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Friday, August 8, 2008

Winchester Bay restaurant offers a taste of Thai regional cooking - and a view.(Food): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)

This digital document is an article from The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR), published by Thomson Gale on August 31, 2005. The length of the article is 1152 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Winchester Bay restaurant offers a taste of Thai regional cooking - and a view.(Food)
Publication: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR) (Newspaper)
Date: August 31, 2005
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Page: E1

Distributed by Thomson Gale


Note: menu offerings and prices may vary.

Fresh baked bread in loaves or rounds and homemade empenadas baked in a stone hearth oven, spicy sausage wrapped in a flaky crust... need I say more?

Patience is a virtue on busy days, as the line can get quite long and the Kitchen's quarters are cramped. The Kitchen is a popular stop for school groups and other large parties who call ahead. But rest assured, the wait is well worth it. If you don't like lines, browse in the Whetstone Chocolate store just as you enter the grounds and sample creamy fudge and sugary pralines. That should get your appetite started!

The Spanish Bakery is open 7 days, usually between the hours of 10:30 am to 3:00 pm. It is located about 100 yards down from the Oldest Wooden Schoolhouse at 42-1/2 St. George Street.

The Spanish Bakery of St. Augustine - Review

Try an empanada stuffed with spicy beef and a bowl of picadillo over rice. If you're really hungry, add a smoked sausage roll. Like it spicy but want it hot? Then add a little Datil Do It pepper sauce, made locally and marketed nationwide. And no meal is complete without a loaf or round of that melt-in-your-mouth bread. The Kitchen also serves up cookies and a soup of the day.

The Spanish Bakery has been in business for more nearly 30 years, according to the little chalkboard that hangs from the stone building known as the Salcedo Kitchen. I think I've been coming here for at least 10 of those years, and I've never been disappointed, except when they run out of bread around 2 pm or when it rains, because they only have 2 picnic tables under cover. Of course, you can sit at one of the picnic tables under a tree and stay relatively dry if it's not a downpour.



Southeast Asian Food: Classic and Modern Dishes from Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam

The diversity of cooking styles and the delicious range of fresh ingredients are just two of the reasons for the allure of Southeast Asian cooking. With a selection of recipes showing the varieties and unique properties of each cuisine, from tangy Thai salads, satisfying Vietnamese soups, aromatic Indonesian curries and exquisite Malaysian sambals, Southeast Asian Food is the authoritative book on the subject.

With the help of the author's clear and easy-to-follow instructions and her knowledge of the local foods, you'll be able to recreate these delightful, fragrant dishes in your own kitchen. As Brissenden says, "With the world full of same-tasting, instant approaches to Southeast Asian food through packets and jars, this book aims to serve as a guide to cooks who wish to enjoy its true freshness and variety by cooking it for themselves. If it also conveys a sense of a rich and diverse set of culinary traditions I shall be more than happy."

Customer Review: The standard for SE Asian cooking
This book more than fulfills my expectations of a book on SE Asian food. There are excellent introductory comments about the background to foods from different areas and easy to follow recipes.


Ever since Emperor Shen Nung discovered the leaves of the Camellia sinensis more than 4500 years ago in ancient China, the health benefits of tea have been known to the Chinese. Books have been written and songs composed to propagate the beliefs about the health benefits of tea. Chinese emperors, for whom tea was nothing less than a tribute, used to even decree royal proclamations as to what form the tea should be presented to them, so that they may derive the maximum from the supposed medicinal properties of the tea leaves. In fact, other than being a rejuvenating drink, the Chinese also claimed that tea was useful for curing lethargy, bladder ailments and tumors.

Effects on Alzheimer's - The epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) can also protect the brain and fight Alzheimer's disease. It helps prevent buildup of abnormal levels of beta-amyloid plaque which is responsible for causing the Alzheimer's disease.

The above illustrated examples are only some of the many benefits of drinking the various varieties of tea. Besides these, tea is also rumored to be beneficial in fighting diabetes and preventing cognitive impairment, though these are yet to be effectively proven through studies. Still, there is no doubt that tea for health is no longer just a marketing strategy of tea companies, but a reality!

Tea For Health

Effects on Hormone Levels - It has been found that tea, more specifically black tea, can reduce stress hormones in the body and thereby help a person recover more quickly from stress. Also it has been seen that the risk of heart attacks and blood platelet activation are a lot lower in tea drinkers.

Effects on Metabolic Rate - Tea, especially green tea, have been known to speed up fat oxidation and in crease the metabolic rate. Along with caffeine, the catechin polyphenols present in tea helps speed up the rate at which calories are burnt, thereby increasing substantially the energy consumed.

Effects on Mental Health and Immune System - Tea has been found to contain amino acid L-theanine which improves the body's ability to combat diseases by giving a boost to gamma delta T-cells. The L-theanine found in tea also helps keep the brain in an alert state of relaxation by increasing alpha wave production in the brain.

Let us have a look at some of the studies done on the composition of tea which show whether really tea is good for health:

Effects on HIV - Studies have been conducted and found that epigallcatechin gallate (EGCG) found in tea helps boost one's immune system. Therefore, this helps in throttling the spread of the HIV virus in the body. However, researchers have made it quite clear, that though tea helps in reducing the spread of HIV in the body, it should always be used along with conventional medicines.

However, most of these claims were unknown to the world outside China until the late nineteenth century. Even then, they were passed off as rumors and unfounded claims. Recently, though research conducted on tea, especially green tea, have started giving results proving that tea for health might not be that bad an idea after all! In these recent studies, it has been claimed that tea may have anti-cancer properties, it may be able to slow down the spread of HIV in the body, it definitely increases the metabolic rate and mental alertness, and it can also help reduce stress.