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Category Archives: Oaxaca

Where to Eat Breakfast in Oaxaca, Part Two

7 / 27 / 177 / 27 / 17

After late nights in Oaxaca kept up by the creep of the mezcal high, I’m always excited for the rewards in the morning: frothy hot chocolate, fresh juice, crispy-edged fried eggs off the comal. Here are a few places to enjoy breakfast in Oaxaca city. For more, read my first post. Thanks to @oaxacking for introducing me to most of these places.

Casa Estambul


During the rein of Porfirio Díaz (Mexico’s president for three and a half decades prior to the revolution), this building was his hub for illicit activity— his casino—owned by a Turk and called Casa Estambul. The small brothel rooms surrounding a courtyard in the back of the restaurant now house kitchen supplies.

Breakfast Oaxaca Casa Estambul Inside
Breakfast Oaxaca Casa Estambul Courtyard

The courtyard is bordered by patterned tiles, and inside the bar area the entire wall is covered with the work of three well known painters. If you walk in and experience mezcal flashbacks, you may be thinking of the owners’ previous speakeasy-like bar Piedra Lumbre. Fer and Betty are also the publishers of Arrecife, a local magazine and guide, and their design sensibilities translate gorgeously off the page.

Breakfast Oaxca Casa Estambul Green Juice
Breakfast Oaxca Casa Estambul Matcha

Brunch is a hit here, and I can see why. There’s a big menu, accommodating your friends who “will just have a smoothie bowl” and your pals soaking up a hangover with a torta de chilaquiles. The barista program is on trend, with dirty chais, matcha lattes, and milk substitutions. We had the chilaquiles verdes with tasajo, orange-red from chorizo spices and softened by queso fresco on top. They have three green juices, and I enjoyed the well-balanced number one: pineapple, kale, spinach, celery and coconut water.

Breakfast Oaxaca Casa Estambul Cocktails
Breakfast Oaxca Casa Estambul Acai bowl

Our first salad in two weeks had dried fig, winter melon, almonds, cheese from chiapas, and a tamarind dressing. The cocktail program here is also fun, I enjoyed a clean and refreshing ginger mule called the Mulas Tercas. Note that this is also a great place for an evening cocktail and dinner.

Tierra del Sol

Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Inside
Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Chocolate
Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Lila Downs Outfits
Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Chilaquiles
Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Outdoor kitchen
Breakfast Oaxaca Tierra del Sol Patio

An ode to unofficial Oaxacan ambassador, Lila Downs, this restaurant is housed in the singer’s childhood home. Private dining rooms are named after songs, and her cropped embroidered blouses and painted knee-high boots are illuminated in a glass case. The garden patio sprawls as cacti-entwined trees and hanging shiny green ceramics open to the kitchen, where fried eggs and tortillas are made on the comal. The only thing uninteresting about this place is that they only play her music (I mean, I like it but it’ll get repetitive quick).

I am a fan of enjoying the subtle ways in which cooks (home and professional) add their takes on simple staples, like chilaquiles. Here they are served with yellow mole, a mild herbal mole that’s poured over chips into a bowl, with two fried eggs.

The waiter will come to your table immediately offering hot chocolate and café de la olla, kept warm over a small grill in the outside patio. There are fresh juices, and some typical breakfasts from the Mixteca region.

This location is just a short drive from the heart of the city but feels like a distant retreat. They recently opened a new location in the centro.

Las Chilmoleras


It’s weird to say that a several thousand-year-old kitchen tool is trending, but is anyone else noticing more molcajetes used as serving bowls? Here at Las Chilmoleras they are filled with bubbling breakfasts, and alongside fresh pastries, juices, and good coffee. Try the huevos estrellados a la chilmolera, fried eggs with thick bacon, enfrijoladas, and salsa. (Tip, don’t scrape a molcajete with your utensils.)

If you’re missing marshmallows while enjoying all that Oaxacan hot chocolate, you’ll find them here.

Breakfast Oaxaca Las Chilmoleras outside
Breakfast Oaxaca Las Chilmoleras Bevereages

This is a casual breakfast joint with a bright lavender and turquoise exterior and a patio that’s right next to the open kitchen. It’s owned by a Colombian chef, who married a Oaxacan. He sent out some freshly baked croissants filled with jam as we were leaving, and it made me want to stay for round two.

Jugos Cardona

Breakfast Oaxca Juice Bar
Breakfast Oaxca Juice menu
Jugos Cardona
Just like I scout out the good coffee in a new place, I’m always on the outlook for a juice shop in Mexico. Often juice shops are open before cafes in Mexico, which is helpful for this early riser. Anyway, this place is in a central location and will fill all your juice needs and give you a place to sit down. You’ll also learn about the nutritional value of seasonal tropical fruits by reading the hand-written signs on the wall.

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Where to Drink in Oaxaca

5 / 20 / 167 / 31 / 16

Mezcaloteca Oaxaca BarI should have called this post Where to Drink in Oaxaca If It’s Not From a Plastic Bottle of Mezcal You Got From the Palenque Today. But on the real, there are so many dope places to grab a beverage in Oaxaca it’s hard to choose. Lucky for us the evenings— just like the mezcal pouring—start early and end late so you can hit up a few in one night. Here are a few places to explore for every kind of drinking mood. Note: this is not a complete list and I hope to keep expanding it.

Mezcaloteca
Mood: I’d like to be drinking in a library.

Mezcaloteca Oaxaca Bar 2
Sit down across from the bookcases of mezcal, under the retro reading lights and enjoy a  well curated list of mezcal made by artisanal small producers. Much more than a bar, the team here will guide you through a three course tasting of their  collection, each bottle labeled by exactly who made the mezcal, how, and where. Don’t miss the vintage cigarette vending machine in the back. By appointment only.  (52) 01 951 514 0082 or email.

In Situ
Mood: Good lawd, help me escape all this mezcal pretension!
177 of the 364 linguistic variations recognized by the Mexican National Institute for Indigenous Languages are spoken in Oaxaca, but that doesn’t include mezcal lingo. Confused by the regions, agave varietals, notes, and other Napa Valley-like chatter you hear at bars? Come here and take a breath, because Ulises and Sandra got you. There’s no pretension at this cozy bar and these two delightful experts will help you pick a mezcal (go for their label) and talk to you about it as much or as little as you’d like. Plus, you can grab one of Ulises’ excellent books on mezcal for some at home reading.

Mezcalogia
Mood: It’s so hot I want to put my face in cocktail.
Mezcalogia Oaxaca
Just trying to kick it, with or without mezcal? Owned by the El Jolgorio/Nuestra Soledad Mezcal family, this small, relaxed bar originally began as a tasting room and has evolved into one of Oaxaca’s most popular spots for a well-crafted cocktail. That’s in part due to former SF bartender Bobby Baker’s bar program, which doesn’t commit what locals might refer to as sacrilege and offer mezcal cocktails unless you ask him to (but I think you should ask).

Piedra Lumbre
Mood: Feelin artsy.
Exquisite black and white photos of mezcaleros and palenque scenes by co-owner Fer Arce were on display when I was here, not to mention the black and white wall sketches, mosaics and other touches by local artists. Black and white tiled floors welcome you into the gallery and string lights hang over the small patio. It’s enchanting. Look out for mixology nights and special events on their Facebook. They used to keep the party going into the very early morning, but I heard they got regulated on.

Archivo Maguey
Mood: I’m trying to work work work work work… my palate.
Archivo Maguey Mezcal Bar Near Market
Tucked a block up from the 20 de Noviembre market, this is a perfect place to relax after a day of shopping. Archivo is sleek space thanks to owner Chucho’s background in design  and he’s equally as thoughtful when it comes to  curating mezcal, many of his unusual bottles coming from the Mixteca region. The grandson of a mezcalero, he and the fambam will walk you through their custom tasting method to help you get all the senses and flavors out of your glass. It was a little intense when I was there in the early morning after a solid night of drinking (Am I puckering my lips enough?? Pineapple, am I smelling pineapple?? Omg am I doing the three tastes thing wrong?? Can someone put a taco in my face??) So go when you’ve got some focus. Thanks to Oaxacking for insisting I come here.

La Ingrata
Mood: Where’s the good beer at?
This extensive beer menu highlighting the growing craft brew scene in Mexico comes accompanied by some quality snacks at approachable prices (including a several-course lunch special). They also have a mezcal, cider, pulque and live music.

Txalaparta
Mood: I’m so full of love (alcohol) that I want to run into everyone I know in Oaxaca.
Txalaparta Oaxaca Bar Inside
Txalaparta Oaxaca

While this is the place most folks (including tourists) end up at towards the end of the night, it’s actually a cool bar worth checking out during the day and they even serve an affordable daily lunch menu. Each room is a treasure chest of funky art, the rooftop patio is fun on a hot night, and a glowing shrine towers over the mezcaleria in the middle of the first floor.

Salon de La Fama & La Giralda
Mood: Whatever happened to the good ol’ days of just going to a regular bar?
La Giralda Oaxaca 4

Read my post linked above for info about these mellow cantinas.

Salud!

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Where to Eat Breakfast in Oaxaca

5 / 5 / 1611 / 27 / 16

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I love breakfast. My boyfriend is not a big fan. Anytime I ask him if a certain place is good for breakfast he says, “I don’t know, it’s breakfast,” with a shrug that indicates I might as well be asking him about the differences between the orange and red packets of top ramen.

But breakfast has the potential to make or break my morning, and when I only have a few mornings in a certain place, I’m looking for something that gets more than a shrug. Here are a few places to start your day in Oaxaca.

Jugos La Huerta (on the corner of Armenta y Lopez and Rayon)

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Never has paying $10 and up for a juice in L.A. hurt so bad after coming here. This was my spot. Not only because it was one of the only morning beverage places in Oaxaca open before 8 a.m. but because all the juices were so well balanced. The minute you walk in a team of young guys and a woman in orange polos will ask you what you’d like, and if you want a half or whole liter. Sometimes if you get a half they’ll have extra in the blender and encourage you to drink some there so they can top you off. There’s a jumpin little before-work crowd, most people hang in the doorway and take juices to go but there are a few bar stools to sit.

It looks like they blend the fruit so that there’s some pulp, which actually makes the juices healthier. My favorites:

  • Anemia: pineapple, alfalfa, apple, amaranth, spirulina.
  • Verde: orange or grapefruit, celery, parsley, cucumber, nopal, chard, aloe, spirulina.
  • Vampiro (this is a classic combo in Mexico): orange, carrot, pineapple, beet, apple. You can get extras too, like bee pollen for a few pesos.

Open at 6:30 a.m. weekdays, 7 a.m. on weekends.

Fonda Florecita

La Merced Oaxaca
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This family-owned food stall in the La Merced market is no secret to the blogosphere, but I thought I’d join the chorus. This market is a relief from the crowded markets in the centro— you see where the produce and goods section ends and begins, and can easily wander through to the food stalls. Fonda Florecita is recognizable from the white wall signed by visitors and the bright pink piggy banks marked para los cocineros (for the cooks). I actually mostly went for lunch, but I know breakfast is their busy time. With a huitlacoche quesadilla and anything in their coloradito, you’ll be well on your way to a beautiful day.

Boulenc

boulencI almost didn’t take my friend here because why go to a French bakery in Mexico when you have an abundance of them at home in California? Because this bakery is very good. A few cats from northern Mexico opened this spot up and it’s no wonder there’s a crowd of people cradling their red clay coffee mugs every morning. I got in the habit of grabbing a quick pastry, the caramel-colored rolls and fruit-topped pastries always hard to choose from. But you can also sit here, order some breakfast and coffee and watch the bakery at work from the wood bar. The bread loaves are rustic and beautiful, scored with leafy flourishes, and the baguettes— fluffy, airy, with a crumbly crust— are great road snacks with some lengua from Gourmand just up the street.

Pan:am

panamI’ll admit I was confused by Pan:am at first. I walked in one early morning and there was no bread on the shelves. A bakery not overflowing with bread and pastries first thing in the morning is usually a bad sign. However, my confusion turned to satisfaction while sitting in the colorful patio. I didn’t care where  the bread was as long as some of it would make it to me. It was one of my last days in Oaxaca and to be honest, the heavy moles, meat and quesadillas were getting a little tired. So while avocado toast with salad and a garden omelette might not sound like anything special, believe me it was.

Itanoni

Itanoni Oaxaca 2
Itanoni Oaxaca 4Itanoni specializes in heirloom corn varieties. In a time when it’s increasingly hard to find a good tortilla in Oaxaca, their menu couldn’t be more relevant. It’s an open patio restaurant, with the comal right in the middle, so you can watch the women work as they press and pat down a menu full of masa creations. The food here is simple, with a priority on letting the main ingredient shine: corn. The breakfast packages include juice and a hot beverage but don’t leave without trying the tascalate, a cold drink from Chiapas made of ground toasted corn, cacao, achiote, pine nuts, and cinnamon with milk or water.

It’s with some reservations that I recommend this place due to the abysmal service I had one time. There was this gringa we made fun of because at one point she was getting up and following around the waiter with a complaint, but then after 30 minutes and not even a cup of coffee I too was that annoying gringa. Damn. The other few times I’ve been the service was fine. So… go on a weekday?

Chilhuacle Rojo

Omelet with quesillo and hoja santa rolls, ranch tomatoes, grasshopper sauce
Omelet with quesillo and hoja santa rolls, ranch tomatoes, grasshopper sauce

Read my other post about this place here. 

Provecho!

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Drink the Day Away at These Two Cantinas in Oaxaca

4 / 26 / 167 / 31 / 16

I like cantinas, as I do dive bars, especially when I’m traveling. I like being in them during the day, the feeling that I should be doing something productive wearing off after my first beer. I like that while we’re the ones inside,  joyful and too honest and slipping off barstools while the sun is high, it’s the world outside that seems disorderly. Because here there will always be someone older than me and younger than me by a decade having a good time— and it’s pretty easy to make friends. That confusing concoction of a house drink that makes no sense when you arrive? It tastes good after a while. The light comes in through the swinging saloon doors and if you’re kind the stories come out from the dusty collectables behind the bar. The beer is constantly in front of you, it costs little, and the snacks, so low-key they’re genius, arrive in divine timing. There is an order at these types of bars you can usually depend on, no matter where you are.

Here are two cantinas I enjoyed in Oaxaca.

Salón de la Fama
Established in 1958, Salón de la Fama reels you in in true Oaxacan style: eye-catching color (a bright royal blue paint job outside) and casual charm  (a tasty bottle of mezcal labeled with scribbles in sharpie). Above the bar you’ll find three photos of “El Chato” capturing the different eras of this legendary owner/cantinero’s life. He’s now in his 80s so while you might not catch him shaking cocktails, he’s certainly left a tradition of good hospitality among the young guys running the bar.

Salon de La Fama Oaxaca 1
Salon de La Fama Oaxaca 2
Salon de La Fama Oaxaca 4
Salon de La Fama Oaxaca 3
Salon de La Fama Oaxaca 5

My favorite thing about eating at cantinas is that you never know what you’re going to get— maybe some black market caracol, maybe some refried beans and stale chips, or maybe some delicious oily yellow potatoes dipped in bottled green habanero salsa. The latter was the case at Salón, my toothpick repeatedly reaching for another bite of salt, warmth, spice and a brief crunch. Apart from botanas, they have a full bar, and two signature drinks: the pink panther (a frothy vodka and grapefruit cocktail) and a pineapple and rum drink. I mostly drank beer.

Salón de la Fama is not a well-kept secret from tourists, but locals come here too. It’s here where I met the people behind the La Salada pop-up, who bring their mezcal, Aguas del Corazon, and a small menu of ceviche, empanadas and tacos to various bars around the city. More on them will follow in another blog post.

Hours: 12 pm until the crowds mellow, but not any later than 2 am. Closed Sunday.

La Giralda
While at Salón de la Fama, Andrea, co-owner of La Salada, invited me to her dad’s bar. La Giralda is a good twenty minutes from the centro, a quiet oasis from the streets that narrow and the heat that thickens as you leave the city’s heart.

La Giralda Oaxaca 1
La Giralda Oaxaca 2
La Giralda Oaxaca 3
La Giralda Oaxaca 4

It’s been around for 70 years, Andrea’s father Carlos inheriting it from his father. There’s a four person bar, white plastic chairs and tables, and a TV and boombox playing music videos the mute colors of 1980s VHI.

I asked Carlos if it’s changed much. “A little to catch up with the times, but not really,” he said as he pulled out a giant garrafon of mezcal infused with a leafy, emerald-green plant. It’s lemon verbena, and it tinged the air with a medicinal, citrusy scent. That and whiskey were always popular back in the day. He pours it in a house-labeled bottle called “pinche mezcal,” which is refreshingly to the point.

At the start I was given a little plate of salted peanuts, dried chile, and lime. Then a small bowl of caldo de camaron (shrimp soup) with four tiny shrimps on the shell: it was brick red with a rich flavor, the color of the orange bubbles of oil leaping out of the spoon. Very quickly I grew a small collection of michelada, victoria, and mezcal to wash it down. They have regular lunch specials, and La Salada pops up here too (Carlos held their menu like a very proud Dad when I asked to take a picture).

Hours: M-S 12 pm to 10 pm, Sunday 12 pm to 7 pm

Thanks to Oaxacking and Andrea for introducing me to these places.

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Treat Yo Self to These Three Restaurants in Oaxaca

4 / 19 / 167 / 31 / 16

As a journalist who recently quit my day job,  I was in heaven eating cheaply in Oaxaca. I cooked with beautiful market ingredients and ate at cocina economicas, market stands, and drank green juices all day (with the extra shots of bee pollen— take that L.A.) My food costs probably came to a third of what they are in the Bay Area and the level of pretension was also remarkably lower. Just as important, I supported and met lots of local folks on a daily basis who I wouldn’t have met otherwise.

But it always irks me when people who have the means to travel to Mexico look for the cheapest deal, especially when it comes to food. I absolutely understand it if you are pinching pennies and making a big sacrifice to travel— much respect. But if not, you’re robbing yourself of an experience (and probably operating on some kind of racist assumption that all so-called ethnic food should be cheap but I will leave that conversation for another day). Usually for much less than what you would spend at home,  you can have an experience where the service, the technique, the creativity, the flavors, the whole story is something you can’t get anywhere else.  Here are three places that stood out from the rest.

Origen

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I’ve walked the wholesale market with Chef Rodolfo Castellanos twice now and he spots ingredients like a hawk. Somehow, peering through the curtains of tasajo and chorizo, past the dark alleyway of garlic, and dodging the wheelbarrows, he’ll find the one woman with orange-red heirloom tomatoes, and go through all of them for the perfect burrata and tomato salad. Having grown up in Oaxaca, you can tell he’s in his element navigating this beautiful mecca of ingredients, but he’s also had successful stints cooking in San Francisco and Monte Carlo, and is currently killing the game on Top Chef Mexico.

At the entrance of the restaurant is the original dining room: a courtyard  with pops of color, the hallway  leading you in with a bright corn mural and in the back a mural of a bright, triumphant chicken at the center. Upstairs there are plush booths and white tablecloths, with the windows overlooking the busy block leading up to the Zocalo. It would be hard to go wrong here, but I dream about the octopus, the seafood pozole and the grilled romaine salad. I always dream about salads when in Mexico but this one would be a delight anywhere. Make a reservation during busy season.

El Destilado

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Three  dudes from the States have opened a restaurant in Oaxaca, so it’s only a matter of time until the rest of the U.S. food bloggery world blows this spot up Hartwood-style (a mention in the latest New Yorker is probably a good start). But the food here is completely deserving of good press. Around the time I left Oaxaca the team had just added a more complete menu, with heartier lunch and dinner portions in addition to the small plates and tacos that make great company to their house mezcal list.

For a special meal in Oaxaca, treat yourself to the multi-course tasting menu. Chef Julio Aguilera presents his dishes by their sizes, bringing over a “little quail” or “baby quesadilla” to your table, setting you up for a smile— there’s nothing little about these flavors. I would call it an ode to Oaxacan ingredients but based on the hip-hop and soul heavy playlist, I’m gonna call it an intro, hook and verse. The refreshingly surprising intro: a course of pulque ice with grilled banana, banana puree and chamomile. The hook: an egg yolk with chorizo, beans, and salsa verde that makes you nod your head to the beat. The verses come in the dishes to follow, telling a story with a lot of heart and talent.

Tasting menus range from $800 pesos to $1280 with extra for the booze pairing (Mexican and Italian wine, mezcal, cocktails and craft beer). Make reservations for tasting menus 24 hours in advance.

La Teca

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Sample the flavors of the  Isthmus of Tehuantepec at this restaurant popular with both locals and tourists. The Isthmus is the most narrow area of mainland Mexico, making it a former trade route between the Gulf and the Pacific, and a unique place with strong traditions that’s split between Veracruz, Chiapas, Oaxaca and Tabasco. I was told that my next trip has to be there, for the food and also for the gorgeous textiles and gold jewelry.

If the kitchen at La Teca makes you feel like you’re in a home kitchen, that makes sense, because this is the home of Tehuantepec native, chef Señora Deyanira Aquino and her family. It’s refreshing to be in Reforma, a neighborhood outside of the centro, in a plant-covered patio with a backyard feel and a glass of ice cold tamarind slushie-like agua fresca.

There’s a unique savory-sweet-spicy thing going on with some of the dishes here like the chile relleno and the cambray tamal, combining ingredients like raisins, almonds, olives and capers. Although they were interesting,  it wasn’t my flavor palate. The moles and the estofado de boda (a beef stew cooked with fruit and chiles) were my favorite: the flavors were rich, with layers that kept punching.

A tasting menu is $320 pesos per person, and they will let you split it, which was more than enough food for me and a friend. I called and made a reservation for the patio although it wasn’t crowded.

Thanks to my bestie Essence for coming with me to all these places, it’s always the company that makes a meal even more memorable.

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Hi! I'm Ferron Salniker. Storyteller, event producer, and chilaquiles-enthusiast.

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 Back to LA, sippin homage to Oakland. "This is not a tiki drink" cocktail inspired by Trader Vic: mezcal, 5 spice orgeat, pineapple, passion fruit, PX sherry at @accomplice_bar. You can drink here and eat xiao long bao among other things from @littlefattyla and have a great night. Dish and drink recos in my story   Walk-through of @breadandsalt_sandiego today for #mexicoinabottle!  Mezcal & food lovers, I am helping to curate and produce this super fun event on March 11th. 40+ agave spirit brands, wine from the Valle de Guadalupe and bites from some of my favorite restaurants on both sides of the border.  Plus @mafondo is DJ-ing, @letsgoclandestino is offering a pre-event tour of Tijuana, and our non-profit partner, #loganavenueconsortium will be bringing cars & artists. ⭐️ Hope to see you there! Check out www.mexinabottle.com for tix or link in bio   I don't think I fully appreciated cochinita pibil when I lived in Merida. Purple pickled onions, sweet & earthy slow cooked pork, bread from Panaderia Rosetta.
 Been off social media for a min because sometimes life happens in ways I can't caption with a cute taco pic, but hey I'm back and fully armed with adventures to share✌⚡️ Also, one of the recent transitions in my life is to full-time auntie, so please allow me to formerly introduce my posse: fraternal twins and champions of life, nerf guns, and snacktime. Teddy and Django are down with ramen missions, like talking outerspace voyages over paletas and cupcakes, and as I recently learned on our first trip to NY, share my excitement when we find soft pretzel pieces in my purse. And their super mama is my bestie. A few of our favorite NY stops coming up in my story ‍♂️  Been bouncing around a lot lately but these babes always make me feel at home. #tbt  It took us 10 mins to decide which fruit cup to get.
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