(Kind of) Hidden Find – Stumptown Coffee

My ever-so-hip father introduced me to Stumptown Coffee  at the Ace Hotel, and I’m ashamed to admit now that I had no idea it existed, even though it’s only three blocks from my office.  I stopped by here today to pick up a pound of coffee for my dad, and I found out it comes with a free small coffee!  ($11/lb).   All of the men working behind the counter look like Newsies, and are very friendly (an anomaly in NYC baristas).

Stmptown Coffee on 29th and Broadway

The best part about this location is that it’s connected to the Ace Hotel, which is a hipster magnet, but also a great quiet place to read and sip your coffee.  The lobby is beautiful, and has tons of comfy chairs, big oak tables to work on laptops, and areas to gather a group of friends.  It’s the kind of place you want to smoke a pipe and wear an ascot.  Another nice feature is that they have waiter service around the lobby, so you don’t need to wait in the line at Stumptown to get a coffee and a bite to eat.  It looks like they have a ton of yummy pastries, which of course, I can’t try to tell you how they are.

Just a nice Oasis in the Flatiron district, and has yet to get too hyped or busy.

Ace Hotel Lobby

Note for Michiganders:  Rumor is that Stumptown is going to be coming to Ann Arbor sometime soon, care of Comet’s Coffee in Nickel’s Arcade.   Apparently Stumptown requires that vendors be trained by an actual Stumptown staff member on how to brew their coffee, so Comet is saving up to fly someone out to Ann Arbor to train them.

Coffee is delicious, very strong, and $2 for a small.  Also, they make their cappuccino foam into a heart sometimes.

Stumptown Coffee at the Ace Hotel

20 West 29th Street (Between Broadway and Fifth Ave)

Buzzbuzzbuzz.

Cheese Rocks and Rolls

 

Big Booty Bread Co. on 23rd St.

 

Friday over lunch I walked over to Big Booty Bread Company in Chelsea.  I don’t know why, but they don’t really advertise themselves as a go-to gluten-free spot – but they have one of my favorite finds in the city.  Their cheese rocks and cheese rolls are masterful – so chewy, satisfying, and hearty that you can’t tell the difference between their rolls and an artisan one.  

Cheese rocks, rolls, and corn pancakes

Big Booty Dictionary:

Cheese rocks (lower left of display): light in color, really moist on the inside, perfect to dip in soup or make into a burger bun

Cheese rolls (to the right of the rocks): more eggy dough, sweet, with a big air pocket on the inside, warm and slathered with butter is the best way to eat (if you can get it home without eating it on the subway, like someone I may know…)

Corn pancakes: like arepas, but no filling.  They have a plain and cheese variety, and both are great.  Like an ultimate cheesy breadstick.  I’m currently plotting to buy a couple of these and dip them in ranch dressing.

So what did we do with them?

My boyfriend, Nick, made his cheese rock into a bun for his bacon jalapeno cheeseburger.  We picked up some McClure’s spicy pickles at Sweet Afton in Astoria, and put those on the side.

Nick's bacon cheeseburger and McClure's pickles

I had my cheese roll with egg salad the next day for lunch (no pickles for me, they’re far too spicy).

Two egg whites, one yolk

Please excuse the dying house plant in the background.  

Big Booty Bread Co. is at 261 West 23rd Street, between 7th and 8th Ave.

Cheese rocks and rolls are $1.75, and they have a large selection of breads and cupcakes for your gluten-eating friends.  (I also saw they have homemade meringue, but didn’t ask if it’s gluten-free…).  

Beware: I came here around noon and they were almost out of cheese rolls, so try to come in early in the day.

Rock and roll, baby.

Match-up: Primal Strips vs. Stonewall’s Vegan Jerky

I know what you’re thinking – there is more than one type of vegan “beef” jerky?  Yes.

And you’re actually recommending them as something I should eat?  Yes.  (If you are vegetarian, but still enjoy salty protein-filled meat-imitating snacks) 

But Anna, whatever jerky should I choose?  

No worries, I’m here to help.  DING DING DING – let the match up begin!

First up: Primal Strips

Texas BBQ and Hickory Smoked are Gluten Free - note the handy icon in the upper right of the package

 

Buy me. 

Primal Strips are truly amazing.  A feat of food engineering.  I don’t understand how those food scientists could make soy taste and feel so much like dehydrated meat. Seeing as I haven’t eaten meat in about four years, this is about as primal as my eating gets.  These strips are only 80-90 calories each, and pack about 10-12 grams of protein each.  They’re also almost fat free, and have no cholesterol.  They’re perfect for a mid-afternoon snack (and even give that guilty-pleasure salt satisfaction, without eating a bag of chips).  These are super chewy, fun to eat, and have a ton of meat-ish, BBQ flavor.  

I’ve been eating Primal Strips for a few months now, so when I saw that the store across from my office started carrying them I was super excited.  They also started carrying Stonewall’s Jerquee.  So I thought – what’s better than one kind of vegan gf jerky than TWO KINDS?  Pretty much nothing.  

So I picked up a package of Stonewall’s Jerquee and started snacking.  This jerky is in little nuggets rather than a strip.  

Nuggets

 

These, however, were not the primal experience I was seeking.  With such pleasant olde time wild west mascot, you’d think that the product would live up to the packaging.  (They also have about 12 different flavors, which was exciting to me).  However, the package of Teriyaki jerquee that I had tasted like dog food.  It had a grainy texture, unpleasant dog food/stale smell, and left my mouth drier than Cheetos and cardboard combined.  I forced myself to eat about half the package (it cost $2.99 so I couldn’t bring myself to just chuck it).  But then I had to give up, drink some water, and throw them out.  

*Sidenote – what’s with the spelling of jerquee?  Makes my skin crawl just typing it. 

Heavyweight Champion = PRIMAL STRIPS!

So, if the thought of vegan jerky doesn’t repulse you – go get some!  They’re available at Whole Foods (near the register at my store). 

Don’t get Stonewalls Jerquee.  Unless you run out of dog food.

Love in the form of pizza:

My boyfriend and I have our one year anniversary today.  I can see nothing more fitting to post:

Sharing is caring

His and hers pizza.

His = turkey bacon, red pepper, and red onion

Hers/mine = veggie burger crumbles and broccoli

What can keep me happy during March Madness?  Pizza!  Pizza!  We’ve perfected this Sunday meal, and nothing makes me happier than sprinkling parmesan on a slice and winding down the weekend with my man.  I think it also exemplifies the amount of compromise he has made for me since we started dating – no calling up Papa John’s and ordering delivery for us.  Living with someone with Celiacs takes planning, patience, and understanding.  It means going to three stores to get the ingredients to make dinner.  It means carrying around gluten free soy sauce in your pocket all night so I can eat sushi.  And it means enduring a lot of awkward moments with waiters at restaurants.  Hopefully homemade pizza makes up for it a bit. (thanks babe 🙂 )

Now back to the ‘za – I think this pizza beats the socks off of Papa John’s.

We made this one with Bob’s Red Mill pizza crust mix:

Bob's Red Mill Pizza Mix

Buy me here.

And Ragu Light tomato and basil sauce (no sugar, just tomatoes and spices):

Follow the directions on the package, slap on sauce, add some mozzarella and cheddar cheese, drop on toppings – bake and enjoy.

I like this mix because the crust gets crispy, and the yeast makes the dough puff up like the real thing.  It’s not delivery! It’s Bob’s Red Mill!

However, we are bigger fans of the Namaste Foods mix.  This one makes really thin crust pizza, and comes with Italian herbs already mixed in (which I could also do myself with other mixes, but I’m far too forgetful).

Namaste quick-and-dirty:

  • You can also use this mix to make some bangin’ breadsticks (just spoon the dough into a breadstick-shaped blob instead of a pizza-shaped blob).
  • The Namaste mix is really chewy (makes you want to pull it apart and dip it in something chewy).
  • Plus, you just have to add a little bit of oil and water (no yeast like in Bob’s).  I think that yeast is scary, time-consuming, and smelly.
  • Namaste’s thin crust means less extraneous carbs, so you can eat 3-4 pieces instead of 1-2.

So – I choose Namaste!

Buy me here.

For both of these mixes we only make half of the bag, since we really only need one pizza for the two of us.  For the breadsticks we usually use 1/3 or 1/4 of the recipe.

So, make some love pizza.  Share it with whoever deals with your gluten-freeness and give them a big smooch for it.

Namaste.

Staple: gluten free veggie burgers

So, I’m not even going to attempt to do a thorough review of all of the gluten free veggie burgers out there (because there are only about three, and I only buy one).  But I wanted to introduce a staple of my diet, as it’s probably going to be included in many of my recipes/reviews.

You can find a great full review here though!

Book of Yum GF Veggie Burger Review

The problem with most vegetarian “meat” products is that they are loaded with wheat gluten.  The titans Boca Burger and Gardenburger don’t have a single lousy product that I can eat (so long vegetarian “bacon” and “sausage”).  Mostly the wheat gluten is used as a filler so the companies don’t have to put in as much expensive soy protein isolate.

That said, I still need my protein, and I don’t want to eat fish every day.  So I eat a LOT of these veggie burgers from Franklin Farms:

I use these burgers in…oh…pretty much everything.  They have 90 calories and 14 grams of protein! For any veggie protein source, that is a lot of bang for your buck.  (More nutrition facts)  Do I sound like a spokeswoman yet?  No?  Ok, how about this?  These are all the things you can do with these magical discs:

  • Crumble them up and put them: in chili, on top of pizza, in soup, on top of a salad, stuffed in a pepper, mixed with rice or quinoa, in spaghetti sauce, in tacos, or anywhere you might use ground beef.
  • Eat them whole with mustard and cheese melted on top.
  • Or mush them into balls, fry em up in a pan, and make meatballs!

Franklin Farms also has two other varieties, but I wouldn’t recommend them (but to each her own, try if you’d like).  You can find these in the refrigerated (not frozen) section of your grocery store.

Order them online here:  Food Service Direct

*only has the portabella and original burgers, but I’ll keep searching for somewhere to order the chili bean online

Babycakes, oh my Babycakes

Yesterday was a positively glorious day to live in New York City.  I’d been planning on going back to Babycakes for quite some time, so it seemed like the perfect day to make the trek down to the (lowest of the) Lower East Side to get me something sweet.

We got off the train at Prince Street, pushed through the crowds in Soho, made our way through the outskirts of Chinatown, and eventually came to the shining sugary Mecca of gluten free bakeries: Babycakes!

The Taj Mahal

*Sidenote daydream on bakeries: they are probably my favorite place on earth.  The smell of sweet saccharine goodness, the aesthetic beauty of all of the goodies lined up in their little rows according to type and color, the wax paper that they use to pick everything up with, the little samples that they put out on the counter so you don’t strangle someone while you’re waiting.  It’s amazing, and I purposely avoid bakeries now for the very same reasons.  No use torturing myself in a place that I can’t eat anything…but Babycakes is different.

Holey Moley

I CAN EAT IT ALL!!! NOM NOM NOM NOM

Now came the difficult part – choosing what to get.  They had a variety of cupcakes (pumpkin, carrot, red velvet, vanilla chocolate), brownies, frosted ginger bread, frosted banana chocolate-chip bread, a variety of cookies, and a variety of donuts.

Originally I had my eye on a chocolate dip donut (a rare find in the GF world), but then the guy in front of me ordered the frosted banana chocolate-chip cake and I wanted that too.  But, he took the last piece [jerk].

So I ended up with the caramel chocolate crunch donut instead:

Caramel chocolate crunch donut

**Deep breath out**  IT WAS SO GOOD.

It was so moist, gooeyness overflowing from all over it.  It had this chocolate drizzle on top, and just melted in my mouth with every bite.  The only regret I had was not getting a tall glass of milk to go with it.

I haven’t eaten a donut in THREE YEARS.  THIS WAS AWESOME.

And I got the wax paper that I love…and I licked it clean right in the middle of the street.

The quick-and-dirty:

  • It is pricey ($4-5 for anything).  But worth every penny.
  • It is deep into Manhattan.  But worth the walk.
  • I’ve read mixed reviews from gluten-eaters, but it is certain to be a treat for anyone with Celiac.

To get some yumminess yourself – 248 Broome Street, between Orchard and Ludlow.  Or order from www.babycakesnyc.com.

Restaurant Review – Paprika

Breakfast and brunch are often difficult eat-out meals.  If I don’t plan ahead or do some research, I usually end up with eggs and potatoes.  Now don’t get me wrong, there’s a simplicity and comfort to eggs for breakfast, but I’m a breakfast person of the pancake-loving, pastry-craving sort.  So whenever I have an occasion to go out for breakfast or brunch, I always do so anticipating a let-down.

One compromise I’ve made is for the East Village spot, Paprika.

The quick-and-dirty:

  • $12 for a brunch entree, mimosa or Belini, and tea or coffee
  • The only egg dish you should be allowed to order here is the scrambled green eggs (they also have a frittata and an omelette, but I wouldn’t recommend either)
  • If you have an ounce of love in your heart, you will bring your friends or significant other here and allow them to indulge in the Eggs Benedict

The green eggs are scrambled eggs with pesto and herbs, and they’re piled in heap atop a cake of polenta.  The edges of the polenta get a bit crisp, and it makes the dish filling enough to not make you miss toast.  On top of the eggs is about 3 tomatoes worth of diced tomatoes in a light dressing which brings a great outdoorsy-summer basil feeling.

While your brunch partner savagely devours the Eggs Benny, you can leave Paprika feeling satisfied, and not fall victim to the fried eggs/potatoes curse.

*For gluten-eaters* – Get the Eggs Benedict with Pancetta and Baby Lettuce.  My gluten-eating boyfriend says that it does something so powerful to you that you have random thoughts about enjoying it.  It’s two pieces of a Ciabatta/French looking crusty bread, with pieces of shredded pancetta, two perfectly poached eggs, and a drizzly Hollandaise sauce.  While I’ll never experience this meal, seeing him enjoy it so much is almost as good.

Halfway through the massacre

Beware :

  • They open at noon on weekends
  • The place is pretty small, so if you have a large party you may need to wait

When you get a hankerin’ – head to 110 Saint Marks Place (between 1st Ave and Avenue A)http://paprikarestaurant.com/

Maiden Voyage

Hello ladies and gentlemen.  My name is Anna and I have Celiac’s disease.

I haven’t had this disease all my life, and had many glorious years of eating whatever and whenever I wanted.  About three years ago, I started noticing some odd things going on…*digestively*.

My tell-tale signs:  I was gassy (to the extreme), bloated, tired ALL the time, crabby, irritable, had (ahem) diarrhea, and I felt downright off.  But what really struck me as a problem was the hiccups.  I was getting hiccups 5-6 times a DAY, for no apparent reason.  I became a pro at all of the hiccup-eliminating tricks (hang upside down, while drinking out of a cup water with a butter knife pressed against my nose).  But I just knew that something was wrong with my normal bodily functions.

So, in true Type A fashion, I started Googling/Web-MD-ing my symptoms.  I narrowed it down to IBS (irritable bowel syndrome) or Celiac’s disease (which I had never heard of).  I took all of my research to my university health center and asked for a test.  My lovely RN obliged, but also wanted a stool sample (yuck).  So I had a vial of blood taken and sent for testing, and skipped home with my paper bag filled with that intimidating plastic cup.

Well, after reading the instructions for the stool sample, I decided that I was far too delicate and lady-like to do anything of the sort.  So, I sat around and waited for the test results to come through.  Somehow, I knew in my heart that it wasn’t just a coincidence that every time I ate a Subway sandwich, it ended up in the toilet an hour later.

I got the call while I was in class, and anxiously checked my voicemail.  It was confirmed.  I had Celiac’s disease.  The RN said something about gliadin A and B, but all that was going through my head was, “Alright, well now what?”

The RN had warned me that the only “cure” for Celiac’s was a lifelong gluten free diet.  LIFELONG.

And so began my gluten free journey.

For about a week, I pretty much only ate fruits and vegetables.  I wasn’t sure what had gluten, what didn’t, what might have it, or where on earth I could get gluten free food on a college campus.  I was used to late night pizza, sandwiches, and bagels for breakfast.  I knew how to eat healthy, I thought I knew a lot about nutrition, but I was clueless.  Since I was also a vegetarian at the time (I’ve since added fish/shellfish to my diet), it was an extra challenge.

But over time, I slowly adapted my diet and found a way to live with this nagging disease.  I found the few stores in Michigan that carried gluten free items, and read up on what to avoid in the supermarket.

I haven’t intentionally consumed gluten since my diagnosis, but I am still coming to terms with the fact I will never again eat gluten.

I can’t say that I’ve embraced my disease. I still complain internally nearly every day that I have to think so hard about everything I put into my body. Because, let’s face it, it’s not easy!

Gluten, in all of its varied forms, is delicious.  It’s what makes bagels stick to the top of your mouth, it’s what makes croissants indent like pillows under your grip, and it’s what creates those adorable little butter jaccuzis on a cut English muffin.

That said, there are some aspects of living with Celiac’s disease that I actually love.  I’ve become exceedingly conscious of what I’m eating, down to each and every ingredient.  Therefore, I’m less likely to eat something with Red Dye #4.  I also have been forced to seek out restaurants, stores, and foods that I would not have normally tried.

But mostly, a lot of the time, it’s kind of the pits.

There are probably a lot of people out there living with Celiac’s who are in this limbo land.  Which is the purpose for this blog.  Simplicity, humor, and realism.

I’m aiming for a tonal mix of Jennsylvania, Gluten Free Goddess, Gretchen Rubin, and a dash of Chelsea Handler under the topical umbrella of everything that is gluten-free.  While I thoroughly enjoy reading the beautifully written Gluten Free Girl & Goddess, and have benefited from many of their recipes and reviews – they are to me what Martha Stewart is to Guy Fieri.  I can’t seem to find the fun (or money) to buy 9 different kinds of gluten-free flour.   My kitchen is about 4 ft by 10 ft.  I don’t own ramikens, a rolling pin, or even a blender.

I plan on doing a bit of griping, a little cooking, a lot of eating out, and sharing the tips I’ve learned on incorporating Celiac’s into my life, not the other way around.