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Friday, July 29, 2022
What you eat could be key to living longer, scientists say - The Livingston County News
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What you eat could be key to living longer, scientists say The Livingston County NewsWhat you eat could be key to living longer, scientists say - The Livingston County News
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Thursday, July 28, 2022
What to See, Eat and Do in Prague - The New York Times
Public spaces, provocative exhibitions, new restaurants and unexpected neighborhoods offer visitors a deeper look into Czech culture.
Prague was justifiably popular with visitors before the pandemic, but life here often felt slightly out of whack before 2020. As a small counterbalance to an immense tragedy, the pandemic offered the city a chance for a much-needed reset. Residents had time to rediscover sites and neighborhoods that they’d long since abandoned to tourists. The sudden lack of foreign guests forced restaurant owners to refocus on customers who actually live here. Historic attractions underwent renovations. And new projects that went ahead with openings in 2020 and 2021 have made the city even more fun than before.
As a result, Prague now feels like a place with less touristic gimcrackery and more local flavor. It also has a younger vibe than many visitors might expect, explains Jan Valenta, who blogs about local restaurants and offers food tours through his company, Taste of Prague.
“The biggest difference, I think, between a Western country like the U.S. and a post-communist country like us is the distribution of wealth among generations,” Mr. Valenta said. “The older generation here doesn’t have the money to spend in these restaurants that young people go to.”
Mr. Valenta, 44, notes that he defines young “very generously.” But by any definition, the city sports more youthful vibrancy than in previous years, which might account for the newfound popularity of public spaces, including the embankments along the Vltava River, as well as islands and parks.
“There’s more of a sense of community than there used to be five years ago,” Mr. Valenta said. “People are more willing to meet and spend time together outside. That’s a very new development, I think, and it’s great.”
Some of those new spaces include Čapadlo, a scenic but overlooked spot on the Old Town embankment that debuted as an open-air concert venue and multipurpose hangout in mid-2021. Even attractions with a bit of history, like the popular promenade on the Rašín embankment known as Náplavka, gained new features during the pandemic, including new cafes and pop-up bars in the former ice-storage vaults in the retaining wall along the riverside walkway.
A renewed culture
On the arts and culture front, the biggest debut took place in February, when the Kunsthalle Praha exhibition space opened in a former electrical substation near the foot of the castle steps. Both the National Museum and the State Opera re-emerged after their own renovations in 2020, while Salm Palace, an important National Gallery exhibition space at Prague Castle, reopened after reconstruction earlier this year; the current exhibition, Zenga — Japanese Zen Paintings from the Kaeru-An Collection, runs through October. Next up: Clam-Gallas Palace, a Baroque masterpiece across from the main public library in Old Town, which should reopen after a complete renovation later in 2022.
Less highbrow, but more immediate in terms of local memory: Retro Muzeum, an exhibition of everyday items from Czechoslovakia’s Normalization Era of the 1970s and 1980s, which opened inside Old Town’s Kotva department store earlier this year (adults, 220 koruny, or about $10). The commie-kitsch collection of clothing, furniture, interior design, packaging and collectibles fits perfectly with the setting, a renovated but still bizarre Brutalist building from 1975.
Barbecue, beer and bakeries
Most of the big new draws are in the world of food — and many are away from the central districts of Old Town and Malá Strana. That might sound daunting, but Prague’s metro and extensive tram network make crosstown travel easy, as Melissa Joulwan, a Prague resident and co-host of the Strong Sense of Place literary travel podcast, often tells visitors.
“People who are not used to public transportation might not understand that it’s so easy to get around, and places that might seem far away are really not far away at all,” she says. “It’s so much fun to look at the architecture in other neighborhoods — there’s always something beautiful or interesting to see.”
With a 72-hour ticket that costs 330 koruny, or a 30-minute ticket for 30 koruny, it’s easy to reach up-and-coming neighborhoods like Holešovice, where Big Smokers started serving its spot-on, Austin, Texas-style barbecue to a relaxed crowd at the end of 2019 (the Big Taste platter serves four kinds of smoked meat and four sides, enough for three diners, for 765 koruny), not far from a popular smashburger takeout window that opened under an unprintable name in 2021. Take another metro and in a few minutes you can check out the new arrivals in the once run-down Smíchov district, like the globe-spanning food court Manifesto Market. Its stylish Anděl branch opened in September 2021, shortly before it shuttered its original location near the Florenc metro station; highlights include tacos, Italian seafood sandwiches and Brazilian barbecue. Just around the corner is another 2021 arrival, Bon Ramen, the third outpost of a local micro-chain.
Even neighborhoods with an already enviable list of restaurants got some fun new arrivals. The Karlín district was already cool half a decade ago, but with the arrival of casual dining spots like 2021’s home-cooking-inspired Kro Bistro & Bar, serving rotisserie chicken, roasted cauliflower and housemade kimchi, it has only gotten cooler. The extensive development projects transforming the nearby embankment are ongoing, but they already host a handful of new cafes, bars and restaurants, like Ye’s Kafe Wine — a day cafe with great vino, housemade lemonades, creative brunch dishes, cakes and easy-sipping cocktails.
One trend runs citywide: better bakeries and pastry shops. With the 2020 opening of its newest, sixth branch in Smíchov, it’s easy to find an Antonínovo Pekařství (or Antonin’s Bakery) in Prague, even if the name isn’t easy to pronounce; an espresso with a poppyseed-covered loupák roll or a gingerbread-like perník makes an ideal midafternoon pick-me-up.
There are now three branches of the Icelandic-owned Artic Bakehouse — a source for super-flaky almond croissants and Iceland’s cardamom-scented kleina pastries — including a Smíchov branch that opened in 2021. And you’ll find Cronut-style “crobliha” pastries, a cross between a Czech kobliha pastry and a French croissant (around 110 koruny), across the city at the four branches of Oh Deer Bakery, three of which opened in 2020 or later. More traditional sweets, including the small pies sometimes called kolache in English, can be found in the Vinohrady district at Kus Koláče, which launched in mid-2020 to rave reviews.
Because of social distancing and other public health restrictions, Prague’s famed drinking culture saw less growth than in previous eras. That said, a handful of important watering holes have opened, including this year’s grand reopening of the vintage-1912 American Bar inside the landmark Obecní Dům, or Municipal House, on Republic Square, after a long closure. Other new arrivals include Pult, a specialty beer bar focusing on expertly tapped, foam-capped Czech lagers, and Oh My Yalta, a cocktail bar run in partnership with the cult Czech distiller Martin Žufánek, maker of great absinthes, unusual fruit distillates and a treasured local gin known as OMG.
Where to lay your head
The recent cancellation of virtually all coronavirus restrictions and a severe, resident-pleasing reduction in short-term apartment rentals have only heightened the sense of a city in full bloom.
While a few hotels did close for good during the lockdown, they were outweighed by several beautiful new arrivals, like 2021’s Hotel Cube, a contemporary boutique hotel housed in a former cinema from the 1920s (in August, doubles start around 149 euros, or about $157). Famous for Viennese coffee and gourmet groceries, Austria’s Julius Meinl group opened its first Prague hotel, the Julius, this summer; many of the 168 rooms and suites have full kitchens or kitchenettes (in August, doubles start around 145 euros). On that same New Town square, Senovážné Náměstí, the Hyatt’s new Andaz Prague opened its 176 luxuriously appointed rooms earlier this year; the landmark neoclassical building, Cukrovarnický Palác, which the hotel translates as Sugar Palace, dates from 1916 (in August, doubles start around 342 euros).
That seems like enough to justify a visit. But to sweeten the deal, the city just launched a new tourist card, Prague Visitor Pass (1,800 koruny for a 48-hour version). In addition to unlimited travel on public transportation, it offers free entry to dozens of museums, galleries, gardens, towers and historic sites.
Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation.
What to See, Eat and Do in Prague - The New York Times
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Many people with kidney disease don't eat enough fruits, vegetables, study shows - UPI News
Eating a rainbow of fruits and vegetables is common advice, but many Americans eat few of these nutrient powerhouses, according to a new study.
This includes adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) who are less likely to eat fruits and veggies than similar people without the disease, said researchers from the University of Virginia (UVA) School of Medicine, in Charlottesville.
"Consuming more fruits and vegetables is strongly linked to health in many different diseases," said Dr. Julia Scialla, a kidney specialist at UVA Health. "We worry about overall health effects when we see patients with CKD consuming low levels of fruits and vegetables. We have to be careful not to unnecessarily discourage healthy fruit and vegetable intake when we provide nutritional advice to patients with CKD, such as advice to reduce potassium intake."
For the study, the researchers analyzed data on eating patterns from nationwide health and nutrition surveys conducted between 1988 and 2018.
The investigators found that between 1988 and 1994, 52% of respondents with CKD had low intake of fruits and vegetables, compared with 48% of people without the disease.
Between 2003 and 2010, 46% of respondents with CKD had low produce intake, compared with 41% of others.
And between 2011 and 2018, 48% of respondents with CKD had a low intake pattern, compared with 46% of others.
About 37 million adults in the United States have chronic kidney disease, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This occurs when kidneys are unable to effectively filter waste from a person's blood. The condition can lead to high blood pressure, heart disease and stroke.
Patients who have CKD sometimes are told to reduce potassium, a mineral commonly found in fruits and veggies. The health benefits of this advice are not known.
More studies are needed to determine whether the low intake of fruits and vegetables is a cause or result of CKD, or if other factors are involved, the study authors said in a university news release.
In addition, the researchers said that more study is needed to understand the link between fruit and vegetable consumption and CKD, and to figure out how to get all Americans to eat more produce.
"We hope that through this study and similar studies we would be able to encourage both healthy individuals and patients with chronic kidney disease to reconsider their intake of fruits and vegetables by incorporating greater varieties and amounts of unprocessed or minimally processed fruits and vegetables into their everyday diets," said co-author Shirin Pourafshar, a nutritionist and dietitian based in Charlottesville, Va.
The findings were recently published online in the Journal of Renal Nutrition.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases has more on chronic kidney disease.
Copyright © 2022 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
Many people with kidney disease don't eat enough fruits, vegetables, study shows - UPI News
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Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Summertime Heat And Good Foods To Eat - The Waterways Journal
Eating light foods before you go out on tow during a hot day is important. Precautions should be considered during heat waves. You lose fluids through sweating and physical work. Some foods increase your body’s water excretion. This would be caffeinated beverages, high-protein foods and spicy foods.
During the summer, your appetite may be reduced when you are feeling hot. This is because your metabolism is at work digesting foods, and your body temperature increases. Fruit and vegetables are good for hydration. In this extreme heat working on a metal barge, it would be a good idea to eat foods that are light and do not lay heavy on you.
Sometimes it is difficult to pick foods that you do not normally eat. We tend to eat with our eyes first. When I prepare foods for my crew, I try to ensure the dish looks attractive. In the summertime I like to serve more salads and lighter desserts. As much as I like pot roasts and soups, I save those meals for the winter.
Gatorade Jell-O Squares
Here is a great hydrating summertime dessert packed with electrolytes. Electrolytes help regulate the body’s fluid balance. Gatorade and Powerade also have potassium, which is good for hydration.
There is a downfall to these sports drinks because they have sugar. However, these drinks have only half the sugars that soft drinks contain.
With this dessert, try different flavors of Jell-O mixed with different flavors of Gatorade. The first one I prepared for the crew was a mix of yellow Gatorade and raspberry Jell-O. You can use regular or sugar-free Jell-O or Gatorade. (The Gatorade Jell-O is shown with the fruit platter.)
Ingredients:
2 (20 oz.) bottles Gatorade (any flavor)
3 (3 oz.) pkgs. Jell-O (any flavor)
Directions:
Heat the Gatorade in a pan until hot but not boiling. Stir in the Jell-O packages. Do not whisk in the Jell-O packets so hard that you will have foam on top. Pour in a 9 x 13 glass pan and chill for three hours.
Kool-Aid Pickles With Gatorade
Holy cow, who thought of this one? It’s weird, but it tastes pretty good! As we all know, pickle juice is good for leg cramps. Pickle juice contains salt and vinegar, which may also help replenish electrolytes. I made this to have pickles look more fun and entertaining to eat. Yes, there is some sugar added in here, but that is to balance the Kool-Aid packet. They almost looked like candied apples!
Ingredients:
1 (32 oz) jar dill pickles, ovals or spears
1 cup Gatorade
1/3 cup sugar
1 packet red Kool-Aid
Directions:
Pour pickles in a bowl. Add Gatorade, sugar and Kool-Aid. Stir gently until Kool-Aid packet and sugar are dissolved. Place in a serving bowl, and refrigerate overnight. Save the pickle jar for your leftovers.
Orange Bars
This recipe is much like lemon bars. The exception is that orange juice is substituted for the lemon juice. It is light and tasty. There is sugar in this recipe, and sugary types of foods can be more dehydrating than others, but that is true only if you consume large amounts of it.
Ingredients for crust:
2 sticks of unsalted butter
3/4 cup powdered sugar
2 cups sifted flour
Ingredients for filling:
1 tablespoon orange zest
4 large eggs
1-1/2 cups granulated sugar
2/3 cup orange juice
Powdered sugar to dust top of bars
Directions for the crust:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 9×13 inch pan with non-stick spray. Cut butter up into cubes. Place in bowl. Add powdered sugar and flour to butter. Blend with a pastry cutter. A food processor may be used to blend the crust. Press into pan and bake for 15 minutes.
Directions for the filling:
Prepare the filling while the crust is baking. This way the filling can be poured into the crust as soon as it comes out of the oven. (You will then re-bake it). With a grater, use the smallest side of the grater to zest your orange. When zesting, be sure not to rub off any of the white under the orange skin. (The white gives a tart, sour taste.) Whisk eggs in a large bowl. Add sugar, flour and orange juice to the eggs. Add the orange zest to egg mixture.
Once the crust is baked, immediately add the filling on top of the crust. Bake for 20 more minutes. Remove from oven and cool. Place orange bars in refrigerator for approximately two hours.
Dust with powdered sugar.
Cold Pasta Salad
During these heat waves of July and August it is a good idea to put up many types of salads. There are many different salads. The internet is great for ideas. Here is a handful of salads I like to prepare: Ceasar, chef, cobb, seafood, taco and Southwest. One of my favorite salads is the cold pasta salad.
Ingredients:
12 oz bag macaroni noodles
1/2 sliced red pepper
1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved
3/4 cup cubed ham
3/4 cup cubed hard cheddar cheese
2 green onions, chopped
1 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup zesty Italian dressing
Directions:
Boil noodles, drain, rinse in cool water, drain again. Toss in rest of ingredients. Voila, you’re done!
Mary Ann Kuper is a cook on the ACBL towboat Harold Dodd.
Caption for top photo: Gatorade Jell-O Squares.
Summertime Heat And Good Foods To Eat - The Waterways Journal
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Eating Too Much Protein Makes Pee a Problem Pollutant in the U.S. - Scientific American
In the U.S., people eat more protein than they need to. And though it might not be bad for human health, this excess does pose a problem for the country’s waterways. The nation’s wastewater is laden with the leftovers from protein digestion: nitrogen compounds that can feed toxic algal blooms and pollute the air and drinking water. This source of nitrogen pollution even rivals that from fertilizers washed off of fields growing food crops, new research suggests.
When we overconsume protein—whether it comes from lentils, supplements or steak—our body breaks the excess down into urea, a nitrogen-containing compound that exits the body via urine and ultimately ends up in sewage. Maya Almaraz, a biogeochemist at the University of California, Davis, and her colleagues wanted to see how much of this nitrogen is being flushed into the U.S. sewage system because of a protein-heavy diet. The researchers combined population data and previous work on how much excess protein the average American eats and found that the majority of nitrogen pollution present in wastewater—some 67 to 100 percent—is a by-product of what people consume. “We think a lot about sewage nitrogen. We know that’s an issue,” Almaraz says. “But I didn’t know how much of that is actually affected by the choices we’re making way upstream—when we go the grocery store, when we cook a meal and what we end up putting in our bodies.”
Once it enters the environment, the nitrogen in urea can trigger a spectrum of ecological impacts known as the “nitrogen cascade.” Under certain chemical conditions, and in the presence of particular microbes, urea can break down to form gases of oxidized nitrogen. These gases reach the atmosphere, where nitrous oxide (N2O) can contribute to warming via the greenhouse effect and nitrogen oxides (NOx) can cause acid rain. Other times, algae and cyanobacteria, photosynthetic bacteria also called blue-green algae, feed on urea directly. The nitrogen helps them grow much faster than they would normally, clogging vital water supplies with blooms that can produce toxins that are harmful to humans, other animals and plants. And when the algae eventually die, the problem is not over. Microorganisms that feast on dead algae use up oxygen in the water, leading to “dead zones,” where many aquatic species simply cannot survive, in rivers, lakes and oceans. Blooms from Puget Sound to Tampa, Fla., have caused large fish die-offs.
Although it is possible to treat algal blooms, many of the current methods—such as spraying clay particles or chemicals over the surface of a bloom to kill and sink the algae—are not always effective at eliminating all of the harmful growth. Some of these methods can even lead to additional pollution. So the best strategy for dealing with the effects of nitrogen pollution is prevention, says Patricia Glibert, an oceanographer at the University of Maryland, who was not involved with the new study.
One option for preventing nitrogen from getting into the environment is improving wastewater treatment plants. The technology exists to remove 90 percent of nitrogen from wastewater, but only 1 percent of all U.S. sewage is currently treated this way, partly because the technology is so expensive. Equipping plants in China to remove nitrogen from three quarters of the country’s urban sewage cost more than $20 billion. Almaraz and her team suggest, however, that curbing nitrogen pollution could be approached more quickly with a change in eating habits that could save billions of dollars in the long term.
Their new study, published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, broke down protein requirements by age (adults 50 to 70 years old need the most) for the current U.S. population and projected future populations out to 2055. By midcentury, the country’s population is expected to be larger overall and to have a greater percentage of older people. The researchers calculated the amount of nitrogen that would enter the environment if people ate today’s average American diet and if they instead reduced their protein intake to only what is nutritionally needed. This shift in diet alone could reduce the amount of nitrogen reaching aquatic ecosystems by 12 percent today and by nearly 30 percent in the future, according to the study’s results. Such a change could also help reduce damaging nitrogen pollution while wastewater infrastructure catches up.
“Many people think that we need to all switch to becoming vegetarians. Obviously, that’s not practical. That’s not something that is really ever going to happen,” Glibert says. Rather than cutting out any foods entirely, she suggests consumers could switch to a “demitarian” diet—an approach that focuses on reducing the consumption of meat and dairy, which currently make up about two thirds of the protein eaten in the U.S. “Enjoy your steak, enjoy your burger but go modest on your meat consumption in your following meal,” she says.
“One cool area that opens up here is how human behavior can influence our environment,” Almaraz says. “I think it can be really empowering to people to understand that, ‘hey, my choices—once those add up with other people making similar choices—can actually have a positive impact.’”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)
Sasha Warren is a 2022 AAAS Mass Media Fellow at Scientific American. They are currently working on their PhD in planetary sciences at the University of Chicago. Follow them on Twitter@space_for_sasha
Eating Too Much Protein Makes Pee a Problem Pollutant in the U.S. - Scientific American
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Creamy margaritas and globe-trotting guacs: 22 ways to eat through Australia’s avocado avalanche - The Guardian
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Creamy margaritas and globe-trotting guacs: 22 ways to eat through Australia’s avocado avalanche The GuardianCreamy margaritas and globe-trotting guacs: 22 ways to eat through Australia’s avocado avalanche - The Guardian
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Tuesday, July 26, 2022
A's and Eat. Learn. Play. to welcome 1000 local kids to the Coliseum on Wednesday, July 27 - MLB.com
OAKLAND, Calif. — The A’s are teaming up with Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation to host more than 1,000 children from community organizations Town Camp, Oakland Lacrosse, Street Soccer USA, Oakland Genesis Soccer Club, Oakland Zoo, and Oakland Public Library at the Coliseum on Wednesday, July 27. The fun day of baseball and activities is designed to promote movement and exercise, literacy and fun, in addition to offering free giveaways and surprise-and-delight moments. Co-founded by Stephen and Ayesha Curry, Eat. Learn. Play. is committed to unlocking the amazing potential of every child by fighting to end childhood hunger, ensuring students have access to a quality education, and providing safe places for all children to play and be active.
Prior to the start of the 12:37 p.m. matchup versus the Astros, campers will take the field with A’s players for the national anthem. Additionally, Stephen and Ayesha will both throw out a ceremonial first pitch. Throughout the day, campers will also have lunch at the ballpark, visit the A’s Stomping Ground, lead the Coliseum crowd in “Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” and enjoy postgame activities empowering the spirit of play.
“We are excited to partner with Eat. Learn. Play. for their first Day at the Ballpark event and to support the amazing work they do for Bay Area youth,” said Stephanie Gaywood, Senior Director of Community Engagement and Community Fund. “We will welcome more than 1,000 kids to the Coliseum to enjoy the game, interactive activities, and lots of PLAY fun.”
“Similar to our Eat. Learn. Play. launch three years ago, we couldn’t be more excited to spend the day with kids from the Oakland community at our very first Eat. Learn. Play. Day at the Ballpark event,” said Stephen and Ayesha Curry, Co-Founders of Eat. Learn. Play. “This fun celebration underscores our work to enhance and diversify program offerings during the summer so that more Oakland kids have safe places to (eat, learn, and) play throughout the summer. Alongside our partners, we are continuing to provide creative and impactful ways to engage kids in unique experiences that inspire them to play through more playspaces, summer camps, and organized sports opportunities. We’re grateful to the A’s organization for giving us this moment to spotlight the importance of physical activity and how crucial it is in supporting childhood development.”
“We’re thrilled to work alongside the Oakland A’s and celebrate PLAY during the summer by hosting over 1,000 children from various Oakland organizations for a day of baseball and exciting activities,” said Chris Helfrich, CEO of Eat. Learn. Play. “Our foundation has begun setting the stage with major investments in our PLAY pillar in 2022 and beyond, and through close collaboration with community partners such as these, we know we can achieve the impossible.”
A's and Eat. Learn. Play. to welcome 1000 local kids to the Coliseum on Wednesday, July 27 - MLB.com
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Sunday, July 24, 2022
Children pushed to eat junk food over holidays by UK government campaign - The Guardian
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Children pushed to eat junk food over holidays by UK government campaign The GuardianChildren pushed to eat junk food over holidays by UK government campaign - The Guardian
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Thursday, July 21, 2022
Kelp is on the way: Why we should all be eating seaweed - CNN
(CNN)When most of us read the words "plant-based diet," we tend to think of foods such as kale salads and grain bowls or trendy meat replacements. But there is one nonmeat option that's gaining traction as the newest superfood: seaweed.
Good for humans and the environment
How to add seaweed to your everyday meals
Casey Barber is a food writer, artist and editor of the website Good. Food. Stories.
Kelp is on the way: Why we should all be eating seaweed - CNN
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What to See, Eat and Do in San Francisco - The New York Times
The city’s neighborhoods, from the Mission to Russian Hill and the Outer Sunset, are vibrant with packed restaurants and bars, and many are home to new parks and the return of in-person events.
Lately, it seems like the news headlines from San Francisco have been negative, from the city’s homelessness crisis and highly publicized recall elections to the area’s astronomical cost-of-living and worsening fire seasons.
But San Francisco is still San Francisco. The fog still rolls in from the Pacific to blanket the city’s jumbled hills, the sunset still flames crimson behind the Golden Gate Bridge and the smell of salt and eucalyptus still hits the moment you step outside of San Francisco International Airport. Always a city for lovers of the outdoors, pandemic restrictions led to the near-universal embrace of an indoor-outdoor city life. And at its core, the city’s spirit, a heady brew of creativity, progressivism and experimentation, remains unbreakable.
San Francisco’s pandemic recovery has been slower than other major metropolitan areas in the United States; according to data from the San Francisco Travel Association, forecasts for 2022 estimate 80 percent of 2019’s visitor volume. While the Downtown and Union Square neighborhoods remain quieter than prepandemic times, the city’s singular neighborhoods, from the Mission to Russian Hill and the Outer Sunset, are vibrant with packed restaurants and bars, and many boast of new parks and in-person events. San Francisco no longer imposes a mask mandate, but some businesses will require or request masks; masks are recommended but not required on MUNI and BART, the city’s public transportation systems. Many indoor events, including concerts and theater productions, require proof of vaccination to enter.
New parks and slow streets
San Francisco’s wealth of green spaces has increased thanks to a trio of new parks, including the Presidio Tunnel Tops, 14 acres of new national park land hugging the city’s north coast that opened this month. Boasting panoramic views of the Bay, the park was designed by the same group behind New York’s High Line and is home to a changing roster of food trucks, art installations and performances. For more views, check out Francisco Park in the city’s Russian Hill neighborhood, which opened in April on the site of San Francisco’s first reservoir. In the southeastern Mission Bay neighborhood, largely protected from the city’s frequent westerly winds, Crane Cove Park has become a warm, sunny destination for stand-up paddle-boarding, kayaking and lounging since it opened in 2020.
In addition to new parks, San Francisco has become more walkable and bikeable with the pandemic-driven development of the Slow Streets program, which limits or prohibits car traffic on streets throughout the city. Destination-worthy ones include the Great Highway, which runs alongside Ocean Beach on the city’s western shore (it’s currently closed to car traffic on weekends and often, on windy days) and JFK Promenade in Golden Gate Park, which could be made permanently car-free in November. The one-and-a-half-mile stretch of JFK takes you past destinations like the Conservatory of Flowers and the Rose Garden, plus the Skatin’ Place, where you’ll often find a rocking roller disco.
A return to in-person music events
Golden Gate Park is also playing host to a number of major in-person events this year, including Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, a free, three-day music festival being held Sept. 30 to Oct. 2. This year’s lineup will feature Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle and Buddy Miller, with more artists to be announced next week. The Outside Lands Music Festival is taking place Aug. 5 to 7 with artists including Green Day, Post Malone and Lil Uzi Vert (single-day tickets from $195; three-day passes from $409). Find even more music in the Sunset District at the Stern Grove Festival, now in its 85th year. The series of free weekly concerts, happening on Sundays through Aug. 14, has acts ranging from the San Francisco Symphony to Phil Lesh.
The Portola Music Festival (single-day tickets from $200, two-day passes from $400), a new music festival is coming to San Francisco from the team behind Coachella, takes place on Sept. 24 to 25 at Pier 80, and will showcase electronic acts including Flume, James Blake, The Avalanches and M.I.A.
A new destination for contemporary art
With its opening in October, the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco aims to provide a fresh approach to the ways in which contemporary art should be showcased and shared. Tied to its core tenets of equity and accessibility, ICASF will have free admission and plans to showcase local artists and artists of color in an environment that is welcoming to all. Opening programming includes a solo exhibition from Jeffrey Gibson, a Choctaw-Cherokee painter and sculptor, a group exhibit curated by Tahirah Rasheed and Autumn Breon, Oakland-based members of the collective See Black Womxn, and work from the local artists Liz Hernández and Ryan Whelan.
Eat and drink
San Francisco’s restaurants have struggled from pandemic restrictions, but also the high operational costs and high costs of living limiting the workforce. Many storefronts remain empty, and a number of legacy businesses closed, including Alioto’s, an Italian seafood restaurant that held court in Fisherman’s Wharf for 97 years, and the Cliff House, an iconic destination hugging the jagged shoreline over the Pacific (a new restaurant may open there by the end of the year).
While undoubtedly challenging, the past two years have had a silver lining: Outdoor dining and drinking cropped up everywhere, from long-established restaurants like Nopa to brand-new spots like Casements, a modern Irish bar in the Mission that opened in January 2020. The bar had originally planned to be a cozy, indoor-only affair, but instead it now serves stellar cocktails (from $12) on one of the best patios in the city, complete with an outdoor semi-private space, live music, D.J.s and colorful murals of Irish rock musicians including Dolores O’Riordan of the Cranberries and Phil Lynott of Thin Lizzy.
While marquee openings are still a major part of the city’s food fabric — recent ones include the opulent Palm Court Restaurant in the new RH Gallery and a new Ghirardelli Chocolate Experience store — some of the most exciting developments center on low-key projects from high-end chefs. In the Mission, Corey Lee of three Michelin-starred Benu opened San Ho Won, a Korean barbecue spot with classic dishes and riffs on tradition, like a blood-sausage pancake and kimchi pozole (starters from $16, barbecue from $26). Matthew Kirk, a sous chef from Lazy Bear, opened Automat, a day-and-night destination in the Western Addition for baked goods, breakfast sandwiches and burgers (sandwiches from $9 to $16).
Natural wine is nothing new in San Francisco, but low-intervention bottles — small-batch, often funky wines made utilizing organic ingredients, native yeast and usually, little to no sulfites — are dominating new restaurants and bars. Shuggie’s, a pop-art explosion with a lively bottle list from the West Coast and beyond, features two-dollar wine shots and a “trash pizza” made from repurposed food waste (wines from $15 for a glass or $51 for a bottle; pizzas from $19). Palm City Wines opened in the Outer Sunset in spring of 2020 as a takeaway-only natural wine bottle shop and deli; now, it also serves small plates, wines by the glass, Northern California beers and forearm-sized hoagies (starters from $8, sandwiches from $19). Upping the ante is Bar Part Time in the Mission, a natural wine-fueled disco with a rotating roster of D.J.s and wine producers.
Where to stay
1 Hotel opened in San Francisco in June on the Embarcadero near the Ferry Building. The striking space features reclaimed wood and native greenery, recyclable key cards and hangers in the 186 guest rooms and 14 suites (from $500 per night), plus a rooftop spa, chef’s garden and beehives. Terrene, the hotel’s restaurant, features a farm-to-table inspired menu and a wide selection of mezcal and tequila.
LUMA, which also opened in June, is the first hotel development in the Mission Bay neighborhood. With 299 rooms (from $329 per night) and a rooftop lounge opening later this summer, the hotel is close to Oracle Park and the Chase Center. And on June 30, the longstanding Sir Francis Drake Hotel in Union Square reopened as Beacon Grand with 418 renovated guest rooms (from $249 per night), a lobby bar and in 2023, will reopen a redesign of the famed top-floor bar, the Starlite Room.
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What to See, Eat and Do in San Francisco - The New York Times
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Wednesday, July 20, 2022
Where to eat, play when visiting South Florida - Times Union
In the southernmost tip of Florida, visitors will find incredible wildlife, delicious Cuban food, energetic nightlife, beachfront properties with plenty of amenities, and some great underwater adventures.
Kimpton Surfcomber
1717 Collins Ave., Miami Beach; https://www.surfcomber.com/
This oceanside boutique hotel focuses on providing a great experience for guests with daily activities like salsa lessons and social happy hours. Pools overlook the ocean as well as private beach access with chairs and umbrellas. Some of the rooms have waterfront views from private terraces, complete with a lounge chairs.
Trump International Beach Resort
18001 Collins Ave, Sunny Isles Beach; https://www.trumpmiami.com/
The resort in Sunny Isle Beach has private beach access, full access to swimming pools, and the option to rent water sport equipment including motorized surfboards, jet skis, and stand-up paddleboards.
Activities
Everglades Outpost Wildlife Rescue
35601 SW 192nd Ave., Homestead; https://www.crocodilechris.com/tours
Swim with gators at the Everglades Outpost. Chris Gillette is an expert when it comes to working with these animals and building their trust. He developed the program to educate guests on alligators’ calm demeanor and why they shouldn’t ever be fed by humans in the wild. That trust was evident between Gillette and Casper, one of the alligators at the outpost. Gillette gently spoke to the animals. There were no obnoxious tricks, just observing Casper swim. After, head over to Smokehouse 191 (35601 SW 192nd Ave., Homestead), a food truck next door for some smoked, garlicky ribs.
Everglades Alligator Farm - Airboat Ride
40351 SW 192nd Ave., Homestead; https://everglades.com/
The Everglades Alligator Farm offers airboat rides every 20 to 25 minutes. The airboat skips along the wetlands at high speeds, then wades slowly through lagoon waters to spot alligators. If riders are looking to get some relief on a hot day, sit in the front and get absolutely soaked. After, head into Everglades National Park for a hike or kayak to spot more gators.
Snorkeling at Biscayne National Park Eco Adventures
https://www.biscaynenationalparkinstitute.org/biscayne-eco-adventures/
Biscayne National Park Eco Adventures brings guests to local shorelines, mangroves, coral reefs and islands by boat depending on the weather and what snorkel sites look the best to the captain that day. Our group was lucky enough to go to two sections of Ball Buoy Reef. The vibrant color coral was stunning to view up close. The array of different fish and sharks our group observed was so special to see.
Miami’s immersive art
Miami has an abundance of art and culture, including some experiences like ARTECHOUSE Miami (736 Collins Ave., Miami Beach). This digital art puts visitors in the center of the artist's message, creating a powerful experience. Superblue Miami (1101 NW 23rd St., Miami) is full of light displays and installations. Be sure to add the cloud experience to the tickets.
Dining
Havana 1957 Cuban Cuisine
405 Española Way, Miami Beach; https://www.havana1957.com/
Havana 1957 is one of many places in this area offering authentic Cuban food. If the menu is making it tough to decide, try the Platter of Havana 1957 with portions of roast chicken, ropa vieja and lechón served with rice, saucy black beans, house salad and sweet plantains. Another spot for amazing Cuban food is Marabú (701 S Miami Ave. Brickell City Center 4th Floor, Miami) for crispy steak with a citrus sauce, rice and beans.
Robert is Here
40351 SW 192nd Ave., Homestead; https://www.robertishere.com/
Robert Is Here, down the street from the Everglades Outpost, is a farmstand with fresh exotic local fruits and produce, along with some delicious Cuban sandwiches. Definitely grab some of the fresh guanabana, or try the fruit in a milkshake. Robert Is Here has delicious options for a quick late lunch or breakfast.
Harry's Pizzeria Miami Beach
1680 Meridian Ave. Suite 102, Miami Beach; https://harryspizzeria.com/
Head to Harry’s Pizzeria Miami Beach, opened by James Beard award winner Michael Schwartz, who first learned about pizza making in Japan. This is the perfect spot to satisfy a craving for some super cheesy, classic pizza.
Azzurro
Tarpoon Lagoon Dive Center Snorkeling
300 Alton Road, Suite 110, Miami Beach; https://www.tarpoonlagoon.com/
The team at Tarpoon Diving Center run dive-certification courses, a gear shop, dive and snorkel charters and more. The group visited Neptune Memorial Reef and Rainbow Reef to snorkel and dive. Even on a clear day, it was difficult to see anything from higher up, while the divers were able to explore the colorful fish and lobsters up close.
Thriller Miami Speedboat Adventures
401 Biscayne Blvd., Miami (Inside Bayside Marketplace); https://www.thrillermiami.com/
The group will slowly head out to be respectful of potential wildlife like manatees in the bay area before the speedboat hits full throttle, bolting off on a 45 minute speed boat tour. The guide mixes adrenaline pumping, fast moments with a guide to the area, keeping things informative and exciting.
https://www.trumpmiami.com/sunny-isles-restaurants/azzurro-italian-restaurant-bar
Inside the Trump international Hotel, guests can visit Azzurro for some amazing Italian cuisine. Be sure to ask about the specials; we had rich lobster ravioli topped with briny caviar or crispy calamari. Don’t forget to save room for the cannolis with coffee for dessert.
Motek Aventura - Mediterranean Cafe & Restaurant
19565 Biscayne Blvd. #938, Aventura; https://motekcafe.com
Motek Aventura has a delicious menu full of halloumi salads, fresh chewy pita with dips and spreads like eggplant salad, Israeli salad, hummus and babaganoush. Try not to fill up on appetizers, because the shawarma, made with lamb or chicken, is unbelievable.
Thank you to Visit Miami and their partners for hosting me.
Where to eat, play when visiting South Florida - Times Union
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Want to help California's kelp forests? Eat sea urchins. - National Geographic
Looking out over the Pacific Ocean, diners at the Harbor House Inn’s bluff-top restaurant in Elk, California, are accustomed to finding locally harvested seafood on their plates. But one ingredient plucked from the waters below makes more than a delicious meal. Eating purple sea urchins when they’re available is part of a local conservation effort.
Purple sea urchins are contributing to the destruction of kelp forests, a key component of the region’s coastal ecosystem that sustains a wide variety of sea life. In recent years, these life-giving underwater forests have been disappearing at an alarming rate—about 95 percent of the area’s bull kelp vanished between 2014 and 2019.
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Sea stars keep urchin populations in check, but sea star wasting syndrome has decimated their numbers. This, plus marine heatwaves, climate change, and El Niño have contributed to a “perfect storm” of conditions, rapidly degrading Mendocino County’s once thriving coastal ecosystem. In recent years, scientists have found 60 times more kelp-munching purple sea urchins than normal.
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Please be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
Please be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
Left: Purple sea urchins, growing unchecked, creep toward bull kelp in Mendocino Headlands State Park, in California.
Right: Purple sea urchins are prevalent all along California’s coast. Here, a few cling to a stalk of palm kelp in Monterey, a popular tourist town south of San Francisco.
Photographs by Brent Durand, Getty Images
“In a lot of places it looks like someone clear-cut the forest and then rolled out a purple carpet all over the sea floor,” says Morgan Murphy-Cannella, kelp restoration coordinator for Reef Check Worldwide, a nonprofit focused on volunteer science to conserve reefs and kelp forests.
Despite a slight increase in kelp since 2020, in correlation with upwelling (when wind brings nutrient-rich cold water), scientists say the problem is far from over. “The ocean … is nowhere close to being back to a completely healthy and restored ecosystem,” says Tristin McHugh, kelp project director for the Nature Conservancy.
How can travelers help? While scientists keep an eye on the data, visitors can learn about the coastal environment, volunteer with local beach cleanup efforts—and dine on the urchins wherever they’re available.
Eating sea urchins for conservation
At the Harbor House Inn, executive chef Matthew Kammerer turns the echinoderm into the Michelin-starred fare his restaurant is known for. After carefully cracking open their outer shells, he removes and cleans the edible inner lobes before adding them to a savory Japanese-style egg custard called chawanmushi and a porridge made of local grains. He also serves them in a dashi sauce drizzled on strips of celeriac that mimic pasta. Pieces of urchin are even whipped into butter and candied, with each preparation showcasing the myriad of ways to chow down for a good cause.
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Left: A diver brings up net bags full of purple sea urchins. Restaurants rely on local divers to handpick the urchins because there is no viable way to harvest them commercially.
Right: After cracking the outer shell, a worker scoops out the edible gonads from a sea urchin.
Photographs by Meg Roussos, Bloomberg / Getty Images
Kammerer isn’t the only top chef cooking for conservation. Chefs at Little River Inn in Little River and Izakaya Gama in Point Arena have joined the culinary cause, too. These cooks try to use purple sea urchins whenever they can, but despite their abundance in the ocean, they’re difficult to source. Currently, there is no established method of harvesting them for restaurants, so the chefs rely on local divers or harvest them on their own. When they can’t get purple urchins, many use larger, commercially available red urchins.
No matter which kind of urchin appears on the plate, locals hope that seeing them on menus more often will help break down the barrier to eating the spiny invertebrate, which can seem intimidating.
Kammerer began serving them four years ago, and so far, diners have been positive. “We ask our guests to trust us, and they end up usually really, really enjoying it and getting their minds changed,” he says.
(Meet the southern chefs turning invasive species into delicious dishes.)
In addition to serving purple urchin, chefs and locals hope a new annual festival will help spread the word. Held in June, the first Mendocino Coast Purple Urchin Festival hosted cooking demonstrations, educational events, and urchin-focused restaurant specials, plus a preview of the upcoming Sequoias of the Sea documentary telling the story of California’s kelp forests.
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“For me, the urchin festival is really about teaching people what’s going on underneath the waves,” says Cally Dym, owner of Little River Inn, one of the festival’s hosts. “Eating the purple urchin is our way of helping the whole ecosystem down there.”
Sheila Semans, executive director of the nonprofit Noyo Center for Marine Science, which received a share of proceeds from the event, says her goal is to get everyone in town to give urchin a try for the environment. “We’re trying to elevate the conversation beyond not doing as much harm to actually improving the environment by eating this seafood,” she says.
(Learn how locals are battling invasive green crabs in the Gulf of Maine.)
More ways to help save kelp forests
Beyond patronizing local restaurants, Mendocino County visitors can explore the Noyo Center for Marine Science in Fort Bragg. Inside the center’s geodesic dome, video of a kelp forest and an urchin barren helps place visitors at the heart of the problem, while a walk-through art installation of a kelp forest provides in-depth detail. Soon, an interactive component will teach kids how to build a coastal ecosystem model using magnets shaped like urchins, sea stars, and abalone.
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The center’s volunteer science program lets trained community members wade into the problem through beach surveys that track what washes up on shore, such as segments of bull kelp and abalone, in addition to urchins. Another program gathers volunteers in search of juvenile sunflower sea stars. One outing logged the first sea star spotted in Mendocino in five years, Semans reports. Visitors can join occasional beach cleanups, too.
(Here’s how to help scientists on your next vacation.)
Since 1984, scientists have been tracking changes in the kelp canopy all along California’s coast. Now the Nature Conservancy, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have partnered to make that data available to scientists and volunteers through a newly launched site, called Kelpwatch.
Coordinated groups of divers have contributed to restoration efforts, too. Nearly 50,000 pounds of purple urchins have been collected through a partnership involving California government entities, communities, and nonprofit organizations, including Reef Check Worldwide, Watermen’s Alliance, the Nature Conservancy, and the Noyo Center for Marine Science.
Together with these conservation efforts, Kammerer hopes that every bite of purple urchin he and others serve is a step toward restoring the kelp ecoystem.
“The more information people know, the more sea urchin they’ll eat, and hopefully,” he says, “we can help make a difference.”
Want to help California's kelp forests? Eat sea urchins. - National Geographic
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