-Rackin the Vote -- California Style

San Francisco is a abuzz on election day. For some reason, the city allows voting not only at schools, City Hall, etc. but also in people's garages. There are at least two garage polling stations set up within a five-minute walk of our house. Dawn strolled down to one on her way to work (I voted absentee in New York a couple of weeks ago...). She waited 45-minutes this morning; goodness knows what it will be like for people who vote this afternoon.

Dawn spent part of the evening deciding how she would vote on California's and San Francisco's many propositions. Some are serious, such as the ones to make gay marriage illegal or require parental notification for a teenager to get an abortion. Others are comical, like the proposal to name the city's sewage treatment plant after George W. Bush.

I'm writing this in a cafe, which is busier than usual because of the election (a garage polling station is half-a-block away). The baristas are excited about Obama ("My man, Obama," one keeps telling customers.) A few minutes ago, a lesbian couple walked by hand-in-hand outside on their way to the polls.

One things for sure: If Obama wins, there will be dancing in the streets tonight.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Balloon Bandit


We got home from a movie tonight and this balloon was floating in our kitchen. We have no idea where it came from. Granted, nearly everything in this apartment is not ours, so it could belong to the people we're renting from, but we've been here three months. Wouldn't the helium be gone by now? And wouldn't we have noticed it before? Where could it have come from???

Monday, September 29, 2008

To market, to market


There's no shortage of farmers' markets in San Francisco, and we've been taking advantage of them and trying to get most of our fruits and vegetables there. One of the most popular is the Ferry Plaza Market, on Tuesdays and Saturdays, and since I work just a couple of blocks away I often swing by during lunch to pick up some veggies for the week. This market is on the bay with all sorts of food stalls and caters to the foodies of SF.

As beautiful as the Ferry Market is, on Saturdays we usually end up closer to our house at the Alemany Market, which is a little less glamorous, especially considering it's under the freeway in a big parking lot. It's closer to the house and the fruit and vegetables are CHEAP and since we live in Cali, still beautiful and mostly local. I have serious doubts about all the "organic" signs I see, especially considering the items are being sold dirt cheap ($1.00/pound for organic peaches -- I don't think so). Our favorite stall is run by a woman who sells these delicious stuffed Afghani flatbreads called Bolanis. Every time we're there she insists on giving us several samples each, even if we've tried them all and know what we want to buy.

I think one of my favorite things about the Alemany Market though, are all the reviews on yelp. They just crack me up and seem to sum up a lot of SF -- a little bit of the holier-than-thou attitude. Not only do the reviewers get to feel superior because they're shopping at a farmers' market, they get to review that market and talk about how much better it is because it's not as pretentious as the Ferry Terminal Market, which just makes the reviewer sound really pretentious. Some of the best quotes: "you don't have to wade through the yuppie fashion show that is the Ferry Building," "if you want overpriced produce served with a silver spoon, go to the Ferry Building," and "not the shi shi poo poo tourists of the Ferry Market."

Saturday, September 13, 2008

San Francisco ride

Bimbo's 365 Club is about a 25 minute walk from the BART, and in general we haven't gotten that good about learning the other modes of public transit in SF because we like to walk and our house is on BART, so it seems to make the most sense to us even though it might not be the quickest way to travel.

Bimbo's is on a cable car line, however, which will take us directly to the BART. The cost to ride the cable cars is a little steep, $5 one way, and most people think of it as something just for tourists. But, SF has a little thing called the FastPass, which is a monthly pass that gives me access to the light rail (aka Muni), buses, the BART stations within the city and cable cars. (Bob doesn't have a FastPass since it doesn't include his trip down to Palo Alto). So, since my ride was free and a cable car came around the corner, we hopped on. It truly is a pretty sweet way to get around the city, especially late at night when there aren't as many tourists, and really nice that the city wants to encourage residents to use it too.

We had the added bonus of having a chatty conductor. I had my big, huge bag I use when I want to go to the gym after work. He told us it reminded him of the sotry about when Ann Richards was governor of Texas, and a member of the State Legislature wanted to pass a law that would require women to carry handguns in order to fend off sexual predators. Ann Richards replied, "Is he crazy, does he know how long it would take me to find a gun in my purse?" Then, as we were walking away from the train the conductor shouted after us, "Have a good night, don't get a hernia!" Nice to know he's looking out for me.

Bimbo's 365 Club


We're sitting at Bimbo's 365 Club waiting to see Alejandro Escobar, who Bob tells me is like the Latino Bruce Springsteen and Carrie Rodriguez, a singer-songwriter and fiddle player from Austin, TX.

Bimbo's reminds me of the Copacabana in Goodfellas, but we came in through the front door, not the kitchen. The main room is full of intimate round tables with reserved signs, and here in the lounge we're cozied next to the fire in red naugahide seats and tables with pink cloths. It's quite fabulous and you can read all about the history here.

The bartenders are dressed like Isaac on on the love boat and have martini glasses filled with ice to chill along the bar. I bypassed the martini and opted for a Miller High Life, The Champage of Beers. Should be a good show.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Sushi in the Sky with Diamonds...

We've already posted one entry about San Francisco food on our blog. There are probably many more to follow. Given the variety of farmers markets and little hole in the wall restaurants, that's not too surprising. We'll only write about them when we find something especially cool and exciting. Otherwise, we realize this blog will get irksome very quickly.

Take Tamasei Sushi for instance. It's in the Noe Valley, a gentrified little neighborhood at the bottom of the hill where we live. The main avenue is lined with funky little shops and restaurants. Dawn and I wandered into this tiny sushi restaurant after she finished work last Friday. It certainly isn't like any other sushi bar I've been in. The first thing we noticed was the large painting of Bob Marley. The second was the the elderly, but spry, waitress passing out menus. The third was the slightly stoned (or at least they appeared to be) sushi chefs (?) preparing nigiri and maki.

Not long after we sat down, a young latino man with a battered guitar case walked in. "The mariachi! The mariachi!" cried the old waitress. He led the man into a small room in back, and as he took at his guitar, she brought out a set of of maracas and passed one to each customer. Then the young man came out and played a Mexican (I guess) melody as we rattled our maracas and our waitress danced around the small room beating two wooden sushi boxes together. He was quite good, actually. We were happy to rattle away as he strummed his instrument. The sushi was nothing special, but then again, we can't get that sort of experience at Tokyo-Seoul or the Bleu Monkey in Syracuse.

We'll return again, and when we do, we may buy the T-shirt hanging above the kitchen which has "Sushi in the sky with diamonds..." emblazoned across the chest.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Berkeley Jaunt


We have explored a number of places over the past few weekends, but we have confined our local jaunts to this side of the bay. We changed that on Sunday when we hopped on a very crowded BART train and took it under the bay to Berkeley. I'll be spending a lot of time there in the winter and spring doing research at the Bancroft Library, which is currently closed for renovations and an earthquake retrofit. That's fine with me. I'll take comfort knowing that if the big one hits while I'm digging in the archives, I'll have a fair chance of surviving to work another day.

I mostly know Berkeley mostly through lore about the '60s. I recently read a book and saw a video about the town during that tumultuous decade, so I was curious if it bore any resemblance to the radical enclave it once was. Telegraph Ave., the main student drag, certainly has retained some of the spirit of that time. Old hippies sell bumper stickers, posters, and strangely, computer mouse pads sporting leftish slogans. Others sell various trinkets. (One was hocking--I kid you not--a chain mail bikini bottom. A potential Christmas gift for Dawn.) Besides that, the street didn't look that much different than the ones around other large university towns, such as the AVE in Seattle.

We were sad to learn that Cody's Books, a Berkeley institution, closed its doors for good just a month earlier. It had a reputation as one of the best independent bookstores on the West Coast. But it met the fate of other bookstores unable to compete with Barnes & Noble, Amazon.com, and the like. Cody's Books was also a home for students, faculty, and locals involved in the Free Speech Movement during the '60s. With its passing, another symbol of that era has passed. We went to Moe's Books down the street. Though not as famous as Cody's, it still is far better than any bookstore in Syracuse.

After spending an hour (and some money) at Moe's, we went to People's Park just off Telegraph Ave. For the casual observer, the park looks pretty much like many other urban parks: some trees and lawns, a basketball court, and bathroom. There are more homeless people there than in most parks, either in San Francisco or Syracuse for that matter. In 1969, the park became a battleground for the city's Free Speech Movement. UC-Berkeley acquired the land through eminent domain to build dormitories. Before construction began, locals and students attempted to turn the land into a park for community use. Eventually, the university erected a fence around the park. The protests that followed led to a violent suppression by the police; one young man was killed by a shotgun blast. Since then, the university has sought on occasion to expel the homeless from the park leading others to insist that the place belongs to all the people, including the homeless. Nearly thirty years later, bitterness endures among those involved in the People's Park riot. When asked at his retirement party in 2007 to reflect on his long career, Alameda County Sheriff Charles Plummer, who was a policemen involved in the confrontation at People's Park in '69, said "I wish I would have hit some people harder during the riots. I regret that."

There's stunning mural depicting this history near the park on Haste St. I've included a photo of it here. You can see more of the mural and others photos from our day in Berkeley on our Flickr page.