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Thursday, February 19, 2026

German-style Kölsch Beer and a Loaded BLT at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget

German-style Kölsch Beer and a Loaded BLT at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget 

Chilly, rainy weather in February 2026 set the scene fro my family’s outing to the Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom in Salinas, California where I was able to relive happy memories from the time I lived in Stuttgart, Germany with my husband Laurent. 

The Alvarado Street Brewery Taprooms offers American, English, and German beers on its extensive beer menu. Laurent and our daughter Florence Paget ordered German pilsners while I opted for the non-alcoholic kölsch beer. Our dinner outing was quickly becoming a brewpub evening. 

Pilsner lagers originally come from Pilsen, Czech Republic, but the Germans have adopted the style as well. Lagers are cold fermented beers. 

Kölsch beer from Cologne, Germany is a hybrid beer. It starts out as a warm fermented yeast, but is aged like a cold-fermented lager. The end result is a beer with fruity flavor, which I like very much. Alvarado Street Brewery serves this beer in the tall, thin glass called a stange like the ones in Cologne as well. 

Kölsch beer has been brewed since 874 AD in Cologne, a northern German city on the Rhine River, according to the Oxford Companion to Beer edited by Garrett Oliver. It is only brewed in the Cologne area and has a legally protected status, which I refer to the kölsch beer at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom as German style kölsch. 

It is easy to have a German brew pub experience at Alvarado Street Brewery thanks to its updated classic bar menu that reflects how brewing and baking are intertwined industries with a history that includes Germany but stretches back to ancient Sumeria and Egypt. 

You can even see beer and bread making and wine cultivation on the Mastaba Tomb of Perneb (ca. 2881 – 2323 Bc) a 4,500 year old structure at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Brewing and baking use both yeast and grain (usually barley and sometimes wheat in Germany). 

Women originally took care of both duties. Later, men took over these roles in breweries and monasteries. Bread products can be made from the spent grain used to brew beer. 

All of the main menu items at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom can use spent grain in some form with the following items: 

-pretzels served with warm beer cheese 

-hamburgers – the buns on the burger can be made with spent grain for this sandwich that originally hails from Hamburg, Germany 

-BLT sandwich (Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato Sandwich) and spicy chicken sandwich – the bread for these sandwiches can be made with spent grain 

-arugula salad – the lettuce is obviously produce, but you can make croutons with bread made with spent grain 

-pizza – Alvarado Street Brewery Taprooms serves Italian pizzas, but there is a Franco-German pizza from Strasbourg, France called flammekueche (flammeküchen) made with chopped slab bacon, thinly sliced onions, and a sour cream-like sauce that can be made with dough using spent grain as well.   You can buy flammekueche pizza frozen in Germany and France.

Spent grain tastes similar to regular grain but develops a darker color when baked and adds a huge cost savings for brew pubs. These savings allow brew pubs to spend money on fine, white cake flour for tarts like the Bartlett Pear Tart at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom. 

With this historical background in mind, my family thoroughly enjoyed our orders of a smashburger for Laurent, a BLT sandwich with mozzarella cheese and pesto aioli garlic mayonnaise, and a spicy chicken sandwich for Florence seasoned with Hungarian paprika and cayenne. My BLT had added mozzarella cheese for a calcium and protein boost. 

Pub food made with fresh, organic ingredients is hard to beat. It also arrives quickly, and hot at Alvarado Street Brewery Taproom in Salinas, California, which makes a visit there relaxing and pleasant. 

The Alvarado Street Brewery is located at the intersection of Alvarado and Main Streets in Salinas with parking behind the taproom, down Main Street by the Steinbeck Center, and some street parking in legally marked spots. 

Note: For readers interested in Cologne, Germany, I haves listed a link below to my blog about visiting this city and its cathedral, which is a major German pilgrimage site: 

Cologne, Germany - Holy City on the Rhine

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Avery Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Avery Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget are related to the Avery family through their ancestor George Robert Carpenter. 

G1 refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget 

G2 – Ruth Pennington (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington) 

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

-daughter of Edward Charles Bardsley and Etta Pearl Carpenter 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter 

 -daughter of George Robert Carpenter and Phoebe Throop 

G6 – George Robert Carpenter 

-son of Benjamin Carpenter and Elizabeth Eaker 

G7 – Benjamin Carpenter 

-son of Barnard Carpenter and Phoebe Avery 

G8 – Phoebe (Phebe) Avery

 -parents unknown at this time 

Born: November 29, 1770 in Dutchess, New York, US 

 Died: 1802 in US Married: March 6, 1788 in Saratoga, US to Barnard Carpenter 

(Ruth Paget Note: Saratoga probably refers to Saratoga Springs, New York) 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Eaker Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Eaker (Variant Spellings – Ecker, Acker) Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget are related to the Eaker family through their ancestor George Robert Carpenter. 

G1 refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget 

G2 – Ruth Paget (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington) 

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

-daughter of Edward Charles Bardsley and Etta Pearl Carpenter 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter

-daughter of George Robert Carpenter and Phoebe Ann Throop

G6 – George Robert Carpenter 

-son of Benjamin Carpenter and Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Eaker 

G7 – Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Eaker 

-daughter of Ludawick Ecker and Elisabeth Bellinger 

Born: June 16, 1813 in Oppenheim, Montgomery, New York, US 

Died: September 10, 1902 in Black Earth, Dane, Wisconsin and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Black Earth, Dane, Wisconsin 

G8 – Ludawick Ecker 

-son of William Ecker and Esther Schneider 

Born: About 1783 in Saint Johnsville, New York 

Died: Death date unknown at this time 

Married: Elisabeth Bellinger on February 24, 1811 in Fort Plain, Minden, Montgomery, New York 

Lived in Boonville, Boonville, Oneida, New York in 1850. 

G9 – William (Wilhelm) Ecker

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Monday, February 16, 2026

Crepes for Fat Tuesday by Ruth Paget

Crepes for Fat Tuesday by Ruth Paget

Tomorrow is Mardi Gras, Fat Tuesday, 47 days before Easter.  Lent, the period of fasting, begins on Wednesday, the day after Mardi Gras..

Our family celebrates this holiday with crepes made with extra organic eggs, Guerande flour de sel salt, and cold press extra virgin olive oil.

I have included links for our family’s California Crepe Recipe and the crepe making technique my husband Laurent uses to make crepes in an online exhibit devoted tobChandeleur;

California Crepes Recipe

Crepe Making Technique Online Exhibit

Bonne Fete!

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Calamari and Smoked Salmon and Creme Fraiche Eggs Benedict at Woody's in Monterey, California by Ruth Paget

Deep-Fried Calamari and California Smoked Salmon with Crème Fraîche Eggs Benedict at Woody’s Bar and Restaurant at the Monterey-Salinas Airport in Monterey, California by Ruth Paget 

My family went out for Valentines’ Day brunch at Woody’s Bar and Restaurant at the Monterey-Salinas Airport in Monterey, California for a locals brunch. 

We sat in the “locals” upstairs dining room. It is quieter and has a view of the control tower and tarmac. I always feel the adventure of traveling when I go to Woody’s, especially when we found out from our server that Woody’s was voted Number 1 Best Airport Restaurant in the United States. 

Our server further related that all chefs are “trying to be Gordon Ramsey” in the kitchen. Tim Wood, the owner of Woody’s, is also opening a restaurant at the Watsonville Regional Airport, making him an entrepreneur who is creating jobs and opportunities for his sous chefs and servers to move up and around the region. 

Tim Wood has been able to expand to Watsonville and his location in Carmel Valley without losing attention to detail by entire staff. We ate a superb winter brunch and had fun watching the goings on at the airport and discussing potential places to visit in the upcoming year as we ate – very appropriate airport chatter. My daughter Florence Paget mentioned, for example, that United now has a Monterey – Chicago flight. 

I ate my usual order of deep-fried calamari as an appetizer. Woody’s uses beer batter coated squid dunked in what seems to be thick Panko breadcrumbs to deep-fry the squid. I like ordering the calamari for the excellent dipping sauces that come with it. 

The cocktail sauce has puréed, fresh, Vitamin C rich horseradish in it for a kicky, pungent start to my shellfish and California smoked salmon lunch. The tartar sauce is equally pungent with sour, tart minced homemade pickles mixed in it. The combination of these sauces with savory, deep-fried squid easily justifies the $19 price for this Monterey Bay treat. 

As my main dish, I ordered California smoked salmon with crème fraîche eggs benedict. Substituting smoked salmon for Canadian ham in this dish makes it called eggs benedict royale I have seen on menus and in online descriptiions. I think the addition of butter fat rich crème fraîche makes this eggs benedict imperial, worthy of shoring up your resources to deal with cold winter weather. 

The English muffin halves had been grilled to soak up the lemony Hollandaise sauce. The California smoked salmon was lightly smoked for preservation, which let the flavor of salmon remain. Crème fraîche was placed on top of it along with sour, Vitamin C rich capers. A pearly, white poached egg was placed on top of the salmon with a generous helping of lemony, Hollandaise sauce poured over it. I love the combination of all these flavors including the piquant capers.

I used the pan-fried potato wedges fried along with red onions and Vitamin C rich red and green bell peppers to soak up the extra Hollandaise. I also ate the garnish of a folded leaf of romaine lettuce with a large slice of a juicy beefeater tomato. The vegetables were organic and full-flavored. They were perfect sides for the smoked salmon and crème fraîche eggs benedict. 

This hearty brunch is perfect for what can be chilly and rainy weather in the northern part of California’s Central Coast where Monterey is located. I consider this weather to be perfect for eating iodine-rich fish and shellfish meals like the calamari and smoked salmon one I ate for brunch. 

As a local I am happy have Woody’s at the Monterey – Salinas Airport as a dining option and am very happy that visitors to our region of California can start or end their vacations here with great meals. 

Note:  I would buy Woody’s cocktail sauce, if it were bottled.  

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Throp Ancestor (Mrs. Thomas Throp - 1492 to Deceased) of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Throp Ancestors of Mrs Thomas Throp (1492 to deceased) (Separate Family from Similarly Named Village) of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget are related to Mrs. Thomas Throp (1492 – deceased) through their ancestor Phoebe Ann Throop (Possible marriage of distant cousins) 

G1 refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget 

G2 – Ruth Pennington (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington) 

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter (Married Name: Bardsley) 

G6 – Phoebe Ann Throop (Married Name: Carpenter) 

-daughter of Joseph Allen Throop and Elizabeth Brundage

G7 – Joseph Allen Throop 

-son of Calvin Throop and Anna Ripley 

G8 – Calvin Throop 

-son of Benjamin Throop and Mary Burgess 

G9 – Benjamin Throop 

-son of Joseph Throope and Deborah Buell 

G10 – Joseph Throope 

-son of Daniel Throope and Deborah Church 

G11 – Daniel Throope 

-son of William Throope and Mary Chapman 

G12 – William Throope 

-son of William Throope, Sr and Izabell (Isabell) Redshaw 

G13 – William Throope, Sr 

-son of Thomas Throope and Elizabeth Smyth 

G14 – Thomas Throope 

-son of William Throope and Jenett Fynningley 

G15 – William Throope 

-son of Thomas Throope and Mrs. Thomas Throope 

G16 – Thomas Throope 

-son of Thomas Throope and Mrs. Thomas Throp 

G17 - Mrs. Thomas Throp

-parents unknown at this time 

Born: 1492 in Scroby, Nottinghamshire, England, UK 

Died: Deceased 

Married: Thomas Throope in 1514 in Lound, Nottinghamshire, England, UK 

Note from sources listed: Throp is Middle English for village. Variants Thropp, Thrupe, Throop, and Throope reflect different county locations. 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Throope Ancestors (Mrs Thomas Throope -1517 to 1614) of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Throope Ancestors (Separate Family from Similarly Names Villages) of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget have as an ancestor Mrs. Thomas Throope (1517 – 1614) through their ancestor Phoebe Ann Throop. (Possible marriage of distant cousins.) 

G1 refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget 

G2 – Ruth Pennington (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington)

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter (Married Name: Bardsley) 

G6 – Phoebe Ann Throop (Married Name: Carpenter)

-daughter of Joseph Allen Throop and Elizabeth Brundage 

G7 – Joseph Allen Throop 

-son of Calvin Throop and Anna Ripley 

G8 – Calvin Throop 

-son of Benjamin Throop and Mary Burgess 

G9 – Benjamin Throop 

-son Joseph Throope and Deborah Buell

G10 – Joseph Throope 

-son of Daniel Throope and Deborah Church

G11 – Daniel Throope 

-son of William Throope and Mary Chapman 

G12 – William Throope 

-son of William Throope, Sr and Izabell (Isabell) Redshaw 

G13 – William Throope, Sr 

-son of Thomas Throope and Elizabeth Smyth 

G14 – Thomas Throope 

-son of William Throope and Jenett Fynningley 

G15 – William Throope 

 -son of Thomas Throope and Mrs. Thomas Throope 

G16 – Mrs. Thomas Throope 

-Parents unknown at this time 

Born: 1517 in Lound, Nottinghamshire, England, UK 

Died: August 1614 at age 98 and buried in England, UK 

Married: About 1537 in Sutton cum Lound, Nottinghamshire, England, UK 

Sources listed: Throppe, England, Lancashire, Non-Conformist Church Record 

(Ruth Paget Note: If she converted, we may be able to find her first and last name in Anglican Church records) 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games