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On the Road

Sink your teeth into legendary barbecue in film-famous Taylor

CultureMap Create
Jul 1, 2022 | 12:00 pm

The quintessential small Texas town of Taylor doesn’t just have stunning sunsets, fields of cotton, a historic downtown with local shops, and even some horseback-riding cowboys in the mix — it has also been the site for scenes from a whole host of movies and shows, including Transformers: Age of Extinction, The Rookie, Varsity Blues, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and AMC’s Fear The Walking Dead, among others.

But you should also know that Taylor has another bold claim to fame: its world-famous barbecue.

Located just about 30-ish minutes outside of Austin, the town is in the heart of the Texas Barbecue Trail and boasts two champions of their craft.

Louie Mueller Barbecue is a family-owned, legendary Texas icon, originally established by Louie Mueller in 1949. They've served guests from around the world with all the staples, including thick slabs of salt-and-pepper crusted brisket, sausage, ribs, pork, steaks, turkey, and chicken. At this “Cathedral of Smoke,” all meats are slow-cooked for hours in age-old pits using post oak wood. The place has shown up on Food Network, the Travel Channel, and in several documentaries.

Sure, Davis Barbeque serves up tender brisket with a crunchy bark and ribs that fall off the bone. But it is owner and pitmaster James Davis Jr.’s secret "Come Back Juice" barbecue sauce that’s the game-changer here.

In addition to these hot spots in the “barbecue belt,” Taylor also has a range of local eateries with world-class flavors from Poland, Peru, Latin America, Czechoslovakia, Asia, and beyond.

Plowman's Kitchen, located inside of the historic Old Taylor High School, is known especially for its massive Breakfast Board: eight silver dollar pancakes, eight French toast triangles, fresh fruit, bacon, sausage, French toast glaze, butter, whipped cream, and syrup.

If you feel the need to work off some of these calories, set out on the city's architectural walking tour. It passes by more than 25 buildings, including the Renaissance Revival-style post office and St. Marys Church, the site of the oldest Catholic school in Williamson County (it opened in 1896).

On Saturdays, you can tour the Moody Museum, which dates back to 1887 and is the former home of Texas governor Dan Moody, who served two terms from 1927-1931 and is best known for reducing the KKK presence in Texas.

There are a variety of parks where you can pause and connect with nature, as well as the new skatepark, Pierce Park. Or if shopping if your cardio, drop into any of the more than 20 unique stores in the downtown shopping district.

Be sure to check the community's event calendar before your trip, to make sure you're not missing annual celebrations like the Taylor Rodeo, Christmas Parade, Main Street Car Show, and numerous barbecue cook-offs throughout the year.

Learn more about this small town with big flavors at Taylor Made Texas.

The downtown shopping district has lots of unique stores.

Shopping in Taylor
Photo courtesy of Taylor Made Texas
The downtown shopping district has lots of unique stores.
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Veterans Day

16 Veterans Day specials that salute San Antonio military service members

Katherine Stinson
Nov 8, 2022 | 2:39 pm
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Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
We've rounded up the best Veterans Day discounts in San Antonio.

What better way to say, "Thank you for your service," to the military member in your life than with these Veterans Day deals? From restaurants and coffee shops to retailers and exercise classes, we've rounded up the best Veterans Day discounts for those that have served and continue to serve our nation.

The below discounts are all applicable to military veterans and active duty service members with valid ID.

Bombshells Restaurant and Bar
Bombshells will provide one free entree for veterans dining in, as well as a 20 percent discount off everything else on their order. Family members dining with veterans will also get a 20 percent discount.

Cyclebar Stone Oak, 19239 Stone Oak Pkwy, Ste 111
Veterans can ride for free during the Friday's classes. Veterans can also sign up for a discounted $99 unlimited monthly membership.

Early Bird Coffee 1745 I-10 Suite #527
Veterans can grab a free Early Bird drip coffee or enjoy a free upsize on any other drink on the menu.

El Camino,1009 Avenue B
Buy your favorite vet a $3 domestic beer at El Camino, the popular downtown food truck park. Bonus? Every food truck onsite offers military discounts!

Fish City Grill
The three Fish City Grill locations across San Antonio will be offering one free entree (up to a $25.99 value) to any veteran dining in or taking their order to-go.

Fogo de Chao 849 E. Commerce St, Ste 393
Veterans will get 50 percent (yes, you read that right) off their Fogo de Chao meal on Veterans Day. Not only that, but they'll get 10 percent off meals for up to three guests.

Perry's Steakhouse & Grille
Perry's is offering a Veterans Day Eve special and a Veterans Day lunch/dinner deal. Any veteran dining in with a guest who orders one lunch/dinner entree will receive one complimentary Pork Chop lunch/dinner plate (we hear that the Perry's Pork Chops are legendary.)

Pluckers
Vets can enjoy one free meal (this includes one entree, a side, and non-alcoholic beverage) at all Pluckers locations.

Ranger Creek Brewing and Distilling
Buy a Sky Trooper beer the entire month of November (or a six-pack if you're thirsty) at Ranger Creek Brewing and Distilling. Tell all your friends its for a good cause (because it is): Ranger Creek has pledged to donate $1 from every Sky Trooper beer sold to the Fisher House, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing service members and their families care and support.

Red Robin
Red Robin is treating service members to one free order of the Red's Tavern Double burger. Did we mention that comes with free refills of bottomless steak fries?

Sanchos Cantina 628 Jackson Street
Veterans can stop by and enjoy 10 percent off anything on the cocina menu.

Smokey Mo's
Vets can grab one free breakfast taco from 7 am to 10:30 am at one of the three Smokey Mo's locations across San Antonio.

Starbucks
Veterans and military spouses can enjoy one free 12oz hot or iced coffee.

Texas Roadhouse
Texas Roadhouse will once again be offering their one free meal vouchers for veterans at the three Texas Roadhouse locations in San Antonio — the voucher will be good for one dine-in or carry-out meal until May 23, 2023, from a select menu.

We Wear Brazil
The locally-owned clothing and swimwear company will be offering a 10 percent discount on online purchases with the promo code "VETERANS".

54th Street
Veterans dining in at one of 54th Street's three San Antonio locations will get $10 off their entree.

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State of the Arts

6 unique ways to savor the arts in San Antonio this November

Kristen O'Brien
Nov 8, 2022 | 10:59 am
6 unique ways to savor the arts in San Antonio this November
Courtesy Presa House Gallery

An exhibit by Aaron S. Coleman and Alejandro Macias is at Presa House Gallery this month.

San Antonio’s museums, galleries, and even gardens are providing ample opportunities to soak up the arts this month in a multitude of ways, from 10-foot-tall works on wood from Andy Villarreal celebrating the Mayan culture (and a few aliens,) to stark black-and-white photos from Duncan Ganley capturing the city of London under COVID-19 lockdown. Meanwhile, Consuelo Jimenez Underwood’s vital feminist textile art redefines weaving and painting at Ruiz-Healy, and the San Antonio Botanical Gardens give us an excuse to kick off the holiday season with Lightscape, their second annual light display and celebration.

Bihl Haus Arts
“Galactic Mayan Warriors: Andy Villarreal” — Now through November 19

Andy Villarreal’s love of Mayan culture started about 20 years ago when he took a trip to Mexico. “My work is inspired by the Meso-American culture from the Yucatan,” Villarreal says. “It celebrates the history, rituals, the people and their ways of life. My work also deals with the past, present, and future. Aliens and flying saucers are also present.” Besides UFO’s, Villarreal, who teaches at the University of the Incarnate Word, includes warriors, kings, pyramids, jaguars, and other important icons, featuring numerous 8-foot and 10-foot-tall works on wood along with some smaller silk screen prints. He believes the Meso-American culture is often overlooked in art and that he should pay tribute to his own ancestors.

Presa House Gallery
"Born to Ride the Edge of Nothing” — Now through November 26

“Born to Ride the Edge of Nothing” brings together former University of Arizona colleagues Aaron S. Coleman and Alejandro Macias. Both artists present new multidisciplinary works reflecting on political and social issues in line with their individual experiences and a broader national conversation. The exhibition fuses their work in a singular dialogue touching on matters of race, ethnicity, multiculturalism, multinationalism, faith, and place.

The Michael and Noémi Neidorff Art Gallery
“Duncan Ganley: Inventory of Empty Streets” — Now through December 10

UK photographer Duncan Ganley documented every street inside central London’s Congestion Charge Zone during the UK’s first COVID-19 lockdown in the spring of 2020. Each photograph, shot identically, presents a view of a cityscape void of people, cars and congestion, capturing the shuttered retail and entertainment hub of London’s West End, the unpopulated residential roads north and south of the River Thames, and the eerily empty global financial center of the City of London. Ganley provides a photographic typology of the lockdown and explores the dissonance between the cinematic reading of the image and the very real anxieties during the pandemic.

McNay Art Museum
“True Believers: Benny Andrews & Deborah Roberts” — Now through January 22, 2023

True Believers is the first exhibition to examine the formal and thematic overlaps in the work of two artists separated by a generation: Benny Andrews (1930–2006) and Deborah Roberts (born 1962). The exhibition was forged through deep connections between the artists’ mutual use of collage and choice of subject matter. The exhibition’s title was inspired by both artists’ emphasis on the role of Black Americans in society, as well as art’s capacity for social change. Each artist has a distinct voice and a unique approach to collage. Both Andrews and Roberts draw viewer attention to the individual portrayed by placing subjects on stark backgrounds, and they also merge collage with painting to render powerful and heartfelt narratives.

Ruiz-Healy
“Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: One Nation Underground” — Now through January 28, 2023

Redefining the practice of weaving, Consuelo Jimenez Underwood works with repurposed barbed wire, yellow caution tape, safety pins, and plastic bags and crosses Indigenous, Chicana, European, and Euro-American art practices. Jimenez Underwood uses her unique tri-cultural perspective as a Chicana Indigenous American in her work, interweaving themes and imagery that reflect and revisit social memories. In 2022, the artist was awarded the Latinx Artist Fellowship, a first-of-its-kind initiative recognizing 15 of the most compelling Latinx visual artists working in the United States today.

San Antonio Botanical Garden
"Lightscape” — November 11 through January 8, 2023

San Antonio’s newest holiday tradition, Lightscape, is set to dazzle for a second year with thousands of twinkling lights and festive displays. The outdoor illuminated trail includes enchanting new installations in addition to well-loved favorites set to seasonal music along a 1-mile path through the Garden. The dazzling illuminations will include installations unique to Texas created by local and international artists. Favorites like the Winter Cathedral will return alongside reimagined installations, including Fire Garden and an even more spectacular display of Bluebonnets, an installation only seen in Texas. Visitors will have an opportunity to enjoy festive food and drinks, including roasting s’mores.

Presa House Gallery

Courtesy Presa House Gallery

An exhibit by Aaron S. Coleman and Alejandro Macias is at Presa House Gallery this month.

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Wurst Week

Beat the crowds for a weekday jaunt through Wurstfest

Brianna Caleri
Nov 7, 2022 | 1:28 pm
Wurstfest
Courtesy of Wurstfest
If you can't relax with some sausages, when can you relax? Wurstfest doesn't have to be a weekend marathon.

San Antonians could stop by their favorite after-work haunts for happy hour this week, but New Braunfels, a relatively short drive away, can offer a lot more.

Wurstfest is in full swing again, coming out of its first weekend of 2022 festivities. This year’s fest runs from November 4-13, spreading that massive population influx across two weekends, and shorter days in between. Sweetening the pot, admission is free from Monday to Thursday.

Realistically, although the German food is at least half the draw, Wurstfest could be called Bierfest with the sheer volume of beers it serves. And they’re not expecting too many visitors drinking before business hours end in the rather quaint New Braunfels. So, Wurstfest starts at 5 pm on weekdays, but the five hours it’s open (ending at 10 pm) offer plenty of ways to pass the time.

All weekdays start with live music at 5:30 pm on all five stages across the old German grounds. (For those who haven’t visited, this is basically a theme park: visitors wander through timber framed beer halls, past many, many concession stands, down the Comal River to a fairground, all without stepping out of Germany, it seems.) From those opening sets, there’s near-constant music on three of the stages.

Most of the entertainment comes from live music and the novelty of wandering around amongst the lederhosen and dirndls. (Those drinking less than friends should strongly consider bringing a book — this is from experience.) But there is some light programming every day to break up the drinking and dancing, especially for visitors with kids.

Monday promises a science show and masskrugstemmen (beer holding) contest. On Tuesday, more beers are held and Rapunzel and Flynn Rider make an appearance. Wednesday brings, you guessed it, more beer holding, and a magic show. On Thursday, kids can hear some storytelling, and Friday, Veteran’s Day, honors veterans with a salute. Following crowds will also bring visitors to shopping, sausage-making demonstrations, and children’s fair rides.

Perhaps needless to say, the food is legitimately excellent; this is, at its heart, a culinary event, and serves more than standard fried fair foods. Obviously, sausage is a great choice, but there are potatoes, gravy, pickles, and sauerkraut to go around. Returning revelers are thrilled to share their best recommendations for the food and imported beers. Pacing yourself, three to five hours is a very reasonable stretch for trying as much as possible and returning to old favorites.

Wurstfest tickets (free Monday to Thursday, $18 online for the weekend) are available now at wurstfest.com, along with more information and entertainment schedules.

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