Bike Tour Grub

On our bike tour we needed calories and this was a great justification for eating whatever we wanted.  Beer.  Cinnamon rolls. Beer. Seafood.

We had decided that we would not even attempt to eat  our "largely vegan diet" on the road which was smart. There were times when even vegetarian options were few and far between and making do with the vegan options from a convenience store would not have sustained us. I am aware that French Fries can be vegan, but I don't think French Fries and Cokes is the diet recommended by cycling champions.  There were a few times that I scoured the menu for a popular item that was ordered a lot--meaning food turnover and freshness in the kitchen-- and hopefully avoiding stuff that had been moldering in the walk-in all week.  Just thinking it through to figure what would be least likely to cause food poisoning.  In those cases, all dietary restrictions rules are out the window.   Safety first, people, safety first.

We started out eating breakfast and lunch in restaurants.  But, it took too long, cost too much and was too heavy.  It made for stomach aches and leaden legs.  So, we started eating smaller meals and snacks all day and then going out to dinner once we stopped for the day and got settled.  We started carrying cereal with us and buying milk when we hit town since it seems that even the smallest, saddest motels have refrigerators in the room. We would stop for a second breakfast around 11am and get the gooiest, most decadent pastry we could find.  (We really miss being able to eat pastries.) We made sure to always have food with us for those afternoon carb rich snacks like bagels with peanut butter and honey,  Lara Bars, raisins and almonds.  We would hit town around 4pm, get settled and search out the best dinner option that included beer.  After a day on the road, a beer tastes pretty darn good.  And, you have totally earned it even accounting for your giant cinnamon roll.   

Some culinary highlights:  delicious steamed mussels at Toby's Bar in Coupeville, WA; a free potato pancake in Lincoln City, OR; pan fried geoduck in Caste Rock, WA; berry pie after the ferry ride into Oregon; berry pancakes across from the Trees of Mystery in CA;  and a berry milkshake in Fort Dick, CA.

Craft twist: you can illustrate any food story with felt/knitted foods.  Crazy!

felt cinnamon rolls

Felt Mussels by GoBuggyGo

Raspberry pie

 

Pancakes by FeltCuisine

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Comments

Sweet

Hey
Our hiking buddy introduced us to some snack bar type things you guys might like. They are whole food type things that seem to be based around dates.

They are called Kind bars and around here you can find them in the nutrition section of Fred Meyer -they remind me of those LARA bars so you might check em out

http://www.kindsnacks.com/

PS: Beer and cinnamon rolls ...yum! Too bad I don't actually do the biking to earn them.

oh and

Wayy cheaper here. I just saw the prices on the site I sent and um, they are ridiculous. If you are intrigued let us know and we'll get some local and ship em to ya. for less than that, Jeez.

@hgm - so you can ship them

@hgm - so you can ship them cheaper, eh?  Sounds like a business opportunity!

More culinary

More culinary highlights:

South Indian restaurants in Vancouver and San Francisco.

Oysters in the bar in Manzanita, OR.

The "Condescending Vegan" bagel sandwich at The Beachcomber Cafe in Trinidad, CA.

A curiously authentic Mexican meal in Belfair, WA.