Month: March 2016

169. Le Petit Zinc – March 20, 2016 – Detroit, MI

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Le Petit Zinc’s jambon et fromage (ham and Swiss cheese) crepe

Happy Easter, all! I’m popping on to recount my visit to the very lovely Le Petit Zinc for brunch last Sunday. Housed in what appears to be an old house in an area of Corktown that is off the beaten path, it’s a gorgeous little café done up in vibrant colors, with a cute little outdoor garden patio that will probably be stunning once the plants start to bloom.

 

As you may gather from the name, this restaurant is a French-themed one – specializing in crepes, although its menu offers other items, such as sandwiches, salads, ratatouille (vegetable stew – not just the name of that Disney movie), and quiche. I’m sure the other food is great (my friend enjoyed her sandwich), but the crepes are where it’s at, guys!

MMMM, crepes. I am not a crepe afficianodo or anything, but it does seem to me that many foods are better with a thin, fluffy, delicate pancake-tortilla wrapped around them. And Le Petit Zinc offers a selection of both sweet and savory crepes – the best of both worlds! The jambon et fromage (ham and Swiss cheese) crepe I ordered – shown above and accompanied by a mixed-greens side salad – was glorious meaty, melty deliciousness. For dessert, I ordered our server’s recommendation, the citron sucre (lemon-sugar) crepe – AMAZING!

So yeah, Le Petit Zinc is a slam dunk in my book, especially coming at it from the brunch angle. I go to a lot of Sunday brunches with friends and enjoy the heck out of myself, but I’m admittedly not a big brunch-foods person; the fact that I don’t like eggs really cramps my style when ordering off of a menu where every dish is loaded with those suckers. So any menu that gives me the chance to have a lunch-y meal rather than a brunch-y meal – and a fresh, delicious one at that – gets extra gold stars in my book.

Another point toward Le Petit Zinc I learned while perusing its website is that it uses “all organic flour and local produce, when possible.” It also makes a crepe that is vegan for those of you who refrain from eating animal products. Yay, yay and yay!

An additional tidbit worth mentioning: there is no booze at Le Petit Zinc. So no mimosas for you and your squad if you decide to brunch here. But there are fun coffee drinks – espressos, cappuccinos, macchiatos – aka, the good stuff that really makes you fly! So you can get your caffeine buzz on instead.

1055 Trumbull St.

Detroit, MI 48126

(Open for lunch and dinner: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Sunday)

www.lepetitzincdetroit.com

168. Give Thanks Bakery – March 19, 2016 – Rochester, MI

20160319_12352720160319_12384420160319_124727Happy Saturday, guys!!!! Today I headed over to downtown Rochester to visit a place I’ve wanted to go for months and months and months now, Give Thanks Bakery, a delightful little European-style bakery/café serving delicious fresh-baked pastries and breads and cakes and coffee drinks. Because heaven is an almond croissant and a cappuccino – or a margarita-laced Tigers game in mid-summer (almost here!!!). I’d take either, really.

You guys, Rochester is lovely, but traffic is crazy out there! OMG, what a cluster today!  Once I exited M-59 and turned right onto Rochester Road to head north, it was like every single person who lives in that area was out on the roads at once. OK, obviously that is an exaggeration, but not really. It was cray. It made the congestion of the Hall Road area where I live look like child’s play. Downtown Rochester was just as jammed, but the Universe was benevolent and delivered me an excellent parking spot behind the bakery after just a few minutes of circling. ~Sigh of sweet relief.~

Give Thanks was a welcome oasis of calm amid all of the chaos. Sitting at one of the three little marble-topped tables, savoring my croissant and my cappuccino in its tiny cup, I mentally regrouped. I soaked up the ambiance – the friendly chatter, the pleasant oldie standards (songs by Etta James, Frank Sinatra). Families with cute, energetic children filtered in and out, and obvious regulars interacted warmly with the staff. It was lovely.

You should go and savor a piece of that loveliness! And a chocolate croissant (I’m into croissants, as you can see). But be sure to get there early – Give Thanks is only open until 2 p.m. on Saturdays and until 3 p.m. Tuesday through Friday (it’s closed Sundays and Mondays).

225 S. Main St.

Rochester, MI 48307

www.givethanksbakery.com

 

 

Reflections on Year Two of 100 Places in the D

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Photo of #129, The Heidelburg Project, Year Two

The two-year anniversary of 100 Places in the D was February 8! I’m so excited to have sustained this project for so long and am grateful to all of you who have visited the blog and come along with me on my adventures. Whether you’re a fellow Motor-City citizen looking for cool restaurants to check out downtown or a reader located far away overseas but perhaps looking to visit the Detroit area someday (you totally should!), I hope this blog has been helpful. Perhaps it has inspired you to embark on your own 100 Places challenge, whether you live in the D or another amazing city. No more same-ol’, same-ol’ national-chain restaurants in your repertoire!

The ironic thing about right now? I’m sitting in a national-chain coffee shop as I write these words. Whoops. OK, so avoiding corporate-chain establishments 100 percent of the time is nearly impossible for many of us (Clinton Township entrepreneurs, we need a cool little independent coffee shop here!). But one thing that the 100 Places challenge engrained in me that I’m really grateful for is the habit of looking for new and local over tired and generic. The 100 Places Challenge made going out – dining, shopping, socializing – much more of an experience for me than it ever was. Going out has become an exciting adventure again, full of novelty, exploration – specialness. I go out less now than I did two years ago, in large part because I have been really trying to behave myself with my budget (Boring budget! I can’t hate you because you work!), but also because I am willing to spend more when I do go out to ensure a more special experience than when I was regularly doing the happy hour at TGI Friday’s or weekly visiting my local Buffalo Wild Wings.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with visiting such places. My love affair with B’Dubs’ chicken-tenders wrap with Spicy Garlic sauce – extra Spicy Garlic on the side to dip my chips in – will never die. But I’ve definitely noticed the personal shift since starting this project, where going out has become an event rather than something I feel I have to do because it’s a Friday or Saturday night. It’s brought more value and meaning and excitement to my everyday. And I love helping to support so many badass local businesses in the area and showcasing the D in the positive way it deserves to be showcased. It’s a win-win any way you look at it!

Because I’m one of those creative souls who also appreciates a good analytical breakdown, I wanted to do a little summary of trends I noticed in Year Two as opposed to Year One and to share my goals for Year Three.

OK, so in Year One – February 8, 2014 through February 7, 2015 – I visited 102 new-to-me places in Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties. I knew going into Year Two that I wasn’t going to sustain that pace. I’d achieved the 100 Places challenge, and going forward, I wanted to sustain the blog 1) Because I loved doing it and 2) To ensure that I kept visiting new places on a regular basis.  My goal for Year Two was 60 places, a pace of about five new places a month. I visited 61 – not bad!

Disappointed by my lame representation of Detroit Proper in Year One (I visited only ten places in Detroit City that first year), another goal was to visit at least 20 establishments in Detroit in Year Two. I visited 21. Yes! That equaled about a third of all of my total visits – woo-hoo! Detroit Days – extended visits to the city with friends, often exploring several new establishments per visit – were also born in Year Two. I love me a good Detroit Day! Come on, summer!

One goal for Year Two I wasn’t great at achieving? Visiting a more diverse mix of cities. Nineteen different cities were represented by the 61 establishments I visited in Year Two – not too shabby. But only four of those (Commerce Township, Mount Clemens, Southfield, and Waterford – here’s looking at you!) were cities I hadn’t previously represented on the blog. So that was pretty lame.

I am conscious of the fact that certain cities – ermh, Royal Oak, Ferndale – and areas have been represented much more than others on this blog. I don’t care if I represent Detroit ad nauseam – I’m happy to be a Detroit champion! – and continuing to go down there more and more regularly is one of my goals for Year Three. But I would like to represent a greater diversity of the surrounding suburbs in Year Three. While there are truths and patterns to my life that are hard to deny and that I’m not sure I want to deny (for instance, that I live relatively close to Royal Oak and Ferndale, that I enjoy hanging out in those cities, that my friends enjoy hanging out in those cities, and that they are ever-evolving in terms of the restaurant and bar scenes), I can’t forget that there are over a hundred cities in the tri-county area. I want to represent them better!

OK, so I don’t see myself driving all the way out to Novi or Taylor from Clinton Township on the regular. While I do love exploring, I’m not a fan of long car drives where I have to do the driving – especially during the dark, icy winter months. I am sort of a pussy of a driver when it comes to unfamiliar territory. I make myself do it, because I know that getting out of my comfort zone is important and worth it. But it’s not something that comes automatically to me. Still, I know that by being conscious about it, I can showcase at least one place located in a new-to-the-blog city a month. It’s a small goal, but I hope that by being intentional, I can represent some of the cities that are integral parts of our community that have been heretofore missing from 100 Places in the D. I aim to start tomorrow!

It is crazy, because Month 1 of Year Three is nearly over. Where has the time gone this year? We are in March, people! The Corktown 5K/Parade is next weekend (I’ll be there)! I’ve visited four places so far in Year Three – three of them in Detroit, during two solo visits where I drove myself down to the city, a major accomplishment for me given my fear of driving the cray-cray roads in that city.

OK, enough words – it’s numbers time! Here’s a breakdown of locations visited in Year Two:

Number of places visited in Year Two: 61

Number of cities visited: 19

Breakdown by county: Macomb: 7 (lame, given that it’s my home county!); Oakland: 32; Wayne: 22

Breakdown by city:

Detroit: 21

Royal Oak: 9

Ferndale: 5

Birmingham: 4

Shelby Township: 3

Madison Heights: 2

Mount Clemens: 2

Northville: 2

Rochester: 2

Waterford: 2

Auburn Hills: 1

Berkley: 1

Clinton Township: 1

Commerce Township: 1

Dearborn: 1

Oak Park: 1

Rochester Hills: 1

Southfield: 1

Saint Clair Shores: 1

And here are my Year Three goals.

Goals for Year Three (February 8, 2016 through February 7, 2017):

-Visit 60-75 new places (I’d love to hit 75, but I’d be happy with at least 60).

-Visit at least 25 new places in Detroit; drive down there myself at least once a month, rather than primarily relying on friends who don’t mind driving around down there.

-Visit at least one new-to-the-blog city a month.

Happy exploring to all of you!