Archive for March, 2008

ny deli in carrollwood

Friday, March 21st, 2008

Big Apple Style Deli Rocks It In Carrollwood

There is nothing like a good deli sandwich. Piled high with whatever cold cut you want, slathered with condiments, dripping with plump tomatoes and chopped lettuce on good ole fashioned baked bread.

I crave this from time to time.

Tampa isn’t necessarily known for its delis. If you are looking for a Sandwich Shop, there are 1000 Cuban varieties to choose from. But what about those New York style delis. Ya know, where Rye bread sits right next to the sliced corn beef and aged Swiss cheese.

Wait, what’s that? Moxie’s, Moxie’s 2, Too Jay’s, and Carrollwood Café & Deli are just a hop, skip, and jump over Ray Jay. I’m there.

I’ll not lie. I’ve been going to Moxie’s on Kennedy Ave for a while and as long as you don’t mind waiting forever and possibly being scolded for too many (um, one) menu variations, you’ll have a good experience.

The sandwiches have always been good. Most are served on Cuban bread, which is not my idea of a NY style sandwich. (Yes, I get it, we are in Tampa, land of Cuban bread, but come on already.) Moxie’s will sub that Cuban bread for anything they have in house, but again, be weary of the scolding eyes and tones you will receive.

They offer creative sandwiches infusing Cuban, NY style, and New Orleans homage.

Then there is Moxie’s Two. I used to go to this location off Benjamin frequently. I’d always thought the same people as the Kennedy location owned it.

I think it’s been sold. It was nothing but new faces this time around.

My experience last week was bad. Bad, bad, bad. Yet, the people were very nice and happy to make any substitution I hoped for.

Perhaps, the Moxie’s of Tampa can get together and help each other in their personal deficiencies.

Too Jay’s at International Plaza was also a place I’d hop in from time to time. At first, I thought it was a chain and avoided it like the plague. I then found out it was a chain, but started in Palm Beach and can only be found in Florida. I can forgive a little if they are staying true to their roots. The food was always okay. Traditional New York style deli with 100 different chicken salads and every pastrami you can think of. But, that chain quality does shine through a bit. You can taste the manufactured-ness in the potato salad. If there were nothing else, Too Jay’s would do the trick.

That’s when I discovered Carrollwood Cafe & Deli.

JACKPOT!

Located in a little plaza on Dale Mabry at 11606, right next door to Outback Steakhouse, sits a genuine New York Style deli. Complete with homemade bread and every soda you could imagine.

The menu has everything from pastrami to tuna salad, all with catchy names like Wall Street Reuben and The Power House. I was in heaven.

I ordered the Deli Trio ($6.50), “the classic combination of kosher corned beef, New York pastrami, Swiss cheese piled high on freshly baked Jewish Rye bread.” My Hubby got the Wall Street Reuben ($6.50), “CC&D’s own cooked corned beef, sauerkraut, Swiss cheese, and 1000 island dressing on freshly baked Jewish Rye bread.” We finished the order with a All Natural Sarsaparilla Soda and an All Natural Black Cherry soda.

Can you say Yum!

My Deli Trio was a good 4 inches high and a good 5 inches in length. The corned beef was sliced perfectly (not too thin, not to thick) and super juicy. The pastrami was paper thin and delicious. There was a perfect ratio of corned beef and pastrami. The Swiss was a good aged Big Eye and sliced just think enough to make the back of your taste buds catch the age. Fresh tomatoes and lettuce garnished an already perfect sandwich. The Jewish Rye was the best Rye I have ever had in Florida. It was soft and flavorful. Perfect.

My Hubby’s Wall Street Reuben was equally as huge, if not bigger. He quickly slathered his with Beaver’s True Grain Mustard. There were a few mustards to choose from on every table. From Honey to Grain and all were really good brands not found in Florida. His corned beef was the same as mine, delicious and the sauerkraut had to have been homemade. The thousand island was a good mix of the old staple. This sandwich was worth way more than $6.50.
Made complete with a side of creamy homemade Cole slaw and a dill pickle spear, CC&D’s has been serving up these New York deli favorites for 10 years, right here in Tampa.

All of the people making this little deli run were very friendly. You could tell who the regulars were because their orders were already on the table before they took off their coats.

Go now! Just get up and go to Carrollwood Café & Deli. Forget about work or the kids or whatever menial task you are doing and go. Then, go back tonight and bring the whole family.

things to do easter weekend edition

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

This weekend may be a long weekend for some to celebrate Good Friday and Easter. My family has to work on Friday but we are looking for something to do on Saturday that has an Easter theme. On Sunday, the little one will spend the holiday with her mom, and the teen has to work. So Tommy and I are going boating!

Even though we have a few plans I still wanted to look for some kid friendly (and free) events. I found a ton! I used TBO.com and tampabay.com to get the events listed below. They each have very nice and easy to read community calendars. www.tampabay.com has put together a nice Easter-only list with one event for each area around town. Have a nice Easter, and spend some extra time with the family this weekend, it is supposed to be a beautiful Florida weekend!

Saturday, March 22 from 9am-11am at Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center is the Eggstravaganza sponsored by Magic 94.9. This event is free and for the whole family. There will be breakfast, photos with the Easter Bunny, face-painters, a petting zoo, a strolling magician, a safe-kids activity area, Patel Conservatory tours, a Rock School demonstration, coloring and 20,000 candy-filled eggs! IMPORTANT change for this year’s event- Due to construction in Curtis Hixon Park, there will be no egg hunt this year. Instead, candy-filled eggs will be distributed throughout the event to children ages 10 & under. So remember to bring your Easter Basket!

Saturday, March 22nd opening at 9:30 am at the Community Center Park & Pool, St. Pete Beach, The 1st Annual Underwater Easter Egg Hunt! The park is located at 7701 Boca Ciega Drive, St. Petersburg. This is a free event. They will have an underwater egg hunt and a traditional hunt in the park. Don’t forget to bring your own basket to fill up! I selected this event because it is different then all the others by using the pool! If you have older kids I bet this one will go over very well!

Saturday March 22 from 10am–2pm at the Florida Aquarium you can have your picture taken with the Easter Bunny before he takes a dive in the coral reef. This event has the regular admission to the aquarium of $17.95, $14.95 seniors, $12.95 ages 3-12. Tampa Bay Parenting Magazine will be sponsoring this event and will have child friendly activities scheduled. The Explore A Shore area is great for the kids; make sure to bring the little ones a change of clothes, they are sure to get wet!

Sunday, March 23rd from 12pm–2pm at Coachman Park, 16th Annual Easter Egg Hunt. This is a free event. There are separate areas for the big and small kids, so all children will enjoy finding eggs. A few special eggs contain the fabled “Golden Egg” inside, which is redeemed for a plush bunny to take home. There will be vendors set up and a handful of rides. I suggest bringing a picnic lunch to this event and hang out for the entire day!

While I was looking for Easter events I found one thing that I would like to mention for this weekend that does not have an Easter theme.

The Florida International Museum will be open to the public for free this weekend. The hours are Saturday 10 am – 5 pm and Sunday 1pm–5pm. They are having a Art Parade: A celebration of Creativity and the Art in the Park Family Day. For more information please go to floridamuseum.org. The museum is located at 244 2nd Avenue North. I went to the website but did not find a lot of information regarding the free admission but they have listed this event at TBO.com.

Happy Easter everyone!

promissary note found from 1861

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Way back in 1861, the Mayor’s Office (John Jackson?) of the City of Tampa issued a promissory note for $299.58 to pioneer storekeeper Thomas Pugh Kennedy.

Now his great granddaughter Joan Kennedy Biddle wants to collect on the note. With 147 years of interest added at 8%, Biddle says the city owes her $22.7 million.

Nice. Just who is this 77 year old Biddle? Joan Kennedy Biddle grew up on Davis Islands and attended Plant High School. She moved to east Hillsborough in the 1960s and ran a lumber business with her late husband. She now owns a three-bedroom home in Brandon. But she may have trouble getting her $22M

Tampa was originally incorporated in 1855, but was abolished in 1869; the city had no money to pay its bills. Tampa was rechartered in 1887.

Tampa is literally a different city now.

Ms. Biddle, perhaps you could donate that note to our friends at the Tampa Bay History Center.

sweetbay shoppers be alert

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

If you paid with plastic at a Sweetbay Supermarket between Dec. 7 and March 10 - even once for a pack of gum - you are going to want to double-check your card or bank statements. Contact the card issuer if you see something goofy.

tampabay catching up to tbo

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

The St. Pete Times is upgrading the tampabay.com website.

Dear Readers:

Earlier this week we made some technical upgrades on tampabay.com meant to improve your experience and our work processes. Unfortunately, just the opposite is happening in some cases.

Many links appear out of date, and certain features, such as the ability to view past editions, are not working.

Listen here, Times. Leave the screwed up websites to the professionals at TBO.com. But the Times promises they will fix it, eventually:

… I think it will take us days not hours to fix our issues.

Yipes…

commute times

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

The big subject lately is transportation.

In addition to your votes that transportation is the first issue to tackle, recent and upcoming TBARTA public meetings and debating red light cameras, Rich Shopes tells us that the Florida Department of Transportation says morning commute times will increase significantly by 2025. The story includes a map of six routes and the estimated driving times during peak hours currently and projected for 2025.

Helpful information missing from the map is the actual mileage for these commutes, driving time outside of rush hour, and alternative means of transportation. It wouldn’t be too hard, since Google does most of the work. Google Maps gives us the actual mileage as well as their calculation of approximate driving time. On top of that, Google Transit is helpful in determining if HART might be a good choice.

If you plan to use this in a court of law, you might want to double-check my math, but here is what we found:

We will start with the longest route given to us by the Tribune, Wesley Chapel to Westshore:
Google Maps Distance: 28 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 33 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 56 minutes
2025 projection: 68 minutes
Google Transit: 91 minutes (two hours for the 6:30 bus) plus a short drive to the Park & Ride. Car ride and two buses for less than 30 miles - sounds like fun, no?

Next is St. Pete to Downtown Tampa:
Google Maps Distance: 24.1 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 28 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 53 minutes
2025 projection: 65 minutes
Mass Transit: 80 minutes includes PSTA Bus #59 for 25 minutes, a 10 minute wait, then 100X for 45 minutes. Couldn’t get Google Transit to include Pinellas.

Valrico to Downtown Tampa:
Google Maps Distance: 14.1 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 19 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 45 minutes
2025 projection: 60 minutes
Mass Transit: 60 minutes (short drive to the P & R, plus 50 minutes on 22X).

Carrollwood to Westshore:
Google Maps Distance: 11.6 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 16 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 45 minutes
2025 projection: 37 minutes
Google Transit: 80 minutes (two buses)

Plant City to downtown Tampa
Google Maps Distance: 24.2 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 29 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 38 minutes
2025 projection: 50 minutes
Mass Transit: 60 minutes (short drive to the P&R and 50 minutes on Route 28X).

And finally, Brandon to downtown Tampa
Google Maps Distance: 14.1 Miles
Off Peak (Google) Time: 21 minutes
Peak Commute Time: 27 minutes
2025 projection: 31 minutes
Mass Transit: 50 minutes (short drive to the P&R and 40 minutes on Route 27X)

All of that only tells us that current rush hour commute times are simply ridiculous - the average speed from Valrico to downtown is less than 20 MPH, and those of you who drive from Carrollwood to Westshore average less than 16 MPH!!! - and our existing mass transit is even more ridiculous. Can’t wait to hear about your trip, Wayne!

In addition to the outrageous volume of traffic, we know that inattentive and/or distracted drivers hold things up or cause accidents, too. Which is highlighted nicely by the story’s inclusion of a photo by Trib Photog Dave Geiger taken while he was driving.

more teachers raping students

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Cops say a middle school teacher Stephanie Marie Ragusa had a sexual relationship with a 14-year-old boy between Oct. 1, 2006 through May 4, 2007, after he turned 15.

The Bay Area’s most infamous teacherapist, Debra LaFave was busted in June of 2004. It’s been nearly 4 years since the entire nation was in an uproar over the harm done to that underage student. Apparently, teachers have not gotten the message.

In addition to Ms. Ragusa above, since then, there has been Ms. Huggins, Ms. Latoya, Ms. Willis, Ms. Lilley, Ms. Butler, Ms. Wallace… It goes on and on…

And that’s just the females.
And that’s just in Florida.

BadBadTeacher.com is focused on our (male and female) educators (nationwide) accused of behaving badly, usually criminal in nature:

Hardly a day goes by that the news media is not reporting on yet another teacher run amok and often students are victimized in the process.

The website began in May of 2007, and the Florida category already has fifty six entries. You would think that teachers would perhaps read the freakin’ papers or take a glance at a newscast now and again, and take note of all the activity in our schools. Wouldn’t you? But they don’t.

And that’s just stupid.

long live thunderdome

Monday, March 17th, 2008

The St. Pete Times is already looking in to how to blow up Tropicana Field. Now is a good time to take a look at where the building has been.

Florida Suncoast Dome
St. Pete began construction on the giant round tent in 1986 in the *hopes that a Major League Baseball team would come to Tampa Bay. The Chicago White Sox used St. Pete and the Florida Suncoast Dome as leverage to get Chicago and the State of Illinois to replace Comiskey Park.

Florida Suncoast Dome was opened to the public on March 3, 1990, at a cost of $138 million, but still had no tenants. The Seattle Mariners were rumored to be moving there in the early 1990s, and the San Francisco Giants flirted with the area in 1992. St. Petersburg was a finalist in the MLB expansion for 1993, but they lost out to Miami and Denver.

In 1990, Davis Cup tennis was played at the dome, with a record crowd of 53,150 attending the three-day event. Later that year, 25,710 NBA fans saw the Chicago Bulls play an exhibition game against the Seattle Supersonics. In August of 1990, the largest crowd ever to visit the dome (47,000+) appeared to see the New Kids on the Block in concert. In 1991, the building got its first regular team sports tenant, the Tampa Bay Storm.

ThunderDome
After playing their first season at Expo Hall at the Florida State Fairgrounds, the Tampa Bay Lightning moved into the facility in 1993, and the venue was renamed the Thunderdome. The building was huge by NHL standards, so NHL attendance records were set between ‘93 and ‘96, including the greatest sporting event ever attended by Joel. The first-round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Regionals were held at ThunderDome in 1994.

When MLB expanded again in 1995, St. Petersburg was finally awarded a team to play at the venue. The Lightning and the Storm both moved to the Ice Palace in 1996, and Tropicana Field closed its doors in October for a 17-month, $85 million facelift.

Tropicana Field
Naming rights for the refurbished stadium were sold to Tropicana Products, who call the place Tropicana Field, and the arena re-opened when again hosting NCAA Men’s Basketball Regional and semifinal games in 1998. The first regular season baseball game took place at the park on March 31, 1998, when the Tampa Bay Devil Rays faced the Detroit Tigers, losing 11-6.

Tropicana Field also hosted the 1999 Final Four, featuring Duke, Ohio State, Michigan State and eventual-champion Connecticut, and drew capacity crowds of 40,632 and 39,113 on March 27 and 29.

Tropicana Field underwent a further $25-million facelift prior to the 2006 season, thanks to the Devil Rays. And another $10 million in improvements was added during that season. The Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall-of-Fame moved to Tropicana Field in 2006. In 2007, the team upgraded video boards, and in the offseason changed the name of the team to the Tampa Bay Rays.

*The nonsense that local baseball boosters had to deal with to get a baseball team here could fill a book. In fact, Bob Andelman wrote a book about it, “Stadium For Rent: Tampa Bay’s Quest for Baseball.” It’s a good breakdown of the entire 20+ year process, and you can find it online through independent bookseller Inkwood Books.