Archive for the 'Food & Drink' Category



Downtown Restaurant Recommendations


h1 Friday, February 10th, 2006

Another great vegetarian/meateater option downtown is Thai Passion. It is fresh and yummy Thai food and open until 3 AM! They extended their hours last SXSW, and have kept it up because of the demand for quality late night food. I love it!

If you are in the mood for Mexican, it is a cab ride or drive away from downtown, but Curra’s Grill is well worth it. Great interior Mexican food with veggie tamales, excellent seafood, and enchiladas. Great for vegetarians or omnivores alike.

Really close to the Austin Convention Center and some of the best breakfast tacos in Austin (great quick lunch, too) try the Taco Shack conveniently located in the Frost building on the Brazos Street side. They are only open until 2:30pm weekdays and until 1pm on Saturdays, not open Sunday, so get down there before those early panels and for lunch.

A new place that’s very close to the action is Koriente on 7th and Sabine. Koriente is family-owned, MSG-free, healthy Asian-inspired food. They have an amazing selection of rare teas, some veggie options, yummy bulgogi and melt-in-your mouth Kalbi pot roast.

That’s all for now, but there’s more to come for people looking to get away from the downtown madness and some old Austin standbys to boot!

Thin Crust Pizza on the East Side


h1 Thursday, February 9th, 2006

There is a new Pizza shop on the east side of Austin. It is called East Side Pies. The menu is limited to Pizza, Slices and whole pies, salads, sandwiches, cookies, brownies, pop, coffee, and tea. We will be officially open (CO) , Mar 1st ,2006. Soft opening is comming the week prior. Try our pie, ESP, We Know What You Want!

Michael & Noah

Bunny Food


h1 Tuesday, February 7th, 2006

I make no claims on being a vegetarian, however, you folks have to eat way too much fried cheese at American restaurants. I think I might even be able to speak with more authority about vegetarian restaurants, because I would willingly drop my steak knife and go to these places for a feed. I swear.

Unfortunately, none of the veggie restaurants I know of are directly downtown. However, most are within a short cab ride or bus ride from there.

Veggie Heaven
1914 Guadalupe St Ste A
(512) 457-1013
Bus 1, 3, 5, ‘Dillo

A mostly Asian themed veggie restaurant right across from the Dobie Mall near UT campus. Protein 2000. Either TVP or wheat gluten this stir fried delicacy topped with broccoli florets and a tangy sauce is hands down my favorite vegetarian dish ever. When my buddy Shawn wants to rock the vegetarian cuisine, I am always game for this place.

Other nice things about Veggie Heaven are that it’s cheap, cheap, cheap and there are lots of student cuties to look at.

NuAge
2425 Exposition Blvd
(512) 275-6925

My veggie friends had a triple birthday party planned this past October. As I looked at the menu, I thought, “Oh no. I’ve been duped. Another flavorless, vegetarian restaurant.” But no. I was so wrong. They have roti and egg curry on the menu, folks! I thought that I’d have to go back to Amsterdam or get on a flight to South America to score some more of that. ‘Twas good. I also sampled some of Shawn’s tasty grilled tofu and vegetables concoction.

Keep in mind, NuAge isn’t cheap, but if you’re on a per diem, why not splurge? How often do vegetarians get to eat at a fancy restaurant?
Madras Pavilion
9025 Research Blvd Ste 100
(512) 719-5575

The number of South Asians I saw eating at Madras Pavilion the first time I walked in this Texas chain, tipped me off that this wasn’t your typical strip mall Indian restaurant. And the countless lunchtime buffets I’ve eaten there have been good and filling. Dinner is also good, but my lack of familiarity with southern Indian cooking sometimes vexes me a bit when it comes down to ordering the right thing. It’s a bit of a hike from Downtown, but if you have a car and a group of buddies, go for it.

Also, another place of note that I’ve heard consistent positive veggie buzz about. However, I have never been.

Mother’s Café
4215 Duval St
(512) 451-3994
Bus 7

The grandmother of Austin vegetarian restaurants. Personally, I have not been in almost 10 years since my more hippie college student days. Back then a definite slacker, bad/excruciatingly slow attitude ruled the place. I pretty much swore it off. HOWEVER, I have gotten repeated reports from veggies and non-veggies alike, that Mother’s has changed its ways. Tasty and good service are apparently the name of the game now.

If Hyde Park Grill is crowded on an expedition to Hyde Park, you might want to try walking across Duval to Mother’s.

Mr. Natural
1901 E Cesar Chavez St
(512) 719-5575

Breakfast/Late Night Feedings


h1 Monday, February 6th, 2006

Last weekend while I was at a party in San Francisco, I never knew my culinary knowledge of downtown Austin would be useful. The party’s host had an agenda—good grub. Suddenly my new friend handed me another Newcastle and started writing down names of restaurants and my favorite meals in his Treo.

You might try to feed yourself on heavy hors d’oeuvres at official parties, but any budding Web developer knows you can’t make it on jalapeno poppers for three days in a row.

Here are some of my favorite places to go Downtown or nearby Downtown in Austin. [Disclaimer: I have not received compensation from any Austin restaurant to make these recommendations]. The favorite BBQ discussion has already begun, so why not focus on the most important meal of the day. BBQ is far too political. If the stale bagels, limp watermelon slices, and flaccid bacon strips at your hotel breakfast bar buffet got you down, rock that corporate card at these places.

Breakfast/Late Night

Las Manitas
211 Congress Ave
(512) 472-9357
Open ‘til 4pm daily.

Especially on weekend mornings, this is the place for Mexican breakfast. And if you come to Austin, you must eat Mexican breakfast. The unofficial hangover outpost of most SXSW attendees, you might even spy former Texas Governor Ann Richards or Texas Monthly editor Evan Smith holding court. My early adult Sunday mornings would have been sorely lacking without scarfing down Las Manitas’s migas with friends.

Migas are the Austin breakfast specialty. Migas con hongos is my favorite dish. Ask to substitute the black beans for the refried beans. It’s a heart attack on a plate anyway, you’re not fooling anybody. The Chilaquiles are also pretty darned good.

Magnolia Café
2304 Lake Austin Blvd., 512-478-8645
1920 S. Congress Ave., 512-445-0000
24 Hours

My buddy Jeff from L.A. makes a run to Magnolia for Gingerbread pancakes after a hard night of listening to the newest bands at SXSW. Filled with a mix of slackers, students, and bands unwinding from a gig, both the Lake Austin and South Congress locations of Magnolia provide Austin’s weirdness over cups of coffee. The pancakes are great, the migas aren’t bad, and for those short on cash, the various “Landscapes” on the menu are a tasty and cheap choice.

Star Seeds
3101 N. Interstate 35
(512) 478-7107
24 Hours

If I they had a frequent buyers program here during my college days, I would have gotten several free toasters at Star Seeds. Basically, just good greasy spoon diner food here. Though they do black beans just like Las Manitas and Magnolia, the focus here is on blocking arteries quickly. Essentially, a good feed.

SXSW Interactive Drinking Game


h1 Thursday, February 2nd, 2006

Ok, so everyone who has been to SXSWi in the past knows that it’s not about the tradeshow booths, the presentations, or even the people.. yes, that’s right, it’s about the booze. Keith came up with the great idea of having a SXSWi drinking game. Since the buzz this year seems to be Web 2.0, those of us here at Blue Flavor decided to take a drink any time someone at the SXSWi Web Awards Show and The Bloggies mentions “Web 2.0″. Interested in joining us? Read more about The Web 2.0 Drinking Game (basic version). Hope to see you there because there’s nothing better than a room full of drunken geeks.

Best BBQ In Austin


h1 Wednesday, February 1st, 2006

OK, I’ll be the first to say it. Some of the best BBQ in Austin is Artz Rib House, 2330 South Lamar. Great food. Good music. West Texas atmosphere (some would say South Austin atmosphere). The real deal.

Best French restaurant in Austin: Chez Nous, 510 Neches, just a block or two from the Hilton. Doesn’t take reservations, but if you get a table, you can sit there and talk all night, just like a Parisienne. My wife and my favorite restaurant.

I’m Joel Greenberg. I’ve been talking at SXSW Interactive since the first one, I think it was around 1995 or so at the Hyatt Regency. Back then, I spoke about cross platform development–how quaint. This year, I’ve put together a panel on What People are Really Doing on the Web with some top notch researchers answering that question with real data. OK, I’ll say it, they’re research superstars!

I’ve been involved in interactive…whatever…since before there was a QuickTime 1.0. Anyone remember Interactive Video Disk? (Beat you there, too, Molly. Smackdown!)

I track trends in society, culture, and technology at the Austin ad agency, GSD&M. I have a small podcast where I interview interesting people at Friends Talking. Sometimes I blog at MIT’s Convergence Culture Blog. Sometimes, I hang out in Second Life.

Welcome to Austin! Stop by, say hi.