Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Dinner and a Private Boat Tour on the River Walk (12/24/2014)

Christmas Eve dinner at Paesano's on the Riverwalk. We even had our own custom menu. It was all ooh la la and delicious.


I had the crab stuffed salmon with spinach and pesto linguini and lemon butter garlic sauce with capers.





After dinner, we had a private boat tour of the Riverwalk. The pictures aren't very good, but hopefully you can see that the lights were varied and beautiful.












Only 1 Patricia.

Market Square and Mi Tiera (12/24/2014)

After the McNay, we had several choices of where to spend Christmas Eve afternoon. We chose to go to Market Square! The famous Mi Tierra restaurant (open 24/7/365 like LL Bean) would be open but it turns out the rest of the Market Square wasn't going to be open. Fortunately, it was open long enough for us to see it.



Mi Tierra!

We both ordered margaritas. Why not?! We had our own coach waiting to take us back to our hotel. :-) I ordered El Rancho Special--A Mi Tierra Specialty: "succulent beef simmered in pepper, onion and tomato sauce, served with guacamole, Spanish rice and refried beans." Yumm!


Look! A Mariachi Santa!


Ooops!

Answer: One and a half Patricias? How do you want to count them?

McNay Art Museum (12/24/2014)

Next stop: The McNay Art Museum. I'd never been before in all my San Antonio visits. It's very cool. Marion Koogler McNay, upon her death in 1950, left her 24-room mansion, the surrounding 23 acres of land, a collection of over 700 works of art, and an endowment to establish the first museum of modern art in Texas. In 1954 the McNay opened its doors to the public. Since then, much has been added to the building, but the heart of the museum is the original home and collection. These peacock-inspired rod iron gates separate the dining room from one of the patios on the house.


There was an exhibit from the National Gallery of Art on Impressionism that we toured along with the rest of the museum. Our tour group split into two small groups and we each had a private tour with our own docent. Our docent was knowledgeable and made it all very interesting. I of course was drawn to the more geometric pieces. This is "Winged Figure II" made in the very good year of 1957 by British artist Barbara Hepworth.



This is "String Composition #T-220" by American artist Sue Fuller, created in 1965.

Fortunately, our amazing tour director Sheryl, who has been to San Antonio many times, made sure that we all saw the Tobin Collection of Theatre Arts, which comprises over 9,000 theatre arts objects focusing on scene and costume designs, as well as the research library, cool spiral staircase, and REALLY big doors. We got two private tours of the McNay. :-)





Institute of Texas Cultures (12/24/2014)

First stop: The Institute of Texas Cultures! We were here in 1968 when this was brand new and a part of HemisFair. At the entrance are flags representing the various cultures that are a part of Texas. Find the Irish flag and Patricia is just across from it. Per a sign on the flagpole: "Although Ireland did not become an independent nation until 1922, the color combination of the modern Irish flag was in use in 1848."

Entrance selfies...sorta.

In the Lebanese section is the story of Newman McKool and it mentions his son Mike McKool who is the dad of my friend and fellow Lamplighter teacher, Mitzi McKool.


They were celebrating Christmas at the Institute by displaying trees typical of some of the cultures. Here's the one in the Czech section. "Veselé Vánoce! Many Czechs decorate their trees in the traditional ways, using natural objects such as fruit and nuts, handmade decorations, and homemade foods. Bright red apples. cookies, candies, and walnuts wrapped in shiny foil, colored paper chains, popcorn strings, and beeswax candles. A manger scene may be put under the tree as might a loaf of bread.

"The cedar tree from the family ranch stood ablaze with candles in tin holders that had come from Germany with Oma's family. The tree bore cookies covered with glittering colored sugar and baked with hooks embedded in them, oranges, apples, and porous net stockings holding gay hard candies hung on many limbs. each family had at least a few delicate decorations, treasured and hoarded carefully from year to year." Flach, Vera. A Yankee in German America: Texas Hill Country. San Antonio Naylor, 1973.

Then there's this "tradition": The German Pickle Ornament. "According to legend, parents in Germany would decorate their trees with blown-glass ornaments--many representing apples, candy, etc. one was clearly a pickle and always was the final ornament to be hung, so the parents kept the children away until time to open presents. To the sharp-eyed child who found the hidden pickle ornament went either an extra present or at least the right to open his or her presents first. The problem with this wonderfully charming story is that there is no record of it anywhere in Germany. One explanation has a German immigrant fighting int eh Civil War who is captured and asks for a pickle as a dying wish. Other variations tend to run along the lines of the first narrative. Many are content to believe that the pickle is actually a German-American tradition, or even is unique to German Texans, but there is no reliable research of documentation to support this."

And from Poland: "The Christmas celebration, which lasted from December 24 through January 6, began with Christmas Eve dinner when the head of the household served everyone part of a small, flat, oblong wafer, an oplateck, which was blessed by the priest. It had a nativity scene impressed on it symbolizing love, friendship, and forgiveness. ... In some households, hay or straw was scattered in the ktichen and on the table briefly before clearing it and setting it for the big Christmas meal. This Old World custom reaches back to a time when the bounty of the field was transferred to the kitchen and the table, but since the advent of Christianity, it has come to symbolize the hay in the manger of Christ's birth."


Not a good picture of it, but I was fascinated by this timeline of Texas history where one inch is 70 years. (It's straight in real life...I tried taking a panoramic photo of it and got the curve.)



Answer to the ongoing game for this blog series: Two Patricias




Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Dinner with Karen et.al. (12/23/2014)

We had several nights that we were on our own for dinner. And "the other sister" Karen lives in Austin, only 90 minutes away. So we got together for dinner Tuesday night. Karen drove over from Austin and brought her longtime friend Katy and Katy's mom, Mrs. C. We went to The Esquire Tavern which is right across the street from our hotel but also a great place to see and eat in San Antonio. It was started in 1933 to celebrate the end of prohibition. It is the oldest San Antonio Riverwalk bar and has a wooden bar over 100 feet long. It had quirky decorations, live music, and good food.



After dinner, we walked the Riverwalk. Can you spot Mrs. C. with Patricia?


Karen, Patricia, and I exchanged Christmas presents (we didn't open them yet, though).




San Antonio Tour Bonuses (12/23/2014)

SAS Shoes?! The factory?! Really??!! Yep. Sheryl arranged for a tour of the SAS Shoe Factory and Store. And what's inside besides shoes? A great general store with lots of goodies.



Including ice cream.


Our hotel is in the old Alamo National Bank Building. Check out these cool front doors.


And from the 22nd floor of the hotel, you get these vistas of the city.











At Kickback, I ordered a margarita the first time and thought it was delicious, but when I ordered a margarita the second time, Annette, the bartender, asked if I wanted lime or cherry. Cherry? I didn't know there was such a thing. But oh my oh my...it's all I ordered the rest of the tour.




San Antonio Classics (12/23/2014)

It wouldn't be a trip to San Antonio without a stop at The Alamo. This Texas Mecca will be closed both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day so we spent the morning here today.


And another San Antonio classic... The Menger Hotel. Established in 1859, it is the oldest continually operating hotel west of the Mississippi River.

Here in the original lobby of The Menger, what may look like three life-size wooden nutcrackers really isn't...well two out of three are.


We had an elegant lunch buffet as part of our tour package.



The hotel is rich in history...both in events that happened here and guests that stayed here. Col. Theodore Roosevelt recruited his "Rough Riders" from his HQ in the Menger Bar. There was also a famous visit to the bar from Carry (also spelled Carrie) Nation. See that triangle-shaped piece of wood in the bar? That's the repair done after prohibitionist and temperance crusader wielded her axe and destroyed approximately 3 feet of the bar.



One Patricia unless you count the picture in which she was the photographer.