Someone’s on Very, Very, Very, Very, Very Thin Ice
Previously: They cook for the Coast Guard, Lisa takes a fall and so does Adam (but his was on purpose) and Nipa is tossed back into the ocean. Tonight: It’s the Bon Appétit episode and someone breaks a jar of sauce on the stovetop. Iron Chefs Cat Cora and Bobby Flay get critical.
We open with scenes of Adam doing pushups in his underwear. Shane is working on his hair a lot, but Aaron doesn’t have to worry about that. It’s mostly on the guys in these opening few seconds. Then they leave and arrive at the Food Network kitchen where there’s a row of cute little picnic baskets. In comes Iron Chef Cat Cora, whose hair looks really long and flowing. I think Shane is in love with her because she’s a strong woman that can wield a knife. (His words, not mines.)
Chef Cora says their challenge is to make something out of the six mystery ingredients in the basket in front of them. Then they have to describe the dish in front of the camera.
The contestants open their baskets and starts cooking. It’s a variety of things. For example, Lisa gets Japanese udon noodles, beets, ginger, lemon, chicken and scallions. Oh my gawd, that doesn’t look like udon noodles to me. You know, I think the same thing happened last year where Amy says she was making a dish with udon noodles and it totally didn’t look like it from where I’m sitting in my living room.
Granted, I’m no expert in udon noodles. But like I said last year, all the udon noodles I’ve ever had have been these thick, white noodles that remind me of worms. They’re typically served in a soup dish and the thick white noodles are comforting to eat on a cold day. But these noodles look a bit thin and hardly white, and Lisa’s making it into a cold salad. They actually look more like soba noodles, but I can’t really say for sure. Anywho, it bugs me when the Food Network tries to pass off like they’re experts in Asian ingredients but they don’t use the more common form of the particular ingredient. Aiiiiieeee!
Everyone works on their dish (Shane’s pretty fast with the chopping) and when they’re done, they’re all excited about giving these in-depth descriptions of their dishes. Then Chef Cora drops the bomb that they have to describe someone else’s dish. And Aaron is about to blow! He was all set to talk about his dish (he made a chocolate strawberry shortcake with his ingredients) and had all these witty lines ready, but now has to describe something he’s never seen before. Aaron doesn’t seem to be really good about going with the flow.
They each get 90 seconds and they come up in pairs. First up are Kelsey and Shane, who will describe each other’s dish. Kelsey starts talking and sounds good but doesn’t really say anything specific. She’s just keeps saying “it’s a burst of flavors.” Plus she thought the sauce had a citrus flavor but it was actually habanero peppers and she takes a big swig of water when time runs out. Chef Cora tells Kelsey that she needs to know her ingredients and be specific. Basically, what I said.
Shane opens Kelsey’s dish and he right away say it’s cod, and I’m like, man he’s good because white fish looks like white fish to me. It could have been halibut or sea bass but he zero’ed in on the fact that it was cod. He talks about the aroma of the saffron blending with the fennel and I’m like, this guy is good. His presentation got cut off just as he was signing off, but I’d say his presentation was pretty on the money, and Chef Cora agrees with me again (smile) and says she likes his energy and description of the dish.
The next pair is Adam and Aaron. Adam unveils Aaron’s dish and gets excited that it’s a dessert. He calls it a delicious Napolean when it’s a shortcake, but I guess it could have seemed like a Napolean because of the layering. He’s actually very smooth and talks a good talk, but he takes this massive piece of cake (I guess it tasted really good) and then he can barely talk or even sign off because he’s busy swallowing. I bet they did this right before lunch to see the will power of the contestants. Anywho, Chef Cora says he needs to anticipate the wrap up and not be busy eating on camera.
Aaron does his bit and he’s even worse than Adam with the eating. He tastes Adam’s dish of Napa Cabbage Salad with Turkey and he’s just eating for maybe 5 seconds. Make that more than 8. Oh wait, he’s still eating. Um, shouldn’t we talk about now Aaron? He finally says something about how he tastes mushrooms, apples, etc. when time runs out. Chef Cora calls him on the eating and not talking and how he needs to own the dish. And Aaron looks a bit agitated about how he doesn’t “own” the dish because he didn’t make it, and Chef Cora tells him too bad, because this is the Food Network and you have to be able to describe food no matter where it came from and who made it.
The final pair is Dallas Diva Lisa and Mom Cook Jennifer. Lisa starts first with Jennifer’s pork tenderloin dish, which she says is beautiful. Lisa is paying more attention to being friendly and having more of a camera presence given her critiques in the past. I thought she did pretty well identifying the ingredients. She even threw in talking about dredging the pork to lightly panfry. Chef Cora tells her she still needs to make eye contact with the camera and be more genuine. Ugh, it must suck to be called fake.
Jennifer starts talking about Lisa’s dish, which is the “udon” noodle salad. Jennifer thinks it’s linguine (see, udon wouldn’t be confused with linguine at all). Jennifer is falling apart because she’s not identifying any ingredients and all she’s saying is, “yum, this is good.” Jennifer’s disappointed in herself, and so is Chef Cora.
Chef Cora names Shane the winner, which probably makes him love her even more (if only she played on his team). Everyone seems a bit surprised that he won, but at least it’s a happy surprise like “oh, that’s sweet the kid won something” as opposed to “are you kidding me, the kid won?”
The contestants line up again and this time Cat Cora introduces Bobby Flay. Just kidding! Host Bobby Flay again has left the building and looks like Cat Cora is doing all the hosting responsibilities in this episode, introducing Bon Appétit magazine editor Barbara Fairchild, who was that same woman last year. Also it’s the same prize as last year, which is a feature in Bon Appétit’s August edition. BTW, did you know Chef Cora is the magazine’s executive chef? It’s amazing how these Food Network stars have so many side gigs. I guess it doesn’t pay that much to just be a “star.”
Chef Cora stands near those shiny domes again with some mystery dish underneath. She says their challenge is to modernize a classic recipe, and they have to make it from “shopping bag to table” in 45 minutes. That’s kind of crazy if you ask me. I mean, sometimes it takes a long time for me from shopping bag to table because it’s a little like: unpack my bags, watch a little baseball, go surf the internet, clean the rice and start that going, watch a bit more baseball, start chopping some vegetables, find out why my neighbor is screaming in the hallways again, focus on cooking dinner, plate, take pictures of it if I think it’s worth blogging about, and then eat. Even then that’s probably and hour and a half on a good night.
The classic dishes the contestants have to reinvent is Beef Willington (never made it), Coq au Vin (like to order it but never made it) and Turducken (definitely never made this). Shane, as the winner of the first challenge, gets to pick the dish to make and assigns the dish to the others. They’re working in pairs again and he’s still with Kelsey and he picks Beef Willington, which Kelsey jumps with joy hearing because she thinks it’s the easiest of the three. Then Shane assigns Coq au Vin to Adam and Aaron and the Turducken to Lisa and Jennifer. Adam sounds like he says he’s making “cook in oven.” Funny.
So now the pairs have to shop and then cook their dishes at the Café Gray in Central Park, which I’ve never heard of but there are so many restaurants in Manhattan that there are probably many more I’ve never heard of. (I just did a Google search and turns out Café Gray, which was at the Time Warner Center near Central Park, has closed. Well there, I guess I didn’t really need to know Café Gray.)
At the grocery store, Jennifer is climbing the grocery walls and basically looks overwhelmed. Lisa says Jennifer’s kind of scattered and Jennifer says Lisa’s kind of bossy. This doesn’t sound like a good combination. You know who’s a good combination? Shane and Kelsey. They look sweet together and they’re both so nice. I like them.
Adam and Aaron, on the other hand, are having a train episode flashback where Adam didn’t listen to Aaron and he made runny eggs for judge Susie Folgelson. So Adam says he won’t be stubborn this time around. Still, he chooses to buy chicken breast with skin and bone on while Aaron says he should go with skinless, boneless breasts. They both buy the different versions of the chicken and I’m wondering if they plan on cooking together because it really seems like they’re both going in their own direction.
The contestants arrive at the (now defunct) Café Gray and it is the typical shiny new expensive-looking restaurants at that Time Warner Center (which for those who don’t know is fairly new and houses Thomas Keller’s Per Se, among other luxury restaurants). Aaron and Adam go first.
Instead of stewing a Coq au Vin, they’re marinating the chicken in bacon and red wine sauce and then grilling it with mushrooms. The contestants each have to make a side dish and Adam’s making polenta while Aaron is making a pasta dish, which to me already scream STARCH alert.
Adam’s grilling his bone-in chicken breasts and, naturally, it’s taking longer to cook so half-way through their time he throws on the skinless chicken. But you know, he’s cooking them with less time so it still might be raw. Oh Adam, you of the raw food reputation. I’m scared for you, and the Bon Appétit editors.
Aaron checks on Adam’s polenta and it doesn’t seem fluffy, so he starts adding chicken stock. Then they plate in a rush and I’m kind of worries about sweat splashes falling into the food. Also, the pasta is thrown into a bowl and they don’t even have time (or energy I bet) to even fix the pasta neatly into the bowl. It’s all dangling off the edges like they’re serving a children’s platter. Aaron calls it disgusting, and I agree. This is Bon Appétit, people!
Adam and Aaron make their presentation, and there’s a lot of Bon Appétit editors, including thee-of-long-locks Andrew Knowlton, who judges the Next Iron Chef America so you know he’s had some good food to critique. Adam jokes about how his first time making Coq au Vin was 10 minutes ago (everybody laughs) and Aaron comes off even more jittery and nervous next to Adam. Barbara Fairchild notes Aaron’s nervousness and Adam’s wittiness and Cora notes the strewn pasta. One woman didn’t like Adam’s egg-yolk yellow polenta and no one’s getting Coq au Vin from the grilled chicken dish.
Jennifer and Lisa are in the kitchen and Lisa is bossing Jennifer around. They going to make a deconstructed Turducken, so they cook some turkey medallion and make a stuffing with pre-roasted chicken and duck sausages. (I totally would have done a roll of some kind of layers of turkey, chicken and duck breast to mimic the Turducken theme of a small bird in a bird in a bird.) For the sides, Jennifer is making squash and Lisa’s making the stuffing.
Jennifer is cooking her squash slices on the stove top and next to it is a duck confit that Lisa has set aside to get the oil drippings for the stuffing and turkey. Then Jennifer gets some kind of juice jar to make a marinade and I don’t know why but it looks like she bangs it against the stove top. I guess she was trying to loosen the top, but she did it so quickly that she cracks the bottle like she’s christening a ship and the glass and juice splatters all over the stop top.
Jennifer says the glass was kept mostly near the side, but because they can’t be sure, they had to throw away everything that was contaminated by the juice. That includes the squash and Lisa’s lonely duck confit leg. Lisa is maaaaad. But she says she’s trying to be more zen and not a perfectionist.
Then they decide to make a “veloute” which is a fancy French term for a white gravy sauce. Lisa gets it going but when Jennifer tastes it, she says it’s too herby but also says it tastes like a forest. She tries to “fix” it by adding milk and stock and doctoring it, and all this time she keeps saying “it’s too herby, it’s too herby.” And I don’t even think herby is a word. This look like a disaster and finally they decide not to serve the “veloute” because it’s too herby. So you know this dish is going to be dry.
They present their dish and Jennifer admits to breaking glass near the stove so that’s why there’s no squash side or gravy. Chef Cora is disappointed about all the kitchen mishaps. Susie feels their recipe is a cop out on the Turducken concept. BTW, whoever invented Turducken is one crazy chef.
Last up is Shane and Kelsey and they work so well together I don’t feel stressed, even though they are a bit stressed because that’s a lot of cooking in 45 minutes. Usually when I’m cooking, I’m just cooking for myself, but they have to cook for what looks like at least 12 people (and the long-haired god). They’re making cooked spinach topped with beef tenderloin and all sitting on puff pastry cups. Kelsey is making a side of roasted vegetables and Shane is making pearl onions.
They plate up and serve what Shane calls the “No Nightmare Beef Willington.” They say it’s an ode to their moms who had to suffer through making the traditional Beef Willington of their generation (our moms did have more time to cook). Shane does get a bit chatty so Chef Cora has to cut him off. When they’re gone, the Bon Appétit photo editor does say that the dish isn’t very appealing visually but Andrew “100 Brush Strokes a Night” Knowlton says it does have flavor. Bobby Flay (oops, I forgot that he did show up to eat and critique) says Kelsey can speak well about the ingredients but Bob Tuschman says he wishes she’d stop mentioning that she just got out of culinary school.
They’re back at the Carriage House. Once again, they look tired and defeated. They are a sorry bunch. The six walk down the stairs for their critiques and here’s how it broke down:
Kelsey and Shane: Bob tells Kelsey she’s too girly and needs more authority, and he wants her to stop mentioning culinary school. Got it, Mr. Obsessive. Susie says their dish didn’t look attractive, but Chef Cora says the beef was cooked perfectly and the flavor was good.
Jennifer and Lisa: Bob says it was hard to watch Jennifer’s presentation challenge. They also talk about the kitchen mishap and Lisa starts to tear up because she says she’s trying hard not to punch Jennifer in the face right now for ruining her duck confit. Susie says in the presentation Jennifer came out gang buster while Lisa still needs a bit more confidence.
Adam and Aaron: Susie says Aaron spent a third of his time tasting the dish in the first challenge. Bob says the flavor was good but didn’t have anything to do with coq au vin. Then he tells Adam that he’s here just on his personality because so far none of his food tasted good. He even says out loud that he seriously wonders whether Adam should remain in the competition has they head into the final five. Susie tells Aaron not to self-edit because he comes out nervous and not natural. Aaron says he wanted to say some kind of hoopty-ville in his presentation but didn’t think it would go over with the Bon Appétit crowd. Bob tells him to be all hoopty-ville on his bad self.
Chef Cora says Barbara Fairchild of Bon Appétit surprisingly did pick a winner to feature and that’s Shane and Kelsey’s No Nightmare Beef Willington (which I’m sure a food stylist will dress up better than they did). They’re both safe and they leave the room. I love those two kids.
Bob says Lisa’s skills and expertise saved her so she’s safe. Bobby says Aaron needs to bring his game together, and he’s safe to try one more time. They leave, leaving Jennifer and Adam. While Jennifer probably cooks better than Adam, I still want Adam to stay for entertainment purposes because really at this point, I think Kelsey is going to take it all even though she has the cheerleader reputation.
Bobby tells Adam that he’s on very, very, very thin ice from a culinary standpoint. Susie says Jennifer wasn’t skillful in exhibiting expertise. Bob says Adam moving on. Jennifer is gone. She goes up and heads straight to pack without saying anything to the others. What, no hugs? She’s gone and the threat of seeing recipes with carrots hidden in mashed potatoes or spinach in meat loaf is gone.
Next: It’s a spot on the Emmy-award winning (!?! I know, really?) Rachel Ray show, and Susie is uncomfortable. Lisa cries again. If you’d like a preview for next week’s episode, click on the video below.
The Next Food Network Star airs at 10 p.m. Sundays and repeats at 9 p.m. Thursdays. Photos courtesy of the Food Network Web site.
Monday, June 30, 2008
The Next Food Network Star: Season 4, Episode 5
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Saturday, June 28, 2008
Saturday Night Movie and a Slice
Tonight I went to see a movie at the Victoria in San Francisco's Mission District. And afterwards, I thought I'd check out the pizza at Arinell Pizza, which Michael Bauer saved as his final feature of his now-concluded Pizza Friday in the San Francisco Chronicle.
It was about 10:45 p.m. when I got to the tiny pizza spot off the corner of 16th and Valencia Streets in the heart of the neighborhood. Rock music was blasting from a little radio behind the counter where two guys were cooking and serving pizza. It totally fits in with the neighborhood vibe of tattoos and piercings, and suddenly I felt so BR (Banana Republic).
There were already a crowd ahead of me, some even ordering a full pizza to go. Wow, must be some late-night munchies going on somewhere in the neighborhood. This cash-only place makes New York-style pizza, so it's pretty simple with minimal toppings. A slice of Neapolitan pizza goes for $2.75 and the deep pan slice goes for $3. You can add toppings for an extra 50 cents for each topping, but I didn't understand how that worked for the slices because all the pizzas coming out were Neapolitans and I didn't feel like waiting for them to make one with more toppings just for me.
So I got the standard Neapolitan slice, which just came out of the oven. It's a thin crust that's just plain tomato sauce and cheese. It's so thin and big that you really do need to fold it in order to eat it, New York style. The sauce was tasty and the crust was nice and crispy with a real freshness to it.
If you're a traditionalist when it comes to pizza and you're a connoisseur of the sauce and crust, then you'll probably love the pizza at Arinell, which does come close to a New York pie. But if you're like me, who grew up adding all sorts of toppings on your pizza, then you might leave thinking, what's the big deal? You'd probably think, hmm, I could have eaten two more slices with what I got on this thin slice of pizza. And you'd probably think I wish I could wash it down with beer, and then you'd find yourself at a nearby Mission pub jockeying for a seat next to some frat boy and a screaming blond. But maybe that's just me.
Arinell Pizza, 509 Valencia, San Francisco. PH: 415.255.1303. Open daily from lunch to dinner, till midnight on the weekends.
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Labels: Stuff
Friday, June 27, 2008
Eat Meat
When I visited my family in Hawaii last month, I noticed that they ate a lot of meat. I rarely eat red meat, but hanging around them made me have the urge to eat meat. But I always think it's unhealthy eating meat, and that's when I decided to make it into a salad. [[Re-reading this post makes me realize I have to stop posting at midnight because I write like a 4-year-old when I need sleep. Ha!]] So that's how I came up with the recipe below for my Meat and Potatoes Salad. I decided if I'm going to eat meat, I might as well add some roasted potatoes too. It's all good if you toss everything and call it a salad. You can make the ketchup-based dressing I made, or just use your favorite store-bought creamy dressing. Enjoy!
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Meat and Potatoes Salad
Copyright 2008 by Cooking With The Single Guy
Ingredients:
8 oz. Flank steak
1 lb. (16 oz.) fingerling potatoes
3 to 4 cups baby arugula
half a yellow bell pepper, finely diced
1 fennel bulb, thinly sliced with a mandolin
olive oil
salt and pepper
For dressing:
1.5 T honey
2 T ketchup
1.5 T Champagne vinegar
3 T extra virgin olive oil
pinch of salt and pepper
Preheat oven to 425 degrees
Cut your fingerling potatoes lengthwise into halves or quarters and spread out on a cookie tray. Drizzle olive oil all over and season with salt and pepper. (Toss the potatoes to make sure they’re all evenly coated.) Bake in oven for 20 to 25 minutes until golden brown and cooked.
In a bowl, whisk all the ingredients for the dressing together until creamy. Set aside.
Drizzle your flank steak with olive oil and then season with salt and pepper (on both sides). Warm a non-stick skillet over high heat and sear your steak, about 1 to 2 minutes on each side (depending on the thickness). Remove from pan and allow your meat to rest for at least 5 minutes. You’ll slice the meat right before you serve the salad.
Remove the potatoes from the oven when done and allow to cool for a couple of minutes. Split the dressing into two bowls. In one bowl, add the slightly warm potatoes and toss to coat with dressing.
In a salad bowl, add arugula, fennel and bell pepper. Add some dressing and toss with potatoes. Then slice your steak and add to your salad. Serve immediately with toasted rosemary bread (I recommend the rosemary loaf from La Brea Bakery).
Makes two servings. Pair with a glass of rose wine.
TIP: Instead of drizzling your potatoes in olive oil, buy the spray can with extra virgin olive oil and just spray your potato slices. The spray allows you to have a more even coating.
OVERNIGHT: If you’re like me and make this salad just for yourself, you can split it over two nights for dinner. But you want to make sure to cook the flank steak fresh each time. So cut your flank steak into two pieces, and cook each one right before you’re about to eat it.
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Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Dish on Dining: Lime
A Party Where Food is an Accessory
2247 Market St., San Francisco
Castro
PH: 415.621.5256
Open for dinner daily, 5 p.m. to midnight (until 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday); weekend brunch from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Major credit cards, reservations accepted
www.lime-sf.com
Since this weekend is filled with Pride events (the massive parade is Sunday), I thought I’d spotlight a restaurant in San Francisco’s oldest gay neighborhood—the Castro.
The complaint is that there really is no destination restaurant in the Castro, just a few decent joints. No celebrity chef has found his or her way to the Castro (not even Lesbian favorite Elizabeth Falkner of Citizen Cake and the new Orson in SOMA).
So when my friend Angel from Chicago was coming into town and said he wanted to “party,” I had some difficulties thinking of the perfect spot. I eventually settled on Lime, a restaurant/lounge that opened four years ago on the edge of the neighborhood on Market Street.
I’ve never been to Lime, but every time I walked by it seemed to be a really funky chic bar with its Scandinavian-like décor and neon-color scheme. (What’s really odd is it’s called Lime but the predominant color is day-glo pink.) Last Friday night, I met Angel and his partner, Bob, who were already having a drink at the marbled bar.
If you recall, last week we had a heat wave in the city and Lime’s air-conditioning wasn’t working. (At least that’s what they said. For all we know, they could have just had it off to save on their energy bill.) So it felt like summer in New York, where people perspired in minimal attire with a cosmo always in hand.
For me, I settled for a white peach bellini, which is one of Lime’s signature drinks. It fell flat. The champagne tasted like the bottle had been opened for awhile and the peach puree was a bit too sweet. While at the bar, I noticed that a lot of people were ordering mojitos because they had enough mint to cover a whole parade float. (I exaggerate, but not really.)
I did enjoy the music pumped in by the DJ. They were all tunes that I recognized, unlike the pulsating techno-electronica crap that often fills the dance clubs. But because of the music, it made it difficult to hold a nice conversation without straining your vocal chords.
We moved to our table when our other friend George arrived. That’s when I started to look over the menu, which is an eclectic collection of small plates “meant to share,” our waitress informed us. The selection is grouped by price points, ranging from $5 to $13.
We ordered a bunch of stuff “to share” and here’s what came out: (BTW, the food came out pretty quickly after we ordered.)
Seasonal Salad ($5) with organic greens and seasonal peaches. It was very light and refreshing.
Tagarashi Fries ($5), shoestring fries tossed in a Japanese 7-spice chili pepper. As some of you know, I don’t like eating fried foods, but ordered this for the table because I knew others do. I did try a bit of it and it was really spicy. Not every piece was crispy, so I didn’t think it was very successful.
Fish Tacos ($9), cornmeal dusted mahi mahi with avocado, sour cream, tomato salsa sitting on mini tortillas. (The dish typically comes with three tacos but you can add a fourth at an additional cost.) I liked the fact that the fish wasn’t deep-fried like some other fish tacos and it had a very light twang of acidity to balance the fish.
Tuna Poke ($12), the diced ahi tuna served raw with cucumber and avocado and won ton chips. The won ton chips were too small to really pick up the tuna cubes, so I ended up just using a fork to eat the Tuna Poke and crunching on the chips as a side.
Baby Back Pork Ribs ($13) was this beautiful tray of barbeque ribs with a side of cole slaw. The meat easily came off the bone and the flavor was solid and not too spicy. I liked it.
Mini Burgers ($9) (again, we added a fourth because it usually comes in three), burgers covered with white cheddar and served with special sauce and pickles. It was cute and the meat was nicely cooked, but the white cheddar was odd. It melted in an odd way like it was stretched cotton on the burgers instead of cheese. It didn’t seem to add to the flavor and it may have been more inventive to use another type of cheese.
Ricotta Gnocchi ($8) with shitake mushrooms, thyme and parmesan cheese. The gnocchi came out looking slightly burnt and the mushrooms had a slight rubbery texture. It was interesting but not necessarily a favorite.
Pork Quesadilla ($8), braised pork in a mole sauce with mango salsa. This was fresh and easy to eat, but nothing really special.
Pan-Seared Salmon ($10) served with a big glop of barbeque sauce on a bed of greens. The salmon was tender but seemed a bit overpowered by the sauce. And I didn’t feel the bed of greens really complimented the salmon, other than to just dress the plate.
We ended with two desserts: a tray of mini red velvet cupcakes and a coffee-flavored crème brulee. The mini cupcakes were cute, of course, and had a good taste and texture. But the crème brulee was a bit off with the coffee flavor, and the sugary top shell wasn’t as crispy.
Angel thought everything was good, but both he and George (who he knows from Chicago) felt we could have gotten something better in Chicago. Even though I haven’t eaten at a lot of places in Chicago, I would tend to agree. While the food at Lime is solid, it wasn’t necessarily creative or offered any new tastes.
What really seems popular at Lime, which isn’t on the menu, is the parade of beautiful people who come to the bar for some S&M action (stand & model). Yes, we were in the Castro so there were a lot of men, but Lime also seems to attract a mixed crowd, some coming from outside of the city.
Lime definitely delivered the party atmosphere for our Friday night, but the food was not the star attraction. It’s good for some lounge bites, but more for the people-watching.
Single guy rating: 2.75 stars (predictably solid)
Explanation of the single guy's rating system:
1 star = perfect for college students
2 stars = perfect for new diners
3 stars = perfect for foodies
4 stars = perfect for expense accounts
5 stars = perfect for any guy's dream dinner
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Monday, June 23, 2008
The Next Food Network Star: Season 4, Episode 4
Like a Fish Out of Water
Previously: The contestants package themselves for Martha, and Adam is on his knees, Kelsey cries (did she force it?) and Jeffrey is out but still feeling awesome. Tonight: Ultimate Tyler is on, it’s a rainy day on a Coast Guard boat, and we finally get to see Dallas Diva take her infamous fall for Iron Chef Michael Symon no less.
Opening scenes of foot traffic in Manhattan. Those people know how to walk. Back at the Carriage House, we don’t get any scenes of contestants waking up. Instead, we jump to them entering Studio B of the Food Network. It’s all business today.
In comes Tyler Florence and now Marin County resident. He tells them they each have to make a 60-second technique video, which is a quick demo (has to be quick for 60 seconds) on a culinary skill. While I think it’s great that the Food Network is testing the contestants’ skills, I have to say I think it’s kind of unfair that they have no time to prep for it and they don’t know what skill they have to demonstrate until they unveil the tray in front of them.
So here’s how they did:
Adam is up first and he finds a whole artichoke and he has to break it down, like I said, in 60 seconds. (Even my demo took 6.5 minutes.) He cuts the artichoke in half and starts to spoon out the prickly needles in the center. He’s about to marinate the artichoke with lemon juice (a good idea to avoid it turning brown) when time’s up. Tyler tells him that he was sloppy when he should be slick. But he gives him the funny nod.
Aaron gets a pineapple, which isn’t too tough I think. But then again I grew up in Hawaii. He starts talking about something and then he cuts off the crown of the pineapple and does this neat thing about garnishing, cutting the crown in half and talking about brunch. Um, Aaron, are you going to cut the pineapple or what? Ooops, time’s up. And his pineapple is still in tact, except for the top and bottom. Tyler says Aaron needs to learn to cook and talk at the same time. No kidding.
Kelsey has to French a rack of lamb. If you recall, last week the judges said Kelsey was over the top and came off too forced. So this time she’s telling herself to tone her energy down a bit, as much as any cheerleader can. She starts off by cutting off a piece of the rack of lamb and then starts scraping the sides of the bone to French it. I give her credit for toning it down a bit, but it’s still a bit well-rehearsed. But maybe that’s a good thing because at least I was able to get some information from her presentation even though time ran out. Tyler thought her approach was good and he commented on her good energy, which made her happy. They do a weird elbow bump (instead of using their fists) when they pass each other, which I’ve never seen before. Must be a chef thing.
Shane finds he has a coconut, which I actually think is a bit unfair because how often are you going to cook with a coconut? This is just plain mean, Food Network producers! Anywho, Shane says he’s going to attempt to just show how to get the juice from the coconut, so he uses a nail to puncture a hole in the soft spot and he’s excited because the nail went in pretty easily. But when he turns the coconut over, nothing comes out and time runs out. Tyler says he has to act like he knows what he’s doing even if he doesn’t, but he likes his energy too.
Spice/Curry Queen Nipa gets to clean fresh squid. When she unveils the tray, she looks like she’s about to toss her breakfast. But she tells Tyler that she has no idea how to clean a squid. So she fakes it. She forces the squid apart using a knife, and just cuts it into bits. Tyler literally drops his mouth and looks shocked. She didn’t even pull out the black liquid part that will totally squirt on you if you bite into it. Anywho, the piece she cuts looks so pathetic but she acts like she did a good job “cleaning” the squid. Tyler asks how she thinks she did, and she says she acted like she knew what to do. He disagrees, of course, and says she really should know how to clean a squid. I guess she never made a seafood curry.
Lisa has to truss a chicken, which is a good demo to do and she could probably do it in 60 seconds (although, again, my demo was a little less than 2 minutes). She grabs some twine and grabs the legs of the chicken and ties the two together, which isn’t that fancy but I guess it’ll do. Tyler says she wasn’t engaging the camera. Lisa says she’s having a hard time looking into the camera, but realizes she has to be an entertainer. I think she’s pretty entertaining already with her wacky outfits and hyper personality. Wow, in her interview her eyes look like she’s been crying or she hasn’t gotten enough sleep. What’s up with that?
Jennifer has to shuck an oyster. Hmm, I love oysters but have never shucked them myself. I think it can be pretty tricky. You know who doesn’t love oysters? Jennifer. But she jumps into it anyway and says she hasn’t done this in a long time. Then she explains that she’s sensitive to oyster so that’s why she hasn’t opened one in awhile. She never really opens it. Tyler looks sad for her. She thinks this could be the reason she might be going home. Tyler says not to apologize on camera because viewers will change the channel if they think they’re watching someone who doesn’t know what she’s talking about.
Then Jennifer breaks down and walks out of the studio, crying in the hallway with her back to the camera. (The cameraman is either feeling really awkward that he has to film this or he’s just eating it up as more reality show drama.) Jennifer even konks herself on the head with her hand, you know, like those V-8 commercials except she’s calling herself an idiot. She pulls herself together and walks back in where hunky Tyler consoles her and tells her that he likes her presence and she just has to bring it.
Tyler names Kelsey the winner of the challenge, and even though it was pretty good, it really seemed like she won by default because the others were just so bad. Her video will be on the Food Network home page (although it’s not on today when I just checked, so maybe they still have to tweak it). Nipa looks mad, but she says she just feels overwhelmed being surrounded by all the experts in the bunch. Oi.
Commercials. Sorry to say, again there has been no new commercials to comment about on this season of The Next Food Network Star. So I won’t be recapping the commercials unless I see something new.
The contestants arrive in the Food Network kitchen and someone moved the fish counter from the local grocery store into the kitchen because there are tons of whole fishes. Iron Chef Michael Symon walks in. BTW, anyone else wondering where’s Bobby Flay? He’s kind of hot and cold with this whole hosting thing. Aaron is all excited to see Chef Symon, but I’m wondering if it’s more the brotherhood of bald men working here.
Chef Symon says he’ll be a guest judge this week, and he introduces the senior executive chef of Red Lobster, Michael LaDuke. Who knew they had a senior chef? Symon says the winner of this challenge will get a dish on the fish special menu at Red Lobsters across the country. Everyone looks excited but I wonder if they realize connecting to Red Lobster can bring on the “sell-out” criticism as Tyler has found with his Applebee’s commercials and Guy Fieri with TGIFriday’s?
The contestants have to make two fish dishes using the fishes in front of them and a secret ingredient ala Iron Chef. Though the ingredients aren’t so secret since they’re sitting in containers in front of the contestants. They’re kind of out there, though, and include: whipped marshmallow, coffee beans, cereal, cola, caramels, grape jelly and white chocolate.
They all get to pick their fish and secret ingredient, and Kelsey goes first as the winner of the earlier challenge. Adam picks up a halibut and kisses it for no particular reason, which even makes Chef Symon cringe. Nipa is last and she freaks out just looking at the fish. She won’t even pick it up and Symon has to coach her on to grab it. I don’t get how she can be a cook and never worked with fish?
They have 60 minutes to prep their food and they all start scrambling in the kitchen. Chef Symon pretends he’s Tom Colicchio of Top Chef and walks around checking up on everyone. Nipa is totally not into her fish, which she has to fillet. The Food Network has provided everyone with some fillets already, but the contestants also have to cut a few of their own from the whole fish they chose. Nipa is massacring her rainbow trout and she’s only able to cut just this tiny piece of the fillet, if you can even call it that. It looks like maybe two inches. Then she goes and dumps the rest of the fish in the trash. Ugh, what a waste.
Jennifer is making a cereal-encrusted mahi mahi. She looks happy about it, or excited. I’m just glad she’s not crying any more. Aaron is making cola-marinated cod with a kick of hot sauce. He’s grilling it and there’s no sizzle so his fish is sticking and they look sick, like falling apart sick.
The contestants are now in their white, unmarked van and it’s storming in Manhattan. But they’re heading off to an undisclosed location where they’re going to serve their fish. They arrive at a pier and Adam says he sees a really big boat, but it obviously has the word Coast Guard on the side. Lisa is sweating because she made tartar and this doesn’t look like a tartar kind of crowd.
Chef Symon and some Coast Guard guy welcomes them in the rain at the top of the ship, and then they’re told they’ll be cooking for 30 Coast Guard men and women.
Kelsey is up first and she starts cooking in the galley. She says they also have to do a 2-minute presentation to the “Coasties.” She does seem a little more calm than normal. In fact, she’s almost normal and not the perky cheerleader we’ve come to know. She made a fish cake with tilapia and a chipotle mayonnaise and a macadamia nut-encrusted fish with white chocolate cream sauce. It looks interesting. Judge Susie Folgelson comments that Kelsey seemed more authentic. The “Coasties” seem to like the fish.
Adam’s cooking and he’s moving fast. He’s also kind of messy. He sees this step in the doorway leading up to the dining area and he thinks it’ll be funny if he walked out and tripped. Physical comedy, I get it. Unfortunately, none of the Coast Guard people or the judges got it. They all end up staring at Adam like he’s from Mars or something. He’s just dying out there trying to salvage his presentation by talking about his olive oil poached halibut with crepes. The judges later wondered what just happened and Susie says Adam came off like a bozo. Also, Bob Tuschman says Adam’s fish smells fishy. And Chef Symon says that comes from overcooking the fish and the oil comes out. Ah, I get it. I’ve been to several restaurants and had that smell of fish come at me with my plate and I always comment on it and my friends never smell it. Now I know the kitchen cooked my fish too long! Thanks Chef Symon for vindicating my nose! BTW, Symon called Adam’s presentation a train wreck, which is a mess given that the train episode was two weeks ago.
Jennifer presents her beer-battered mahi mahi with mango salsa and fruit-cereal encrusted fish with coconut. She kind of jokes whether they’re scared of eating her cereal fish, and pretty much tells them, good luck with that. When she’s done, she realizes that she apologized again about her dish when she’s been told by the judges not to apologize. Sorry judges! Jennifer says there’s a whole different Jennifer back home who’s confident. Maybe she should make a switch with that girl before it’s too late.
Nipa made a tandoori trout and one marinated with her secret ingredient of grape jelly. It really just look like fish with a pile of mush on top. And her presentation was just as mushy. She introduces her fish dish and then does a quick demo of a Bollywood dance. And it looks a little like “Walking Like an Egyptian” but not. It’s kind of weird to watch at home and we’ve got the music going in the background. Just imagine what it was like for the poor Coast Guard people who watched it without any music except the music in Nipa’s head. One Coast Guard guy said it was so awkward he had to look away (but I’m sure he didn’t because it’s like a car crash that you just have to rubber neck).
Lisa, who so far is the only contestant I have a nickname for (sigh), is doing her Dallas Diva thing around the kitchen and then it happens. She slips while holding a container of sauce and like true Lucy form, the container goes flying up into the air and the contents pours down like rain and then the container drops on Lisa totally empty. It is a mess. I totally feel for her (and so does Adam who rushes in and looks scared for her but can’t really help her since it’s her gig). She gets up and says she’s fine, but the next minute she’s outside in front of the room of guys and judges looking like she showered in her clothes.
She does a good job of self-deprecating to make the best of the situation, and then she has this real moment where she says her brother is in Iraq and how it’s an honor to cook for the Coast Guard, then she gets choked up just a bit before she leaves. Bob Tuschman gets choked up as well and really liked her real presentation instead of the phony fashion Dallas Diva we’ve come to know. But the Red Lobster guy isn’t digging her tartar for the chain’s menu.
Shane does his sole with orange cream sauce and a parsnip roasted garlic puree with the marshmallow. His presentation was pretty average and generic. He’s like Kevin reincarnated. Chef Symon says the fish was the better tasting so far. It’s moist and the technique is good. The Red Lobster guy says either one of his fish could go on the menu.
Last up is Aaron and his crumbling, flakey cod. He talks about his fish dish and I really didn’t understand what he made. The cod is overcooked and a big mess in the eyes of the chefs. Bob still wants Aaron to tell a story.
They’re all back at the Carriage House, and again they are the most stressed out looking group of people heading into elimination. They face the judges with Bobby Flay still MIA. So it’s just Susie, Bob and Chef Symon.
They get their individual critiques and here’s how it went:
Lisa needs to connect with the camera and she missed the Red Lobster boat with her tartar dish, but she was the least perfect Lisa which is the Lisa Bob wants to see.
Shane gets called the child prodigy by Symon and is told that he needs to be more convincing with a coconut.
Adam was organically humorous on his technique demo, but not so with his falling down at the Coast Guard boat. Plus, Symon spit out his crepe after taking a bite. The judges tell Adam he needs to grow up.
Nipa giggled her way through her demo, which Tuschman read as disrespectful, and Chef Symon was offended by her butchering and tossing of the whole fish.
Kelsey gets all the good marks this week, for a good French lamb demo with solid energy and two good dishes to choose from for Red Lobster.
Aaron’s food was disappointing this week, and the judges still don’t know who he is because he doesn’t share anything about himself.
Jennifer’s cereal fish was too sweet and despite her warmth, she’s killing herself with her apologies. Then she starts to cry and Shane and Kelsey next to her tries to pat her on her shoulder. I don’t think there’s been an elimination round this season without tears.
Chef Symon starts by naming the Red Lobster winner, and it’s Kelsey, which is actually fitting because I think she’s really Red Lobster’s target audience. You know, wholesome and blond. They chose her white chocolate macadamia nut-encrusted fish for their menu. She’s also safe, and they give a pass to Lisa and Shane as well. So the three are excused.
Then they do this weird thing where they ask the remaining people why they think they’re on the bottom this week. That gets Jennifer crying some more as she talks about growing up fat and insecure. Aaron then realizes he hasn’t spilled enough of his personal life onto TV and he spits out that his son ran away from home right before Aaron came to do this show. Wow, now that’s sharing too much information. How does that relate to his cooking? That would be more a Lifetime movie about the cook who becomes successful but wants to find his son so every week he cooks his son’s favorite dish so that he’ll come home to eat it. Now that’s a movie. BTW, Aaron never says how old his son is. If he’s 21, then I wouldn’t necessarily say that’s “running away from home.” But if he’s like 15, then I would be like, “um, Aaron, why aren’t you at home looking for your son instead of spending time in New York?” This whole TMI moment is a bit strange.
Anywho, Jennifer and Aaron are safe and they are excused, leaving Curry Queen and Funny guy Adam. And I so hope it’s Nipa who goes home. The judges agree with me and send Nipa home, and she leaves saying she doesn’t know if she ever really wanted this at all. Nice, thanks for taking up space with your dead weight.
Next week: Some one breaks a jar, there’s a lot of smoke in the kitchen, Jennifer is frustrated at the grocery store, and someone is on very thin ice with the resurfaced Bobby Flay.
After the episode, there was this infomercial with that Red Lobster chef and Kelsey to introduce her dish on the Red Lobster menu. She looks poised and smooth as always but I couldn’t hear the whole thing because my tape ran out. Oh well, go to Red Lobster if you want to find out more. And if you want to see previews of next week’s show because my above teaser wasn’t enough for you, just check out the video below.
The Next Food Network Star airs at 10 p.m. Sundays and repeats at 9 p.m. Thursdays. Photos courtesy of the Food Network Web site.
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Sunday, June 22, 2008
More Than Chocolate at G.Square
I can't remember the last time I was at Ghiradelli Square at San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf. All I remember is that I never really bought anything from the stores at this beautiful red-brick complex that has fallen prey to the tourist-label.
But this weekend, the developers who are trying to revitalize this landmark square tried to entice back locals with free food and wine. OK, I'll bite.
The two-day "Savour the Square" event was supposed to be an unveiling of the "new" Ghiradelli Square. But when you arrive, you still see a lot of scaffolding and a few stores (including several big-name ones) still not open. So I really didn't get how this was an unveiling. I think if they waited a month, it would have been even more attractive and festive. But hey, no one called me to be their event planner. (They really should, though.)
One store that was definitely open and a welcome boost to the square is Kara's Cupcakes, which started in the Marina's Chestnut Street area and opened this second location late last year. (Now I hear Kara's Cupcakes is expanding to San Jose.) This Fisherman's Wharf location had the trademark pink cuteness, and I couldn't resist getting the classic Fleur De Sel cupcake, which is a chocolate cupcake filled with caramel and topped with a sprinkle of fleur de sel sea salt. Hmmm, so good. (But definitely one that can't be eaten without milk!)
A few of the stores yet to open set up booths to introduce themselves to the crowd that gathered this weekend. That included this table from the soon-to-open Crown Crumpet, a tea salon. I love the idea of another tea salon in the city, especially one with a very English motif. I hope it's good, though, because the cookies I sampled weren't very promising. It was a bit stale, but it may be from sitting in the sun all morning. It was a hot day so I didn't try the tea, but tried the iced tea, which was super cold and refreshing. What was odd, though, was I asked the girl what kind of tea was used to make the iced tea and she simply said "black." Duh, there are thousands of black tea and depending on what you use it can totally change the nuance of your iced tea. Oh well, at least it was cold.
One of the stores I'm really looking forward to opening is Marche on the Square, which is a French-inspired market. It's set to open next month. If you've traveled in Paris, you can imagine beautifully displayed aisles and exquisite food stations. At least that's the promise of Marche's U.S. owner.
Even though Marche wasn't open, that didn't stop it from promoting itself. It set up a booth outside for a sushi demonstration by its chef Mario Matos. [So a couple of people pointed out that this chef is actually named Mario Perez and he goes by “Mariomoto.” So I must have heard wrong. Who knew this guy was so popular?] Sushi will be a regular offering at Marche along with more traditional French offerings like crepes. Chef Matos demonstrated how he plates a tuna sashimi dish and he made nigiri sushi as well as maki rolls. People swarmed around him grabbing the free samples as soon as he cut and plated them. They went fast! I got to try only one piece of maki roll with fresh tuna and salmon and it was great.


The highly touted and anticipated second restaurant from Gary Danko will open at Ghiradelli Square, which is actually just a few yards away from his current fine-dining restaurant. This one is supposed to be an American brasserie, but not sure if that's the actual name as well. I would be interested in trying this more casual outlet of Danko's, but not sure how it can attract more locals to shop at the square. When I go for dinner, I usually don't shop afterwards. But that's just me.
There actually aren't a lot of stores to really stroll and visit and I still felt Ghiradelli Square is very touristy. Most of the other levels once used for boutiques have been transformed to luxury apartments. Great, that's all we need is another luxury condo in San Francisco. But of all the stores that were at the square, Cellar 360 was the most interesting.
Cellar 360 is a huge space dedicated to wine. They have a wine bar for daily wine tasting and on the opposite end they have a food counter selling sandwiches and salads using fresh, organic ingredients. In the center are an assortment of wine for sale as well as cute wine accessories. Cellar 360 is also promoting itself as a culinary education center, so I guess they'll have regular classes or events at this special room in the back. On this weekend, especially for "Savour the Square," they had a special wine tasting and the people was like a mob behind glass as they packed themselves into the glass room.
See the crowds? It was crazy. But I guess that's what happens when words gets out that there's free food and wine.
They were pouring wines from Penfolds, which is an Australian winemaker. Here this woman is pouring a shiraz. It was OK, not really mature yet and a bit tannic for my taste. But nobody cared. They were all into the free tastings.
On hand for the event was Penfold's owner and winemaker, Peter Gago. He was like a celebrity winemaker (I didn't know any existed) because I saw one guy buy a bottle and ask him for his autograph. Those oenophiles are worse than groupies!
I have to say the free bites were more exciting than the wine. Here the Cellar 360 kitchen made asparagus spears wrapped with beef. Oh. My. Gawd. It was soooo good. The beef was seared to perfection. I didn't even bother with the dipping sauce because it had so much natural juices from the meat.
These little toast bites were also amazing. They were just roasted tomato chunks dressed in olive oil and topped with a thin slice of cheese. The toast was so crunchy and light, and everything just was so perfectly simple but well-balanced. Mmmm.
When I walked out I was surrounded by leashes and little dogs. Turns out there was a dog fashion show put on by boutique dog store Yap. These dogs were really working it. ;-)
It'll be interesting to see how successful the new Ghiradelli Square will be. So far it looks like it has a long road to go before locals face the tourists and expensive parking of Fisherman's Wharf just for a few moments of shopping at high end stores like Marche. Then again, there's a chocolate fair at the square in September. And chocolate is the universal language of success.
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Single Guy Ben
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Labels: Events, Food Shopping
Saturday, June 21, 2008
We All SCREAM for Sorbet
It’s summer, so bring on the ice cream! I bet the lines at my favorites Ici and Bi-Rite Creamery are pretty long this hot weekend. But last weekend I discovered something different at the Temescal Farmers’ Market in the ‘hood.
This was the first time I spotted the Scream Sorbet tent at the Sunday market (which is in the parking lot of the Clairemont DMV in Oakland). This fairly new company was started by a couple of guys in Emeryville, and they’ve only been selling at farmers markets in the Bay Area. (There have been reports that they’ve been spotted at Alameda and Jack London Square. But you can find out where they’ll be by checking their Web site.)
So far their hand-made sorbets of seasonal, organic fruit have created a lot of positive buzz. Their flavors change often (again, check the Web site) but last weekend they were selling Maple-Walnut, Lemon-Buttermilk, Peach-Raspberry, Cherry-Lime, Carrot-Ginger and Strawberry-Rhubard.
They’re really good about letting you taste test their flavors, and I pretty much tried them all. There were definitely some nice ones (Peach-Raspberry was my favorite) and the oddities (Carrot-Ginger is great as soup but not so much as ice cream unless this is an Iron Chef challenge). What struck me as interesting were all the raves I was hearing from people around me. Almost everyone loved the sorbet, even though I didn’t think every flavor was a home-run.
The sorbet itself is definitely a plus. The texture is silky and gooey, resembling very much the house-made sorbets at fancy restaurants. It’s so thick that it really felt like eating ice cream. While there’s a definite sweetness, the girl behind the counter says it all comes from the natural fruits.
And now, the price. You know, I think I’m the only food person that’s so concerned about pricing because most critiques I read never seem to point out when they think pricing may be too high. Not me. I believe in paying for quality food, but sometimes it can be over the border. I’m ambivalent about Scream Sorbet so I’d be interested to hear what others think.
Scream Sorbet sells their sorbets by the single scoop or double scoop, and it costs $3 for a single. (I forgot the price for the double.) $3 might not sound too bad, but the scoop really looked kind of small. It’s in a really small, white paper cup and the scooping isn’t very generous. Sometimes you’re at Ici and you might get a really big scoop of ice cream to make paying that much worth it. And I know Bi-Rite goes crazy scooping large portions, even for the kid size I typically order! I can’t say the same for Scream.
I was at the Temescal market early in the morning and I wasn’t in the mood for sorbet for breakfast, so I decided to buy some to try later at home. The small plastic container, which is about a pint, sells for $10. Am I crazy but isn’t that a bit much? The girl at the counter (who actually was the girlfriend of one of the partners) says it’s equivalent to six scoops, and that I could mix flavors if I wanted.
I ended up getting the Peach-Raspberry and the Strawberry-Rhubard. But as I stood there I was getting buyer’s remorse, so I asked if I could just get two scoops of each flavor instead of three. The girl agreed and charged me only $7 instead of $10.
I enjoyed my sorbet later that night after dinner, and again the next night and it was a really luxurious experience. The Strawberry-Rhubard was sweeter than the Peach-Raspberry but still good. And I liked the Peach-Raspberry because it was subtle in flavor.
So if you spot the Scream Sorbet tent at your local farmers market, give it a try. It definitely is a treat. But let me know if you think it’s worth the price.
Scream Sorbet, currently available only at farmers markets in the East Bay. screamsorbet.com
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Single Guy Ben
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Labels: Food Shopping, treats
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Dish on Dining: Slurp
Big Bowls of Noodles for Easy Satisfaction
2426 Telegraph Ave. (between Channing and Haste), Berkeley
Near the UC-Berkeley campus
PH: 510.644.9292
Open Tue.–Sat., 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sun., noon to 9 p.m., closed Mondays
No reservations, major credit cards accepted
Continuing my theme this week of eating in this down economy, I thought I’d go where most cheap foods can be found—near the college students. For me, the closest college campus is the University of California at Berkeley and the funky Telegraph Avenue.
Of course, there are many ethnic food places to choose from. But one of my regular standbys in the area is Slurp, a fun and casual noodle shop who’s Asian-ness is not very apparent. Is it Chinese? Is it Japanese? Hmm, the cook looks Korean? I can’t really tell. I just know it’s a good place for a cheap bowl of noodles.
You walk in and order at the counter, and the menu contains a variety of noodles, both soup noodles and fried. After you pay, you get a number and when they call it, you go get your food. It’s very much self-serve in that way. (And please be nice and bus your table afterwards for others.)
There’s a lot of counter space surrounding the narrow dining room and a few tables in the center. I thought I’d see a lot of Berkeley students at the times I visited, but mostly it was a mix of ages and not strictly the college crowd.
My first trip I ordered the Soup Noodles with Pork and Chinese Pickled Vegetables ($5.50). This is a Northern-style dish with the thicker noodles and the preserved cabbage. I think everyone who’s been to Slurp will agree that the portions are huge, so my bowl was filled with noodles and dark pork strips, the preserved cabbage, celery, onions and sprouts. The soup was nice and rich, but I wasn’t a fan of the pork. Still, it kind of hit the spot for me and I definitely didn’t leave hungry.
On another trip I went for the Dan Dan Noodles ($5.50) (sometimes seen as Tan Tan noodles). This is a noodle dish with minced beef sauce that’s mixed with cold cucumber slices. Again, a very Northern Chinese-style dish. (BTW, the menu does have Japanese noodles like udon. I just wasn’t feeling like udon on my trips to Slurp.)
Slurp’s version of Dan Dan looked a bit pedestrian, almost crude. The sauce had an odd orange color and the cucumbers didn’t seem fresh. This wasn’t as successful as my first visit, although once you mixed the sauce with the noodles it was still oddly comforting to eat.
While Slurp isn’t a place you’ll go run and tell friends about, it is a decent place for a cheap bowl of noodles. You get a lot of food and it’s a way better alternative to the fast-food joints. The dining area is well-kept and the counter help is generally friendly. And when you don’t want to make the trek to Chinatown, there’s no beating the price.
Single guy rating: 2.5 stars (bowl of savings)
Explanation of the single guy's rating system:
1 star = perfect for college students
2 stars = perfect for new diners
3 stars = perfect for foodies
4 stars = perfect for expense accounts
5 stars = perfect for any guy's dream dinner
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Single Guy Ben
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11:01 PM
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Labels: Review
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Business Lunch: Chicken Salad
Continuing where I left off yesterday about stretching your meals, today I’m posting a very basic recipe for chicken salad. I used half of the roasted chicken I made on the weekend and created chicken salad to take to lunch for work.
I kept this recipe pretty simple because the whole idea is not to spend a lot of money on ingredients with prices going sky high every day. But if you want to dress up your chicken salad, you can get ideas from an earlier post I did on curry chicken salad here.
So with my roasted chicken that I split into two dinners and the chicken salad, which I ate over two days at work, this is how much I spent for four meals:
Whole fryer chicken: $7.18
Broccoli (for a green side at dinner): $1.02
One orange (stuffed in the chicken): 85 cents
One lemon (why are they so expensive?): $1.29
Celery (to stuff in chicken and mixed with salad): $2.49
Red potatoes (roasted for dinner): $1.04
Carrots (for salad): 57 cents
Rosemary (to stuff in chicken and roasted with potatoes): $1.99
Acme Walnut Levain bread loaf (for chicken salad sandwiches): $3.95
Total: $20.38
That works out to be about $5.09 per meal, or the equivalent of roughly 1.25 gallons of gas.
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Basic Chicken Salad
Copyright 2008 by Cooking With The Single Guy
Ingredients:
6-8 oz. chicken meat (about 2 chicken breasts or half a roasted chicken)
¾ cup celery (2 stalks), finely diced
¾ cup carrots (2 carrots), finely diced
½ cup mayonnaise
1 T dijon mustard
1 t sugar
1 t champagne vinegar
salt and pepper
This recipe is great for using leftover chicken meat from a roasted chicken. But if you don’t have that, then roast two pieces of chicken breast in the over at 400 degrees for about 20 minutes until cooked. Let cool and shred the meat into pieces. Add carrots and celery.
In small bowl, mix mayonnaise, mustard, sugar and vinegar and season with salt and pepper. Fold the mixture with your chicken, carrots and celery until you get the consistency you prefer. If it looks to dry, add more mayonnaise. Be sure to taste afterwards and season with more salt and pepper if needed.
Serve as sandwiches or on a bed of lettuce.
Makes 2 to 3 servings.
Pair with a glass of Chardonnay.
TIP: Don’t let your cooked chicken stay out too long before putting it in the refrigerator. You don’t want any bacteria to grow. But at the same time, if you put it in the refrigerator covered, the heat can create moisture and make your salad runny. It’s all a balancing trick, you know?
CRUNCH IT UP: If you want to add texture to this basic chicken salad recipe, a lot of people throw in chopped walnuts. In the summertime, it’s nice to add fresh grapes sliced in half. Be creative!
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Single Guy Ben
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Labels: Recipe
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Back to Basics: Roast Chicken
With the economy the way it is these days and prices going up everywhere, I thought I’d do a post about one of my favorite “stretch-the-dollar” meals. And that’s a whole roasted chicken.
A whole chicken works out cheaper than buying boneless breasts fillets. You get more meat and the satisfaction of getting a variety of meat instead of just plain white meat. And as a Single Guy, I stretch a whole roasted chicken over several meals, chopping up half for two nights of dinner and using the other half to make chicken salad for lunch. (I’ll be posting my chicken salad recipe next.)
Below are the simple, basic steps to roasting a chicken. It’s a combination of techniques I’ve learned from watching my favorite chefs like Ina Garten and Jamie Oliver and from what I read in cookbooks like the award-winning Zuni Café Cookbook.
I start with a whole chicken that I’ve rinsed and pat dry. (Be sure to remove all the giblets and junk inside the cavity. You can use them to make stock or gravy later.) I salt my chicken 24 hours before I plan to roast it, which is the highly quoted recommendation from Chef Judy Rodgers of the Zuni Café Cookbook. Salting it this early helps seal the flesh so that it’ll stay moist when cooking. I use about 3 teaspoons of coarse sea salt for this chicken that weighed about 4.5 lbs. I made sure to rub the salt underneath the skin to make sure it has contact with the meat. Then I cover it and place it in the refrigerator for the next day.
Before I’m about to cook my chicken, I preheat my oven to 425 degrees. The high heat is another recommendation from Chef Rodgers to help brown the skin. Above is a look at what I plan to stuff inside the cavity. These are ideas I got from Ina Garten who likes to use citrus when roasting her chicken. I love citrus so I put in a mix of orange and lemon quarters along with the traditional celery sticks and some rosemary. As the chicken cooks, the citrus juices infuse into the meat for a really subtle taste. Other things you can add in the cavity include half an onion and a couple of garlic cloves. But really, there’s only so much you can shove in there. (That’s why I cut up the citrus into small quarters to make it easy to fit.)
Bring your chicken out of the refrigerator and let it sit at room temperature so that it’s not super cold when going into the oven. After filling the cavity with the items above, then I also squeeze in rosemary twigs and nubs of butter (that’s a Jamie Oliver trick), about 2 to 3 tablespoons, under the skin on both the breast side and the back. I even squeeze in any extra orange segments I might have. As the chicken cooks, the butter melts and in a way acts like a self-basting technique. You see I also trussed the chicken (tied up the legs), but there’s a lot of chefs who recommend not worrying about it. I do it so that the oranges and lemons don’t fall out. You can check out my video on how to truss a chicken. When your chicken’s all ready, pat it dry again and place it in a roasting pan and into the oven to cook at 425 degrees for about 30 minutes.
After 30 minutes, I bring out the chicken and flip it over because I want to make sure it cooks golden all around. Here it is with its back to me. I grind some fresh sea salt on top so that the skin will have some nice saltiness for those who like to eat the skin, and then put it back in the oven to cook for another 20-25 minutes. Then I flip it back with the breast up, sprinkle some salt on the breast side and let it finish cooking for another 15 minutes. The cooking time really depends on your chicken, but I’ve found that this 4.5 pound chicken usually cooks between 1 to 1.5 hours, depending on your heat. You can use an internal thermometer to test how done the chicken meat is, but I use the old fashion technique of inserting a small knife between the thigh and checking to see that the liquid flowing out is clear. That’s when I know it’s done.
You want to have a nice golden brown skin for your chicken. (Actually, I think mines turned out a bit dark because of the butter.) When done cooking, let it rest for about 15-25 minutes so the juices will settle. Then remove the twine if you trussed your chicken and toss out everything in the cavity and under the skin. You can use any of the drippings from your roasting pan as a base for gravy.
So a whole roasted chicken can serve about four people, or if you’re cooking for yourself you can split it into several dinners. Here I have a quarter of my roasted chicken along with some roasted rosemary potatoes and sautéed broccoli. Enjoy!
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Monday, June 16, 2008
The Next Food Network Star: Season 4, Episode 3
Brand Me Martha!
Previously: The contestants cook on a train and many were off track, including some raw eggs. Nipa walked out but not out the door. That was reserved for Kevin, who was eliminated because he was generic. Tonight: The Dallas Diva is frantic when she cooks, everyone goes ga-ga over Ms. Martha, and more contestants cry.
We open with scenes of Manhattan and those ugly double-decker buses carrying tourists. In the Carriage House, Adam says he has to be perfect after serving undercooked food two weeks in a row. People are still talking about the warning Nipa got for her prima donna fit last week. Even Nipa’s talking about it, saying it would be easy to have quit, but now she knows she really really wants it. OK, if you say so.
They go to the Food Network studios and they’re greeted by Bobby Flay, who’s standing in front of those silver trays with the coverings to unveil some fancy food at those fancy restaurants. Do people use those things anymore? Everyone knows the next challenge is underneath it so they’re all speculating what it could be.
Bobby says he wants to see more of their culinary point of view translated to food, and he’s found the perfect canvas—the plain, generic russet potato. Everyone’s excited about the potato, especially Nipa who goes all Bollywood with ideas for curried potatoes. I have a feeling all her dishes will involve some kind of curry. Not to generalize, but I’m just saying she should call herself the Curry Queen instead of the Spice Queen.
The contestants have 30 minutes to create something and then do a 1-minute presentation on tape for the judges. Go!
Everyone’s frantically cooking and talking about their plans for the potato. BTW, did you ever notice that Jennifer, the mom, talks like a baby when she’s on air? When she does her interviews, she’s fine. But I notice when she’s in front of the judges or speaking to the camera while cooking, she talks like a baby. Grow up already!
Dallas Diva Lisa is really frenetic in the kitchen. I wouldn’t want to be near her when she’s chopping vegetables, like right now. She’s a human food processor. Jennifer is adding a big plop of goo onto a pizza she’s making. It doesn’t look appetizing at all. Just all white. Curry Queen is standing around as the 30 minutes wind down. You know, she always looks so low-key during these challenges. Either Nipa’s dishes are so easy to make, or she has someone else cooking for her backstage because we all know the Food Network is hungry for an Indian food show.
Time’s up and they do their presentations in front of the camera. In comes Bob Tuschman and Susie Folgelson, and Bob tells them to be sure to tell a story about themselves.
Adam’s up first and he’s serving up cheese fries because he’s all about the comfort food. He does a good job talking about eating comfort food when you’re breaking up with your girlfriend and it’s actually quite funny. No surprise since he’s an actor. And the judges’ seem to like the bacon and fries, which Bobby notes are not raw.
With Kelsey, she’s like sunshine walking into a room. But with the judges, they all feel like she’s shining too bright. They’re like, where’s my sunglasses because this girl is too sunny? Susie actually calls her phony and her dish of potato au gratin is undercooked.
Jeffrey and Aaron both give similar presentations, meaning they both either stuttered their way through it all or really showed their nerves. While the judges’ felt Jeffrey’s home fries were bland, they really love Aaron’s bacon-wrapped potato. In fact, they always seem to like Aaron’s food, so I get a feeling that he must make some tasty dishes.
Then we have Nipa, who always seem to be sleep-walking IMHO. I have to say, her make up and hair looks pretty nice right now, giving her a really soft look. And her presentation is not bad. She’s talking about her Indian potato dish, some long-ass name that I can’t pronounce and were too many words to type in a few seconds. Tuschman says she needs to smile more because “she has a lot going for her.”
Shane is kind of boring and his dish tasted like paste, according to Bob. But not as bad as Jennifer’s grilled pizza with mashed potatoes which she says will be easy for kids to make to load up on carbs if they’re running a marathon the next day. (She actually didn’t say that; I made it up for her because that really is a lot of carbs.)
Finally, there’s Lisa. She’s all worried because everyone coming back from doing their presentations have been saying how the minute goes by fast, so she keeps her presentation short and sweet. Well, maybe too short because she’s all done talking about her crème fraiche and fresh asparagus dish when the floor director tells her to stretch it out. Lisa’s confused because she’s done and doesn’t have more to say, so we just see the time clicking away and the judges watching to see if the Dallas Diva is going to say anything else. She doesn’t and it’s all very awkward. Lisa is upset with herself and cries saying she doesn’t want 30 seconds of dead air to take away her dream. Dead air has killed a lot of people’s dreams and careers, baby. This is TV.
Commercials. Ugh, you know these commercials are always the same. It’s like the Food Network sold commercial blocks for the whole series to the same companies. They’re so repetitive, all you have to do is read my last two recaps and you’ll get the idea about the commercials.
The contestants walk into a room where Bobby Flay is standing in front of all these products. Jars of sauce and stuff from the likes of Paula Deen, Emeril Legasse and Giada DeLaurentiis. Bobby tells the group that their challenge is to come up with a food product that they can brand and sell. Then they have to demonstrate its use with a dish for a group of 50 buyers from food stores all across the country … and a special guest. (But since we’ve seen the previews already, we know the special guest is Ms. Martha Stewart.)
They have 30 minutes to shop for ingredients, and I’m kind of shocked at how little time they’re given to conceive a packaged product and then think up a recipe to serve it with. I’m starting to think the Food Network just wants to see who fails more than they want to see who can excel. The evil bastards!
Adam is going for a smoking rub, but can’t find any wood chips. So instead he uses a trick he saw on the Food Network (see what you’ve spawned!) of smoking corn husks. Nipa, of course, is making a sweet and spicy peanut seasoning and apparently the main ingredient is cayenne because she talks about buying up all the bottles of cayenne in the store. Then strolls in Aaron who wants to make his apple-cider vinaigrette. He says his secret ingredient is … cayenne. Wait! Where’s all the cayenne? Aaron can’t believe the store is out of cayenne. This is like a really sick version of “Who Moved the Cayenne Pepper?”
Back in the Food Network kitchens, the contestants start cooking up their product selection of sauces, marmalade and such. Most of them seem pretty confident about this challenge, which is surprising given that none of them currently have a product on store shelves. Oh look, there’s Nipa looking bored again while cooking. Yawn.
Commercials. OK, these commercials are sooo boring, I want to talk about a really funny commercial. Have you guys seen the recent E*Trade commercial with the baby on the computer? It’s He-LARRY-ous! He’s talking about trading stocks and gets a text message and then a call from his girlfriend. The dialog is so funny and the baby is spot on cute! I love these commercials, but I saw them earlier on another station. The Food Network should get E*Trade as a sponsor so I can have some fun during commercial breaks. Can you get on that, FN?
Bobby is in the studio again. You know, Bobby Flay is really working this episode, unlike the first two. He’s been in every segment so far. Good hosting work, Bobby! Then the crowd of buyers strolls into the room where each contestant has set up a little table to do a food demo, like walking around Costco.
The buyers and judges walk to the various contestants. A buyer from Whole Foods thinks Nipa’s sweet and spicy sauce is too simple because it’s just sugar and cayenne, which anyone can mix together at home despite Nipa’s assurance that it’s a trick to get that “proper balance.”
Over at Kelsey’s table of All-in-1 sauce, she’s cooking up Sloppy Joe’s, or what she calls, Sloppy Jane. (Get it?) And Susie and Bob Tuschman are again overwhelmed by her sunshine. They think she’s overselling.
For Shane, a buyer tells him he needs to work on his product’s name, which has this stupid Cherri-Gac name but the g is silent (like gag, oh, not like gag, but should be). Lisa made an orange-basil marmalade and it looks delicious spread on those chunks of cheese.
Jeffrey sells his soul-food salt and when the judges try the fried fish that he sprinkled it on, they don’t say a word. But Jeffrey is selling up a storm, saying how even after they walk away, the flavor will sneak up on them again and say “Jeffrey” in this really creepy whisper. Can you see Bobby Flay waking up at night screaming because he heard someone whisper in his ear “Jeffrey. Jeff-reeeeey.” Scary.
The buyers leave, and everyone’s trying to guess who will be the special guest. Then in walks Ms. Martha and Lisa and Kelsey are having an OMG shitfest.
Ms. Martha walks around like she’s inspecting the troops, with her little plastic clipboard. She starts with Shane and his poorly named Cherri-gac, but thankfully for him Martha gets that it’s supposed to be a play on cognac. Still, she felt Shane’s dish needed a bit more salt.
With Nipa, she asked if there were peanuts in her sweet and spicy peanut seasoning, and Curry Queen says no. Ms. Martha thinks that’s misleading. Nipa is so overconfident that she interviews that she thinks Martha loved her presentation when it was so obvious that she didn’t.
For the rest, Ms. Martha thinks Jeffrey is a good salesman, Jennifer is boring and she loves Aaron’s apple-cider vinaigrette, mostly because she loves apple-cider.
Then she meets Lisa, who looks like she’s going to go into convulsions at any moment. She says she’s Martha’s biggest fan, and I believe her. Ms. Martha tries a bit of the orange marmalade and talks to Lisa about sourcing and organic food. Martha doesn’t say much and she makes me nervous how she dabs her lips with her napkin in that slow way like she’s planning how she can get out of this conversation without killing Lisa.
Kelsey, who’s also a fan but not as convulsive as Lisa, is worried because if she knew Martha was coming she would have made Beef Willington or a fancy pasta instead of her stupidly named Sloppy Jane’s. Again, Martha tries it and doesn’t say much, other than saying she doesn’t eat Sloppy Joe’s typically. (I don’t see why, Martha, they’re so comforting!)
The last is Adam, and he asks if it’s all right for him to sing to her? Huh? I didn’t know Martha was taking requests? Adam pulls out a harmonica and does this blues song about meeting Martha. He falls on his knees at the end, and I have to say it did make Martha giggle, so there’s that.
Ms. Martha is now in the roundtable with the judges and she gives short reviews on everyone. Mostly she’s saying “not bad” a lot. She doesn’t rave about anyone in particular. It was a very short critique I think. But you can tell she’s like Oprah of the food world because Bobby Flay can’t stop thanking her and touching her arm.
Commercials. I switched to the Tony Awards on CBS and they’re doing a tribute to Rent, which ended its long run on Broadway this past season. I. Love. That. Musical. Especially that song, “Seasons of Love.” Thankfully I taped the tribute and will watch it again tonight.
Judgment. The contestants are tense and all of them think they’re going home as they walk down the stairs to the judges’ room. They get their critiques and this is how it went:
Tuschman tells Shane that the soup tasted wrong and he needs to show more passion. He’s too careful and thoughtful for the Food Network.
Bobby tells Adam that he liked that he didn’t cook anything raw this time and that his BBQ rub was OK but nothing he hadn’t tasted before.
Susie tells Jennifer that her mashed potato grilled pizza wasn’t working. She also thinks Jennifer is a little self-conscious and is always apologizing about her food. Tuschman says a Food Network star has to be authoritative.
Bobby tells Lisa that her presentation in the first challenge was too short but buyers liked her marmalade. Then she gets all teary eyed thinking about meeting Ms. Martha. Oh, PUH-lease, someone hand the girl a tissue.
Bob gets Nipa, and she asks her first whether she’s up for a critique or if she’s going to go ballistic and storm out of the room like last time? She says she’s going to stay, and Bob tells her that her potato dish was delicious but her product was too simple. He also says she has low-energy. (See, I told you.)
Susie tells Aaron that his honey scallion bacon-wrapped potato could be his signature dish, but his presentation lacked any personal stories.
Jeffrey looks like he’s wearing black lipstick. I’m not kidding. His lips look so perfectly dark and smooth. Anywho, Tuschman tells Jeffrey that he seems to shrink in a crowd and he needs Jeffrey to be Jeffrey. And Jeffrey concurs.
Susie tells Kelsey that her potato au gratin wasn’t very good and Ms. Martha didn’t like her Sloppy Jane’s. But she hits Kelsey hard by telling her to be less Miss Sunshine because she’s coming off too rehearsed and verging on being annoying. Ouch!
Commercials. Patty Lapone just won a Tony for her reprisal role in Gypsy. She’s giving this hilarious speech about how it’s been almost 30 years since her last win (for Evita, of course). She’s so great.
Decision time. Adam wins the potato-presentation challenge (he was smooth). The buyers chose Lisa as the winner with the best product. And Martha chose her personal favorite and that’s Aaron’s apple-cider vinaigrette. All three are safe and are excused. Then Nipa and Shane are declared safe and they leave too, leaving Kelsey, Jeffrey and Jennifer.
Kelsey looks down, and Bobby asks her what’s wrong? She talks about how she’s passionate about food and food television and how she applied for The Next Food Network Star after seeing season 1, and how she applied every year. (Tuschman says in his blog that they basically took her in this year because she kept applying. I guess that’s the trick, wear ‘em down!) Then she starts crying because it breaks her heart to think that she’s coming off forced and unnatural. I feel kind of bad for her because she does seem really sincere. And can she help it if she radiates the sun? I think not.
Bobby tells her that she has raw talent and if he were her producer, he’d work with her so he asks her to stay. Which of course makes her cry more and she promises to work harder, and then goes upstairs and cries some more because she was called annoying by Susie. The others give her a group hug and say, “you’re not annoying.” That’s so sweet. They lie, but that’s still sweet.
That just leaves the two Js—Jennifer and Jeffrey—and I could tell at this point that Jeffrey is going home. Because even though he seems really nice, he is pretty boring. And you know how the Food Network loves the mom cooks! I’m right as Susie tells Jennifer she’s staying. She also breaks into tears, probably from all the pent up frustration and tension, and Jeffrey has to end up comforting her.
Jeffrey leaves graciously, telling everyone it was an awesome experience. He later interviews that if you get beaten down in life, you grow stronger and taller. That says a lot because he’s pretty tall already so he must have been beaten up a lot as a kid.
Jennifer goes upstairs and runs immediately to her bed to pull out a photo of her daughter and starts bawling. Wow, did the Food Network forget to run psychological analysis on the contestants before they arrived in New York? Because these people are on the verge of nervous breakdowns.
Next week: Tyler Florence is the guest and he’s going to teach them some basics, Iron Chef Michael Simon is also going to get them to cook for the Coast Guard, and looks like we’re going to finally see Lisa’s infamous preview fall in the kitchen. It’s a doozie. If you don’t believe me, you can watch it in this preview video:
The Next Food Network Star airs at 10 p.m. Sundays and repeats at 9 p.m. Thursdays. Photos courtesy of the Food Network Web site.
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Sunday, June 15, 2008
Fro-yo Battle Royale in Palo Alto
This weekend I traveled outside my food blogging safety zone of San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley and trekked all the way down to Palo Alto’s University Avenue. What would make me travel more than an hour on train to this part of the Peninsula? Frozen yogurt.
Sure, you’re probably thinking there are a variety of new frozen yogurt stores that I can blog about right in San Francisco. In fact, I think there are probably four new fro-yo shops that opened up in the last month that I still haven’t tried. But in the tree-lined blocks of University Avenue is the grand-daddy of all frozen yogurt shops, Red Mango.
When the fro-yo trend started in Los Angeles a few years ago, it was Pinkberry that got people lined up for the tart original flavor or green tea. But many people were quick to point out that Pinkberry was just a knock-off of the Korean chain Red Mango.
Last year, Red Mango came to the United States to reclaim its title as the favorite fro-yo and the U.S. division has been opening stores like crazy. And while Pinkberry has yet to open a store in the Bay Area, Red Mango came to town last month with its first store in Palo Alto. (Other stores are planned for San Jose, Cupertino and San Carlos.)
But this isn’t just a visit to Red Mango. I decided to do a taste-test of Red Mango’s yogurt compared to local favorite Fraiche Yogurt, who could probably be credited with starting the local version of the fro-yo craze when it opened a few years ago and became one of the first frozen-yogurt spots in the Bay Area.
So my first stop was Fraiche, since it’s the closest to the Caltrain Palo Alto station.
Just off University Avenue on Emerson, Fraiche is a cute little shop that sells both fresh and frozen yogurt. It also sells oatmeal and baked goods and serves Blue Bottle Organic Coffee.
Started by two friends, Fraiche’s yogurt is made just like they do it in Europe. But they use local ingredients (Clover organic milk) and it’s made on site. They have a nice selection of fresh fruits along with the crunchy stuff. The sizes include Junior (4 oz.) for $2.95, Regular (6 oz.) for $3.95 and Large (9 oz.) for $5.25. The fro-yo flavors are natural, soy and chocolate. Then there are extra costs for the number of toppings you choose.
Fraiche décor is very Swedish with a lot of white, brown and orange accents. I really liked the wall texture that looked like a wave but probably is supposed to represent the swirls of frozen yogurt. While the décor was contemporary and nice, it did feel a bit tired. Like the brown pillows on the side just seemed well-worn.
I got the natural flavor frozen yogurt in the regular size cup with two toppings: strawberries and blackberries. Total cost was $4.95.
The cup looked like a lot of fro-yo, and it looked milky white. While it was pleasant, it did have a slight icy texture to it. You know what I mean? Like tiny bits of ice granules were mixed in when making the yogurt. The flavor of the fro-yo was subtle, with a very slight vanilla hint but mostly the flavor of milk.
The fruits were incredibly fresh. Strawberries were great since they’re in season, but the blackberries were especially good. They were firm and sweet.
Overall, it was an enjoyable cup of fro-yo and I liked the fact that they used compostible spoons. Service was friendly, and you could probably meet and chat with one of the two owners behind the counter.
I walked a few blocks up University Avenue to Red Mango, which definitely has a more high-profile location right on University Avenue.
This particular Red Mango was opened with a famous partner, Bay Area’s Yul Kwon who won Survivor a few years ago. I’m guessing he’s using some of his $1 million in this business venture. Kwon was supposedly spotted at the store when it opened but now makes only a few rare appearances.
The store has a bright, open feel with a lot of red accents, of course. Red Mango sells only two flavors of fro-yo: original and green tea. It also sells what they call frozen yogurt blenders, which I’m guessing is like a smoothie.
The fro-yo sizes are Small (4 oz.), Medium (8 oz.) and Large (12 oz.). The prices for original flavor are $2.95, $3.95 and $6.45; and the green tea prices are a $1 additional. Toppings are extra.
I ended up getting the medium original fro-yo. They had strawberries but no blackberries, so I couldn’t get an identical match for comparative purposes to Fraiche, so I went with mango and raspberries. My total was $5.20.
The medium is 2 ounces larger than Fraiche, and cost a bit more. But once I started eating the yogurt, I could tell a marked difference. The yogurt was creamier and had no icy texture like Fraiche. And it had the distinctive tart flavor I’ve heard people talk about when describing yogurt.
The mango chunks were especially good because they tasted really fresh and sweet. So overall, it was a really worthwhile cup of fro-yo.
I think there are going to be loyalists who will continue to patronize Fraiche because they’re local and it is made of quality ingredients. Both Fraiche and Red Mango have contemporary, clean environments but I have to say Red Mango wins for texture and taste. I would take a 1-hour train ride just to get a cup (but I’m hoping they’ll eventually open one closer to me). I can’t wait to try the green tea!
Fraiche Yogurt, 644 Emerson St., Palo Alto. PH: 650.566.0055. www.fraicheyogurt.com. Open Mon.-Thu., 7 a.m.-10:30 p.m.; Fri., 7 a.m.-11 p.m.; Sat., 9 a.m.-11 p.m.; and Sun., 9 a.m.-10:30 p.m.
Red Mango, 429 University Ave., Palo Alto. PH: 650.324.1811. www.redmangousa.com. Open Sun.-Thu., 11 a.m.-11:30 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 11 a.m.-12:30 a.m.
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Friday, June 13, 2008
Two Scoops Rice and Macaroni Salad
The warm weather in the Bay Area lately has reminded me of Hawaii again. Don’t worry, I’m not going to dredge up more photos of my recent vacation. But it did get me thinking of plate lunches, and more specifically macaroni salads.
The plate lunch is the standard lunchtime meal in Hawaii. We don’t go for no simple sandwich. It’s always a protein like teriyaki beef or chicken, or maybe the Hawaiian favorite kalua pork, and then the ubiquitous two scoops of rice and a scoop of macaroni salad.
And while this isn’t necessarily the most healthy of meals, it is the most comforting. I especially enjoy the macaroni salad because there’s something about the creamy dressing and the soft macaroni that made it all special. The macaroni salad always look so simple too because they are mostly just pasta and maybe some carrot strips. Some people take it up a notch with tuna and peas, but I say it taste great just with the pure simplicity of pasta and dressing.
Below is my attempt to make a home version of macaroni salad. I’ve found that places on the mainland don’t seem to make macaroni salad the same way as in Hawaii (unless you go specifically to a Hawaiian-style restaurant). The macaroni salads here are more like pasta salad with so many ingredients the pasta just fades to the background. But I say make the macaroni the star, maybe at your next grill party or summer picnic. Enjoy!
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Single Guy’s Macaroni Salad
Copyright 2008 by Cooking With The Single Guy
Ingredients
8 0z. Elbow pasta (about 2 cups), overcooked
1/4 cup red bellpepper, finely diced
½ cup mayonnaise
1½ T Dijon mustard
2 T Sweet relish
1 T sugar
1 t salt
1 t white pepper
Boil pasta per box instructions, but overcook it by two minutes to make it extra soft. (Be sure to salt the water to season your pasta.) Drain and set aside. In bowl, mix mayonnaise, mustard, sweet relish, sugar, salt and white pepper. Add bell pepper pieces to the pasta, then gradually toss a little of the mayonnaise mixture in at a time with pasta until you get the consistency that you prefer. Place in refrigerator. Serve cool.
Makes 4 servings. Serve with any grilled meat.
TIP: I recommend that you overcook your pasta because it’s better to eat the macaroni salad soft than hard. When you refrigerate the pasta, it’ll start to harden again from the cold, that’s why you want to overcook it to make sure it stays soft. You want to cook it so it’s floppy when taken out of the water.
WATCH THE MOISTURE: Make sure your pasta is cool before you start mixing it with the mayonnaise mixture. If you mix it when warm, the heat will make your mayonnaise runny. When you place the warm pasta in the refrigerator, it’ll also create condensation that will bring more moisture into your salad, giving you the dreaded runny version.
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Thursday, June 12, 2008
Top Chef: Season 4 Finale
They Cook. They Eat. One Wins.
It’s the last show and a long road to get to where we are … Puerto Rico. But before we get the tropical scenes, we get a review of Chicago and how this all began with 16 cheftestants, Pizzeria Uno, munchkins in the kitchen, a wedding to cater, Stephanie’s shaky hands, Lisa’s rice problems, and Dale’s screaming and yelling. Now, three cheftestants, Richard, Lisa and Stephanie, cook the meal of their lives. And we don’t get to try any of it. :(
Tonight we find out who gets the title of … TOP CHEF.
Hey, what happened to the theme song? I miss all the dancing. No last dance? Instead, we go straight to scenes of San Juan and the three cheftestants having breakfast at the hotel. Richard sniffs his egg. It must be hard eating as a chef because I bet you spend so much time inspecting the food before actually chowing down. Just like eating with a food blogger who needs to photograph all the food before chowing down. ;-)
They all interview about how they want to win. Stephanie brings up the fact again that it would be the first time a woman wins if she takes it (or Lisa, I guess). Lisa is so confident it’s crazy, but she does admit that she got to the finals “by the skin of her teeth.”
They arrive at the courtyard and waiting for them are Padma and Chef Tom Colicchio. Also we see three chefs standing behind individual round tables with a bunch of food on top. The guest chefs are the dashing Eric Ripert, the celebrity French chef of Le Benardin in New York, the kind-of-geeky Dan Barber of Blue Hill, also of New York, and April Bloomfield of the Spotted Pig of (guess where?) New York.
Richard calls Ripert a “culinary god” and with his now almost white hair, he is kind of Zeus-like. Chef Tom says the final challenge is to create a four-course tasting menu starting with fish, then poultry, red meat and finally dessert. Stephanie’s shocked that dessert is a requirement and not left up to the cheftestant to decide. Yeah, life has rules that way.
The three guest chefs are also going to play the role of sous chefs, which is what happened in last year’s season finale. Padma says the cheftestant with the most challenge wins will get to pick first, but there’s a tie between Richard and Stephanie with four each. So they draw knives and Richard lets Stephanie draw first. And she draws the knife with the No. 1. Richard looks like he just gave away the title.
Stephanie chooses Chef Ripert while Richard picks Chef Barber. So that leaves Chef Bloomfield with Lisa. So of course Lisa’s all “girl power.” This is not the Spice Girls Tour, Lisa.
More scenes of the forts around Puerto Rico and then we’re in the kitchen and the cheftestants start prepping their ingredients with their sous chefs. Lisa says she’s going to go back to her Asian style and doing Thai and Vietnamese dishes instead of last week’s failed Latin flavors. April feels a bit uncomfortable since she’s never cooked Asian, but Lisa chats the chef up like long lost friends and they’re all chatty in the kitchen.
Richard is doing a reflecting of his journey as a chef, which will include molecular gastronomy. He looks a bit stress and frantic. Stephanie, on the other hand, is watching over Chef Ripert, making sure he fillets the red snapper to her liking. HEL-lo? This is the same chef who wrote an entire cookbook about bringing the sea into the kitchen.
There’s actually a lot of cooking going on at this time, and some of the food looks amazing. And all this kitchen scene with the fun Latin music in the background reminds me of those food movies such as “Like Water for Chocolate” or “Eat Man Drink Woman.”
Richard busts out his liquid nitrogen, which he says is the one ingredient that he was allowed to bring with him. He’s thinking of making a tobasco sauce ice cream by quick freezing it with the liquid nitrogen. All the other chefs, especially Ripert, are all curious about it and watches Richard like he’s some kind of wizard. Lisa, of course, says she keeps her food simple. What’s odd is we never hear Lisa or Stephanie talk about what their secret ingredient is that they brought along. I’m not sure they even used it.
So far everyone seems pretty calm in the kitchen, especially buddies Lisa and April who, like I said, are just chatting away. And so far this is the most boring season finale of Top Chef with no twists or surprises. Just cooking. Which is nice if we get to eat, but short of that, I want some drama!
Commercials. A free commercial for Puerto Rico, of course.
The next morning, the cheftestants arrive in the kitchen and it’s pretty quiet. Their sous chefs aren’t there. Chef Tom comes in and informs the three that their sous chefs won’t be showing up for work today. (You know, this was the same routine last year. This finale is so predictable.)
The cheftestants seem a bit stress but all handle the news well. I mean, they probably knew they had to make their own dishes by themselves. This is when we get an idea of their individual menus. Here they are:
Lisa: Grilled prawns, Tom Kha Gai soup with dumplings, Wagyu beef and black rice Thai pudding.
Richard: Scallops, guinea hen and foie gras, pork belly and banana “scallops” with bacon ice cream. (Richard, again with the banana scallops? If you recall, this is the dessert he made that’s going to be in the Top Chef cook book when he won the dessert challenge. Except that time he made it with a big slab of avocado and chocolate. Hopefully he won’t do that again.)
Stephanie: Seared red snapper, quail with lobster ravioli, medallions of lamb and ricotta pound cake. (Hmm, that sounds good. I love pound cake, but it’s been a long time since I ate one.)
Chef Tom comes back to the kitchen to do his typical chef chats with each cheftestants. Richard seems a bit stressed of all the three and tells Tom that his menu so far is “abstract.” I’ve always found abstract food to be so vague. Tom finds Lisa really calm and Stephanie worried about her dessert. Again, I never really get anything from Tom’s visits. Are we near the half-way mark yet?
Back in the kitchen, Richard says he’s not going to make his tobasco sauce ice cream, and instead will just make bacon ice cream with his liquid nitrogen. Stephanie is indeed stressing over her cake after taking a bite, and Lisa tells her to be more confident like her.
Night arrives and they’re in a beautiful formal dining room. They’re probably still at the Governor’s Mansion. Padma looks hot in that red dress and I love how they did her hair. It’s a bit more breezy.
Commercials. Yuck, I hate mosquitoes.
Padma talks to the sous chefs. Ripert felt relaxed working with Stephanie, but Barber felt anxious with stressed out Richard. April felt humble in the role of sous chef. The cheftestants come out and meet the other guests, including Chef Alfredo Ayala of Puerto Rico and Tim Zagat, CEO of Zagat. Of course, there are Gail, Ted and Tom.
The cheftestants each give a brief description of their approach. Richard is talking again about his journey, Lisa is all about Southeast Asia and Stephanie wants to hit all the flavor points in their mouths. (I didn’t realize you had different flavors on your mouth. Interesting.)
They go back and they make their final preps. I’m still waiting for the curve ball, but nothing yet. Just fancy dishes and pretty food. They serve, and here’s how it went down.
First course: Lisa’s Grilled Prawns with Chili Basil Sauce and Crab with homemade potato chips, Stephanie’s Seared Red Snapper in Truffle Oil Clam and Asparagus Broth (in a cute cup) and Richard’s barely cooked Scallops with mango and pineapple.
Mr. Zagat felt Richard’s scallop dish was a bit too complicated, and Chef Ayala felt Lisa’s prawns were too spicy. Eric like the infusion of the truffle oil in Stephanie’s broth and Chef Ayala declares it the best of all three.
Second course: Lisa’s Tom Kha Gai with Dumplings, Stephanie’s Seared Quail Breast over Lobster Ravioli and Quail Eggs and Richard’s Which Came First dish with guinea hen, foie gras and sous vide cooked chicken eggs.
Chef Eric likes the complexity and earthiness of Richard’s dish but found it hard to figure out the ingredients. Everyone loves Lisa’s soup, and Gail says she could eat a whole bowl. Tom is bothered by the leeks in Stephanie’s dish. (It’s odd how one ingredient can throw off a dish for Tom, and then he obsesses about it. Don’t worry, he brings this up again later.)
Third course: Lisa’s Wagyu beef, Stephanie’s Medallions of Lamb with Maitake Mushrooms and Braised Pistachios and Blackberries, and Richard’s Be The Bacon with pickled radish, miron broth and pork belly.
Chef Ripert is surprised at how Richard’s food lacks seasoning, but he says the pickled radish on the pork belly is “bordering on genius.” Barber wanted the pork belly to be more crispy on the side (which is why I don’t like sous vide style cooking). Lisa’s dish was just OK although people thought the sweet sauce on the meat was the same as the prawn dish. Gail thought Stephanie was going to crash and burn with her concept but she totally loves it and Chef Ripert points out that this is the first time people have been throwing the word “love” when describing a dish tonight. Tom summarizes the three cheftestants so far, saying Richard’s dish needs work, Lisa is pedestrian and Stephanie is full of surprises.
Dessert course: Lisa’s black rice pudding, Stephanie’s ricotta pound cake with tropical fruit, and Richard’s banana scallop and bacon ice cream.
Chef Barber thinks Richard’s dessert is exciting. Mr. Zagat likes the rice pudding. People agree that Stephanie’s cake was just, meh.
The judges chat a bit at the end of the meal, and it’s really the typical glowing compliments you hear from like Paula Abdul on the finale of American Idol. You know, things like “they’re all winners” and “they’ve all grown since they started this journey” blah blah blah. Did I say earlier that this was the most boring finale of Top Chef history? There was no crisis in the kitchen. No missing ingredients. No curve ball. And Puerto Rico was barely featured. Can we just name Dale Top Chef and end the misery right now?
Commercials. I can’t believe there are so many car commercials. Who’s buying a car these days?
Judges’ Table. Everyone seems excited about the meal. Tom feels they delivered. The cheftestants come in. Has Richard been wearing those military shorts all this time? I didn’t notice it before. It must have looked weird when he entered the formal dining room dressed like that.
Padma asks how each cheftestant felt they did and they get some previews of the critique from the judges. Richard is taken aback by some of the comments, like how they felt his scallops were under-seasoned. Tom tells Lisa her prawns were too spicy and she says she was just representing her spicy self. I say Stephanie won this round.
For the second course, Gail tells Richard his foie gras and eggs dish was a bit muddled. Again, he looks taken aback by the reaction. But everyone loves Lisa’s Thai soup. And again, Tom brings up the leeks in Stephanie’s dish, telling her that they were uncooked and she’s shocked that they weren’t. I say Lisa won this round.
For the meat course, Ted asks Richard why he didn’t sear his pork belly and he says something about the integrity of the meat. Tom tells Lisa that Kobe beef shouldn’t really be served so rare like regular American beef because of all the fat. And just the thought of all that raw fat is making me kind of queasy right now. But everyone loved the surprises, especially braised pistachios, of Stephanie’s dish. I say Stephanie won this round.
For dessert, Richard says he eats banana every day for breakfast so that’s why he did that dessert, but Padma does call him out and says he’s done it before earlier this season. They says Lisa’s rice pudding was delicious and Tom says Stephanie’s banana cream was unidentifiable on her cake. So looks like a tie between Richard and Lisa for this round.
So if you go round by round, looks like Stephanie took two rounds and a split between Richard and Lisa. So I say Stephanie’s going to be named Top Chef.
Padma asks if the cheftestants have any last words, and there’s an awkward pause before Stephanie speaks up about how she second-guessed her dessert and that’s why it wasn’t successful but she learns from her experience and that’s why she’s Top Chef. Lisa and her bravado basically tells the judges to give her the title of Top Chef now. Richard shocks the judges by saying he felt he fucked up and gave up his opportunity to be Top Chef by overthinking his dishes. He’s totally really honest or A GENIUS trying to get the sympathy vote.
The three go to the stew room and Gail’s all shocked by what she just heard from Richard. Although Tom’s all like “I can see where he’s coming from.” They talk about the courses again and Tom does a poll, but you know what? I just did that above so Tom, all you need to do is just read my notes above. The judges comments are so repetitive.
We hear the birds chirping as a new morning arrives and I’m shocked that they filmed so long. I feel like the sun’s about to rise out my window now as I try to finish this recap so I can post it early because tonight I’ll be at the Yankees game in Oakland. (Go Yankees!)
Commercials. Get Smart, I loved that show growing up. Who didn’t?
The three come back to hear the decision. Tom says they cooked tremendous meals and were amazing competitors. He says Richard’s food is whimsical, playful and outrageous. Lisa is big, bold and all about her. Stephanie is surprising. He says the decision was made on which meal they would have gone back and eat again. And Padma says that meal would be the one cooked by one Stephanie. Stephanie is named Top Chef, the first female winner and the first one who I believe is from the host city (Chicago).
Stephanie’s surprised, of course, and the other rejected cheftestants sneak up from the back to give hugs. Lisa interviews that she’s all fuck that she didn’t win because she should have, and Richard is disappointed and near tears. He feels he gave up on himself at the last minute. He directs the show to cut so he can cry alone.
Stephanie doesn’t care about crying on Tv because she’s won the big money so she can cry all she wants. She says this is a reaffirmation that she is meant to be a chef. This from a woman who opened her own successful restaurant and closed it to reevaluate her future. So I guess the future is another restaurant, and I would definitely try it if I’m in Chicago.
Photos courtesy of Bravo TV's Web site.
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Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Dish on Dining: Yoshi’s San Francisco
Whetting My Appetite on Chef Kamio’s Genius
1330 Fillmore St. (between Eddy and Ellis), San Francisco
Fillmore Jazz Preservation District
PH: 415.655.5600
Dinner, Mon.–Wed., 5:30–10:30 p.m.; Thu.–Sat., until 11 p.m.,; Sun., 5–11 p.m.
Reservations, major credit cards accepted
sf.yoshis.com/sf/restaurant
Dine About Town is back for an encore this month, so last night I ventured with fellow food blogger Foodhoe to one of the more exciting new restaurants on the list of participating locales … Yoshi’s Jazz Club and Restaurant.
The original Yoshi’s is this unique and historical restaurant in Oakland’s Jack London Square that’s a combination jazz venue and Japanese restaurant. Last year, the owners created a spectacular San Francisco counterpart in that city’s historic jazz district known as the Fillmore. Its opening last fall was long awaited as a revitalization of the area.
There’s no denying that Yoshi’s San Francisco is the centerpiece now of the neighborhood. Just the sign itself can be seen for several blocks. And when you walk inside, it’s like walking into a theme park devoted to jazz and fine dining.
Jazz performers are scheduled for almost every night of the week, so many people come for dinner and a show. But Foodhoe and I were there just for the food, and there were a lot of it.
Yoshi’s menu under Executive Chef Shotaro “Sho” Kamio includes an innovative list of small plates and entrees as well as sushi and grilled selections. Just sitting down you’re inundated with pieces of papers containing the menus for the main dishes, sushi and drinks.
But we came for Dine About Town, which is a promotion to get people to taste the various offerings from San Francisco restaurants with a 3-course prix fixe dinner menu of $31.95. Most restaurants’ Dine About Town offerings are a choice of two options for each course. With Yoshi’s, I was impressed that they offered three choices for the starter and entrée (but stuck with two for dessert).
With our DAT dinner selected, Foodhoe and I toasted on Japanese beer and sake and snuck in a starter from Chef Kamio’s Sousaku section of the regular menu, which is his list of small plates he calls “original creations.” The original creation we wanted to try was his Yari Ika “Somen” ($11) or squid thinly sliced to resemble somen (the Japanese cold noodles) and served with uni and lime.
The squid “somen” came out so beautifully presented as five little dollops of squid topped with the uni (or sea urchin). I loved these little bites, which combined the crunchy texture of raw squid with the savory taste of the uni.
For our DAT starter, Foodhoe got the Sashimi Morikomi or raw fish plate consisting of maguro, hamachi, salmon and scallops. Foodhoe says the fish were all fresh, and she especially liked the scallops. She let me try a piece of her hamachi, and it was so tender and yummy it felt like it was melting in my mouth.
I chose the Saikyo Miso Caesar, which is a Caesar salad but with a creamy Caesar dressing infused with miso. Again, the plate came out looking beautiful, light and refreshing. It had hints of a creamy Caesar with the look and taste of Parmesan, but it also reflected an Asian touch with the daikon sprouts and bits of color from the radish. While it was enjoyable (maybe a bit heavy on the dressing) I didn’t necessarily get any miso flavor. It was overwhelmingly Parmesan, which isn’t bad, just not as promised.
BTW, both our starters came out surprisingly quick. Granted, the raw fish is easy to prepare, but I almost had the feeling that my salad was also pre-plated and sitting in the refrigerator because it was crispy cold. The other starter option on Yoshi’s DAT menu is Kakiage, or seasonal vegetables tempura fritters.
For our entrees, Foodhoe chose the Grilled Organic Chicken with an ume-shiso glaze. Ume is the preserved plum that’s the size of a dime and often inserted in rice balls known as musubi. I love eating ume, but you can only eat so much of them before getting sick from all the tartness. Shiso is the leaves often served with sashimi. Together, it created a sweet-tangy glaze on Foodhoe’s chicken that was perfectly cooked to accentuate the tenderness and freshness of the meat, both white and dark that came on the plate.
I got the Kurobuta Prime Pork Loin, which were medallions of pork loin with a lemon thyme jus. The pork loin is grilled to order and it offered a nice smoky flavor combined with the soy glaze, which reminded me a lot of yakitori, which is grilled foods. The pork came with a nice side of crunchy Napa cabbage shreds and dried tofu pieces with a tangy dressing. I loved everything on the plate, even the small pearl onions that were braised until they were tender so that each bite was a subtle sweetness.
(The third option on the DAT menu was Spicy Dragon and Spicy Tuna rolls.)
Finally came dessert. Yoshi’s dessert menu was created by opening pastry chef, Marisa Churchill, who was a cheftestant on Bravo’s Top Chef. Churchill left the restaurant recently (she had always been hired as a consultant) but her creative offerings continue to be dutifully made by the kitchen staff. For the DAT desserts, Foodhoe got the Okinawan Doughnuts. Okinawa is an island of Japan that’s gotten a lot of Western influences, so some think these doughnuts are similar to those made in Portugal. Three little doughnuts covered in cinnamon sugar and sitting on a spear are served with chocolate sauce. The doughnuts are more cake than dough, and they were wonderfully light but substantial at the same time.
I chose the Frozen Apricot Mousse, which was served with a cherry consommé and accented with fresh pieces of apricot and cherries, which are all in season right now. The mousse was very much like ice cream, and it was a nice flavor that was cooling on a hot day. I didn’t get a strong apricot flavor, but you could get that from the fresh apricots on the beautiful plate.
The dining room is an expansive space with a view of the kitchen behind glass. Standing front and center was Chef Kamio, who was probably working on the special omakase orders that night. (Omakase is similar to a chef’s menu.) I was impressed to see him cooking on a Tuesday night. I’m sure he wasn’t spending his time on the DAT offerings, but I believe his presence kept everyone else on top of their game as the kitchen worked efficiently to keep the plates rolling out.
The wait staff is also extremely knowledgeable and friendly. From our waitress to the bus boys, everyone could answer questions about the food that’s on the menu or items on the plate brought to our table. While a few seemed rushed, most were cool and calm.
And of course, there's the music. Jazz sounds are pumped in through the restaurant's extensive sound system. When the dining room is nearly empty, the sound is quite loud like you're at a live performance. But when the restaurant starts to fill out, the soothing jazz falls into the background and is barely noticeable.
Dine About Town runs until June 15, and if you’ve been trying to decide which restaurants to try, definitely run to Yoshi’s in San Francisco. A DAT menu is supposed to give you a taste of a restaurant at a reasonable price so you’re tempted to come back for more. After trying Yoshi’s DAT menu, I say mission accomplished because I am definitely coming back to try more dishes from Chef Kamio’s regular menu.
Single guy rating: 4.25 stars (zen-like cuisine)
Explanation of the single guy's rating system:
1 star = perfect for college students
2 stars = perfect for new diners
3 stars = perfect for foodies
4 stars = perfect for expense accounts
5 stars = perfect for any guy's dream dinner
Read Foodhoe's take on our DAT dinner at Yoshi's here at her site.
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Monday, June 09, 2008
The Next Food Network Star: Season 4, Episode 2
Next Stop: Drama-ville
Previously: The contestants serve up dishes to a table of Food Network stars. In the judging, Cory was called dark, Nipa doesn’t care and Kevin is generic. But it’s Cory who’s the first to go home after she gets no laughs. And tonight: They’re all cooking on a train with the ex-Dinner: Impossible guy, and Nipa walks out on Bobby Flay. Oh, no she did-NT.
Cue intro. Did you notice how they have all these Food Network stars saying “Who WILL BE…” but when it comes to the end with Rachel Ray, she goes “Who DO YOU THINK is the next Food Network star?” Girrrrl, just follow the script.
It’s the middle of the night and (faux Sir) Robert Irvine arrives in the Carriage House, banging a pot yelling, “wakey, wakey” like he’s getting a bunch of preschoolers ready for the day. Turns out it’s 3 a.m. and the sleepy contestants assemble in a line to hear Irvine explain that he’s on the judging panel this week and they have to divide into teams of three to test their food knowledge.
They do the color thing and this is how everyone divides up:
Team Blue: Dallas Diva Lisa, Spice Queen Nipa and Young Shane
Team Green: Jeffrey, Cheerleader Kelsey and Kevin (who still looks like the guy from “Felicity.”)
Team Gray: Aaron, Adam and Jennifer (This team is so boring, like their color. Who picks gray for a team color?)
Their assignment is to visit specialty food shops that have been forced to open in the middle of the night by the Food Network so that this scavenger hunt can happen without any patrons milling around. They’ll be asked food questions and receive ingredients to be cooked later. If they get the answer wrong, they have to do some kind of food prep.
Irvine announces that the winner of this challenge will be featured in the Sunday magazine USA Weekend (which is inserted in most U.S. newspapers that I don’t subscribe to anymore because I read everything online).
Everyone scrambles because they were just woken out of bed, so that means no one has showered, shaved or brushed their teeth. It’s a madhouse in the bathrooms with I’m sure a lot of rushed personal hygiene, but the first team out is Team Green with Jeffrey, Kelsey and Kevin. Team Gray leaves next, and it’s poor Shane and Lisa of Team Blue waiting for Nipa, who sure is gathering up a lot of clothes.
First destination is Amy’s Bread. There a girl (I can’t assume it’s Amy) who asks Team Green about what two parts of wheat grain are removed to make white flour. They answer wrong, and the correct answer is bran and germ. So Kevin goes off to the bakery to start folding and rolling out bread in order to get past this stop.
Team Gray arrives and gets a question about what’s the double acting ingredient in baking powder, and surprisingly they get it right. (I didn’t understand the answer, and really, who really wants to know the double-acting ingredient in baking soda? Google it if you do.)
Team Gray chooses the brioche bread out of three ingredients and then heads off to the next stop, Alleva Dairy. Meanwhile Kevin is still rolling out bread when Team Blue arrives and gets a question about what gives pumpernickel its color. They answer molasses and it’s correct. I’m impressed. They choose the baguette and passes Kevin and his team.
At Alleva, Team Gray is asked how many pounds of whole milk are used to make cheese and they correctly answer 10 pounds. They dash off with some ricotta cheese in hand.
Kevin finally finishes rolling out dough and they leave with a loaf of semolina raisin bread.
Team Blue arrives at the dairy and gets a question about what cheese-making process involves pressing layer after layer of curd, and they answer cheddar, which to me doesn’t sound like a process as much as it’s an end product. Anywho, CORRECT! Shane actually says he learned that from the Food Network. My guess is from him. They rush off with the Danish blue cheese.
Team Gray is already at the Esposito’s Meat Market and they get a question that I finally know the answer! The guy asks what’s the main feed for the pigs that are made into Iberico jamon. (If you read my interview here, you’d know the answer is acorn.) Adam says as a waiter, he knew this answer because the restaurant he works at serves Ierico ham and so he often has to explain it to guests. He gives the right answer and they grab a strip steak as their meat.
Team Green, running last, arrives at the dairy for their question about the dye that makes cheddar cheese orange. I didn’t get the answer, but they’re correct and they grab the mozzarella.
At Esposito’s, Team Blue of Nipa, Lisa and Shane has to answer the different parts of the meat, and Dallas Diva Lisa gives it a try and it looks like she got them all wrong except one. So they have to perform a task and they make Shane butcher chicken into eight parts. When he’s done, Team Green still hasn’t arrived so they’re still in second place and they grab the lamb because Nipa says she can easily make Indian food from that. Of course, the other items were a baguette and Danish blue cheese, which doesn’t really scream Indian food to me.
The first two teams are headed toward New Jersey when Team Green arrives at the meat market. They have to name the different cuts of beef and they get it wrong. (Correct answer is chuck, rib, loin and round.) Jeffrey volunteers to butcher the chicken, and when he’s done they’re left with the duck breast.
Commercials. Vegas has a new campaign called “Do Vegas Right Now.” What happened to “What Happens in Vegas Stays in Vegas”? The new one sounds a bit desperate.
The teams head to New Jersey and when Team Gray arrives, there’s Robert Irvine standing on some train tracks. Here comes the train, so they know they’re all going for a ride. Irvine tells them that they have to prepare brunch with their ingredients and whatever else is in the pantry to serve 30 guests and the judges. Then they have to do a presentation because you know the Food Network is all about the show and tell.
The teams go in the order that they arrived. So Team Gray is up first. They have 45 minutes to prep their food and the team decides to make a savory French toast with eggs and herb ricotta and a grilled steak. Adam, the waiter, is in charge of eggs and he talks about poaching them, which Aaron is strongly against. Adam probably notices the trend of poached eggs going on everything, but Aaron has the practicalities of serving a large number of people at a hospital so he knows it’ll be a mess. They’re both pretty stubborn and it’s kind of like my brother and I when we were growing up and we would fight about how things should be done like who’s turn it was to rake up all the mangoes that fell from our tree. (It was like walking around a landmine of mushy mangoes around our yard.)
To appease Aaron, Adam decides to do the eggs sunnyside up, and even that Aaron doesn’t think is a good idea. (He thinks they should be scrambled, which sounds a bit boring to me.) In the meantime, Jennifer is cutting out bread pieces in circles for the French toast and Aaron and Adam thinks it’s too big. Basically the team is falling apart with everyone disagreeing on how things should be made. Aaron looks mad, and he says he wants to walk off the team right now. Aaron, I would wait for the train to stop.
Commercials. Already? And they’re all so repetitive and boring.
Tired of dealing with Adam and his eggs, Aaron focuses on his steak which he’s rubbing with a blend of cayenne and other seasoning. Adam cooked all his eggs in two batches and then plans to cut them into individual servings. But some of the eggs were cooked too close and they’re still runny, so he has to be really careful when cutting around the white to not break the yolk. Um, did you forget he’s on a moving train? Adam belatedly sees Aaron’s point.
When they plate everything, the ricotta thing they made to slather over the meat looks weird and of course the eggs are a bit runny, so Aaron says the plate makes him seasick and he’s on a train. Still, they prepare to go out and sell it.
Adam has the idea of doing a skit, like a train robbery. Aaron is all, “oh, hell no.” But Jennifer and Adam walk out first and start giving their presentation and then all of a sudden Aaron comes out saying something about a train robbery, but tying it to his bold flavored steak. It was very bold, but still not sure what that all had to do with a train robbery. Maybe he needed a cowboy hat.
Right away we get a clip of judge Susie Folgelson saying she got a raw egg, and she’s all like, “gross.” Bobby Flay says Jennifer’s French toast was kind of bland. (BTW, Bobby’s smiling less in this episode. I wonder if he’s not enjoying the train ride.) But they all have nice words for Aaron’s steak.
Next up is Team Blue with Shane, Lisa, and Nipa. Shane and Lisa seems to both defer to Nipa’s Indian cooking and she says she’s going to make a lamb kebob with six different spices. Young Shane makes a salad with blue cheese, romaine and figs while Lisa does a crostini-style French toast.
I don’t really see Nipa cooking her kebob, I guess they were easy because she’s just walking around while Shane and Lisa are scrambling. Lisa starts plating and she’s careful to ration out her crème fraiche to make sure she gets it on all 30 plates. Of course, she thinks she’s done when they discover two more plates and she’s already doled out all her crème fraiche. So with two minutes left, she quickly whips with a fork or spoon this small bowl of whipping cream. She’s like a whipping machine, but a messy one. The plate also looks a bit messy with glop everywhere. Nipa interviews that this was a lot more pressure than she thought and she doesn’t know if she’s ready for this. I’m thinking girl just sleep-walked her way through a challenge, so what does she have to complain about.
Commercials. PUH-lease, the humanity. Did the Food Network oversell this episode?
Now Team Blue does their presentation. Shane stumbles as he’s talking, and Nipa talks about Indian food, of course. Dallas Diva Lisa, surprisingly, is coherent. She talks about the journey through art of fine dining with beautiful basics. She thankfully got rid of her three “Cs.” And she does this neat adlib where she connects with what Nipa was saying earlier about hot and spicy and how they can calm themselves with the crème fraiche. Smooth.
Bobby Flay thought Shane was speaking too fast, plus he felt his salad was overdressed. Bob Tuschman says Nipa has a warmth about her but is too matter-of-fact. Robert Irvine makes this weird face like he’s choking, which I’m guessing means Nipa’s lamb was so spicy he’s choking for water. Tuschman agrees with me that Lisa was oddly simple and refreshing with her beautiful basics point of view. And Bobby likes her French toast.
The Green Team is last and they’re worried that people won’t be hungry after eating the dishes from the earlier teams. (But I think they actually serve each dish to different customers.) Kelsey’s making a duck salad with champagne vinaigrette while Jeffrey makes bread pudding and Kevin makes honey glazed figs crostini. He thinks it’s sexy. But Jeffrey’s doesn’t think fruit on a crunchy toast is sexy.
Jeffrey is looking for oil, and there’s only a squeeze bottle. Turns out Kevin said he would grab the oil before boarding the train, but he only brought enough for his dish. I have to say, Kevin was my early favorite because he’s funny but in this segment he’s really coming off as the clueless chef. He’s into his own world and really not working as a team. Plus, he tries to laugh off all the setbacks as nothing major.
For example, when they start plating, Kevin says they’ve done 30 plates until Kelsey recounts and only sees 20. She spots another stack of 10 off to the side. So they have to take the food off all the plates and replate them to proportion everything, but since they’re in such a rush, not every plate gets even distribution of the food. Kevin looks like, eh, no biggie. If I were in Jeffrey or Kelsey’s shoes, I would slap him across the face with a crostini.
They go and make their presentation, and I’m just glad we’re not heading into another commercial break. They say hello and then there’s this awkward pause. Finally they start talking about love, soul and happiness. Bobby Flay really looks annoyed during the presentation. I wonder if he’s grumpy because he had to wake up early to catch the train. He probably wishes he was out grilling somewhere.
Everyone likes Jeffrey’s Bourbon bread pudding, but the duck was overcooked and Kevin’s crostini was like candy with the sweet figs and honey. Bobby wants to talk to Kevin about his culinary point of view because he’s not buying the romance guy.
The train heads back to the station and the contestants all look worried heading into judgment.
Back at the Carriage House, they go in for their critiques. Nipa says she feels wiped out and that the challenges are harder than she thought. She wonders if she’d like being the next Food Network star. (Remember when Amy last year had similar misgivings and then she cried and eventually came back the winner?)
The judges do this weird thing where they talk in parts. Like Robert Irvine starts with one sentence, then Bobby Flay says the next sentence, and so on with Susie and Tuschman. It is all so very rehearsed that it’s kind of weird.
Here’s how the critique broke down:
Gray Team (Aaron, Adam and Jennifer). The eggs were raw but Aaron’s steak rocked. They also like Aaron’s entrance, and he confides that it was Adam’s idea and Susie calls Adam stupid for giving away a brilliant entrance to Aaron. Bob tells Jennifer to get more authority.
Green Team (Kelsey, Kevin and Jeffrey). The duck was overdone and the plating was off. No one’s buying Kevin’s romantic side and Jeffrey needs more passion.
Blue Team (Shane, Nipa and Lisa). Shane wasn’t happy with his dish, and Lisa had a nice French toast. But this was all about Nipa, who talks about making Indian food and then saying she doesn’t know if she really wants to do this. When Tuschman asks why the hesitation, she answers with “well, look at me.” (I think she was referring to the fact that she might not fit in with the Food Network family because she looks different that the other girls, which I think is such a cop out because if you’re coming in to shake up the existing profile of a network, then of course everyone’s going to look different from you. That’s. Why. You’re. THERE. So don’t use that as a crutch or excuse when you feel less than adequate.)
Bob says she doesn’t seem engage, and I agree because she keeps looking off to the side and never looks at Bob directly. Then she does this rude move and abruptly walks out while Bob is talking. All she says is “sorry, I can’t do this anymore” and leaves.
Commercials. Hey, those Alltell My Circle quick recaps are pretty cool. They do my recaps in 30 seconds. Huh, I guess I’m too thorough!
When we come back from commercial, they show Nipa walking out again because it’s just so good. It was hard for me to count all the dropped jaws and roving eyes. Everyone was shocked that this woman just left the judges in the middle of an elimination. It’s like Food Network suicide. The camera shows Nipa upstairs in the Carriage House pacing and wondering what to do next, saying she didn’t want to cry in front of everyone and now she’s just questioning why she’s there. And then downstairs the judges are saying how they’re rooting for everyone and the criticism is to help. But the fellow contestants try to explain Nipa, saying no one’s used to the constant criticism. As they’re talking, Nipa decides to wander back with her tail between her legs.
Then she breaks into this very heartfelt story about being an Indian girl and an immigrant to the United States who grew up different but would fall in love with food when she’d visit her grandmother in India. Wow, she really pulled a rabbit out of her hat because I can see Susie eating this shit up.
Robert Irvine, who’s probably bored with all this drama and just wants to get on to his next make-believe project, announces the finalists who will be featured in the USA Weekend spread—Lisa and Aaron. They’re both safe and they head upstairs, with Aaron promising to buy every single edition of USA Weekend when it comes out. (I’m sure that’ll make Allen Neuharth happy.)
Bobby then names the other contestants moving on: Kelsey, Jennifer (she always has a weird happy reaction), and Adam (he also has this reaction like he’s always shocked he’s moving on). That leaves Nipa, Jeffrey, Kevin and Shane. Bobby sends Jeffrey to safety. Robert Irvine sends Shane. The two go upstairs, leaving only Nipa and Kevin.
Now, this is where all the bets are on Nipa getting the boot because she totally disrespected the judges. But this is TV and they eat that drama up, so Susie announces that generic Kevin is going home. But Bob Tuschman says Nipa has been warned because any other Food Network star throwing a prima donna fit like that would probably have had their show canceled. (Robert Irvine on the other side didn’t have to worry about that, but he did have to worry about exaggeration.)
Kevin does the typical interview of how he’s shocked and how this isn’t the last we’ll see of him. I’m kind of sad to see him go because I think he would have been fun to watch, but now I’ll just have to rely on Adam. The show lingers on a bit as we see the contestants in the kitchen preparing dinner. So I guess they don’t eat until someone leaves, saving themselves from making an additional plate at the table. Nipa takes this time to apologize to everybody at the house. Maybe she’ll make some of her spicy kebobs for them as a peace offering.
Next week: They have to invent their own packaged food product. Ms. Martha makes her appearance, and Adam is on his knees. There’s more crying in the Carriage House.
Here’s a preview video of next week’s episode:
The Next Food Network Star airs at 10 p.m. Sundays and repeats at 9 p.m. Thursdays. Photos courtesy of the Food Network Web site.
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Sunday, June 08, 2008
Red Onions at the Farmers' Market
The farmers' markets are overflowing now with cherries and strawberries, but in the midst of all that I saw these beautiful HUGE red onions. This is from the San Francisco Ferry Plaza Farmers' Market on Saturday. It's the farmer near the Ghandi statue selling mostly root vegetables. You could smell the sweetness from the red onions a mile away. I'm generally not an onion fan but I got one for a summer salad. Perfect!
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Saturday, June 07, 2008
Food Gallery: My Top 10
I've been tagged by a meme! It's been awhile since I've been tagged. I think because my blog still flies under the radar out in the blogosphere. But that's not the case for my fellow blogger, Foodhoe's Foraging, who gets a lot of tags. So she's the one that passed on her tag to me.
But this latest tag is pretty easy and fun. It's asking bloggers to share their Top 10 favorite food photos. Since photos are a big part of my blog because I love taking pictures, it was easy coming up with my Top 10. Well, almost easy because I did have a hard time narrowing my list down to just 10 favorites!
So here's my Top 10 in no random order. The first is above, and it's my photo of figs. Taking photos of food that I buy and bring home is pretty easy because I can control the styling and lighting, as opposed to when I'm out "in the field." And when the fruit is as seductive as a fig, sometimes all I need to do is place them on a white plate, get up close and click away.
I get a lot of my favorite shots of food at the farmers' market. This particular shot was so perfect in lighting because it's at this particular farmer who has a black netting as a roof for the stand. The black netting defuses the light, so instead of harsh sun on the tomatoes, I got this beautiful soft light. Plus, it didn't hurt that the tomatoes looked so luscious.
Of course I do some dining reviews and it's a struggle to get beautiful shots at a restaurant with dim lighting. So my favorite shots are when I eat during lunch at a restaurant with windows and lots of natural light. This is a scallop salad at Wood Tavern in Oakland. It also helps when the restaurant plates its dishes so dramatically like they do at Wood Tavern.
Sometimes my favorite shots are just those that's all about timing. When I went for dinner at Laiola in the Chestnut Street neighborhood in the Marina, the sun was setting and creating some amazing color in the clouds. And when I looked up at the Laiola sign, I saw the clouds reflected in their windows and I thought it was such an amazing combination. Snap!
My favorite photos involve nice arranging of food, a good lens and great lighting. I sometimes have difficulty balancing lighting in my studio apartment, but for some reason my friend Jessie has great warm lighting at his home. So the few times I snapped shots at his home when invited for dinners, all the photos looked so romantic like this shot of a cheese platter. It helped that I used a macro lens so I can get up real close and get the blurred background.
Travel photos are always fun, mostly because the beauty comes in discovering new things and seeing new sights. And again, it's all about capturing a moment. This is one of my favorite shots from my Vietnam trip I took in January 2007. In a market in Saigon/Ho Chi Minh City, I saw this guy just sitting there just watching time go by. I thought it was so cool how he looked so calm in this extremely bustling market. It was a real moment in time for me.
Again, capturing a moment with interesting lighting that tells a story are the things that make a great photo to me. This is at a cooking demonstration at Williams-Sonoma and the chef was scooping up a stew. The lighting from behind him created this back light that made the hot steam of the pot very visible, which really made this shot show how hot and fresh this dish was.
When I cook at home, I try to style it so it looks really yummy so you'll want to make it at home! One of the easy recipes that's my favorite shot was this chocolate dipped cherries I made. They tasted so good, but deciding to plate them on this blue plate and separating them in an odd arrangement instead of a perfect row made this really ethereal like photo, don't you think? BTW, it is cherry season so you can totally make this yourself.
I'm always on the look out for interesting compositions when I'm out and about shooting shots. So while at the Boulangerie at Hayes, I was sitting inside enjoying my scrumptious lunch when I looked out the window and saw the sign reflected in the light and I thought it was so an interesting shot. Snap!
Sometimes my favorite shots happen by accident. (OK, so it's not sometimes, but most of the time!) This is a shot of a bellpepper that I shot at home awhile back. I was shooting black and white film (yes, in the old days when they had film!) and I must have shook my hand as I snapped and the lighting probably sucked so it didn't give enough light for the camera to capture a clear photo. So what turned out when I got the film developed was this interesting blurred shot that for me looked so seductive and abstract. So that's how this mistake turned out to be one of my favorite food photos.
Now I have to tag five other food bloggers. And since most of the people I would tag were already tagged by Foodhoe (!), I'm just going to tag blogs that I read and love their photography. So I hope they'll consider doing this tag because I do admire their photography and would really love to see their thinking behind coming up with their Top 10 shots. (And even though they don't do this tag, you should still visit their blogs to check out their photos.)
1. Steamy Kitchen. (Jaden creates some amazing photos and have blogged in the past about how she did them.)
2. Hungry Hedonist. (This girl really knows how to eat. She goes to some amazing restaurants and then comes out with great photos all. the. time. I am so jealous of her restaurant shots.)
3. Chez Pim. (Pim is one of the most famous food bloggers in the Bay Area and has some beautiful photography. I know she says she likes taking pictures, so hopefully she'll share her tips.)
4. Becks and Posh. (Here's another famous Bay Area-based food blogger whose photos I admire. I also like how she makes the cute little frames, very nostalgic!)
5. Delicious Days. (This is an international blog and pretty big, so I don't even know if they believe in meme tags, but I'm going to tag them anyways because the photos are in another level.)
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Thursday, June 05, 2008
Top Chef: Season 4, Finale Part I
Guess Who Got Pigeon (Pea) Holed?
Previously: The five remaining cheftestants take over a steak house and cook a lot of meat. Spike uses frozen scallops and that leads to the honor of being the last cheftestant cut in Chicago. But who really cares when we’re all heading to Puerto Rico for a finale stretched over two weeks!? Woo-hoo!
What’s at stake? Since it is the finale, I’m going to give you the run down (via the lovely Padma) because now it matters: a feature in Food and Wine magazine, a showcase in the Food and Wine Classic in Aspen (which is actually next week), a culinary dream vacation in the French Alps, $100,000 in moolah and the title of … TOP CHEF.
Opening scene is of this really blinding sun and splashing waves. We’re not in Kansas, darlings. This is Puerto Rico, the 51st state. The final four start to arrive at the airport, and it must have been a nice long break because they look really relaxed. Or maybe it’s those cut-off jeans they’re all wearing.
Stephanie says she spent her break traveling in Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. Antonia opened up a restaurant and has been cooking 100 hours a week. (Now, if she has a restaurant already, why does she need the $100,000?) Richard arrives all ready to get the game started and he’s happy to see Stephanie and Antonia, who he knew would be in the final four. He doesn’t show the love for Lisa, who arrives last with a new shorter haircut. Lisa forces them all into a group hug. Awkward.
We get the obligatory shots of the sandy white beaches that the cheftestants won’t get to play in, and they arrive at a deck where Padma is waiting along with … is that Tom Colicchio’s brother?
It’s actually Wilo Benet, chef and owner of Pikayo Restaurant, which is supposedly the best restaurant in Puerto Rico. I’ve never been, so I’m just taking Padma’s word for it. Their quickfire challenge is to make the traditional Puerto Rican beachside treat of frituras (fritters), and Chef Benet says they have to incorporate the signature gastronomical ingredient of the islands—plantains (which really look like bananas on steroids).
They have 40 minutes and everyone runs up to the table and start picking away at the plantains, but Lisa is showing some smarts as she runs to the kitchen to check out the protein, opening a mini frig to see containers of prawns and stuff. She grabs some chorizo and duck.
BTW, this is not the Top Chef kitchen. So no shiny and new GE professional chef’s appliances. This looks like the kitchen of a beachside taco stand. Lisa starts making tostones, which she learned during her break. Again, she’s really showing that she did her homework for the finale. Tostones are green plantains that are pulverized and pushed through some wooden mold and then deep-fried until their nice and crispy. I think we’ll be seeing a lot of fried stuff in Puerto Rico.
Woah, Richard almost burned off his faux hawk lighting that gas stove. (BTW, I heard Richard and his wife just got a new baby girl. So he really got busy soon after he finished filming!)
The cheftestants serve up their offerings one at a time to Wilo and Padma. Most of them made tostones, treating it like a chip and adding stuff like ahi tuna (Stephanie) or duck (Lisa). One of Antonia’s dishes didn’t use plantain in it, other than serving a plantain salsa on the side. But in the end, Chef Wilo says his least favorites were Richard’s pork meatballs and green plantain chips. He says the plantain had a raw taste. Antonia was his second least favorite, also because of some raw plantain taste with an added boost of “slimy.”
That, of course, leaves Stephanie and Lisa as his favorites, and he names Stephanie the winner. She’s stoked because this is her first quickfire challenge win—ever!—so she hopes that gives her momentum going into the elimination challenge.
Instead of getting into details of the challenge, Padma and Wilo invite the group to old San Juan for a party, Puerto Rico-style. That means a lot of colorful costumes and dancing, and a whole pig roasted on a spit. Puerto Rico seems to have a lot of forts because everything looks like some Spanish battle.
Anywho, the cheftestants are dancing in the streets, except Richard who says he doesn’t dance. Then the editors do this slow-mo thing, which I have to say they used a lot this season. Mostly it’s when they’re talking about being tired or if something bad is about to happen. But I totally don’t see the reason for it here. The cheftestants are just talking about gearing up for battle the next day. It’s not like someone’s going to drop out or something. They make it seem like this is a “very special episode of Top Chef” where we find cheftestants in rehab.
Commercials. Does everyone own a Blackberry? Oh, and those eco-shaped Arrowhead
water bottles aren’t going to save the Earth. It’s carrying less water because of the handle for the grip, so that means people will have to buy more plastic bottles to drink more water. Just get a regular SIGG water bottle, people! (See my Amazon shop to your right. ;-)
The cheftestants arrive at La Fortaleza, which in recent years have been the official home of the territorial governor. Is that Tom Colicchio with Padma or still the guest judge? I’ve never seen Tom so early in an elimination challenge. He needs a tan.
Padma says 100 VIP guests will arrive at the fort for a cocktail party and they each have to make at least two dishes with Puerto Rico’s favorite ingredient. Hope it’s not plantains. Tom says it’s a whole pig. And they each get one, which they have to butcher. Antonia makes a face like, “Whatchoo talkin’ about Willis?” She wants to go back to the deep dish pizza challenge.
Tom says they’ll have some help, so you know what that means. That’s right, bring on the rejects! In come Dale, Nikki, Spike and Andrew. (Andrew, I miss him! He’s always so funny!) Of course, Lisa in her mind knows she doesn’t want to be paired with Dale because of their “history.” Same goes with Andrew, who questioned her integrity. So really, who can she work with?
Stephanie, having won the quickfire, has the power to pair the chefs with the sous chefs. And if Stephanie was really hungry to win, she would strategically do a “Survivor” evil trick and pair the worst people with the frontrunners. Of course, Stephanie’s too nice. And nice is boring. So we get safe matches of Stephanie and Dale (because he’s actually a good cook), Richard and Spike, Antonia and Nikki and Lisa and Andrew. OK, maybe that last one was to throw Lisa off her game. Andrew interviews that he plays with honor so he’s going to be the best damn sous chef for Lisa because that’s how he rolls.
The sous chefs will go to the local market to buy the fresh ingredients while the cheftestants stay back to hack up their pig. They spend a few minutes with each other making a game plan, and already Richard is being innovative doing a “head to tail” concept while Lisa’s trying to go local and doing Latin cooking instead of her typical Asian style.
The sous chefs go to the local market with $250 and this segment is mostly about Andrew working his way around trying to speak Spanish. Do all the others speak Spanish because they don’t seem to have as much problems as our poor Andrew? He’s so funny. I wish I could hang out with him.
Back in the kitchen, the cheftestants start hacking away. The tops of mallets are flying off and people are sweating in that tiny kitchen. Then Richard stops to call Spike at the market because he remembers drinking malta with this Haitian kid when he was growing up. And it’s some kind of popular malt beverage like caramel beer. So he asks Spike to find some, and I’m thinking Richard sure know how to party when he was growing up.
When the sous chefs come back, everyone’s excited about the ingredients they find and they start prepping the food. Stephanie does a pork belly with a dry rub, and Lisa is busy micromanaging my man Andrew. Richard, again with the hate on Lisa, says she’s like a grey cloud in the kitchen. After they’re all done, everyone leaves for the day and then we get a zoom of Stephanie’s pork belly sitting under the counter in a tray. Dun-dun-DUH.
The next day they arrive to finish up prepping for the party and Dale realizes that he left the pork belly sitting out. Stephanie says she has to throw it out because she doesn’t know how warm the kitchen was overnight. I’m wondering is there really a debate? That pig is a goner. So her pork belly dish is a scratch and Dale is totally totally sorry about it. He really feels bad and I’m sure it was an honest mistake since the refrigerator was so crowded. Stephanie says that she’s been able to pull off last-minute things in the past, so hopefully she can do it this time.
Richard is torching some pig’s feet and we learn that he’s making four dishes, the most of all the three. Antonia is doing three dishes, and one of it is pigeon peas (never heard of that) and rice. She’s having problems with her rice not cooking evenly, so she has to start over. Nikki, her sous chef, senses that Antonia is off her game. She’s not focused. She’s not paying attention to the details. Nikki is quite observant.
Stephanie and Dale are trying to think of a third dish and he suggests crispy pig skin because that’s her style, and she decided to make chicharones with fruit and prosciutto salad. Now she’s all psyched to churn that out along with her Coconut Pork with Plantain Pancakes and Pork Satay in a sugar cane (very Vietnamese).
Commercials. LOL, that Flat Earth chips commercial has a flying pig in it. I bet that little pig is sure glad it’s not in Puerto Rico right now.
The cheftestants arrive at the backyard garden of the fort, and they start setting up and cooking. Stephanie is making her plantain pancakes, which looks like the blinis from the first episode. Guests start to arrive and I don’t know who they are, but supposedly that woman is the first lady of Puerto Rico. And Padma is wearing this really bright light blue toga outfit.
Padma, Chef Wilo, Chef Tom and Gail walk around the stations and this is how it all broke down:
Stephanie’s Pork Satay on Sugar Cane with Miso Almond Sauce, Coconut-braised Pork with Black Plantain Pancakes and Tropical Fruit Salad topped with Chicharones. Gail thought the salad was refreshing and Chef Wilo asks Stephanie for her recipe for the black plantain blinis.
Richard’s Fresh Ham with Local Beans, Pressure-cooked Pork Belly with Pickled Watermelon Rinds, Malta-caramel Pork Ribs and BBQ Pork Shoulder with Braised Greens and Mango. The judges didn’t really say much, but Richard’s faux hawk is battling the humidity of Puerto Rico, trying its best to stand at attention but it’s a losing battle.
Lisa’s Citrus-braised pork belly, Tostones with Black Beans and Onion, and Yuca Rellena with Pineapple Mojo. Tom makes some remark to Gail about the sweetness but I couldn’t make out what he’s saying and the editors didn’t do the captioning like usual. So it could have been something like “Gail, how much more pork and beans do we have to eat?”
Antonia’s Picked Sweet Pepper Salad with Pork Belly, Curried Pork with Pumpkin and Yuca, and Pigeon Peas with Pork Sausage. Padma asks how long she soaked the peas and Antonia says overnight. Antonia also combined the curried pork dish with the pigeon peas and that doesn’t seem to go over well with the judges. I also notice that after the judges leave, Antonia’s standing there with Nikki waiting for guests to come up to her but there’s no line at all. Not a good sign.
The cheftestants arrive at the Puerto Rico version of the “stew room” while the judges are sitting at this really grand table with dramatic lighting. They talk briefly about what they liked and then Padma goes and gets Richard and Stephanie, leaving Antonia to shit in her pants and Lisa to stew angrily like she typically does.
Richard and Stephanie walk in like they’re scared. They look worried like this will be the first time of the entire season that Padma brings in the loser firsts. Even though we’ve had more than 11 episodes and not once did that happen. They’re the favorites. Hugs all around. And Chef Wilo names Richard the overall winner and gives him a brand new 2009 Toyota Corolla. Good luck driving that baby home to the states, Richard!
So then it’s Lisa and Antonia. Lisa says she felt her dishes tasted strong, but she tried Stephanie’s and Richard’s and knew theirs were way better. Tom asked why she didn’t cook Asian, and she says she cooked Latin before living in South Florida. Gail says the puree was too sweet and the dish seemed to be more focused on the garnishes rather than the pig.
Antonia says she realizes her pigeon peas could have been cooked more, and Tom corrects her and says it was undercooked. She then backpedals and says she likes her beans a bit al dente. Gail didn’t like the combination of all the food into one plate.
Deliberations. Chef Tom says that at this stage, it all comes down to who screwed up the most. He says it’s Lisa with her sweet plantain puree and the poorly executed tostone. In the stew room, Lisa is feeling the hate as she says she’s going home too.
Tom says Antonia’s mistake was trying to be rustic but it came off unsophisticated. Plus, there’s no such thing as al dente beans.
Commercials. I notice this episode sure has a lot of beer commercials. Huh, didn’t realize so many frat boys and football fans watch Top Chef.
Antonia and Lisa faces judgment and everything seems to lean toward Lisa going because she’s the most deserving to go. Tom says they needed to bring their A-game but instead they brought their B+-game. Then he says the judges considered which table had the fewest people wanting to eat the food and thinking back to Antonia’s quiet table, I knew she was a goner. Sure enough, Padma sends Antonia packing, and ugh, you can see Lisa trying her best to hide her smile but you know she wants to bust out and celebrate. What a bitch. She tells the judges that they won’t be disappointed. Famous last words, if you ask me.
Antonia feels sad that she’s leaving for these mistakes. And she whispers to Stephanie as they hug goodbye, “kick their asses.” Anywho, Antonia now goes back to her new restaurant and the disappointing face of her young daughter who told her not to come home unless she wins. Oh well, I guess someone’s going to have to learn the hard lessons of disappointment at an early age.
Then you think it’s over when Lisa suddenly turns to Stephanie and Richard and says, “you know, it would have been nice for you to congratulate me. … It just makes me feel like you think the wrong person went home.” Uh, HEL-lo. That’s exactly what they’re thinking. Stephanie gives a half-hearted, congrats, almost as a whisper, but mostly as a shocked reaction to the demanding Lisa. And Richard has the funniest line when he says “what do you expect? You won the fucking bronze metal. Congratulations!”
Next week: It’s the finale of Season 4 and will it be the first female Top Chef with Stephanie? The gastronomical wonders of Richard? Or will Lisa just piss on them all. I wonder if they’re going to cook pig again.
The season finale of Top Chef airs next Wednesday at 10 p.m. (9 p.m. Central) on Bravo TV. Check out videos and multiple blogs at the Top Chef Web site. Photos courtesy of Bravo TV.
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Tuesday, June 03, 2008
Dish on Dining: 1300 on Fillmore
Soulful Sounds Drift from Every Dish
1300 Fillmore St. (at Eddy), San Francisco
Fillmore Jazz Preservation District
PH: 415.771.7100
Open for dinner, Sun.–Wed., 5–11 p.m.; Thu.–Sat., 5 p.m.–1 a.m.; Sunday brunch, 10:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m.
Reservations, major credit cards accepted
www.1300fillmore.com
So much has been written about 1300 on Fillmore, I really wonder what more I can add to all the chatter in the food blogosphere? But when something’s good, I really can’t keep quiet about it.
Opened since late 2007, 1300 on Fillmore is one of two anchors of a luxury development in this neighborhood once known for its jazz but in recent years have been neglected by major commerce. But 1300 on Fillmore, along with the massive Yoshi’s jazz venue and restaurant (I’ll be visiting Yoshi’s next week), has attracted new interest in the lower Fillmore.
1300 on Fillmore is the first venture for chef-owner David Lawrence and his wife, Monetta White. Chef Lawrence has attempted to bring Louisiana Southern comfort with the sophistication of the French cuisine he’s been cooking for years in the city at other locations. The restaurant is a handsome locale that’s part speakeasy, part jazz homage and part neighborhood gathering hole.
In the lounge area, there’s an entire wall of historic photos of some of the jazz legends who’ve set the tone for the neighborhood and for the restaurant. You can dine at the lounge, in the main dining area or in a private dining room that can be reserved for special parties. I visited 1300 on Fillmore both times on my own, so I simply saddled up to the tiny bar in the center of the restaurant.
My first visit was on a Sunday soon after the restaurant started serving brunch (its first brunch service was right before Easter Sunday). When I perused the menu of buttermilk pancakes and hang town fry, I settled for a poached egg salad and the barbeque shrimp and creamy grits. Turns out both of these items from the brunch menu are also available for dinner, so I really didn’t get the full brunch flavor. Oh well.
First up was the Warm Poached Egg Salad ($9) with savoy cabbage in a roasted garlic-bacon vinaigrette. The dish looked beautifully presented, and the poached egg was quite sizeable. It wasn’t a problem getting the warm golden yolk to cream all over the savoy cabbage, creating a glistening salad that was part crunchy and part wilted, in a very interesting way.
Then came the Barbecue Shrimp and Creamy Grits ($14). The plate was definitely an appetizer portion, but it was just as beautifully presented. There wasn’t a very strong barbecue sauce on the shrimp, but it was more a subtle light brown sauce. I didn’t think barbecue when I ate the dish, but I enjoyed it nonetheless. What was really the eye-opener for me was the creamy grits. I don’t eat grits that often, but I never had it so creamy and so flavorful. I really felt like I was somewhere in the south.
With my food I ordered a Bloody Mary and chatted with the bartender, who was very friendly. I found that the people behind the bar really create a neighborhood feel, chatting with patrons like they’ve been coming for years. When I returned a few weeks later for dinner, I got the same bartender and she recognized me right away, welcoming me back like an old regular.
This time with my Mint Julep in hand, I ordered the Bourbon Braised Pork Belly ($12) as a starter. The chunk of pork belly came out sitting on top of a white bean puree and dazzled with a reduction of the bourbon braise. The pork belly was quite tender and was amazingly comforting with the bean puree.
For my entrée I got the Oven-roasted Halibut ($25) with white and green asparagus. The portion size was only slightly larger than the appetizers, but the price is a considerable leap. That’s why I think I was expecting more. Still, it was beautifully plated and I liked the combination of both white and green asparagus. The fish itself had a nice golden color and tender, flakey flesh, but the taste was light—not very bold like some of the other flavors.
Side note: The cornbread, brought to the table on request, is light and crumbly, just like how cornbread should be. It’s served with butter or a house-made tomato sauce, almost like a cocktail sauce.
I should also note that there are a lot more interesting traditional Southern dishes that Chef Lawrence has undoubtedly added his own twist to on his menu. Things like Maple Syrup Short Ribs, Po Boys, Fried Chicken, Sweet Breads and Hushpuppies. But if you know these dishes, you know that most of these are deep-fried. And you know I’m not a big fan of the deep fried, so I passed on many of them.
But despite skipping all the fried goods and not being tempted by dessert, I enjoyed both my visits to 1300 on Fillmore and plan on going back. Its interesting menu, handsome setting, and friendly bar service makes this a dining destination that can bring back the crowds to this historic neighborhood.
Single guy rating: 4 stars (the soul of the city)
Explanation of the single guy's rating system:
1 star = perfect for college students
2 stars = perfect for new diners
3 stars = perfect for foodies
4 stars = perfect for expense accounts
5 stars = perfect for any guy's dream dinner
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Labels: Review
Monday, June 02, 2008
The Next Food Network Star: Season 4, Episode 1
It's No Laughing Matter
Since this is the first episode of the season, we get a “preview” of what’s to come over the next nine weeks, including a lot of smoke in the kitchen, a lot of breaking of things, and a lot of falling on your bum. (Well, maybe that was just that one lady.) There’s a slew of guest judges, including many of your standard Food Network stars, but the highlight I think is Ms. Martha Stewart herself making an appearance. Plus, they go to Vegas, people cry, and someone walks out in front of the judging panel. Draaa-ma!
Cue the music and the flying stars. Hmm, the prize list for this show is shorter than for Top Chef. What’s up Food Network?
Opening scene of New York. I’ve got to get back there for a trip. They show the Chelsea Market, which is the home of the Food Network in Manhattan. If you know Manhattan, you know the Chelsea Market is near the Meatpacking District, which means it’s stinky when you walk around there. Anywho, we start to see the 10 contestants arrive and first up is Kelsey. Oh. My. Gawd. She’s like a living Barbie doll, isn’t she? She’s all blond, and perky, and little.
Kelsey is the first one in this meet-and-greet room and she’s all alone, but she keeps smiling because she knows the camera’s on her. She’s just hoping she’s not Punk’ed.
Next is Kevin, who I think really looks like the guy from “Felicity.” (Not Ben or Noel, but the roommate guy Sean. For you younger readers, I’m talking about the cop who reads minds on “Heroes.”) Kevin walks in and sees Kelsey and he’s not sure if she’s a contestant or a publicist because she’s just so perky.
Then comes 19-year-old Shane, who used to be a chubby kid. Kelsey thought she was the youngest contestant and is a bit bummed that this young kid beat her out on that claim.
Then we get a bunch of people that so far I’m not too excited about. They include the stand-up comic Cory, tall caterer Jeffrey, Jennifer the single mom, and Adam, an improv guy.
Then walks in Lisa. Ahhh, Lisa, every casting director’s choice for throwing a wrench into the mix for good TV. She walks in channeling Anna Wintour and with her wheelie bag, she also looks like a flight attendant.
Our group of contestants is rounded off with Aaron, the good guy from a bad neighborhood (who totally dresses too average for TV IMHO), and Nipa, the spice of color with her Indian cooking and bright clothes.
In walks Bobby Flay, and that’s when Kevin says he “wet his pants.” Kevin is my favorite so far because he totally cracks me up. He’s more funny than the stand-up comic Cory.
Along with Bobby, who’s now a permanent judge and host for the show this season, is our “dynamic” (<-- sarcasm) duo of Susie Folgelson and Bob Tuschman, both top Food Network executives which is why we can’t get rid of them as judges. They toast the contestants with champagne, but Bobby cuts the celebrating short by saying their first challenge is right behind curtain No. 1. Then we get shots of really, really stressed contestants. You’d think they’d be excited about their first challenge but they really look like they’re going to shit in their pants. And it’s the same look they keep throughout this first episode. If you were expecting any cocky standouts ala Marcel or Dale, you can forget about it with this crowd.
(I want to note here that even though Top Chef is extremely popular among the food crowd for its kitchen creds, I still believe there’s room for the type of amateur or self-trained cooks like many of the contestants on The Next Food Network Star. For me, I feel like I can relate to them more because I would probably do the same if I were on this show. And you know I’ve tried!)
Finally, the man behind the curtain appears and it’s none other than Alton Brown and I feel like it’s a flashback of The Next Iron Chef. Adam is all giddy like a school girl. And I’m not just saying that. Those are his words.
Brown goes on and on about “culinary point of view,” which is a really important theme in this series that gets hammered into the contestants in seasons’ past. Basically, it’s the shtick for the show to grab viewers. Giada is the everyday Italian with the va-va-va voom looks. Tyler is the handsome frat buddy who keeps it ultimate. Bobby is the restaurant chef with the spicy flair and the grill. Rachey Ray is … what is Rachel Ray?
Each contestant has to go in front of a camera and say his or her culinary point of view in one sentence. There’s a table with a bunch of props that they can use.
Jennifer is up first and she grabs a rubber chicken as a prop. Her point of view is “keep it simple, I don’t have all day.” Then she goes on about how she cooks all day at a restaurant and comes home to her daughter and really has to make something fast. Brown says she should have stopped at the first sentence, and I agree because then I would have less to recap.
Jeffrey grabs a slab of bacon and says he’s all about classical French training combined with soul food. “There’s going to be a lot of pig,” he says. Isn’t there always?
Aaron is going to teach us how to take herbs and with love turn out great delicious meals. Snoozefest.
Nipa is holding a really big ginger root. She says she wants to teach the world that ethnic food is approachable, but I think she’s specifically talking about just Indian food. Brown asks if she wants to redo her take (hint, hint) but she’s all, “No, I’m good.”
Shane is going for timeless techniques to make easy, at-home French inspired food without the attitude.
Adam is all about the humor and full-flavored comfort food. I have to say, he’s smooth in front of the camera. To show how smooth he is, he grabs a pint of white stuff and drinks it like milk. Too bad it was a quart of heavy cream.
Cory is holding a tomato and … freezes in front of the camera. As a stand-up comic, she would be heckled at this point. Get off the stage! Instead, there’s this awkward moment with Brown. Girl needs some new material.
Barbie Doll Kelsey wants to teach you to be comfortable in the kitchen with innovative twist. Then she spins a graduation cap, I guess to suggest that she has a brain.
My guy Kevin wants to bring romance back in the kitchen, and does some yoga mantra of cooking well, living well, loving well. I would have gone for his romance cooking line if he didn’t get all Deepak Chopra on me.
Lisa gets all dressed up in a chef’s hat and a flower, holding a stack of books. This looks like it’s going to be a mess. Then she starts talking about the three C’s, one is cooking the other is community service. WTF? Brown says he doesn’t know what she’s talking about and her message is not very accessible. She looks annoyed that Brown doesn’t get her. But he’s not the only one.
Commercials. If you want to watch food porn, that new Kraft Tuscan House Italian dressing commercial has some really beautiful photography. Everything looks so fresh and artistic. Unlike Red Lobster who’s now showing food that somehow all looks fake to me.
The contestants are back at the Carriage House in Greenwich Village, which is the same place last season’s contestants lived. Lisa is doing yoga, trying to cleanse herself of her horrible taping earlier. They all get into the same unmarked van they used last season.
At the Food Network kitchen, Brown tells them they’ll be working in pairs. They pull color from a pot and that’s how they’re matched. Kevin is standing next to Lisa and he picks grey. Then it’s her turn and he’s all like “please don’t pick grey, please don’t pick grey,” and sure enough, she picks grey.
The pairs have to make two dishes, each representing their individual culinary point of view, then they have to make a third dish that’s a combined effort of the two. Oh, and they have to do this in 30 minutes, which is like a Top Chef quickfire challenge, times three! I think that’s crazy to cook all that in 30 minutes, but the contestants get into their pairs to start mapping out a menu.
After they’ve narrowed down their dishes, Brown takes them shopping at the Westside Market, which I’m assuming is near Chelsea since Chelsea is on the west side of Manhattan. (See how I know New York?) Lisa is running around like a Chihuahua with a ticking bomb while Kevin is following her going, “I can’t believe I’m working with this crazy woman.” He ends up dubbing her the Diva from Dallas. Thanks Kevin. That’s what I’m going to call Lisa from now on, the Dallas Diva.
Nipa is standing in front of this huge wall of spice jars and she says she can’t find tumeric to make her dish, which is a curried potato side. So instead she just settles for curry powder.
Back in the Food Network kitchen, Nipa and her partner Shane are up first. So they start cooking. She’s making her curried potatoes, called suki bhakji, and Shane is making pork tenderloin wrapped with prosciutto. Shane voices in his interview that he likes to keep his cooking area clean. Cut to the scene of him blending his butternut squash soup and it splashing all over his face. He looks like a mess. You know what else is a mess? His pork tenderloin, which he cuts into and it’s raw in the center.
Commercials. Mercury Mariner. I bet this will be a prize for the winner this year. Oh, Oreo cookies. Do you like to split it and lick the center or do you eat them together? Discuss.
Shane and Nipa is up first, and they serve a table of Food Network stars, including Iron Chef Masuharu Morimoto, Giada DeLaurentiis, Sandra Lee, and the husband-and-wife team known simply as the Neelys (I don’t know their first names so I’m just going to refer to them as Mr. Neely and Mrs. Neely.) Of course, there are the three judges and Alton Brown.
Shane is really sweating in front of the judges, but Nipa does this weird thing where she falls on her sword figuratively by going on and on about how she couldn’t find tumeric and had to settle for curry powder. When they leave, Mr. Neely says the pork was tender and moist unlike the pork on display, which was the undercooked piece. Morimoto says he wouldn’t serve that uncooked pork to any human being.
Kevin and Lisa aka Dallas Diva are cooking. He’s making his French Kiss Onion Soup and she’s making poached salmon, which looks a mess when she’s pulling it out from the pot. Then they work together on a salad.
In front of the judges, Kevin does his thing about romance and Lisa starts talking, again, about her 3 “Cs” which include cooking and community service. But you know what? She always stops after community service and we never get to hear what’s the third C. Brown, who’s already heard this mess, wants to force the issue with the rest of the judges and he asks if they know what she’s talking about. Of course, no one does. Susie says Dallas Diva spoke in circles.
Adam and Jennifer are making potato gratin and honey-glazed carrots to go with their combined dish of meatloaf. Meatloaf in 30 minutes? They’re crazy. When they finally get done mixing all the ingredients for their meatloaf, they only have 9 minutes left to cook it. So they make their meatloaf into small individual-sized loaves and grill them on a griddle. In my neck of the woods, that’s called a hamburger.
Adam walks out to the judges and feels the cold, steely stare of Iron Chef Morimoto.
Commercials. Eeww, did you see that State Farm commercial where the woman is stuck at an airport working on her laptop and then this guy props up his stinky feet next to her? That has happened to me. And Pringle Stix is trying to bring back disco, people.
Adam talks to the table of stars about their “kitchen sink” meatloaf because they threw in all kinds of meat. Giada says the potatoes in the potato gratin were raw, but the judges like their personalities. Tuschman thinks Jennifer is appealing in the single mom tells a story about her daughter kind of way and Susie thinks Adam is a cool guy. Bobby wants to hangout with him.
Kelsey and Aaron are teamed together and they’re smart, making very easy to cook ingredients like salmon and an orzo salad. Of course, they have poor time management so they’re pressured near the end and some of the plating is a mess. They do their presentations and Barbie Doll Kelsey does her best to talk her way out of the fact that some dishes don’t have bread to go with the tomato soup like they originally planned.
Mr. Neely says Barbie Doll Kelsey was fired up and Sandra Lee felt she was real, prompting a quick retort from Giada who says Kelsey wasn’t real at all. Brown tries to save Giada’s comments by helping her out and suggesting Giada wants Kelsey to “tone it down.” Sure, whatever, says Giada. After the pep rally, Giada’s going to write something nasty in Kelsey’s yearbook.
Jeffrey is making deviled eggs, and Cory is making salmon. Is that the third salmon dish the judges are eating? What’s weird about Cory is she says she likes to cook with things that are trendy. So she’s making honey-glazed salmon because honey is so trendy now. Really, honey? Their combined dish is potato pancakes, or latkes to my Jewish friends.
Cory fucks up this presentation as well, stumbling her way and looking really stressed. Bobby calls her out on it and says why does she always look so serious when she’s a comedienne? He asks if she’s going to bring her comedy to the kitchen, and she says she will, but apparently not right now.
Mr. Neely says the salmon was too sweet while Brown says Jeffrey’s eggs were too salty. Tuschman and Susie comments on Cory, saying she looked tortured.
The contestants are back at the Carriage House waiting to face the judges. Man, they look like they’re being called to the principle’s office. They all think they’re the ones to go. Well, then this will be a pretty fast season if they all went, wouldn’t it?
When they face the judges Tuschman, Susie and Bobby, Susie goes on and on again about having a breakthrough personality and unique culinary point of view. Then they start with the critiques and here’s how it broke down:
Aaron and Barbie Doll Kelsey were the favorites, but Tuschman says Kelsey can come off as an over-caffeinated cheerleader (I bet Giada passed him that note to say). Aaron needs to get a personality.
Adam and Jennifer. The judges really don’t have much to say at this early stage other than Adam is funny and Jennifer needs to “focus, focus, focus,” according to Bobby. Um, focus on what?
Kevin and Lisa. Dallas Diva’s point of view is baffling, and Kevin’s romantic view needs to be distinguishable from all the other love doctors in the kitchen.
Cory and Jeffrey. Their food was the worst of the group, and Cory is too dark for a comedienne.
Shane and Nipa. Bobby says Nipa’s sense of confidence is surprising, and I’m pretty sure he means it in a bad way, like she’s borderline cocky. But he doesn’t come out and say it. Susie tells Shane that he needs to put his best forward and then she makes him cry when he has to talk about putting a piece of himself out for display every time he cooks. And he even looks to Bobby for empathy and Bobby just nods his head to end the awkwardness. Then Susie says, “I’m sorry,” like she has to take a break because maybe she’s going to cry? This is the most crying I’ve seen in the first episode in years. Awwwwk-ward.
Commercials. In the State Farm commercial this annoying woman goes around asking people how much of a deductible she should have. Lady, just go with $500.
Back in the judges’ room, Bobby announces who gets to move forward, and they’re Aaron, Barbie Doll Kelsey, Jeffrey, Kevin, Jennifer and Adam. The six are excused and they breathe a sigh of relief upstairs.
That leaves Nipa, Shane, Dallas Diva and Cory. Bobby gives Nipa the first pass, and she leaves the room right away without him even excusing her. Then Shane gets the pass, and he’s about to burst into tears. Then that leaves Cory and Dallas Diva, and I hate to give it away but at this point I already knew Cory was leaving because in the previews at the top of the show there were future scenes of Lisa falling on her bum (yep, she’s the one). So I knew Cory was a goner, and even though Tuschman calls Lisa’s personality overpowering and rigid, it’s Cory who’s sent home for her unhappy performance as a standup comic doing food.
Next week: Robert Irvine is the guest host and Food Network execs are cringing at this episode already. (Irvine’s contract was unceremoniously not renewed from the Food Network earlier this year when he allegedly was caught making up stuff on his bio.) The contestants cook on a train and everyone looks angry, especially Susie Folgelson, who has to eat a raw egg. And at the judges’ table, Nipa walks out for some unknown reason. Maybe it’s to get her Bobby voodoo doll that she left behind. Here's a video preview ...
The Next Food Network Star airs Sunday nights at 10 p.m. and repeats on Thursdays at 9 p.m. on the Food Network. Check your local listing, and go to the Food Network site by click on the banner below and vote for your fan favorite. (At this point I would say vote for Kevin.) Photos courtesy of the Food Network Web site.
NFNS Giveaway Drawing Closed
Today was the last day to enter the NFNS giveaway on my blog and the chance to enter is now closed. Go to the original post in the comments section to find out the lucky winner!
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Sunday, June 01, 2008
Woo-Hoo, Giants Win!
I haven't been cooking lately because I've been lazy after coming back from vacation, and because, well, it's baseball season so all I do is sit around watching games on TV. Or when I'm lucky, I get to see it live like I did on this beautiful Sunday afternoon.
I was at AT&T Park for a San Francisco Giants game, the last of a three-game series with the San Diego Padres. Everyone was confident going into the game because pitching was young ace Tim Lincecum, who is leading the team with the most wins by a pitcher so far this season.
The game was moving at a brisk pace with both pitchers doing well to keep the innings short. So that gave me time to check out the food. I tried to look for anything new but there didn't seem to be that many new things.
The only thing that did seem new is this big chocolate-colored box of a stand by Ghiradelli, which sells a lot of ice cream things. I'm sure this is going to be really popular when it gets hot. Despite the sun, it was still a bit chilly today.
I had to figure out where to get some lunch so I decided to check out these stands behind the scoreboard where they sell the Crazy Crab sandwiches. I wasn't going to get a crab sandwich, which is crazy expensive, but I checked out the Anchor Grill because I was craving some meat after watching my family eat meat all the time when I was in Hawaii.
So I ended up getting a cheeseburger for $7.50 at the Anchor Grill. They sell regular cheeseburgers at other stands for only $6.50, but supposedly this is fresh off the grill. They cook it all well so there's no pink inside. It was OK but there was a lot of juice and I wasn't sure if that came from the meat or the grease. Notice something missing from the burger? Yeah, it's a cheeseburger but you don't see the cheese. Anyway, it's underneath the burger. There's just this thin layer of melted cheese. I had to take the lady's word that it was there.
Around the 7th inning when the Giants led 1 to 0, I went hunting for a snack. I wanted to try something different that you normally wouldn't get at a ballpark, and so I got some tiramisu from the North Beach Grill over by the first base side on the promenade level. It cost $6 and it's from Victoria Bakery.
Here's the layers of the rum-soaked cake. The cake was pretty good, but the cream was a bit stiff and it had a slight sour taste that I didn't like. I don't think this is worth $6.
At an earlier game, I had a ticket for the field level and that gives you access to some food stands on the ground level behind home base. I don't really like how the Giants restrict the food area depending on your ticket, because there's a lot of interesting food things on the club house level that I rarely get to try because I don't really like to sit on the club level. So anyway, the food stands behind home base included this Joe Garcia stand selling Mexican food.
Here are Joe Barcia's offerings, your typical burritos, street tacos, etc. I didn't try any of them.
The alcohol stands behind home base is also extra fancy, like this wine bar.
Back to today's game, the Giants lost its lead in the 7th when reliever Tyler Walker came into the game. He is not my favorite player, just for this reason that he always gives up the lead, which he did today. But in the end, we went into extra innings and the Padres took the lead at the top of the 10th but the Giants were able to rally in the bottom of the 10th to win the game. (And against all-time saves leader, closer Trevor Hoffman.) So it turned out to be a good game after all.
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