Tuesday, August 8, 2006

Lee's Sandwiches - Gotta taste 'em all!

I have a new project that will take me a bit of time. I intend to try every Vietnamese sandwich offered at Lee's Sandwiches. At the one near my home, we have about 17 different kinds. Thus far, I'd had 3, the number 1 combo, the number 2 pork roll, and the number 11 combo. Today, I tried the number 15 shredded chicken. This was a disturbing sandwich to me. The chicken was very very shredded, and it was sweet. Not a taste I'd go for again by choice. I also tried their meatball skewer, and was a bit disappointed. It was like someone had taken the formula for fishcake, swapped in pork, and painted it fuschia before serving. Just a ton of fillers, and not very tasty. There are several things I do like from the sandwich shop, but we'll see occasional updates from me in the comments about new sandwich attempts, and hopefully, this will help you with your purchases.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Gilroy Garlic Festival - Obsession with the Stinking Rose

Today was my first experience with the Gilroy Garlic Festival. To think I've lived here most of my life, and never tried to partake of this infamous experience is almost shocking. http://www.gilroygarlicfestival.com George and I (George my boyfriend and garlic lover) headed down to Gilroy in moderate traffic to partake in a festival that has been around for generations. Note: the walk from the car to the entrance is not for the faint of heart or short of breath, as it was an 8 minute walk from the car to the entrance.

We walked into the festival and proceeded immediately to Gourmet Alley, home to the standard faire of the festival. We each got a combo platter which ended up giving us the following list of items:

Garlic marinated mushrooms
Garlic bread
Penne con pesto
Garlic chicken stir-fry
Garlic sausage roll
Garlic pepper steak
Scampi
Calamari

Here’s the run-down on my recommendations. The mushrooms were very good, with a nice balance of garlic and vinegar, and fresh, local mushrooms. George liked the penne, but I thought the pasta was well over-cooked, and the pesto was too creamy. He just loves pesto, so he’s not the most critical of anything in his favorite oeuvres. The chicken stir-fry was awful, with linguine noodles in the mix, and not enough ginger. It felt lacking on salt as well. The sausage roll was pretty good, with a solid garlic and pork sausage with lots of flavor. The pepper steak wasn’t as good, with a bad balance of meat and peppers. The scampi is something I’d eat again. The sauce was a bit creamy, but the flavor and texture were both good. The calamari was sautéed, much to my surprise, not fried, and had a red sauce on it. The calamari just did not work for me. The texture left something to be desired.

From there, we went to watch some of demonstration cooking, and I did end up buying a cookbook of garlicky recipes. They were offering a $900 Le Creuset set as a raffle prize, and far be it for me to not try and win Le Creuset cookware. After a bit of relaxing, and watching the show, we grabbed some wonderful beignets, and munched on those. Light, fluffy pillows of dough with just the right amount of powdered sugar. A light crispness on the outside, and soft, airy pockets of goodness on the inside. These were very good. The Crawfish I took home were not so good. A little too much boil seasoning on them made them spicy and too anise and clove tasting. The seafood also tasted a bit off. The stuffed mushroom caps were good. Again, great mushrooms, and a good blend of parmesean cheese, breadcrumbs, seasoning, and lots of garlic.

It was definitely something to do, but not something to do every year.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Vooges - The New Dutch joy in food

Vooges is a tiny little place in Amsterdam. If I didn't find the web site, I would never have thought to have gone in. The food was listed as Modern Dutch, and it was the best I've had in Amsterdam ever. George and I went there for a nice, quiet, romantic dinner. We walked, in the blistering cold, and almost gave up looking for it. The service was nice, polite, and their English was far more than serviceable. The food was fresh, and amazing. I appologize for not giving the most detailed description of what was eaten, but their menu changes w/ the season, so every two months, it's a different menu. Thus, I cannot re-trace my steps at this time. George had a lovely rabbit, with a celeriac mash, which was excellent. I had the best meat I'd had in Europe. It was a perfectly cooked medium rare veal. Soft, and delicate, with a wine reduction.

Foodie Down Under - Cairns could have you starve

Cairns was an amazing town, with tons of activities launching from the harbor, and many restaurants and pubs lining the small downtown area. I had stuck to foods that were easy to grab, and they were passable, but not great. I finally got myself to the restaurant row, and tried a place that looked somewhat upscale, but not stuffy. It is called Mangostin's. http://www.mangostins.com/

Local beer, Beez Kneez, honey beer, yummy.

Fried seafood basket with bugs, prawns, baramundi, scallops, and chips. Full scallop, bugs were tasty, poor fry job.

Desert lime and ginger creme brulee. No ginger flavor, only on the candied top, and lime brulee is a bad idea. Custard-like, not smooth. Tokay botritis wine. Like raisins, but crap service. "

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Kyoto in the heart of Sharon Park - Kaygetsu

Kaygetsu means beautiful moon in Japanese. The restaurant means authentic Kyoto cuisine in Menlo Park, CA. www.kaygetsu.com I went there with the hopes of finding a good Kaiseki dinner in California. It was a successful trip.

Note: Kaiseki is an artful preparation of seasonal, elegant Japanese food. The dishware is as beautiful and meaningful as the food itself. Often done as part dining experience, part tea service, it is always multi-course, and the process is art. They change their menu every 6 weeks, to incorporate the best ingredients for their dishes the season has to offer.

A Kaiseki experience can range significantly in price. I've seen them go for as low as $65, and as high as $10,000, with the desert wrapped in gold leaf, and range from 5-15 courses. That being said, the Kaygetsu Kaiseki, is a moderately priced menu, with 9 courses at $85-90, depending on the season. This happens to be their late Winter menu.

Saki-zuke (starter)
sushi rice in bean curd
anago (sea eel)with boiled quail egg with aspic
sweet shrimp and pear in japanese vinaigrette, with caviar topping
herring roe with kelp
plum jelly, wrapped with sake lee, and fried

This course is a perfect example of intricate Japanese cuisine. Each line had was a unique piece. When eaten in sequence, it went openned up the palate with each flavor, sweet, salty, bitter, sour, and umami. The texture of the anago suspended in the aspic gelatin was rather amazing.

Tsukuri (sashimi)
daily assortment
Choosing a slightly unconventional set of sashimi, it really showed the delicate flow of the palate. This particular sampler contained a mackerel, suzuki (striped bass), and tai, of which the last 2 have very subtle flavors.


Takiawase (slow cooked dish)
Yama kurage (mountain jellyfish) wrapped with inari (flavored bean curd), kabura turnip, carrots, shiitake mushroom, string beans, fu(wheat gluten), and kabocha squash cooked in clear fish broth

This dish is so flavorful, it's almost criminal. Each item was a different texture, and the sweetness of the kabocha and carrots were almost dessert like in nature. The broth was very light, and mildly enhanced the flavors of the items that were cooked in it.

Agemono (fried dish)
Deep fried kinki fish with eggplant, enoki mushroom, and ume fu in soy broth

I had never had the kinki before, but it managed to stay crisp and light despite it being served in broth. The texture of the eggplant and enoki were both excellent, and that's really what it's about with fried foods.

Yaki mono (grilled dish)
Minced kurobuta pork and kobe beef, mixed with natto (fermented beans), and grilled
served with yuzu flavored ponzu sauce, garnished with kinome (sansho pepper leaf)

I am a vocal non-fan of natto. This small ball of amazing ground meats changed my mind. The natto was an excellent binding agent, allowing the meats to hold together, and providing a richer flavor to the dish. Highly recommended.

Gohan mono (rice dish)
Rice cooked with bamboo shoot, chicken and lotus root
dark red miso soup and house pickled vegetables

It's so simple, but so good.

Dessert
Peach yeast sake flan made with "tokagen" nama sake
fresh fruits

This may sound strange, and honestly, when written down in English, much of the Asian world's food sounds strange, this was light, sweet, fruity, and delicate. Very tasty indeed.