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Michael D Housewright
  • Housewrighter
  • Imagery
  • Video Production
  • About Michael
  • Contact
  • Housewrighter Musings

Coffee - Our Daily Passion

Juliet taught me to love coffee. Yes, I was an Italian caffe' guy from way back but I did not drink much coffee in America.

The main reason I discovered was that coffee in America was often simply not good. This, I am proud to say, is changing rapidly and has improved dramatically since I met Juliet 5 and a half years ago.

America is making some of the best coffee in the world and I would be proud to exclaim that across the pond. Our artisan coffee houses are sourcing the top 3% of the top 3% of the best beans in the world and turning them into the finest espresso, macchiato, cappuccino, cortado, americano, latte, and pour-over coffees on the planet.

Today is a tour of our little secret passion, the coffee photo. Popping a creative shot of a creative shot allows us to enjoy the little bit of roasty, warm joy for all that much longer. So, without further ado, enjoy the java!

Source: Uploaded by user via Juliet on Pinterest

Juliet is really the master of the coffee shot. Here is a link to her Pinterest Board for Coffee. Juliet's impeccable taste is evident throughout her board and I suggest you give her a look and a follow.

tags: images, poetry, stoires, travel, @Blissadventure, coffee, @blissadventure, @crema_denver, adventure, Austin, Boulder, Boxcar Coffee Roasters, Caffe Medici, Catalina Coffee, Coffee Shops, Colorado, Denver, Happy Coffee Denver, Hipstamatic, Houston, Italy, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Photography, the blissful adventurer, Travel
Monday 05.28.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

A Creative Pause - Monday Morning Meditation

A stirring week of fortune has left me creatively bankrupt.

I seek home and the familiar places of solace.

Yet it has been some time since I knew this place on a map.

Perhaps I could sit here a bit and ponder

or walk along this road till I come upon something

under a great tree

maybe he will entice me to sit and chat

in the chapel alone with my thoughts free from

obligation and left only to newly remodeled creative space

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Aqua Adventures, Blog, Hipstamatic, Houston, Images, Menil Collection, Michael Housewright, Photography, poetry, Rothko, Rothko Chapel, stories, Swing, Travel
Monday 04.23.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Haiku Sunday - Day at the Museum (Hipstamatic)

sun shines brighter than

neon and for a much longer

period of lifetimes

Dear Adventurers and New Readers - On Sundays at TBA we do Haiku. The theme this week is part 2 of my Hipstamatic series in the old drug store. Please enjoy and feel free to share Haiku of your own in the comments.

Maybe I should

read this thought the author as he

snapped the photo

fleeting memories

of the day she fell hard and

took him with her

even brand new she

knew there was no market for her

wares in an unhappy place

ice skating over

the rabble of life we take

for granted the meek

stick'em up he said

becoming the violent man

on his 5th birthday

kind of like a barber

useful to an entire generation

now alone and shelved

crayons always drift

from box to box and sometimes

we find one we like

cowboys and indians

we learned this game long ago when

hate was not even known

loud is an emotion

one that stays with us and begs us

to get louder still

the fuel cells ready

the heat source coming to bear

death makes its rounds

funny even the saver

cannot be the savior as the sweet

moves to savory

a kite fight for life

on its flight filled with strife makes

one last swoop over him

he was scared as they

laid him on the table to insert the sheath

and wire to his heart

racism comes in many shapes

colors and flavors with no stone

left to turn away

diarrhea was

just a fact of life he thought turning

the capsule on a pink cocktail

on the runway there

is not time to consider the glue options

for pinning a stray breasts

presidents and their

wives must not know the reasons

they are not always loved

 

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Aqua Adventures, Blog, Hipstamatic, Houston, Images, Menil Collection, Michael Housewright, Photography, poetry, Rothko, Rothko Chapel, stories, Swing, Travel
Monday 04.23.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Saigon - City of Color

Saigon or Ho Chi Minh City as it is now formally called is easily one of the most vivacious places I have seen in my travels.

Rising from the ashes of war and abject poverty, Vietnam as a nation is firing on all cylinders. The changes in culture, quality of life, and wealth are all over Saigon.

This is a country that has gained almost 40 million people since the end of the war in 1975. These are industrious, friendly, and perhaps the happiest people I have encountered anywhere on the planet.

I was immediately taken with the people of Vietnam for another reason: food! This is a country of citizens that know how to eat and eat often. If you are a food person there are the great cities, New York, Paris, Rome, Hong Kong, Istanbul, and I must emphatically stamp Saigon on to that list. I ate here like a Roman emperor and yet in the humblest most un-fussy settings.

Fresh ingredients are not even a choice here, they are simply what are available. This little photo essay I am presenting today is about the colors of life in Saigon. Bold colors, warm, rich, and vivid in every way, life here is nearly electric.

The French left behind some lovely architecture and their own lovely traditions of food which have remained and improved in many ways.

This amazing little man comes to this post office daily as he has for 40+ years to help locals and visitors translate letters and documents. He speaks close to 10 languages and is a fixture of local culture since before the war.

FOOD

At this amazing restaurant in a former French plantation shit started getting serious

Nha Hang Ngon is a collection of talented street food vendors housed in a former French colonial palace. In essence there is a single menu from which one orders amazing local street foods and they are created by individual artisans and then brought to the table by universal servers. It is a genius concept and a place we could not resist.

There are food geeks who swear that there is better if you go ala carte along the streets, but on a 94 degree day the cool shade and the warm service give this place a charm and wondrous respite from the street chaos just outside. Keep in mind, I adore the chaos I sometimes prefer to eat my Bún Thịt Nướng without a side of exhaust. (the link is a helpful Wikipedia page with names and images of Vietnamese dishes)

THE CHINESE TEMPLE

The Chinese invaded Vietnam on several occasions and each time were ultimately driven out but bot before they left their colorful influence on Vietnamese culture.

STREET LIFE - PEOPLE - COFFEE

The smog is off the charts as there are reported to be 3+ million scooters in Saigon. Yet the people relax outside over very cold beers, chill out in coffee shops where the iced coffee - cà phê sữa đá is one of the great cold caffeine and sugar bombs of the world.

I have not had the privilege to ever visit a city quite like Saigon and I cannot wait to return where I surely will have more Blissful Adventures!

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Hipstamatic, Houston, Huston’s Drug, Images, Michael Housewright, photo essay, Photography, stories, the blissful adventurer, Time Capsule, Travel, Tx, Saigon
Saturday 04.21.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Uchi Houston - 1st Look

The venerable Jeremy Parzen wrote a terrific piece yesterday in the Houston Press on the wine program at the new Uchi Japanese Restaurant in Houston.

I thought I would take this opportunity in the midst of our long drive from Houston to Colorado and detail our 1st dining experience at Uchi Houston.

I have been a longtime fan of Uchi in Austin as my wine group began doing programs at the original Uchi back in 2003. Through the years I have dined over and over at this hub of creativity and elegance on South Lamar in Austin. In the process I can say with all certainty I have enjoyed at least 3 of the top 10 meals of my life there.

Our frequent Uchi dining partners included a pair of dear friends with an exceptional wine collection and my amazingly talented fellow food and wine adventurer, "Dr" Loren Root (@theleftoverchef). Loren, as I have said many times is the best fish chef I know and his passion for Japanese cuisine borders on mania. It is with Loren that I developed my passion for sushi and my nearly fanatical love of uni (sea urchin). I seek out the best sushi on the planet in my travels and Uchi Austin has been at or near the top of my list since 2007.

When I heard that Uchi was coming to Houston I knew I was in for some amazing dining just around the corner from my home and the money I would save on gas to Austin I could push into an extra bottle of Sake'.

Alas, Juliet and I moved from Houston before Uchi opened. Imagine our joy when the maven all of Houston food and bev people(even living in Seattle), Emily Resling was able to get us into one of Uchi's soft opening evenings last week while we were in Houston visiting some of our dearest friends.

Having been a part of several restaurant openings I fully expected Uchi Houston to be crowded, a bit disorganized, and likely to be good but not up to the excellent standards I have come to expect from Uchi and its sister Uchiko in Austin.

Boy was I wrong! Uchi Houston was firing on more cylinders than the big block chariots of Narcissus parked in the lot. I was nervous when I did not see any of the chefs I knew from Austin. I was afraid the guys in the kitchen and at the sushi bar might miss out on the tutelage of a veteran Uchi chef on-hand to bring the true depth of experience Uchi has delivered for 8+ years.

My expectations were blown out of the water. Under the amazing guidance of lead sushi chef Nobu (not THAT Nobu, but a serious and soft-spoken bad-ass who worked with the famed Morimoto in his past) we were led down a path of fish joy that simply left us feeling like we had been transported to South Lamar circa 2009. The service was on top of its game in a place that was packed to the gills. We were seated immediately for our 7:30 reservation and enjoyed a nearly 3 hour extravaganza.

Jeremy Parzen discussed his take on Uchi's wine list yesterday and so I will take a moment to extol the virtues of Uchi's Sake' list. There are solid choices across most price ranges and on our particular evening we chose the Otokoyama Tokubetsu Junmai - in 720ml bottle. This sake' was described on the menu as having the flavor of clean winter air. While the whimsy of this description was not lost on me, the sake' itself was vibrant on the palate, clean across the aromas, and finished with a long, perpetual grip that carried the flavors of the fish and kept my fingers reaching for glass after glass.

Master Yasuda the former namesake sushi chef genius at NYC's world-class Sushi Yasuda suggested to me a few years back to consider drinking Junmai grade sake' with sushi, as its clean, elegant style, and higher tones pair better with fish than the higher grades of sake'. Who am I to argue with a master?

I sometimes hear detractors claim that Uchi is not a traditional sushi restaurant and that causes these naysayers consternation. I agree it is a unique program and at the same time Uchi utilizes the freshest fish available that I have ever enjoyed in Texas in both traditional and non-traditional ways which are inarguably exceptional.

I am going to say something here that is not intended to come off as anything more than a qualifier for the opinions I express. Since 2006 I have dined out an average of 400 times per year and in that time enjoyed sushi in New York City, Houston, Austin, Dallas, San Francisco, Denver, and Hong Kong. I have tasted some sublime fish in most of these places and Uchi Austin and now Uchi Houston live up to the best of the best in any of these places.

Yes, I know Uchi does experimental desserts, gorgeous chef-prepared plates, as well as beef and even interesting creations with foie gras. I have enjoyed some gorgeous creations by Top Chef Candidate Paul Qui and many from Owner/Chef Tyson Cole as well. However, it is Uchi's masters of the sushi counter that keep me coming back time after time.

The fish, the service, and the simplicity of feeling like I am worlds away from my cares easily mask the 2 bills+ it costs for a night out here for two. Is it expensive, yes? Do I still smile when I think of the first time Chef Masa in Austin carved an apple in about 7 seconds and created a saba (mackerel) dish that my wife , who does not enjoy mackerel, actually adored; absolutely!

Houston, I know how proud we all are of our homegrown restaurants and I urge the community to embrace Uchi Houston as one of their own and take a chance on a dining experience that could change your lives for the better.

Bravo Uchi Houston for a superb beginning. I cannot wait for my next rendezvous with you and Nobu!

Please see my additional photos and descriptions of our dishes.

Take my advice - sit at Nobu's station and let him drive the truck

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, food, food porn, Food Travel, Houston, Michael Housewright, Paul Qui, Photography, Sake, sushi, the blissful adventurer, Top Chef Texas, Travel, Uchi, Uchi Houston
Saturday 02.04.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 
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