Good salsa sure is a wonderful thing. I’m living in San Francisco now, and eating out is kind of pricey. I didn’t want to avoid eating out altogether, because eating out is a good opportunity to network with co-workers, and San Francisco offers some really good food. So I decided to eat as frugally as possible when I eat in, in order to compensate for eating out from time to time. I decided to eat a can of kidney beans in the morning, in order to get some good proteins and carbs, and then to eat whole-wheat pasta with tomato sauce for dinner. I tried to get my variety of vegetables in at lunch.
The concept was working pretty well, but I felt that the meals weren’t healthy enough–that I wasn’t getting enough variety of vegetables with my meals. While I was at Costco a couple of days ago, I found the solution: salsa. Adding some salsa to my beans in the morning gives me some extra veggies for breakfast, and replacing my tomato sauce with salsa definitely makes the meal more appetizing (and I would assume that organic salsa is healthier than tomato sauce).
So three cheers for Salsa. And may it always reign as the #1 condiment in the world (and not only because people like saying the word “salsa”).
Posted by Cole on July 11th, 2010 :: Filed under
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I’ve been living in San Francisco for the past few weeks as part of a summer internship with a public accounting firm. I was excited to move to the area and get to know the renowned San Francisco a little better. I’m still trying to form my overall opinion of the city, but here are a few things that stood out to me:
- The crosswalks make the “Million-Dollar Man” sound when the signal is to walk. Even after several weeks of experiencing the sound, I still want to broad jump the street in slow motion when I hear it. (Both my wife Kerri and my friend Kyle B. think the sound is more like a slow-firing machine gun, encouraging sight-impaired individuals to run across the street.)
- In the financial district, it seems like most places close down at around 6:00. I feel like I can barely get out of work in time to do any shopping, and even then, only for a few minutes. For how much retail real estate likely costs, I would think that it would be a good idea to stay open for another hour or two and catch businesspeople as they leave the office.
- Walgreen’s seems to average at least one store on every block downtown. I’m surprised that there’s enough pharmacy business to distribute among the stores, especially to cover fixed costs.
- This isn’t a San-Francisco thought, but something I noticed since I’ve been here: Apple’s sleek and minimal style is maybe starting to go a little overboard. They’re getting very close to looking like a soulless, big-brother-type of an organization, very contrary to their famous “1984” campaign (see photo below). It’s kind of funny how close cool and independent are to soulless and authoritarian.

Posted by Cole on July 11th, 2010 :: Filed under
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