Category Archives: Restaurants
Grinders West, Kansas City, Missouri
Italian food in St. Paul
To provide information to members of the club of Italian heritage and to others who enjoy great Italian food, I would like to recommend Cossettas in St. Paul, Minn. Those who will be attending the MOA Rally next summer will want to have lunch there at least once.
The restaurant is a short walk from the Science Museum as well.
I recently attended a visual storytelling conference at the Science Museum. I asked a local reporter where to eat lunch. He immediately recommended Cossettas. I had a Hero sandwich made with a whole loaf of bread. You will not go away hungry. There were many flavors of gelato too. I picked Amaretto. So what is the difference between ice cream and gelato? To my taste, gelato always tastes better (except maybe my own home made ice cream). Ice cream has a minimum 10 percent fat. Gelato has more milk to cream and has only five to seven percent fat. Gelato is made with a slower churn speed and that does not put as much air in as ice cream (25-30 percent air for gelato, 50 percent for ice cream). Ice cream is served frozen and gelato is served at a warmer temperature. With less fat coating the mouth, the flavor of gelato is more intense.
With a Hero sandwich for lunch and gelato for dessert, you may just want to drink coffee and wait for supper time to go through the line again. Did I mention homemade mozzarella?
211 7th St W
Saint Paul, MN 55102
[mapsmarker marker=”1″]
Nebraska Highway 2
En route to the MOA Rally in Oregon, Dominick LoDuca and I discovered a fun way to cross Nebraska via NE-2. We peeled off of I-80 in Grand Island. Highway 2 starts in Lincoln, but just parallels the interstate until Grand Island, where it takes off through the Sand Hills heading more or less towards Chadron.
Remembering the Club Motto. It’s mandatory that I mention a great little place to have breakfast in Grand Island. Sure, you could eat at Perkins, but who could pass up an opportunity to eat at …
Yes, Sin City! Anyone who’s stayed up way to early into the morning on Sunday after their Saturday night revelry knows this kind of joint. Downtown. Next to all the bars. That sort of place that serves a mean breakfast of the ‘reward yourself you survived the night before’. And we happened to be going by there on Sunday morning! Marriage made in heaven.
That delectable goodness ladies and gentlemen is hog belly! And it’s amazing. As good as bacon can taste, and about 10 times better. Yes, it is mostly fat. Yesm it has calories–about 500 per 100gm’s. Dom and I had heard of it, but until that day, we’d never had it before. It’s good–real good. Anyway, back to the ride…
Nebraska 2 is a two lane with wide berms and generous sight lines afforded by the endless plains of mostly scrub vegetation–literally going on forever are endless small hills and very few minor curves. They say that with a few inches of rain less per year, this area could be desert. And the hills are just like sand dunes underneath.
We had little traffic and no trouble making good time the entire way. There are trains hauling mile long processions of cars going by the entire way.
After riding this road, I know that we have NO shortage of energy in this country!
And before you know it (272 miles), you’re at Carhenge. Yes, that’s right. It’s a must see. Located near Alliance, Nebraska. Built to the proportions of Stonehenge, there are 38 classic American automobiles in a 95 foot circle. Unique. That’s all I’ll say.
The last section before Crawford is the most scenic and enthralling part of the ride (remember, we are talking about Nebraska here, so don’t get your hopes too much!). This part goes through what’s ironically known as Nebraska National Forest.
From there we turned onto US-20 and headed for Wyoming.
You must be logged in to post a comment.