Keep a tight lid on rising food prices with a few hits of Austin's finest supermarket deals.
1. Navel oranges, .49/lb. at Sprouts and Sun Harvest (through 3/30/11)
2. Texas 1015 yellow onions, .69/lb. at Whole Foods (through 3/30/11)
3. Green or red leaf lettuce, .88/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/30/11)
4. Boneless skinless chicken breasts, $1/lb. at El Rancho Supermercado (through 3/29/11)
5. Sun Harvest popcorn or kettle corn, .99/ea. at Sun Harvest (through 3/30/11)
Also, in a "spirited" attempt to mimic Trader Joe's Two Buck Chuck, Sprouts is now carrying something called Broke Ass Wines for $5 a bottle. And if your ass is even broker than that, pick up sixer of Sierra Madre beer for just $3.99 at Sprouts this week. That's almost as cheap as Walgreens' Big Flats 1901!
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Hitler Longs for SXSW of Yore
I know the Hitler meme is rubbed in the ground, but this SXSW edition from UrgentGenius is pretty hilarious. Enjoy it now before producers throw down the inevitable cease and desist.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Fave Five Food Deals - 3/16/11
Welcome to the SXSW edition of Fave Five Food Deals. No badges or RSVPs required.
1. Navel oranges, .49/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/23/11)
2. Hill Country Fare split chicken breasts, $1/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/22/11)
3. Organic Braeburn apples, .88/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/22/11)
4. Green seedless grapes, .99/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/23/11)
5. White onions, 8 lbs. for $1 at El Rancho Supermercado (through 3/22/11)
Also, if you have to have corned beef and cabbage for St. Patrick's Day, Randall's has corned beef brisket tips on sale for $1.99/lb. and green cabbage on sale for .39/lb. through tomorrow. You will need a Remarkable card to get these prices.
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
1. Navel oranges, .49/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/23/11)
2. Hill Country Fare split chicken breasts, $1/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/22/11)
3. Organic Braeburn apples, .88/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/22/11)
4. Green seedless grapes, .99/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/23/11)
5. White onions, 8 lbs. for $1 at El Rancho Supermercado (through 3/22/11)
Also, if you have to have corned beef and cabbage for St. Patrick's Day, Randall's has corned beef brisket tips on sale for $1.99/lb. and green cabbage on sale for .39/lb. through tomorrow. You will need a Remarkable card to get these prices.
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
Monday, March 14, 2011
A Public Health Worker in SXSW Court
I always figured if I was ever asked to serve as a SXSW panelist, it would be for something having to do with music. So imagine my surprise when good ol' public health got me into SXSW Interactive for the first time.
On Sunday morning, I was on a panel to discuss the use of social media to eliminate health disparities among minority populations. Although my program's forays into social media for HIV/STD prevention have been limited and inconclusive at best, I felt like I was at least able to convey the (ahem) challenges one must face when attempting to implement something new and not especially predicable at a government agency. That doesn't mean you can't change things in a bureaucracy, but it does mean you'd better take a mighty long view of things if you don't want to lose your head. It was great to hear that experience reaffirmed by several others while learning about their work.
Aside from going slightly over my allotted time (next time I do a panel presentation, I'm going to have a timer right in front of me), my only regret about SXSW Interactive has been not getting to fully immerse myself in it due to time-sensitive projects at work, gearing up for SXSW Music, Kate's busy schedule, tax preparation and wanting to see my son for a couple of hours over the weekend. There's a lot of potential synergy between emerging technologies and public health in everything from disease management to patient advocacy to data management. Here's hoping SXSW Interactive's embrace of health continues in coming years.
On Sunday morning, I was on a panel to discuss the use of social media to eliminate health disparities among minority populations. Although my program's forays into social media for HIV/STD prevention have been limited and inconclusive at best, I felt like I was at least able to convey the (ahem) challenges one must face when attempting to implement something new and not especially predicable at a government agency. That doesn't mean you can't change things in a bureaucracy, but it does mean you'd better take a mighty long view of things if you don't want to lose your head. It was great to hear that experience reaffirmed by several others while learning about their work.
Aside from going slightly over my allotted time (next time I do a panel presentation, I'm going to have a timer right in front of me), my only regret about SXSW Interactive has been not getting to fully immerse myself in it due to time-sensitive projects at work, gearing up for SXSW Music, Kate's busy schedule, tax preparation and wanting to see my son for a couple of hours over the weekend. There's a lot of potential synergy between emerging technologies and public health in everything from disease management to patient advocacy to data management. Here's hoping SXSW Interactive's embrace of health continues in coming years.
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Fave Five Food Deals - 3/9/11
Before SXSW hits with full force, take advantage of this week's bargain sustenance deals from your friendly local supermarkets.
1. Red potatoes or green cabbage, .49/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/17/11)
2. Braeburn apples, .69/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/17/11)
3. Asparagus, $1.49/lb. at Sunflower (through 3/17/11)
4. Air chilled whole chicken fryers, $1.99/lb. at Whole Foods (through 3/16/11)
5. Real Ale 6-packs, $6.27 ea. at H-E-B (through 3/16/11)
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
1. Red potatoes or green cabbage, .49/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/17/11)
2. Braeburn apples, .69/lb. at Sun Harvest (through 3/17/11)
3. Asparagus, $1.49/lb. at Sunflower (through 3/17/11)
4. Air chilled whole chicken fryers, $1.99/lb. at Whole Foods (through 3/16/11)
5. Real Ale 6-packs, $6.27 ea. at H-E-B (through 3/16/11)
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
Monday, March 07, 2011
Cloud Nothings "Should've Been"
I'm a sucker for heart-on-sleeve collegiate pop records like this one from Cleveland's Cloud Nothings, who'll be in Austin next week for SXSW. That goes double when it's accompanied by an infectiously cute-and-clever video I can easily appropriate for STD prevention work in my day job. This one is rife with choices and consequences. The rest of Cloud Nothings' self-titled debut is also pretty good if you like this sort of thing.
Thursday, March 03, 2011
Soul Clapping on Wall Street
My old guitarist-turned-DJ pal Jonathan Toubin got written up in The Wall Street Journal a couple weeks back for his ever-popular Soul Clap 45 RPM dance parties, which are happening everywhere from Brooklyn to the Bahamas these days. He'll be bringing the Clap to Austin during SXSW, too.
Reporter Andy Beta got most everything right, but there was one curious passage I took issue with.
"I used to DJ records, CDs, mp3s and it never sounded good," Mr. Toubin, who is 39, said a few days after the party, his Texas drawl just breaking his otherwise speedy diction.
Folks, the only way anyone would think they heard a Texas drawl in the banter of Jonathan Toubin is if he spoke with a deliberately affected accent or if he told you he was from Texas and you imagined it.
Photo by Julie Paterson
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Here Comes the Chronthlology
In conjunction with the Chron's 30th anniversary this year, UT Press is publishing The Austin Chronicle Music Anthology. This hulking, 314-page ride through Austin music history officially hits the streets a week from today with a big release party at Antone's. Chron music columnist Austin Powell, who co-edited the book with Austin Sound founder Doug Freeman, will reveal the full musical line-up for the party in weekly Off the Record column tomorrow.
UPDATE (3/3/11): The line-up includes Standing Waves, the Skunks, Kathy McCarty, the Gourds, the Crack Pipes, Poi Twang (featuring Twang Twang Shock-a-Boom's David Garza and Poi Dog Pondering's Frank Orrall) and special guest Daniel Johnston. Tickets here.
I'm jazzed about having a smattering of my work in the book. I didn't choose what stuff of mine went in, but I'm glad Austin and Doug used my oral history of Scratch Acid, my 1998 live review of Dale Watson at Ginny's Little Longhorn and my review of the Motards compilation, Stardom, among other things.
Although my opinion is obviously biased, I think Austin and Doug did a remarkably good job with this book. The photography is amazing throughout and the pre-online archive selections from the 80s and early 90s read like opening a window into Austin's past. The late Jeff Whittington's writing is some of the best music writing you'll ever read in Austin or anyplace else. And no one could do hilarious, spot-on snark like Michael Corcoran during his mid-80s run as music columnist.
In pulling together three decades of next week's bird cage liners, Austin and Doug wisely avoided a "definitive history" rubric, instead remaining steadfast to the rambling, tangent-prone vibe that - for better or worse - has traditionally defined the Chron's music coverage. It's a unique way to tell the story - and a very Austin one at that.
Fave Five Food Deals - 3/2/11
After an unscheduled week off, we're declaring Texas independence from high prices with another round of Austin's top supermarket deals.
1. Organic Fuji apples, .77/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/8/11)
2. Cantaloupes, .77/ea. at Sun Harvest (through 3/9/11)
3. Strawberries, $1.29/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
4. Red, orange or gold bell peppers; Roma tomatoes, .77/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
5. Chicken tenders, $1.97/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
1. Organic Fuji apples, .77/lb. at H-E-B (through 3/8/11)
2. Cantaloupes, .77/ea. at Sun Harvest (through 3/9/11)
3. Strawberries, $1.29/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
4. Red, orange or gold bell peppers; Roma tomatoes, .77/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
5. Chicken tenders, $1.97/lb. at Sprouts (through 3/9/11)
Austin supermarket links (directs to weekly ads where available):
El Rancho Supermercado
Fiesta
H-E-B
Natural Grocers
Sunflower Farmers Market
Randall's
Sprouts Farmers Market
Sun Harvest
Wheatsville Food Co-Op
Whole Foods Market
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