Drink of the week!

DRINK OF THE WEEK

Blue Agave’s Coconut Ginger Mojito

Ted MillsMay 13, 2011 11:49 AM

Santa Barbara News Press

Leon Stamatis greets us when we make a late-night, early-in-the-week visit to Blue Agave. To come here at this time is unlike our usual visits, which find the two story bar and restaurant packed with all manner of (single) people, shoulder-to-shoulder, glass-to-glass. Instead we get the full lebensraum treatment at the empty bar, where Stamatis has already got three drinks in mind for us to try.

The first was their duly popular Pasión del Diablo, which comes with a chili pepper garnish. The drink is made from their chili-infused vodka, although Stamatis is cagey about what vodka they use. (Him: “It’s our house vodka.” Me: “Which is…?” Him: “…a good vodka.” Me: “Yeah, but…which one?” Him: “I…can’t tell you.” Me: “DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM???”) (Note: That last line didn’t happen.)

The vodka By itself is a kick in the throat with capsaicin boots. The drink tempers it with mango puree and complicates it with lime juice and lemongrass syrup. Good stuff. (And duly noted By at least one other patron at the bar, who orders one to sate her curiosity.)

Continuing on, we try the very popular Coconut Ginger Mojito. It’s a tall drink. Stamatis makes hundreds of these a night and, he says, it’s the most complicated to make. Most mojitos try to keep a clear head and stay refreshing through its mix of rum and other flavors. This cocktail goes right ahead and uses coconut puree. Without its mint and ice, it would look like a glass of milk. Into this Stamatis goes two rums (Malibu, of course, and Captain Morgan), a ginger mixer called Elixir G and brown sugar. The drink delivers on its title; its only fault is that it’s hard to see how close you are to finished. There’s so much foam, mint and ice left over you might think there’s something left to drink.

And By the time we had finished ours, five women at the bar had ordered the drink for themselves. Are we tastemakers? No, they chastised us, it was their favorite cocktail already. Take note, however — this isn’t on the menu. They haven’t had to add it.

The weekly special is the Ginger Mint Margarita, made with Hornitos, triple sec, lime juice and that Elixir G again. This time, the ginger is hidden, and the cocktail is a serviceable margarita.

Instead, we preferred the Pineapple Adrift, which Stamatis says he brought back from holiday. It’s a simple mix of the pineapple-flavored Skyy Infusions vodka and DeKuyper’s Tropical Pineapple, topped with a float of that chili vodka. It’s clear and refreshing and flavorful. But because of its unique taste and our wannabe tastemaker status, we’re going to go with the mojito. It’s our Drink of the Week.

COCONUT GINGER MOJITO

1 ¾ ounces Malibu

1 ¾ ounces Captain Morgan

1 ounce coconut puree

¼ ounce Ginger Elixir G

½ ounce lime juice

Tablespoon Brown sugar

Soda water to fill

Mint

Muddle mint, lime juice and sugar in a shaker. Add ice, rum, puree, Elixir and shake. Before pouring, top with soda water. Pour into tall glass.

BLUE AGAVE

20 E Cota St.

899-4694

blueagavesb.com

 

2011 Long Beach Grand Prix

Another year means more fun for us behind the scenes at the Long Beach Grand Prix. We were sporting our all-access “Hot Passes” that get us everywhere. Thanks a bunch to driver Pat Lindsey for hooking it up as always. It’s great being part of the team. Marla got a special treat this year and was one of the flag girls for the start of the race. Good times!

 

Pepto for dogs?

Can you give pepto to your dog? Some say don’t do it, some say no problem, but I had no choice and didn’t have any problems from it. I had to this past weekend while down in Long Beach at the Grand Prix. We had to bring the dogs with us for the weekend because of the lack of a dog sitter. Stupid me, decided to switch the dogs’ food to a new brand a couple days before we left and it turned their stomachs pretty bad. After a little research on the world wide web of internets, I found out that some people are giving anti-diarrheal to their dogs. I just mixed it up with some plain yogurt and it went right down. Yum! neon-pink yogurt.

How to watch 3D TV at home for cheap!

So, after all of this hype about 3D TV I decided to give it a go. And, I’m glad I did. I was just watching some of the March Madness in 3D on ESPN and felt like I was there at the court. Pretty cool.

Here’s what was needed for my current setup:

3D Capable TV
I had purchased a 65″ Samsung DLP LED TV a few years ago that is 3D ready, so that saved me some big bucks off the top. Most TV’s purchased in the past 3 years are 3D capable, they just don’t tell you about that so you buy a new one.

Sony PS3™ (with PS3™ system software version 3.60 or later) That version has support for HDMI 1.4 (3D)

Direct TV (Direct TV has about 5 channels dedicated to showing 3D content)

HDMI Cable (only way to carry the signal)

TRU3D Mitsubishi 3D Adapter Kit (Samsung and Mitsubishi have the same 3D signal) $549 (google Tru3D, they pop up first)

Now I’m playing Gran Turismo 5 in 3D on my PS3™ and watching 3D content on Direct TV.

Don’t drink and trap!

I’m not sure if there’s a warning on the traps or not but the other night after a night on the town I decided I was sick of living with rodents and that was there last night partying at my place. Well, we’re all heroes when we’re a little tipsy I guess, right? After a 2am snack in the kitchen I grabbed what was left of the cheese in the Fridge. By the way, cheese apparently doesn’t appeal to rats. Who knew!? I got one trap set up with a little fidgeting right in line with some rat turds I found in the laundry room. On the second one I didn’t even get the thing close to the ground before I heard an impressively loud snap as I looked down and noticed my thumb and index finger were inside the trap. Luckily for the booze I didn’t feel a thing but noticed my fingers had a bright white-ish blue line straight across them. They still hurt, but I’ll make it through. Learn from my drunken rat rage and wait ’til the next day. I didn’t catch anything with my 1 successful trap anyhow.

Assateague Island, Maryland

I took a trip out east this summer to visit my parents and we camped at this National Park just south of Ocean City Maryland. It was pretty neat seeing all of the wild horses that the park is known for along with it’s undisturbed miles of beachfront. If you’re into wildlife check it out. Camping At Assateague

Developing websites for the iPad

As I posted back about six months ago, Adam Brown hired us to create an online portfolio for his world-class photography. He specifically wanted it to be in Flash as we accommodated. Spring forward six months as apple has re-written the future of interactive websites excluding Adobe Flash, Adam asked us to make his site iOS friendly. This was a rather difficult task because of the design of his site. The portfolio is a horizontally scrolling gallery behind a circular mask. With touch-screen mouseless devices a scrollbar doesn’t do much good. So, we needed to figure out how to make it feel natural on the iPad which I think we did a great job of. Have a look at www.adambrownphotography.com on your iPad or iPhone. I think you’ll be impressed.

Scrubby Zoom!? Seriously?

For the life of me, I can’t figure out why Adobe insists on changing how basic tools work in every new version of photoshop. Seriously, what the heck were they thinking with the new scrubby zoom option? Since as long as I can remember you just hold cmd + space bar & drag a marquee to zoom in to a particular portion of a photo. After a couple weeks of trying to get used to the new click and “scrubby” I decided to search on the web to get my old zoom tool back. Turns out it’s just an option and can be set back to normal by just unchecking the scrubby zoom box.

A day at the Getty

This was my first time visiting the Getty as it seems most locals around here don’t ever make it. What a shame! First off, all it costs you for a full day of excitement is fifteen bucks for parking per car. We ended up going because Marla is taking a photography 101 class at SBCC and she heard about a photographic exhibit that was in for the week. I recommend starting your day off with the garden tour. Your guide will take you around the grounds and show you the magnificent gardens from an architectural perspective. Quite unique, and they even throw in a shortened version of the architecture tour which saves you about 45 minutes. Anyhow, here’s a picture I snapped at sunset. It was a truly inspirational day up there on the hill.

Tempest : Site Launched!

Tempest Telecom Solutions of Santa Barbara hired SB Catalyst to undergo a complete brand overhaul. Everything from their logo evolution to promotional materials, to a fully dynamic and integrated multimedia website. The site features a custom built CMS (Content Management System) that allows them to handle all updates to the website in-house . Including Meta Tags for everything, product databases, product quotes, individual page content, calendar of events, testimonials, customer databases, and more. Please check it out at www.tempesttelecom.com