Menú del día, or menu of the day, is a menu served by Spanish restaurants during lunch, one of the largest meals of the day …
… typically between 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
This is a cheap, economic meal, typically with good food.
Problema for ME is that it includes all-you-can-drink wine. They leave a full bottle on the table for you.
I’m pretty much buzzed for the day — at lunch.
Typically they come with soup, bread, drink, dessert and main course. I paid 12 Euro for this feast.
Seafood soup appetizer on the Santiago Camino
HEY – the Interterritorial Health Council, made up of doctors and other health professionals, had suggested that alcohol be dropped from the menús del día. I highly doubt that’s going to happen.
This is the first book I’ve read by Linwood Barclay, though he’s a Canadian.
It’s excellent.
The premise of the plot is fantastic. Private Investigator Cal Weaver is hired to help protect an 18-year-old who had run over a friend while blind drunk. Killed her. And had somehow been found not guilty in court because he (supposedly) did not understand the consequences of his actions because he was coddled by an overprotective mother.
Simultaneously, but apparently unrelated, Detective Barry Duckworth is dealing with a case of a young man abducted and tattooed by … aliens?
Both Duckworth and Weaver are fictional characters well worth spending time with.
Bosch Legacy pretty much picks up right where the original Bosch series ended.
And it’s equally good. 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
“Harry” Bosch has retired from the LAPD, and works as a private investigator.
Defense attorney Honey “Money” Chandler, has him work on some cases for her.
His daughter Maddie navigates her first days as a patrol officer with the LAPD, working from Hollywood Station, where her father used to be assigned. Bosch investigates businessman Carl Rogers, who previously hired a hitman to kill Chandler. Billionaire businessman Whitney Vance asks Bosch to discreetly investigate a private matter.
In an era of many folk singer / songwriters, James got lucky when a friend gave a demo tape to Peter Asher, head for the Beatles‘ newly formed label Apple Records.
She is also the owner of Birchbark Books, a small independent bookstore in Minneapolis that focuses on Native American literature.
In The Sentence, the narrator, Tookie, works in a bookstore in Minneapolis that carries Native American literature. Tookie, like the author, is a Native American.
As a young woman, Tookie was sentenced to 60 years in prison. But later had her crime reduced to some years time served. That part of the book I found fascinating.
She became a serious reader in prison, one reason she ended up working in a bookstore — haunted by the ghost of a former customer — before the pandemic broke in March 2020.
I’d forgotten how confusing it was mid-March when we had no masks or gel yet. And didn’t know how serious it would become.
The story in Minneapolis following the murder of George Floyd was super interesting too. Her step daughter was out protesting. But Tookie was worried about looters burning down the bookstore.
Overall — however — I found the book too long and rambling.
It’s supposed to be mainly a ghost story. But I didn’t really buy the resolution of that.
I took the train to León where I’d be starting a week long cycling trip to Santiago de Compostela on the French Camino. A pilgrimage people have been doing for over 1000 years.
It’s very walkable, a small city with most of the attractions close together.
León’s Cathedral is one of the finest in Europe.
Panorama of Plaza de Regla and Leon Cathedral, Castile and Leon, SpainMe and the cops.
My official start is this Cathedral. I’ll finish at the Cathedral in Santiago.
After hiking the West Coast Trail for the first time in 1999, I decide to switch to what I called destination travel. I’d travel to do something specific — a specific hike, for example. I’d travel less, but with a GOAL.
The first blogging I did was on WordPress.org, launched 2003. For a couple of years before that I hand coded HTML which was difficult.
Matthew Kepnes — Nomadic Matt — started traveling abroad in 2005 and quickly became one of the most popular on the web. The site is still going strong as Matt hired a team of 5 people to keep it going.
Matt traveled nearly non-stop for 10 years. And then wrote a memoir.