Menupro Curbside 08012020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Menupro Curbside 08012020 CURBSIDE MENU Starters Famous Texas Navy Crab Cakes ................................................................................................. 27.00 › (2) Heavy on crab topped with crab meat & spicy remoulade Half..$13.50 Camarones de San Antonio ............................................................................................................ 18.00 › (4) Large grilled or fried shrimp w/ jalapeno & provolone cheese wrapped Nueske's applewood smoked bacon Meat Entrées Entrée served with choice of Garlic Mashed Potatoes or Wild Rice ........... Asparagus, Green Beans, Broccoli, Regular Mac'n Cheese available at $3 ........ Gouda Mac 'n Cheese available at $9.95 Stephen F. Austin 12oz Ribeye ........ 25.00 Joshua Houston 8oz USDA ................ 23.50 Margaret Lea Houston 6oz Filet .... 27.00 Choice Ribeye Steak Crocket 10oz center-cut Filet .......... 43.00 Baron Bastrop 8oz Filet ....................... 36.00 Tender Beef Tips ...................................... 23.50 8oz Chopped Sirloin Steak ................ 15.00 › Served w/wild rice and mushroom › topped w/sautéed mushrooms, sauce grilled onions & Monterrey Jack Chicken Fried Chicken Plate Batter fried or grilled 15.00 Seafood Entrées Verlasso Salmon ..................................... 17.50 Copano Bay Shrimp ............................... 27.00 › 7 oz filet served with mango salsa › (6) Jumbo shrimp grilled or fried Seafood Trio ............................................... 39.50 Peggy McCormick's Salmon .............. 28.00 › (4) Grilled or fried jumbo shrimp, › 10oz pan-seared Verlasso Salmon crab cake, & 6oz grilled salmon filet filet w/mango salsa Burgers & Sandwiches Served with your choice of Sweet Potato Fries, Homemade Potato Chips, or French Fries Jim Bowie Angus Burger ................................................................................................................... 13.00 › A half-pounder with lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, and mayo or mustard Add cheese or jalapenos.... .75 Grilled Chicken Breast Sandwich ................................................................................................ 13.50 › With avocado, Swiss cheese, lettuce & tomato on sweet sourdough wheat bun Lone Star Bison Burger ...................................................................................................................... 16.50 › Healthier red meat served with sautéed onions, lettuce, tomato, roasted jalapeño demi-glace & jalapeños on side Desserts Key Lime Pie .................................................. 7.00 Kentucky Bourbon Pecan Pie ............. 7.00 New York Cheesecake ............................. 7.00 Chocolate Mousse Cake ........................ 8.00 › with berry sauce › Chocolate lovers must! p To place order call: Steamboat House 832/912-1845 or Order On-line 08/6/20 Mon-Sat 4:00-8:30pm www.softcafe.com.
Recommended publications
  • Margaret Moffette Lea (Wife of General Sam Houston)
    Margaret Moffette Lea (Wife of General Sam Houston) Margaret Moffette Lea was born 11 April 1819 in Marion (Perry County), Alabama, one of four daughters born to Temple Lea and Nancy Moffette. She was a granddaughter of George Lea and Lucy Tolbert (Talbert) and a great granddaughter of Captain William (South Hico) Lea of Caswell County, North Carolina. Captain William Lea was a brother of James (Kilgore’s Branch) Lea of Caswell County, North Carolina. These two brothers, William and James Lea were among the founding families of Caswell County. Margaret Mofette Lea was a first cousin to Thomas Lee. Their father's (Temple Lea and Ransom Lea) were brothers. Temple Lea and Ransom Lea moved from Georgia to Alabama. Margaret's genealogical line leads to the Lea family of Virginia. In Star of Destiny: The Private Life of Sam and Margaret Houston, Madge Thornall Roberts (Foreword by Ralph B. Campbell) (1993)1 at pages two and eight the following is found: Margaret Moffett Lea came from an Alabama family of distinguished men that included soldiers, lawyers, and laymen active in the state government, so it would not seem impossible that she could be introduced to so famous a man as Sam Houston. Margaret carried the name of one of the most distinguished families of the south. Her father, 1 "Much is known about Sam Houston's political and military career, but until Star of Destiny the influence of his wife and children on his life have been overlooked. Written by the great-great-grandaughter of Sam Houston and Margaret Lea, who draws upon previously unpublished family letters between husband and wife to reveal a deep interdependency between the two.
    [Show full text]
  • Tslac Displays Rare Houston Quilt During Talk by Expert Marcia Kaylakie
    REVISED NEWS RELEASE Contact: Derick Hackett FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Communications Officer March 11, 2011 (512) 463-5514 [email protected] ATTENTION: This release corrects name of spread donor. TSLAC DISPLAYS RARE HOUSTON QUILT DURING TALK BY EXPERT MARCIA KAYLAKIE AUSTIN –The Texas State Library and Archives Commission will display the summer coverlet made by Margaret Lea Houston, wife of Gen. Sam Houston, for the first time at the Lorenzo de Zavala State Archives and Library Building during a talk by quilt expert Marcia Kaylakie at 6:30 p.m. March 17. Certified appraiser Kaylakie, author of “Texas Quilts and Quilters: A Lone Star Legacy,” will discuss the historically significant summer spread as part of the fourth event in the TSLAC Speaker Series. The evening will begin with a showing of the award-winning 30-minute documentary, “Quilts in Women’s Lives,” by filmmaker Pat Ferrero. The event, co-sponsored by the Friends of Libraries & Archives of Texas, is free and open to the public, but reservations are necessary and may be made by calling (512) 463-5460 or e-mailing [email protected]. “We’re especially pleased to showcase the creativity and art of these women during Women’s History Month,” says TSLAC Director and Librarian Peggy D. Rudd. Crafted by Houston’s third wife, the spread is technically not a quilt, according to Kaylakie, because it contains no batting. It does, however, contain richly colored, heavy- gauge cotton appliqués, including some Masonic imagery and other design elements of still-undetermined origin. The fragile spread, which will be shown only for this event, was donated to TSLAC’s Sam Houston Regional Library and Research Center by Elizabeth Houston Paulus Henderson, Margaret and Sam Houston’s great-granddaughter.
    [Show full text]
  • Sam Houston State University a Member of the Texas State University System Procurement and Business Services
    Sam Houston State University A Member of The Texas State University System Procurement and Business Services REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL RFP NUMBER: 753-SHSU-2019-RFP-174-600000 CUSTODIAL SERVICES CONTRACT FOR SAM HOUSTON STATE UNIVERSITY ALL PROPOSALS MUST BE RECEIVED BY: May 7, 2019 @ 10:00 a.m. CT (Central Time) Note: Proposal must be submitted in BearKatBuy Sourcing Director at https://bids.sciquest.com/apps/Router/PublicEvent?CustomerOrg=SamHoustonState on or before the hour and date specified for the Request for Proposal opening. After receipt, only the names of offerors will be made public. Prices and other proposal details will only be divulged after the contract award, if one is made. Refer Inquiries To: Sam Houston State University Procurement and Business Services care of the BearKatBuy Sourcing Director Q & A Board at the web address shown above under RFP number: 753-SHSU-2019-RFP-174-600000 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION PAGE Cover Page 1 Table of Contents 2 A Introduction: Scope of Proposal 4 B Proposal Instructions and Requirements 4 B-1 Delivery Methods/Documentation 4 B-1a BearKatBuy Sourcing Director 4 B-1b Unacceptable Proposal Delivery Methods 4 B-1c Samples, Bid Bonds and additional documentation 4 B-1d Proposer’s Response 4 B-2 RFP Methodology/Process 5 B-2a Proposer's Acceptance of Evaluation Methodology 5 B-2b Selection Process 5 B-2c Criteria for Award 5 B-2d Public Information 5 B-2e Cost of Preparing Proposals 5 B-2f Negotiations or Discussions 6 B-2g Presentations and Product Demonstrations 6 B-2h Pricing 6 B-2i Property
    [Show full text]
  • Mary Jones: Last First Lady of the Republic of Texas
    MARY JONES: LAST FIRST LADY OF THE REPUBLIC OF TEXAS Birney Mark Fish, B.A., M.Div. Dissertation Prepared for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS December 2011 APPROVED: Elizabeth Hayes Turner, Major Professor Richard B. McCaslin, Committee Member and Chair of the Department of History D. Harland Hagler, Committee Member Denis Paz, Committee Member Sandra L. Spencer, Committee Member and Director of the Women’s Studies Program James D. Meernik, Acting Dean of the Toulouse Graduate School Fish, Birney Mark. Mary Jones: Last First Lady of the Republic of Texas. Doctor of Philosophy (History), December 2011, 275 pp., 3 tables, 2 illustrations, bibliography, 327 titles. This dissertation uses archival and interpretive methods to examine the life and contributions of Mary Smith McCrory Jones in Texas. Specifically, this project investigates the ways in which Mary Jones emerged into the public sphere, utilized myth and memory, and managed her life as a widow. Each of these larger areas is examined in relation to historiographicaly accepted patterns and in the larger context of women in Texas, the South, and the nation during this period. Mary Jones, 1819-1907, experienced many of the key early periods in Anglo Texas history. The research traces her family’s immigration to Austin’s Colony and their early years under Mexican sovereignty. The Texas Revolution resulted in her move to Houston and her first brief marriage. Following the death of her husband she met and married Anson Jones, a physician who served in public posts throughout the period of the Texas Republic. Over time Anson was politically and personally rejected to the point that he committed suicide.
    [Show full text]
  • “Sweet Village! Thou Loveliest Spot of Earth to Me.”*
    Independence The Women’s Dormitory on Academy Hill. It’s breathtaking to discover it. The intertwined birth of Baylor as a great university and Texas as a sovereign nation are at a crossroads Line Camp students tour Windmill Hill. Baylor Line Campers dine on the grounds of Independence Baptist Church. known as Independence, Texas. Fling your Green & Gold Back in Time! The Texas Baptist Educational Society chose Independence in 1845 as home to the newly chartered Baylor University. Of the location, First Stop ~ Independence Visitor Center Just 14 miles from the historic site where the Texas Declaration of The Visitor Center officially opened to the public on May 1, 2010. they said it had “centrality, accessibility, health and beautiful scenery.” To verify days and times open, call 979.251.9227. Independence from Mexico was signed (1836), Baylor set roots in the town of Independence where the oldest continuously operated Of the original campus, four columns notably remain, painting a Baptist church in Texas still holds services. Its spectacular clustering timeless image against the Central Texas sky. Now, more than a oaks and birdsong from every grove caused Sam Houston’s wife, century and a half later, those columns stand sentinel-like within Margaret Lea Houston, to write of Independence: Old Baylor Park as today’s entering freshmen assemble during a Baylor Line Camp visit to the birthplace of their chosen university. “Sweet village! You, too, are invited to stroll and learn, picnic on the At the intersection of FM 50 and FM Thou loveliest spot of earth to me.” * 390, take FM 390 West up the hill.
    [Show full text]
  • ETHJ Vol-11 No-1
    East Texas Historical Journal Volume 11 Issue 1 Article 1 3-1973 ETHJ Vol-11 No-1 Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ethj Part of the United States History Commons Tell us how this article helped you. Recommended Citation (1973) "ETHJ Vol-11 No-1," East Texas Historical Journal: Vol. 11 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ethj/vol11/iss1/1 This Full Issue is brought to you for free and open access by the History at SFA ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in East Texas Historical Journal by an authorized editor of SFA ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. OLl'l\<E Xl Inn NUMBER I EAST TEXAS HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION OFFIOERS Ralph Goodwin, President .. Commerce Robert S. Maxwell, First Vice-President Nacogdoches Maury Darst, Second Vice·Presidenl Galveston M.rs. Tommie Jan Lowery. Secretary Lufkin D.DUXlTOBS Term Expires F. I. Tucker. .. Nacogdoches 1973 Lee Lawrence ... .. Tyler 1973 Mrs. W. S. Terry .. .JeltE'rson ............ 1974 Ralph A. Wooster . Beaumont .1974 John Payne, Jr. Huntsville 1974 Mrs. E. H. Lasseter ... Henderson .. .1975 Ralph Steen Nacogdoches 1975 Maury Darst ... .... Galveston 1975 EDITORIAL BOARD Allan Ashcralt Bryan Robert Glover . Tyler Ralph Goodwin Commerce Frank Jackson Commerce Archie P. McDonald. Edltor-in..chle[ Nacogdoches Mrs. Charles Martin Midland James L. Nichols ..... Nacoldoches John Payne, Jr... Huntsville Ralph A. Woosler .. Beaumont MEMBEBSIUP PATRONS contribute to the work of the Association $100 or more, payable II desired over a period of five years. SUSTAINING MEMBERS contribute to the work of the Association $50 or more, payable if desired over a period of five years.
    [Show full text]
  • Ney (Elisabet) Letters, 1894 and 1897
    Texas A&M University-San Antonio Digital Commons @ Texas A&M University-San Antonio Finding Aids: Guides to the Collection Archives & Special Collections 2020 Ney (Elisabet) Letters, 1894 and 1897 DRT Collection at Texas A&M University-San Antonio Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.tamusa.edu/findingaids A Guide to the Elisabet Ney Letters, 1894 and 1897 Descriptive Summary Creator: Ney, Elisabet, 1833-1907 Title: Elisabet Ney Letters Dates: 1894 and 1897 Creator Born in the Prussian province of Westphalia, Elisabet Ney (1833-1907) Abstract: was one of the first professional sculptors in Texas. Content The collection contains two letters from Elisabet Ney to friend and Abstract: supporter Margaret Lea Houston Williams (1848-1906), a daughter of Sam Houston. Identification: Doc 15066 Extent: 2 items (1 folder) Language: Materials are in English. Repository: DRT Collection at Texas A&M University-San Antonio Biographical Note From the Handbook of Texas Online: Franzisca Bernadina Wilhelmina Elisabeth Ney, one of the first professional sculptors in Texas, was born in Münster, Westphalia, on 1833 January 26 to Johann Adam and Anna Elizabeth (Wernze) Ney, a Catholic stonecarver and his wife. Ney enrolled at the Munich Academy of Art in 1852 and, after her graduation two years later, moved to Berlin, where she studied with Christian Daniel Rauch, one of the foremost sculptors in Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. Under Rauch's tutelage, Ney developed a classical style in the German tradition, with a tendency toward realism and a faithfulness to accurate scale. Through Rauch, she also became acquainted with Berlin's artistic and intellectual elite and sculpted her first works, among them portraits of such luminaries as Jacob Grimm and Alexander von Humboldt.
    [Show full text]
  • Castaneda, Antonia I
    THE BRITISH LIBRARY WOMEN IN THE TRANS-MISSISSIPPI WEST, 1840-1900: A GUIDE TO MATERIALS IN THE BRITISH LIBRARY by Jean Kemble THE ECCLES CENTRE FOR AMERICAN STUDIES CONTENTS Introduction States Alaska Arkansas Arizona California Colorado Hawaii Idaho Iowa Kansas Minnesota Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Mexico North Dakota Oklahoma Oregon South Dakota Texas Utah Washington Wyoming Regions Prairies Plains Northwest Southwest West--general Topics Army Black Women Ethnic Women Family Life Female/Male Relations Fiction Historiography Homesteading Overland Journey Photography/Art Prostitutes Religious Women Suffrage, Feminism, Women’s Rights Teachers Women and Native Americans Women in Their Own Words and Others’ Eyes Letters Diaries and Journals Oral Histories, Memoirs and Autobiographies Biographies Work INTRODUCTION Few regions, in any country, at any time, have so indelibly shaped their nation’s identity and its international image as the late nineteenth century American West. For nearly a century this West was portrayed in fiction, film, folklore and art as a vast arena of mythic struggles between rugged individuals, a hostile environment and even more hostile inhabitants. It was a place populated almost exclusively by single men: cowboys, miners, loggers, gold-panners and ranchers, single-mindedly creating new lives for themselves in unknown and challenging terrain. Women rarely featured, even in the work of historians, and when they did it was invariably as one of three types: genteel civilisers, sunbonneted helpmates or prostitutes. During the past two decades, however, historians of both women and the West have increasingly turned their attention to western women’s diaries, letters, journals, memoirs, novels, poems and oral histories.
    [Show full text]
  • Correspondence of James K. Polk
    Correspondence of James K. Polk VOLUME X, JULY – DECEMBER 1845 JAMES K. POLK Oil on canvas by Thomas Sully, 1783–1872 Philipse Manor Hall State Historic Site New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Accession: PM.1972.65.a. Correspondence of JAMES K. POLK Volume X July – December 1845 WAYNE CUTLER Editor JAMES L. ROGERS II Associate Editor Brian E. Crowson Cynthia J. Rogers Assistant Editors 2004 The University of Tennessee Press Knoxville Copyright © 2004 by The University of Tennessee Press / Knoxville. All Rights Reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Cloth: 1st printing, 2004. The paper in this book meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. The binding materials have been chosen for strength and durability. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA (Revised) Polk, James Knox, Pres. U.S., 1795–1849. Correspondence of James K. Polk. Vol. 10 edited by W. Cutler CONTENTS: v. 1. 1817–1832.—v. 2. 1833–1834.—v. 3. 1835–1836. v. 4. 1837–1838.—v. 5. 1839–1841.—v. 6. 1842–1843.—v. 7. 1844. v. 8. 1844.—v. 9. 1845.—v. 10. 1845 1. Polk, James Knox, Pres. U.S., 1795–1849. 2. Tennessee—Politics and government—To 1865—Sources. 3. United States—Politics and government—1845–1849—Sources. 4. Presidents—United States— Correspondence. 5. Tennessee—Governors—Correspondence. I. Weaver, Herbert, ed. II. Cutler, Wayne, 1938– III. Title E417.A4 1969 973.6’1’0924 75–84005 ISBN 1–57233–304–9 Sponsored by The University of Tennessee and assisted by grants from The National Endowment for the Humanities The National Historical Publications and Records Commission The Tennessee Historical Commission [Page vi is blank.] To Robert V.
    [Show full text]
  • OAKWOOD CEMETERY Ix
    WALK£R COUNTY TEXAS CEMETERIES . Volume Ill Comfmi'fl Hu 011/cUJOOti CMMllty Comf/.,z: . (OIJ 011/cflXJOti, 011/cUJOOti Motlsrn, d/Jitila&, 11"'1 M.91& d!Jtiilion&) 8t 8taf'un &. Columb.rium: Prison ClfMl:lril&: C11/J/llin Joi jjyJ (P16kmoooti Hilt) CWI""' 1&nn ~oru ~""" WALKER COUNTY, TEXAS CEMETERIES VOL. 3 Walker County, Texas Cemeteries Volume 3 © 2007 Walker County Genealogy Society Post Office Box 1295 Huntsville, Texas 77342-1295 No part of this book may be used or reproduced, stored in a database or retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, digital, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Making copies of any part of this book for any purpose other than your own personal use is a violation of the United States copyright laws. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the publisher and author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions. 11 WALKER COUNTY, TEXAS CEMETERIES VOL. 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION iv PREFACE/FORWARD v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vi CEMETERY LOCATION MAPS vii ABBREVIATIONS viii WALKING TOUR OF OAKWOOD CEMETERY ix OAKWOOD CEMETERY 1 ADDICKES ADDITION 63 MAYES ADDITION 111 ST. STEPHEN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH COLUMBARIUM 119 CAPTAIN JOE BYRD PRISON CEMETERY 121 WYNNE FARM PRISON CEMETERY 151 GOREE WOMEN'S PRISON CEMETERY 155 INDEX 159 ll1 WALKER COUNTY, TEXAS CEMETERIES VOL. 3 Dedication JUANITA BURTON LYNCH has been an active member of the Walker County Genealogical Society for many years, serving in numerous offices, and always loving and encouraging the membership.
    [Show full text]
  • Texas Co-Op Power • April 2015
    apr 15 local covers custom 3/13/15 9:37 AM Page 4 BLUEBONNET ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE EDITION APRIL 2015 Santa Anna Dinner for Two Rockin’ Out in Llano IT’SWILD OUT THERE Introducing the Natives and Taming the Invasives SEE PAGE 20 BLUEBONNET NEWS We are pioneers. Our mornings, our nights and the waking hours in between — this is when we discover what we can achieve. We are determined to grow and build and cultivate the life of our dreams. Because this is our ground. Our opportunity. Our responsibility. Our life to lead. kubota.com © Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2015 Since 1944 April 2015 FAVORITES 20 Local Co-op News Get the latest information plus energy and safety tips from your cooperative. 33 Texas History Santa Anna’s Complex Character By Martha Deeringer 35 Recipes Dinner for Two 38 Focus on Texas In Bloom 40 Around Texas List of Local Events 42 Hit the Road Llano: Between a Rock and a Hard Place By Helen Thompson ONLINE TexasCoopPower.com SPECIAL FEATURES Find these stories online if they don’t appear in your edition of the magazine. It’s Wild Out There Despite the exuberant show Texas USA 8 they put on every spring, wildflowers don’t have it Owl Wisdom all that easy. Plus, find best-bet drives for wildflower By Martha Deeringer watching and tips on how to make your own meadow. Observations By Helen Thompson Breakdown on the Tahoka Circle By Clay Coppedge NEXT MONTH Jump into Summer! In Texas, a summer getaway means finding water. We’ll tell you where.
    [Show full text]
  • Curbside Menu
    CURBSIDE MENU Starters Famous Texas Navy Crab Cakes ................................................................................................. 27.00 › (2) Heavy on crab topped with crab meat & spicy remoulade Half..$13.50 Camarones de San Antonio ............................................................................................................ 18.00 › (4) Large grilled or fried shrimp w/ jalapeno & provolone cheese wrapped Nueske's applewood smoked bacon Meat Entrées Entrée served with choice of Garlic Mashed Potatoes or Wild Rice ........... Asparagus, Green Beans, Broccoli, Regular Mac'n Cheese available at $3 ........ Gouda Mac 'n Cheese available at $9.95 Stephen F. Austin 12oz Ribeye ........ 25.00 Joshua Houston 8oz USDA ................ 23.50 Margaret Lea Houston 6oz Filet .... 27.00 Choice Ribeye Steak Crocket 10oz center-cut Filet .......... 43.00 Baron Bastrop 8oz Filet ....................... 36.00 Tender Beef Tips ...................................... 23.50 8oz Chopped Sirloin Steak ................ 15.00 › Served w/wild rice and mushroom › topped w/sautéed mushrooms, sauce grilled onions & Monterrey Jack Chicken Fried Chicken Plate Batter fried or grilled 15.00 Seafood Entrées Verlasso Salmon ..................................... 17.50 Copano Bay Shrimp ............................... 27.00 › 7 oz filet served with mango salsa › (6) Jumbo shrimp grilled or fried Seafood Trio ............................................... 39.50 Peggy McCormick's Salmon .............. 28.00 › (4) Grilled or fried jumbo shrimp,
    [Show full text]