Circle K – Meredith Street
5324 Meredith Street- Portage, MI 49024
- (269) 323-7674
- Website
J and I finally got to do something today that we’ve both wanted to do for a couple years now. We got our first Christmas tree. The last couple years, we’ve not been home a lot around the holiday’s, so we decided a live tree might get neglected. A fake tree really isn’t an option because we don’t have any place to store. This year, our first Christmas since getting married, we decided it was finally time to start that tradition.
When J got home from work, we headed out to Badger County Christmas Tree at the corner of Sprinkle and Romence in Portage. We picked out our tree and headed back home to decorate it.
On the way, we passed a Circle K. I can’t pass up a Circle K so we stopped in for my favorite drink in the whole world…a Polar Pop.
This Circle K is on Meredith Street in Portage, but it accessible from Sprinkle Road. It sits kind of in between the two roads which converge into a triangle intersection. Like the store on Milham, this Circle K is just a convenience store, which, again, is something I hadn’t seen before moving here. Usually they are gas stations. Read more…
Press Release – Angel’s Thai Cafe Opening in Grand Rapids
From a press release….
Grand Rapids, MI – The much awaited Angel’s Thai Café will open its doors at 136 Monroe Center this Friday, December 4 at 12:30 p.m. Business owners Lang and Julie Lee invite the public to its grand opening, where Mayor George Heartwell will officiate at the celebration with a ribbon cutting followed by food sampling. Following the event, the restaurant will open at 2 p.m. for regular business.
The Lees are seasoned restaurateurs, and recently relinquished their partnership in the Thai Express restaurants in Southfield and Detroit’s Greek Town in order to move to Grand Rapids and open a new restaurant. During the past few months the space has been completely renovated to serve the public well, both logistically and aesthetically.
Why Grand Rapids? Julie Lee has been watching Grand Rapids for several years. “I feel that Grand Rapids is the next up-and-coming metropolitan city. People here are really, really friendly, helpful, and resourceful.” The business incentives for the building renovation and signage were also a plus. Mai is very enthusiastic about Downtown events as well. “I feel they are very well organized and something I can benefit from.” Being directly across from Rosa Parks Circle is a definite advantage.Then there is the food. Angel’s Thai Café will accommodate a wide range of Thai food lovers. The restaurant will have “really traditional” Thai cuisine, as well as the newer “fusion” style. For customers not well-versed in Thai food, Julie will be a personal consultant, going through the list of sauces in order to best match your tastes. And a “Create your own dish” option is also on the menu. While Julie will guide you on selection, Lang and her brother, Junior, are the chefs that will create it. Says Julie: “So far I have never had a customer walk out without being happy.”
Hours: Mon. – Thurs. 11 a.m. – 9 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m. – 3 a.m., Sat. 12 p.m. – 3 a.m., Sun. 12 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Phone: (616) 454-9801
Buck Horn Family Restaurant – Chesterton, IN
Well, our long holiday weekend in Chicago was over and we started back towards Michigan. We had done enough economy stimulating and was looking forward to getting back in our own bed.
Of course, traffic was a pain and the weather was starting to turn bad. Not long after we got into Indiana, we hit construction and it took us about a half hour to go five miles. J really wasn’t feeling good and asked if we could pull off for lunch. She said she wanted soup and grilled cheese. Where better to comfort food than a truck stop?
Buck Horn Family Restaurant in Chesterton, IN is just off Interstate 94 on US 20. It’s part of the TravelCenter of America chain of truck stops. We saw a sign for the place on one of those blue Interstate signs. We didn’t know at first it was a truck stop, but the “family restaurant” part of the name led us to believe we could get what J was looking for. As we were driving towards the TA, just said “Let’s just stop at the truck stop.” Turns out, that’s where we were heading anyway.
If you enter the Buck Horn underneath the awning and sign, you won’t enter the restaurant. We came in a hallway that looked to be management offices. We followed the hallway back towards the gas station side and found the restaurant. It’s not really defined in the locations. It just sort of takes up the space. There aren’t really any walls separating it from the rest of the gas station. Read more…
Xoco – Chicago
For a few months now, there’s been one place in Chicago that I’ve really wanted to get to. I’m a huge fan of Rick Bayless and when J’s mom told me he opened a street food Mexican restaurant right next to his Topolobampo restaurant on the Near North Side, I knew we had to get down there.
It worked out perfectly that we ate dinner right around the corner from Topolo, so I drug my family another two blocks farther away from the parking garage our car was parked in for dessert.
Xoco (pronounced Sho-ko) is on the corner of North Clark Street and Illinois Street in Chicago’s Near North Side neighborhood. The entrance is actually on Illinois Street, but the show is on Clark Street. It’s there that you can stand at the windows and watch workers make home-made churros and grind coco beans for the hot chocolate. My family was super confused. They’re not foodies. They have no idea who Rick Bayless is and they thought the coco beans that were being grined didn’t look so appetizing. J and I were super excited that 1.) we found the place and 2.) there wasn’t a line out the door. The rest of our group, could have cared less.
J, my sister-in-law, and I left my brother, mom, and dad out on the street and went to get in line. We entered the store and took a place in what we thought was the line against the wall. After a few minutes, a lady comes over and asks if we are dining in or grabbing something to go. We tell her we just want some churros and hot chocolate to go. She hands us a purple ticket and tells us we can cut to the front of the line. Everyone in line is waiting for a table. Since we were grabbing to go, we could go to the register and just put in our order. We were all confused. Did she just tell us to cut in line? Read more…
Lindt Chocolate Shop – Aurora, IL
1650 Premium Outlet Blvd. #521- Aurora, IL 60505
- (630) 236-0966
- Website
Ah, Christmas. The time of year that brings out the worst in people. I know we all think it, so I just decided to put it in writing. Jingle bells aren’t the sound of the season. Car horns are. At least the beginning of the season is that way.
J and I braved the crowds and headed to the Premium Outlets in Aurora, IL. The thing is, we didn’t go early. It was closer to 5:00 PM by the time we made our way to the northwest suburbs. We were hoping to avoid some of the crowds. I’m glad we didn’t go at midnight last night…the crowds were nuts.
Well, not so much the crowds, but the traffic. Chicago drivers are just jerks. It’s a complete “me, me, me” attitude when it comes to driving. If everyone would just show some patience, we’d all get where we’re going a lot faster. Instead, we create bottlenecks by trying to squeeze five wide on to an on ramp because no one wants to wait their turn. I just go past my ramp, do a U-Turn and hit the on-ramp from the other direction where there’s no traffic at all. Read more…
Cooper’s Hawk Winery & Restaurant – Orland Park, IL
One of the worst places to be in the Chicago suburbs on Black Friday is Orland Park. Guess where J and I were. Yup. Orland Park. We had made an appointment at Fred Fox Studio’s to pick out our wedding pictures. We needed to go to their shop to do it, so we had to do it when we were in town. The day we had free just happened to be the day after Thanksgiving.
J had thought she made the appointment for 1:30, but when she looked at the calendar on her phone, it said 12:30. Apparently, when we switched time zone’s, it changed the appointment back as well. Fred Fox didn’t open until noon and it’s a little over a half hour away, so we had to start driving before they opened just in case. Once we found out the appointment was at 1:30 like we thought, we headed to lunch.
I ended up blindly choosing Cooper’s Hawk Winery & Restaurant on South Harlem Avenue near 157th Street in Orland Park. It’s a pretty fancy place that has four locations in Chicagoland. Beside the Orland Park restaurant, they have shops in Burr Ridge, Wheeling, and South Barrington…all well off Chicago suburbs.
The restaurant is in a building labeled Cooper’s Hawk Plaza. When you enter the front door, you come into the gift shop and tasting room. You have to go through this room and down a hallway to find the restaurant. On the way, you pass a really neat private party room. It’s down a flight of stairs and lined with wine barrels. Read more…
Bistro 120
120 E. Michigan Avenue- Paw Paw, MI 49079
- (269) 657-3654
- Website
- No Online Menu
When we leave home, I usually have a dining plan. I take pride in researching and finding the best place to eat along our route. For some reason, on our recent trip home, I didn’t do that. We just got in the car and started driving. J had just gotten off work and we were heading to Chicago for the holiday weekend.
It was about 1:00 and we were both hungry. I suggested just getting off in Paw Paw and seeing what we could find. J thought she had seen a place downtown but when we drove by, it didn’t really look like a lunch spot. I went to turn around in a parking lot off of Gremps Street and staring us right in the face was a sign for a Bistro. We didn’t see it from Michigan Avenue, but a Bistro sounded like a good place for lunch.
Bistro 120 is on Michigan Avenue between Kalamazoo Street and Gremps Street. The storefront is actually a O’Farrell McGuire’s Irish Pub. The Bistro is behind the bar with the main entrance from the parking lot behind the building.
We entered the Bistro and were met right away by someone who told us they were done serving lunch in the Bistro, but were still serving in the pub. We followed a hallway around the corner to come into a typical Irish pub setting. Along the wall were a number of two tops. The tables in the middle were all set up for six to eight people. The two tops were all filled and we didn’t want to take a huge table, so we took a seat at the bar. The waitress handed us a couple menus and said she’d be right with us. Read more…
McDonald’s – South Westnedge
McDonald’s twice in one week? I know. I apologize. This was one of those unplanned stops.
J and I left Waldo Stadium about halfway through the third quarter to avoid the incoming rain. Somehow, I ended up back in Portage after leaving the stadium, so we came home I-94 to Westnedge. About the time we were getting to our turn, J said she was still hungry. I didn’t want to say anything, but I was too. We had only eaten a slice of pizza and some popcorn at the game and didn’t have much of a lunch.
J was craving a smoothie and the only place we could think of at 10:00 at night that would have a smoothie was McDonald’s. We knew there was one just a mile or so down the road, so we skipped our turn and headed to the golden arches.
McDonald’s in the South Westnedge neighborhood is on South Westnedge near Elys Way. Like I mentioned in my McDonald’s review earlier this week, I hate drive thrus, so we parked and headed in. The restaurant is open 24 hours, but the lobby closes at 11:00. We got there ahead of that, so I wasn’t forced to argue with a speaker because neither of us can understand each other. Read more…
Waldo Stadium
600 Oakland Drive- Kalamazoo, MI 49008
- (269) 387-8092
- Website
As wierd as it may seem, before tonight, I had only been to one college football game as a spectator. I’ve been to dozens of games, but in the past, I’ve always been working. My first game as a spectator was earlier this year when J bought me tickets to see a game at Michigan Stadium. I’ve seen games in seven of the eleven Big Ten football stadiums, but Michigan Stadium is the one that always seems to elude me. Instead of waiting and hoping for a phone call to work, J bought a couple tickets to a game while it was still warm out.
Game number two came as a complete surprise. The Kalamazoo Regional Chamber of Commerce was giving away four tickets to Senior Night through a Twitter contest. I was the first one to reply with the right answer and the next day, I picked up the tickets.
Waldo Stadium is on Stadium Drive at Michigan Avenue on the campus of Western Michigan University. One of the first things I noticed about the stadium was parking. It seemed almost non-existent. I love that it’s a campus stadium and most students could probably walk to it, but for those of us that have to drive to the game, it really sucks. The athletic department’s official website encourages you to park at Lawson Ice Arena and take a shuttle back to the stadium. I’d prefer to be able to walk to and from my car, but whatever. We really couldn’t even find a lot and there were no signs pointing us towards parking. I ended up in a neighborhood about a block away. I must have gotten lucky because I found street parking. It was a quick ten minute walk back to the stadium, but it saved us the five or ten dollars it would have cost us to park in a university lot.
The stadium itself was built in 1939 and was most recently renovated in 2003. That renovation enclosed the east end of the stadium with the Donald J. Seelye Athletic Center. On the other side of the field, a video board was installed. The first game in Waldo Stadium was a 6-0 win over Miami University. The name comes from Dwight B. Waldo who was elected the first president of Western Michigan University in 1904. Read more…
1600 W. US Highway 20
449 N. Clark Street
22 W Hubbard Street
15690 S. Harlem Avenue
3320 S. Westnedge Avenue

