Sunday, May 18, 2025

Cafes, coffee and pastries in the Portland area

It's May already and while we didn't quite explore a Cafe every weekend, we have done pretty well so far, I think!

February 9th: Coava Coffee - one of the
'must-visit' coffee places in Portland. Was also
part of our PDX coffee tour a few years ago.
February 16th: Futura Coffee
February 23rd: Super Joy Coffee -
alas, didn't enjoy this one that much...
March 2nd: Push x Pull Coffee - allegedly one of
the top 100 Cafes worldwide!
The Fresh Pot - we were not
part of the desired demographic 😞 
March 16th: Wallflower coffee - will definitely go again, 5 out of 5 beans!
March 23rd: Water Avenue Coffee
March 30th: Cream Coffee


April 8th: MKS' Global Technology Conference in Boston. I sampled Nero Coffee on that
occasion - not part of the running for best Portland Cafe, obviously.
April 13th: Heart Coffee - back in the groove
April 27th: Carnelian Coffee - and
an outstanding Passionfruit Danish
May 9th: Kalesa Coffee - tiny space but well worth the visit, we'll be back.


May 15th: Spent a couple of days in Irvine visiting another MKS site and sampled 'the lost bean's' coffee: no pastries before 8 AM 🤯







Sunday, February 2, 2025

Citizenship, coffee, and Photonics West

 It's been an eventful January!

After following in Michaela's footsteps and passing my naturalization interview at the USCIS, I was surprised to be offered to participate in a naturalization ceremony the very same day in the afternoon. That the Portland office was trying to squeeze in as many ceremonies as possible before January 20th is of course pure speculation, but I was happy to jump at the opportunity!


While we did not celebrate with a coffee afterwards as we did in Michaela's case, we have started an exploration into the Portland café-scene: we are aspiring to check out a new café every (or most) weekends this year. We started with Keeper Coffee on SE 41st Ave and enjoyed a dark roast latte with fruity overtones as well as delightful coffee cake and a puff pastry cardamom bun. It was unseasonably sunny which rounded out a successful first outing.


The next Sunday we only briefly stopped at Ovation coffee on Mercantile Drive (Lake Oswego) on our way to the airport (Photonics West beckoned):

There, we were served - in a modern-industrial ambience - some very pleasant, spicy & smooth, Moroccan Latte's, as well as some unexpectedly (based on the presentation) amazing scones - not too sweet, very fluffy on the inside and crunchy on the outside.

And then it was off to Photonics West! As last year, Rob was kind enough to let me crash at his place, even though, at least for the first few days, he, Kristen, and Weston were off in Idaho enjoying some snow, so our catching up was limited to a nice Thai dinner on Wednesday evening while entertaining Weston with 'I spy with my little eye...'. This was my last year as conference chair for LAMOM and I was happy to hand off the baton to the next generation.


Photonics West was its usual self with ~20,000 participants and - at least the LASE part of the conference - has more or less recovered from the pandemic in terms of the number of talks (somewhere in the 700-800 range). Plenty of friends, acquaintances, speakers, and poster presenters to say hi and catch up with as well as to ogle the latest optics innovations the industry has to offer on the exhibition floor.
But just as notable was a real world application of optics (and AI) that has become ubiquitous on San Francisco's streets: robotaxis! Mostly Waymo's cars, but also some Zoox, were hard to miss given the sheer number of them on the streets.



Needless to say, I had to give it a try! On my last morning (Thursday) I called a Waymo at Rob's place to bring me to the Moscone center (about a half hour drive) and it was smooth as butter from the start of the call - the car arrived within 2-3 minutes or requesting it - to the drive, which admittedly took a few minutes to get used to not having a driver, to the drop off at the destination. It was a flawless experience - will happily do this again!

After settling back into Portland, Michaela and I wasted no time and explored the next Café on the following Sunday: Albina Press on N. Albina Ave. The Lattes were smooth, though not exceptional, the scones - particularly the apple-chai one - a bit stale and the artsy ambience a bit disconnected. Guess, not every Café can be a winner, even though we appreciated the pet friendly setup and the LGBTQ flag in the window.

Haven't decided, yet, which Café to explore next - stay tuned!


Sunday, January 5, 2025

And then it was 2025!


Another year has passed! Just how quickly was evidenced by seeing Andy again (center) after his 3(!) year expat stint in Ireland - we had a lot to catch up on.


Christmas was around the corner, so the dogs got their final bath of 2024 ... 
... and after some recuperation were (somewhat) ready to pose for our annual Christmas family photo.

After our traditional Christmas Eve fondue it was time to unwrap the presents and spend the next few days relaxing and playing with our new toys - good times were had!


 

As is expected for the season, it was mostly raining (no white Christmas this year), but we made good use of whenever a window presented itself where it wasn't raining (or at least not raining as heavily).


And - as most New Year's Days - I made it up to Mt. Hood's Timberline to great the New Year in the snow early in the morning. A bit cloudy and at times foggy, but plenty of powdery snow to be had! Happy New Year!