Garlic Shrimp…what’s not to Like?

Posted in Gastromical on March 29th, 2008 by gastromical

Very Garlicky and Very Shrimpy Pasta

The key to this dish wasn’t as much as the garlic as it was the shrimp flavor from the head and the shells. I spent some time shelling and deveining a pound of shrimps, and my arm hurt from pressing them to get the juice out, but all the work was worth it. I used rigatoni pasta but they turned out to be too big for the small pieces of shrimps. When you try this, use penne instead. You can also substitute the vermouth with white wine. I just didn’t want to waste a perfectly good and pricey Chateauneuf-du-Pape white–we needed another bottle of it after this very garlicky and very shrimpy pasta was done.

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Anthony Bourdain - Raunchy Travel Channel Chef Feeds on Food Network

Posted in Gastromical on March 25th, 2008 by gastromical

Anthony Bourdain, Travel Channel’s, Galloping Traveling Chef speaks truth about the nature of the Food Network shows. We’ve copied it upon our own websites so do give it a looksie - click here: Bourdain Vid.

Mario Batali and The Naked Cook, Jamie something or other, are in the background. I was reading recently that Batali left FN under poor circumstances. He was fun to watch on Iron Chef which doesn’t seem to be on anymore. I used to watch the original Japanese shows and they were really good. There was one on every day.

Bourdain is fun to watch and his show is fun to watch as well as he traverses many places in many time zones.


Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (P.S.)

Kitchen Confidential Updated Ed: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (P.S.)
By Anthony Bourdain

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A deliciously funny, delectably shocking banquet of wild-but-true tales of life in the culinary trade from Chef Anthony Bourdain, laying out his more than a quarter-century of drugs, sex, and haute cuisine—now with all-new, never-before-published material

Top Ten Nibblers For The Hard At Work

Posted in Gastromical on March 25th, 2008 by gastromical

Marci AlboherMarci is a former corporate lawyer who has written about workplace issues and careers for The New York Times since 2001.
Top 10 all-around picks, in no specific order, to stash at your desk or in your office fridge

1. Raw, unsalted nuts (almonds, pistachios, cashews, walnuts, pecans)

2. Kashi TLC granola bars, Gnu Flavor & Fiber bars, Lara bars (or check out youbars.com and create your own)

3. Low-Fat Laughing Cow Cheese, Coach Farm Goat Cheese or organic part-skim string cheese

4. Fage 0% Greek Yogurt or Stoneyfield Farms Low-Fat Organic Yogurt

5. Wasa, Finn Crisp, Kavli or Dr. Kracker wholegrain crackers

6. Organic peanut, almond or cashew butter (any organic/natural brand will do, or get the freshly ground stuff at your local Whole Foods Market or health food store or through FreshDirect.com)

7. McCann’s Irish Steel Cut Oatmeal or Arrowhead Mills Organic Original Instant Oatmeal

8. Kashi GoLean or Heart to Heart Cereal; Uncle Sam’s Cereal; Bear Naked Granola (watch portions!)

9. Sweet Riot Chocolate Covered Cacao Nibs (for the occasional afternoon chocolate craving)

10. Good Health Half-Naked Popcorn or Glenny’s Soy Crisps (1.3oz – small bag)

 


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StarBucks - The Hand That Drips You? Or Serpent’s Teeth.

Posted in Gastromical on March 22nd, 2008 by gastromical

Tips ruling against Starbucks sends a jolt to other eateries

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Pooling gratuities is a common practice, and California and several other states require managers to keep their hands out of the jar.

By Andrea Chang and David Colker, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
March 22, 2008

The restaurant industry got a bad case of coffee jitters Friday after a San Diego judge slapped Starbucks Corp. with a more than $100-million judgment for unlawfully giving supervisors a cut of barista tips.

The California Restaurant Assn. wouldn’t comment on how the decision announced Thursday by Superior Court Judge Patricia Cowett might affect other eateries.

And consultants didn’t want to get on the wrong side of the coffee giant.

“I am working in an industry where you would not want to be attached to anything extremely negative about Starbucks,” said Darren Tristano, executive vice president of Technomic Inc., a Chicago-based food industry consulting company.

But the issue isn’t about to go away. Starbucks is planning to appeal the ruling, which bans shift supervisors from sharing in tip jar money even if they make drinks and serve customers alongside lower-ranked baristas. The penalty plus interest would be paid to baristas who worked at California stores since October 2000.

And it’s clear that some non-Starbucks chains are facing the same situation.

Pooling tips is a common practice, and California and several other states require managers to keep their hands out of the tip jar.

But restaurant owners can get tripped up when they designate some hourly employees as supervisors. Thursday’s ruling could cause Starbucks and other eateries to change how they do business, perhaps altering their pay systems or the way they differentiate management from workers.

“We allow all of the people who work behind the counter to share the tips,” said the owner of a local cafe with counter service. He didn’t want his name printed for fear of falling on the wrong side of the tip debate.

“Eighty percent of the people who work behind the counters are supervisors, so it would be unfair if we allowed the crew people to take all the tips. They would be making more money than the supervisors.”

Dan Kim, North American president and chief executive of the Red Mango frozen yogurt chain that has 18 U.S. shops, said he knew about the pending Starbucks case when he opened the first of the stores last year.

“We were actually going to not do tips at all because of that,” Kim said. “But tips are pretty important — that extra dollar per customer really does help.”

The stores have three levels of employees, all paid by the hour.
Only employees on the lowest end of the pay scale can receive a share of the tip jar. Managers and supervisors who work the counters miss out but can get bonuses based on a store’s quarterly performance.

The Starbucks case was not the first to take up this matter. Labor attorney Sheryl Willert represented a restaurant in Washington state — which has a tipping law similar to California’s — that was sued by its workers over the sharing issue. Willert lost the case, which was decided about a decade ago with little fanfare.

“But this is Starbucks,” she said. “It’s going to be a wake-up call.”

Few on either side of the counter at Starbucks seemed happy with the court’s ruling.

On Friday morning, shift supervisor Robert Velasquez was the only employee making drinks at a crowded shop at La Brea Avenue and San Vicente Boulevard in Los Angeles. Under the decision, he will now go tipless.

“When there are no baristas here, supervisors are the ones who make the drinks,” Velasquez said. “And we should be able to get tips.”

Velasquez, 18, says he earns about $2.50 an hour from tips, which he uses for gas money. He stands to lose as much as $100 a week as a result of the ruling.


 

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Night of The Geisha

Posted in Gastromical on March 21st, 2008 by gastromical

My Neighborhood Bar: The Geisha House

March 21st, 2008

In other cities, like Brooklyn or Boston, there is a concept known as “The Neighborhood Bar”. Such a venue, also referred to as a “dive bar” is a casual, low-key, unpretentious bar a short distance from one’s house. The drinks are typically cheap, the atmosphere friendly, and (shocker) it is socially acceptable to show up by yourself.

I love this concept: my neighborhood feels otherwise. Two blocks south of my house lives Parc, Bella, Le Deux, Mood, Opera and Geisha House. I can’t imagine the looks I would get if I walked down the street in leggings and a sweatshirt and took a seat by the bartender at Le Deux and struck up a conversation about the brews on tap. Now this is not fault of the establishments itself: I am merely complaining because I would like a place to be able to do such a thing. It would defeat the idea of a “Neighborhood Bar” to drive a bit east or further south, especially when in Hollywood a distance of one mile can take approximately ½ an hour to traverse.

These bars cater to tourists, couples on awkward dates, and parties, so on any given night when walking home I am constantly dodging taxis, limos and girls in trashy miniskirts from Forever 21. I dodge some nasty looks as well: DON’T TAKE UP SO MUCH SIDEWALK, GIRL IN JEANS AND FLATS WITH NO MAKEUP.

Last weekend an old friend of mine, we will call him Michael, told me he was meeting people at the Geisha House for a birthday party of, surprise, a girl he didn’t know. Did I want to come? The proximity of my studio to Geisha House made the offer incredibly appealing. I could just walk down the street! The walk was so short, I could even wear heels!

If you have never lived in Hollywood, I need to explain a few things. Parking is difficult from 4:30pm through 10am, daily. By difficult I mean impossible. There are some meters (which are patrolled constantly), a few expensive flat-rate lots, and many taxi and tour bus loading zones which ARE NOT TO BE STOPPED AT, EVEN FOR A SECOND, WHAT ARE YOU THINKING NICE HOMELY PERSON JUST TRYING TO UNLOAD GROCERIES. So once a Hollywood resident finds a parking spot, he does not go anywhere that would involve driving for a few days in order to bask in the glory of actually having his car parked in a place that does not cost money.

And on this weekend night when Michael called, my car was indeed in one of these spots. Huzzah. I was thrilled to accept his invitation and join the ranks of “those that party on Hollywood Boulevard” as opposed to “those that sit and complain in apartment on Hollywood Boulevard”.

The Geisha House was loud, flashy and packed. Upstairs, where I spent most of the night, was pretty much standing room only. It is technically open air (I suppose a 2 foot space in between wall and ceiling counts) and therefore people can smoke. Getting drinks took a while, and the bartenders all wear these ugly red wifebeaters that have a slit down the center. This is not their fault, and I tried not to hold it against them as I shelled out $20 for a glass of house wine and a gin and tonic.

The crowd was either gross mid 20s “dudes” who flirt by staring at you for an extended period of time but don’t approach you, or out-of-towners clicking the shutter on their disposable cameras, like, 50 times a minute. I have a slight feeling these out-of-towners hail from Orange County, or Thousand Oaks. Michael and I huddled at a table in the corner that was not being used, and were politely attended to by servers checking to see if we wanted more drinks. We did.

I walked home after two hours or so, thrilled that I was supporting neighborhood businesses. Even more thrilled that I was only two blocks away from my large, comfy bed. Geisha House, I don’t think I’ll ever become a regular, but it was a decent Saturday night.

Though, I am still moving on April 1st.


 

Bloody Mary Mix, Dave's Gourmet Insane Mary Spicy Bloody Mary Mix Is the Thick, Rich, and Spicy Drink Mix You Have Been Looking For. It Has Just the Right Amount of Spices and Is Full of the Freshest Flavor You Will Ever Taste. Mix It with Vodka, As a Marinade or Ingredient, or As a Drink on It's Own  

Bloody Mary Mix, Dave’s Gourmet Insane Mary Spicy Bloody Mary Mix Is the Thick, Rich, and Spicy Drink Mix You Have Been Looking For. It Has Just the Right Amount of Spices and Is Full of the Freshest Flavor You Will Ever Taste. Mix It with Vodka, As a Marinade or Ingredient, or As a Drink on It’s Own
From Dave’s Gourmet

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Product Description

WINNER NATIONAL SCOVIE & NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE SPECIALTY FOOD TRADE AWARDS. This is a hot and spicy mix with hints of horseradish, peppers and savory herbs. You’ll be crazy about this drink. It also makes a great cocktail sauce and base for gazpacho.

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Features

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Reader with a Gordon Ramsey Beef.

Posted in Gastromical on March 20th, 2008 by gastromical

2008-03-20_091021-don%27t-be-fooled-by-celebrity-chefs.jpg
Photo credit: Brad Barlet/Getty Images

My daughter was angered by an article in the Globe and Mail today, and suggested I write a post about it. It was about the Canadian launch of Gordon Ramsay’s new cookbook entitled Gordon Ramsay’s Fast Food (2008, Key Porter Books).

According to the article, what makes the food so fast is this: You open a jar of “gourmet” sauce and pour it on whatever you are cooking, or you buy already roasted meat to put on top of your pasta. It seems is the in thing to do for readers of Nigella Lawsons’ Nigella Express (2007, Hyperion) and Martha Stewart Living’s Great Food Fast (2007, Clarkson Potter). Apparently, so says the article, “people will think you fussed and fussed.” Well, I think people can tell a processed food over homemade anytime.

I can tell you I have made lots of easy, fast recipes that my guests have thought I fussed over, without opening a jar of sauce or buying ready-made ingredients. I remember years ago, when I was hosting a barbeque, and I was making chicken satay, I sent my husband off to the grocery store for ingredients. When he had trouble finding something, he asked a clerk who pointed to a jar of satay sauce and said, just buy that. He said he could, but it was pointless because I’d never serve it. He was right. That isn’t to say I don’t used canned items. I do, but I’ve used canned tomatoes when they are out of season, and canned beans and the like, just not ready-made food.

There are a number of things at issue here:

1. We have become so enamoured of celebrity chefs on television, and the difficult menus that they seem to effortlessly pull off while we watch their shows, that cooking seems scary and challenging. It’s not.

2. We are being encouraged to consume products that are expensive, highly processed, and filled with chemical additives that we don’t need or want in our diet. Read Michael Pollan.

3. As I pointed out in my post about eating out for my birthday, chefs use much more salt and fat than anyone needs. So do bottled sauces. Your food can still taste great without that.

Don’t be fooled into thinking that you can’t put an easy, quick meal on the table without resorting to pouring something ready-made out of a jar.

Difficulty level: Easy


 

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Gordon Ramsay's Fast Food  

Gordon Ramsay’s Fast Food
By Gordon Ramsay

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Product Description

Throw away the takeout menus, ready meals, and convenience foods! These days everyone wants fast food but at the same time, they want to eat well. And theres no one better than Gordon Ramsay to show you how to cook real food fast and make it taste delicious too! With his unique style, high voltage energy, and passion for good food Gordon shows how to get a great meal on the table in less time than it would take to have takeout delivered. Taking his theme from his new UK series of C4s The F Word, his new bestseller is packed with ideas for 5-minute snacks, 10-minute main courses, and 30-minute menus for all occasions. A cookbook for the way we live today, Gordon Ramsays Fast Food is the stunning follow-up to his fabulously successful library of titles.

 


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2684 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-03-28
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 256 pages

Table Manners - Mother Knows Best!

Posted in Gastromical on March 17th, 2008 by gastromical

From: What Men Need To Know

table manner tips
photography by Richard Gifford

We all remember the basics our mothers taught us about table manners–no elbows on the dinner table and don’t talk with your mouth full. But ever wonder which fork to use for your salad or how to signal a waiter at a fancy restaurant? Read on and learn the basics in table manners that will be sure to impress your date, girlfriend/wife’s parents, employers or whomever you dine with.

Table Setting Placement

In formal settings, all the silverware, glassware, cups, saucers and the like are placed on the table, so it’s often difficult to know which fork to use when or which water glass is yours. As a general rule to thumb, silverware is lined up in the order in which a person will use them, going from the outside, in. For instance, the fork and knife used for the salad are placed in the outermost of the setting, farthest from your plate (with the exception of the spoon). Dessert silverware, if not brought out with the dessert, are placed at the top of your entrée plate. Glassware, cup and saucer are placed to your right, while the napkin, bread plate and butter spreader to your left.

10 Table Manner Tips

Now that you know how the table setting is laid out and when to use each, here are 10 tips for the duration of the meal:

  1. When dining with six or more, it’s polite to wait till roughly 50% of the table has their food before starting your meal. In smaller groups, wait until the entire table has their food, unless food temperature is at high risk in decreasing the enjoyment of the meal, and/or others at the table incessantly insist you begin.
  2. You can and should use your knife to cut large pieces of lettuce or other ingredients in your salad. Nothing is worse than trying to shove a large piece of lettuce in your mouth and having some of it stick out. (No brainer, but this applies to your entrée as well.)
  3. The proper way to butter a piece of bread is to rip off a piece that’s about one or two bites in size, butter it, and eat it. Repeat. Never bite straight into a roll, and refrain from cutting it in half and buttering.
  4. While cutting meat, the correct way is to cut a piece and then switch your fork to your right hand to pick it up. This method is considered the “American” way. Not switching your fork and using your left is called the “Continental” way, and is done most often in European countries. This way is gaining acceptance and I wouldn’t be surprised if one day soon it’s considered acceptable in fine dining. Also, cut meat a piece at a time. Cutting the entire meat up into pieces or cutting more than one at a time is tacky.
  5. Wipe your mouth before taking a sip of your drink. It’s unsightly to see food particles or grease on the rim of your glass. Also, it’s considered rude to take a sip of your drink with your mouth full. Plus, backwash is gross!
  6. When leaving the table during the course of your meal, put your napkin on your chair, not the table. No one wants to see your stained napkin. And at the completion of the meal, place it on the left of your plate, or if your plate has been cleared, in the center.
  7. When in a situation where you have to pass food or condiments to others at the table, pass it to your right, or counter clockwise. Never do a “boarding house reach” across the table.
  8. When you don’t want to swallow a piece of food in your mouth (e.g. a bone or a piece of fat), move the piece to the front of your mouth and use your fork (or spoon if that’s what you were using) to retrieve it from your mouth and into the side of your plate. The only time its okay to use your fingers is when it’s a fish bone.
  9. To get the waiter’s attention, the most polite way is to make eye contact. However chances are they are busy and/or are ignoring you. It’s acceptable to raise your hand to head level, just don’t go overboard by raising it way above your head and wave it about.
  10. When you’re done with your meal, the proper placement of the silverware is to lay them parallel to each other and across the plate with the handles facing the right. To clarify, the ends would be facing 10 o’clock and four. Note: Not all waiters will know this and they still may ask you if it’s okay to clear your plate. At least you appear classy.

After reading this, you may realize you may not have as good table manners as you thought you did. (It’s okay, it happens to the best of us.) And honestly, I’m not saying these are not the “be all, end all” of table manners, but if you follow these tips, you’ll be a step closer towards proper table etiquette.


 

Bee Movie!


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Get Well Soon Chicken Soup Gift Basket - Gift Tote  

Get Well Soon Chicken Soup Gift Basket - Gift Tote
From ArtofAppreciation.com

Price: $39.99

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description

Contrary to the optical illusion, there is no need to look for a can opener! Our eye-catching paperboard gift tote provides an effortless assortment that is sure to bring a smile and make anyone feel better. It holds Feel Good Snack Mix, Chocolate Chip Pound Cake, Pirouline Wafer Rolls, Raspberry Tea Cookies, Assorted Napoleon Belgian Bonbons, soothing Blueberry Tea, and Chicken Noodle Soup Mix. Each gift is carefully hand packed, topped with a bow and includes a personalized gift message from you! HOSPITAL DELIVERIES: We will gladly ship your gift direct to a hospital patients room but highly encourage you to ship instead to a caregiver or loved one who can hand deliver your gift to the hospital. It has been our experience that patients are often moved or released early missing their thoughtful gift from you. To determine when your gift will be delivered, please click on the “View Shipping Rates and Policy” link below:


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #204 in Gourmet Food
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Bestest Sandwiches In America

Posted in Gastromical on March 17th, 2008 by gastromical

From Esquire

Jimmy's Favorite

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Jimmy’s Favorite

 

 

 

Jimmy’s Favorite

Jimmy and Drew’s 28th Street Deli, Boulder, Colorado

Never mind that Jimmy and Drew left Chicago to sell meat in a vegan stronghold: They survive because they make everything in-house. They thrive because Jimmy’s namesake Reuben swaps pedestrian rye (meh, it’s just a meat vessel) for schmaltz-fried latkes the size of your hubcaps. (2855 Twenty-eighth Street; 303-447-3354)

Porchetta

Salumi, Seattle

The daily fresh-pulled mozzarella runs out before the line of customers at Salumi, started by Armandino Batali (Mario’s dad). Don’t let the curing bats of fennel-studded finocchiona dangling from meat hooks distract: You want the porchetta — braised-until-melting pork shoulder with peppers, carrots, and onions on a stout roll to soak up the profligate juices. (309 Third Avenue South; 206-621-8772)

Cuban Meat Sandwich

Paseo, Seattle

No place in Seattle could care less whether you come in than Paseo. The shoe-box shack has no sign, takes no credit. Has so few seats that devotees eat outside on the trunks of their cars. What keeps them returning? The milagro that is the Cuban meat sandwich: marinated, slow-cooked pork ganged into a baguette slathered with garlicky mayonnaise, then mounded again with cilantro, jalapeños, and fat O’s of caramelized onions. Seattle’s a long way from Cuba, but this sandwich erases every mile. (4225 Fremont Avenue North; 206-545-7440)

Bánh Mì

Saigon Sandwich Shop, San Francisco

A culinary legacy of imperialism: French baguette and Vietnamese barbecued pork, sprinkled with shredded carrots, onions, jalapeños, and cilantro. (560 Larkin Street; 415-474-5698)

Reggie Deluxe

Pine State Biscuits, Portland, Oregon

A hangover cure found only at Portland’s Farmers Market (for now): fried chicken, bacon, cheddar, gravy, and an over-easy egg on a cream-top buttermilk biscuit still hot from the outdoor oven. (South Park Blocks, SW Harrison and Montgomery; Saturdays)

 

 

Trailer Park Monte Cristo

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Trailer Park Monte Cristo

 

 

 

Trailer Park Monte Cristo

Beachland Ballroom, Cleveland

Bobbing in a sea of Blue Ribbon, battered by gale-force amps, you need something solid to hold on to — and hold down. So: Dip a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich in pancake batter, dunk it in a deep fryer, and dust it with powdered sugar. Voilà: Bar eats supreme. The crisp, cakey crust conceals a molten heart as sweet as Cleveland’s own. (15711 Waterloo Road; 216-383-1124)

Monte Cristo

Canter’s Deli, Los Angeles

Popularized in the ‘60s at the restaurant inside Disneyland’s Pirates of the Caribbean ride, the Monte Cristo is bread, turkey, ham, and Swiss dipped in batter and grilled like French toast. The Canter’s version is a sweet, meaty sponge sprinkled with powdered sugar and served with strawberry jam. (419 North Fairfax Avenue; 323-651-2030)

Club Sandwich

Restaurant Guy Savoy, Las Vegas

Two tiny triangles of toasted country bread and two disks of creamy foie gras transformed by Gallic culinary voodoo into a bite-sized treatise on opposites — simple versus complex, earthy versus rarefied — all of it gone too soon, in the melancholy French manner. (3570 Las Vegas Boulevard South; 702-731-7731)

The Tyler

Cheese ‘N Stuff, Phoenix

It began in the days before the belly and the beer that made it, when I was a high school wrestler. My prize for making weight was two hours to ingest as much as I could before getting my ass kicked. I found Cheese ‘n Stuff, which stood out not just because it was old and weathered in new, prefab Phoenix but because it had all these weird foods — pickled things, things in aluminum tubes, headcheese. A father and son — Stan Zawatski, middle-aged, and Emil, his father — were behind the counter. This was my creation: a hoagie roll, split wide and topped with Boar’s Head turkey, Muenster, and lettuce, dressed with ribbons of tomato and hot peppers, deli mustard for zing, avocado for lubrication. I ate it at the gym before my match. Then again before my next. I went the week after that, twice. Then I quit wrestling, and on good weeks had it every other day. I ate it before the first concert I drove to with friends, and on graduation day. After a few months, I didn’t have to order anymore. Just enter and smile, a nod between priest and supplicant. Or call first, get Stan’s daughter on the phone — ”Tell your dad Tyler’s coming in, okay?” (5042 North Central Avenue; 602-266-3636) –Tyler Cabot

Cochon de Lait Po’Boy

Walker’s Bar-B-Que, New Orleans

For years, this sandwich — twelve-hour-hickory-roasted suckling pig, topped with creamy Cajun mustard slaw — was available only at Jazz Fest. Now there’s a shop, where the cult of the cochon can worship year-round. But you can still get it at Jazz Fest. (10828 Hayne Boulevard; 504-241-8227)

 

 

Torta de Milanesa

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Torta de Milanesa

 

 

 

Torta de Milanesa

Las Nueva, Los Angeles

A neon crown hangs in the doorway of the East L. A. institution that serves the king of the spicy torta, or Mexican sandwich: breaded carne asada, cheese, avocado, and jalapeños on a toasted roll glistening with grease. Dip it in one of the homemade salsas. (3701 East First Street; 323-264-0678)

Italian Beef

Al’s #1 Italian Beef, Chicago

The stockyard special: thinly sliced beef on bread from the 122-year-old Gonella bakery, enhanced by giardiniera, a fermented vegetable relish made with hot peppers and celery. You could buy the ingredients and study the method, but it ain’t gonna taste like Al’s. (1079 West Taylor Street; 312-226-4017)

Jibarito

Borinquen, Chicago

At first it looks like any sandwich: bread, mayo, meat, iceberg lettuce, tomato. But the “bread” is actually twice-fried green plantains (sliced and pressed into rectangles and brushed with garlic and oil), and the meat is traditional Latino (slow-cooked pork; chopped skin-on fried chicken). An American sandwich with Puerto Rican roots. (1720 California Avenue; 773-227-6038)

McRib

McDonald’s, Multiple Locations

The pickles slay me. The other components of the McRib — sauce, meat, onions, bun — are straight outta barbecue antiquity. But the pickles are an unexpected wacko touch. Is that how they do it in . . . what, Kansas City? Because I grew up an active citizen of fast-food nation, this is what my palate has been calibrated to want: the overdetermined tang of the sauce, meat that tastes slightly of the mixing vat, the grace note of those pickles. I look forward to its occasional rerelease, because however artificial, it tastes like the real thing to me. –Scott Dickensheets

Grilled Cheese

Café Muse, Royal Oak, Michigan

Grilled cheese: Wonder bread, Velveeta, and a clothes iron. Or: Havarti, for creaminess. Mozzarella for gooeyness. Fontina for bite. Honey to linger on the tongue, paired with the sharp anise nip of fresh basil and the sweet tang of grilled tomato. (317 South Washington Avenue; 248-544-4749)

Lisa C’s Boisterous Brisket

Zingerman’s, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Gold Angus-beef brisket, dry-rubbed with sea salt, pungent Tellicherry black pepper, garlic, and marjoram, is left to sit in a mixture of butter-sautéed onions, caramelly demerara sugar, ketchup, molasses, garlic, and cayenne. Later it’s hand-pulled and layered into a bun that’s basically challah baked in hot-dog-roll form. On the side you get molasses-baked beans with applewood-smoked bacon, best added to the sandwich. (422 Detroit Street; 734-663-3354)

 

 

Sweet Coppa with Hot Peppers and Rucola

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Sweet Coppa with Hot Peppers and Rucola

 

 

 

Sweet Coppa with Hot Peppers and Rucola

‘Ino, New York City

‘Ino is short for panino — in this case, an artful little Italian sandwich pressed flat. The bread comes from a bakery across the street, and the combinations inside come from a wild imagination. Sweet cured ham stands up to the fiery peppers — pop the sugary roasted garlic cloves on the side to extinguish the flames. (21 Bedford Street; 212-989-5769)

Corned Beef

Slyman’s, Cleveland

Bernie Kosar jerseys outnumber the business suits, but just barely. The corned beef is why you go: a softball-sized lump of lean the color of a Great Lakes sunset, kissed with fat and slow-cooked to succulence, then nestled between clouds of fresh bread. (3106 St. Clair Avenue; 216-621-3760)

Polish Boy

Freddie’s Rib House, Cleveland

Soul on white. A pipe’s length of kielbasa is wrapped in a bun and mounded with french fries, then dressed with coleslaw and barbecue sauce. Ignore any toxic runoff: Locals consider cuff stains a red badge of courage. The genteel can request a fork, because, yo, every circus needs a clown. (1431 St. Clair Avenue; 216-575-1750)

Chicken Sandwich

Chick-Fil-A, Multiple Locations

You can get a chicken sandwich anywhere, which may explain your low expectations. Boneless breast. Bun. Blah. But down south, there lives an eye-opener. A come-to-Jesus sandwich. The Chick-fil-A. Seasoned, breaded breast served on a toasted buttered bun with dill-pickle slices. No mayo. No sauce at all. Deceptively simple, yet transcendent. The hook is the breading: spicy, with an intoxicating crunch. The meat is always juicy, never chewy. The bun is like lingerie — there, but not, providing delicious support without obscuring the main flavor. The first bite changes everything you think you know about chicken. And about the need for condiments. –Allison Glock

Chopped Pork

Allen & Son Barbeque, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Famous among the vinegar-based smoke pits of North Carolina for its tart, smoky sandwiches. The owner, Keith Allen, still splits his own hickory in the backyard, fueling the fires that cook your meat. (6203 Millhouse Road; 919-942-7576)

 

 

Ferdi's Special

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Ferdi’s Special

 

 

 

Ferdi’s Special

Mother’s Restaurant, New Orleans

At Mother’s, a downtown refuge for the workingman (and tourists), they’ve been serving all kinds of meat since 1938. The Ferdi, a kind of compilation po’boy, has the greatest hits: tender baked ham, roast beef, and “debris,” the gorgeous, grease-darkened bits of meat that fall into the pan during roasting. Shredded cabbage and Creole mustard mix with the juices to create an alchemy from above. (401 Poydras Street; 504-523-9656)

Cubano

Latin America Cafeteria, Miami

Little Havana’s specialty, an eight-inch roll wet with butter, plus sugar-cured bolo ham, lechon asado (slow-roasted marinated pork), Swiss cheese, and pickle, toasted in a plancha (press). The later the hour, the better it tastes. (9606 SW Sunset Drive, 305-279-4353)

Seafood Salad

La Sandwicherie, Miami Beach

Go with the French bread, not the croissant — it’s appropriately crusty and soft in the middle. And get it to stay — the seating is outdoors, and the seafood salad (jumbo lump crab, shrimp) goes well with the salty air. (229 Fourteenth Street; 305-532-8934)

Roast Pork with Provolone

John’s Roast Pork, Philadelphia

Although the area looks like a good place to dump a body, when John’s opened in 1930 the shipyards were bustling, and the place still keeps day-laborer’s hours: 6:45 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. The cheesesteak is the best in town, but your first time, get Philadelphia’s sleeper signature sandwich, the roast pork with shards of provolone. Only the large size comes on a seeded roll from Carangi Bakery, the perfect texture to absorb the juices without falling apart. The meat and cheese meld together while retaining flavor and texture — molecular gastronomy at its finest. (14 East Snyder Avenue; 215-463-1951) –Francine Maroukian

Chicken Cutlet

Shank’s & Evelyn’s Luncheonette, South Philadelphia

You don’t need a hangover to appreciate the chicken cutlet with broccoli rabe and provolone at Shank’s & Evelyn’s. But with a little planning, you can acquire one and come to know the best morning-after sandwich in the world. And no matter how many times I tell myself that I’m too damn old for this kind of excess, the side of head-clearing long hots — peppers eaten straight (vodka hangover) or jammed into the sandwich (bourbon) — remind me that there’s no satisfaction in playing it safe. (932 South Tenth Street; 215-629-1093) –F. M.

 

 

Ham and Cheese

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Ham and Cheese

 

 

 

Ham and Cheese

Primanti Bros., Pittsburgh

A relic of Pittsburgh’s steel days, this sandwich was made for steelworkers who had to eat fast. Everything that typically comes with a sandwich comes on it: meat cooked hot, bacon, tomato, provolone, pickles, slaw, an egg for fifty cents extra, even fries. Shove it in your lunch box. (46 Eighteenth Street; 412-263-2142)

Pork Roll, Egg, and Cheese

Brennan’s Deli, Rumson, New Jersey

Fancier places around the Garden State call it Taylor ham, but to the hungry, hungover Jersey masses, the salamilike breakfast meat is pork roll. Fry it up in bacon fat and serve it on a kaiser roll with a fried egg and a slice of American cheese, or ask the good men of Brennan’s to do it for you. It’s the only way to start a bad day. (44 West River Road; 732-530-0302)

Tuna Niçoise

Bouchon Bakery, New York City

Looks like a regular tuna sandwich, except the bread is crusty and minutes old. The tuna comes with capers instead of celery, aioli on top of mayo, and cornichons instead of a pickle. Plus tarragon and sliced soft-cooked egg. It’s mundane. It’s exhilarating. It’s the best tuna sandwich we’ve ever eaten. (10 Columbus Circle; 212-823-9366)

Pastrami on Rye

Katz’s, New York City

You know Katz’s. You know the scene in When Harry Met Sally. The orgasm. And if you’ve been there, you know she wasn’t faking it — the fatty, thick-cut pastrami on rye is that good. Better with a smear of mustard. (205 East Houston Street; 212-254-2246)

Three-Terrine Bánh Mì

Momofuku Ssäm, New York City

You’d never stand at a Plexiglas counter and tell the guy to top your crusty bread with chicken liver, ham terrine, and you know what, throw on some scraps of veal face. Just order this sickly delicious bánh mì and, without thinking too much, enjoy the crisp, earthy texture of…that delicious stuff between the bread. (207 Second Avenue; 212-254-3500)

 

 

Fried Cod

 

Michael Schmelling

 

 

Fried Cod

 

 

 

Fried Cod

Cove Fish Market, Stonington, Connecticut

When a fish starts its morning in the ocean and ends up in a deep-fryer that afternoon, the result is reliably tasty. The Cove has been proving this for four decades, turning out some of the best no-frills fish sandwiches on the Eastern Seaboard. (20 Old Stonington Road; 860-536-0061)

The Bomb

Sal, Kris, and Charlie Deli, Queens, New York

The Sandwich Kings of Astoria stick to a simple formula: Use great ingredients and a lot of them. Know what you want to order when it’s your turn and you’ll have a great experience — that’ll be the Bomb, an Italian with nine kinds of meat. (33-12 Twenty-third Avenue; 718-278-9240)

Hot Lobster Roll

Abbot’s Lobster in the Rough, Noank, Connecticut

The best way to get to Abbott’s is by boat — float in, tie up, and order the classic, made with a quarter pound of meat, melted butter, and not a drop of mayo. Get a table out on the dock. (117 Pearl Street; 860-536-7719)

Maple-Barbecue Pulled Pork

Vermont Country Deli, Brattleboro, Vermont

Bunch of northerners making pulled pork? Damn straight. Two words: Maple. Syrup. (436 Western Avenue; 802-257-9254)

Grilled Lobster and Cheese

Restaurant Bricco, West Hartford, Connecticut

Generous clumps of fresh lobster tossed in a net of stringy, buttery Havarti and gently pressed between grilled white toast. Wash it down with a glass of prosecco. You’ll feel like you’re celebrating. (78 LaSalle Road; 860-233-0220)

Gyro

East Side Pocket, Providence

The sliced lamb gets a quick char while you pick out your toppings — any or all from a list of ten: hot sauce, hummus, tabouleh, tahini, yogurt-cucumber sauce, various veggies. Thirty seconds and six bucks later, you’re eating the best Syrian street food outside Damascus. (278 Thayer Street; 401-453-1100)

Lamb Sirloin

Matt Murphy’s Brookline, Massachusetts

In a land teeming with trite Irish pubs, Matt Murphy’s stands alone: no Gaelic street signs, no U2 poster, no “Molly Bloom Mozzarella Stix.” But this hits you like a Joycean epiphany: sirloin, cooked until it dissolves on the crusty potato bread, and pickles, daubed with sweet relish and a sauce bearing the faintest rumor of mint. (14 Harvard Street; 617-232-0188)

Prosciutto and Asiago

Little Notch Café, Southwest Harbor, Maine

Let the others scarf lobster rolls. Up near Acadia National Park, where the crowds thin out, sharp Asiago and sweet prosciutto offer a different sort of local comfort. Grab one and catch the mail boat out to breathtaking Cranberry Island, where the crowds disappear into nothing. (340 Main Street; 207-244-3357)


 

 

Bee Movie!

LA Weekly Counter Intelligence - Gold Coffee?

Posted in Gastromical on March 15th, 2008 by gastromical

La Mill: The Latest Buzz The next generation of coffee cuisine

By Jonathan Gold

Whipped McGrath Farms Tahitian squash soup with coffee-chile crème fraîche and whole-wheat croutons? Hand-chopped arctic char tartare turned out like a terrine with quatre épices? Spicy chocolate-chipotle mousse with avocado purée and crushed sweetened tortilla chips? The past few months have seen a lot of fascinating new restaurants open in Los Angeles, but the most interesting of them all may be a coffee shop in the restaurant-starved heart of Silver Lake, a place whose menu is designed by Providence’s Michael Cimarusti and Adrian Vasquez, and whose owners are devoted to the cult of coffee in the same way that a chapel might be dedicated to its saint. The cinnamon French toast is pretty good too, as are the salmon-pink slices of cured Tasmanian sea trout sprinkled with crème fraîche, tiny rice crackers and crushed wasabi peas; the Asian BLTs constructed from spiced pork belly; and the drink called Coffee and a Doughnut, which tastes exactly like a jelly doughnut dunked in joe.

 

 

Coffee savant Eton Tsuno at work

 

Snap, crackle and trout

 

Unzipped: Hot Eva Solo

It’s hard, in fact, to figure out exactly what La Mill might be — a lunchroom, a tearoom, a café, or a wine bar serving aged Sumatran peaberry instead of Bordeaux. What is clear is that no brew-pub impresario, no sushi master is more serious about his product than La Mill’s self-styled “Coffee Savant” Eton Tsuno, its equivalent of a rock-star sommelier. When he crouches alongside your table, discussing the fine points of coffee terroir or explaining why one bean expresses itself better in a siphon pot, one in the Clover machine and another in the supercharged carafe called Eva Solo, and why you could have your coffee prepared in a Chemex pot or a French press but probably shouldn’t, you know you’re not at Starbucks anymore.

La Mill, a sleek dining room done up in a sort of pomo Hollywood Regency extreme enough to give Cecil Beaton pause, may not really be set up for the appetizer-entrée thing. What would seem to be the main courses are basically the same size and price as the apparent starters; the panini, served with olives, pickled cippolini onions and a metal cup of freshly fried potato chips, are filling on their own, and even the sandwich made with peanut butter, bananas and melted dark chocolate could be a meal.

The first wave of American coffee culture was probably the 19th-century surge that put Folgers on every table, and the second was the proliferation, starting in the 1960s at Peet’s and moving smartly through the Starbucks grande decaf latte, of espresso drinks and regionally labeled coffee. We are now in the third wave of coffee connoisseurship, where beans are sourced from farms instead of countries, roasting is about bringing out rather than incinerating the unique characteristics of each bean, and the flavor is clean and hard and pure.

The new face of coffee is neither Juan Valdez nor a gum-snapping waitress named Madge, or even Starbucks’ Howard Schultz, but a postmodern barista like Tsuno, spiked hair and a gauzy shirt, stirring a siphon of Sumatran peaberry with the pouty insouciance of Jimmy Page executing a guitar solo, while awestruck customers study every flick of his long fingers. The first few days La Mill was open, the restaurant was filled with the coffeehouse equivalent of the dudes who work behind the counters of indie record stores, the ones who sneer at you when you come up to the cash register with Amy Winehouse instead of Olivia Tremor Control, except talking about Ethiopian beans and Clover settings and atmospheres of pressure instead of pawnshop amplifiers and Epiphone guitars, and the dude behind the espresso machine was drawing tawny, lead-dense doubles that didn’t quite film the bottom of the cup.

Tsuno is an artist devoted to a sort of ascetic perfectionism that only rarely considers the actual consumer. His famous Coffee and Cigarettes, which has temporarily been taken off the menu, is a shot of espresso fortified with tobacco-infused cream, which is lovely to behold perched on a clear acrylic plinth, but which packs the nervous wallop of a dozen nonfilter Camels. (If you’ve been searching for an alternative use for the packet of Drum you haven’t managed to throw away since you quit smoking, you’ve come to the right place.) One of the special Kenyan coffees has a mellow but distinct back note of hot tomato soup — lovely, even a summit of the roaster’s art, but perhaps not what you have in mind for your morning cup of joe.

Tsuno is working with pastry chef Vazquez to produce coffee pearls, dime-size spheres of lightly jelled coffee that will explode into liquid when you take them into your mouth. If there were a way to transform coffee into a test tube full of gas, or an ointment, or a spectrum of light, Tsuno would probably be on that too. The other day, he presented my table with his newest creation, a perfected version of the café con leche he would have enjoyed in Miami if the old Cuban guys behind the bar didn’t overextract the coffee. Tsuno’s version involves brown sugar sprinkled over the ground coffee that caramelizes into a host of sweet, smoky flavors when he runs it through the machine, and although it is almost certainly the best café con leche I have ever tasted, his version includes four extra-strength shots of espresso, which is basically enough caffeine to induce a cardiac event.

It isn’t easy to adjust ambitious food to make it go with the extreme flavor profile of this sort of coffee, but Cimarusti is doing his best. The frisée aux lardons, a chicory salad with plenty of Niman Ranch bacon and a runny poached egg, is dressed in a coffee-scented vinaigrette, and the delicious pressed sandwich of piquillo peppers, Spanish chorizo and cheese is made with Farcell, a Catalan cow’s-milk cheese whose rind is traditionally washed with coffee, which gives it a tangy, smoky quality that does in fact go with the bean. The potato-leek soup with clams, a simplified facsimile of Providence’s famous chowder, is spiked with enough bacon to make the coffee pairing work.

But even Cimarusti’s cooking is upstaged by the coffee here. When you order that aged Sumatran peaberry in the Eva Solo, a waitress sets down a willowy carafe encased in tight, zippered neoprene, like a fitted wetsuit on a supermodel, and starts the seconds ticking on an electronic egg timer. When the alarm buzzes, she is already back at the table, undoing the heavy zipper with her long fingers, breaking the thick crust that has formed on the surface of the coffee. She stirs until the grounds settle to the bottom. She flourishes a thin metal-mesh cone that looks like something Jean-Paul Gaultier might have affixed to a bustier a decade ago, and plunges it deep into the murky liquid. A second later, there is clear, limpid coffee in your cup, light-roasted, tart, smelling rather more of fruits and flowers than of whatever it is Starbucks peaberry smells like. It has been explained to you that the Eva Solo method reproduces the experience of cupping, the way that professional roasters taste coffee. All I know is that I have never tasted coffee quite like this before coming to La Mill, winy zippiness accentuated instead of chocolate thunder, and I used to consider myself pretty serious about what I put into my French press. I must be stuck in the second wave.

La Mill Coffee Boutique, 1636 Silver Lake Blvd., Silver Lake, (323) 663-4441. Tues.-Sun. 7 a.m.–7 p.m. (Extended dinner hours, including late weekend hours, begin March 18.) No alcohol. Takeout. AE, MC, V. Pastries run $3-$4; savory dishes $12-$16; desserts $8-$9. Recommended dishes: Yukon gold/leek soup; ABLT; cured Tasmanian sea trout.


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Lavazza Italian “Super Crema” Espresso Whole Beans (2.2 lb bag)
From Lavazza

List Price: $28.00

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by Aroma Cafe Culture, Inc.
Average customer review:

 

Lavazza Italiano Coffee!

The blend for those who want a traditional espresso coffee that has a full, rich taste without a hint of bitterness. Super Crema’s cup characteristics include sweet aroma and sharp flavor, as well as an easily attainable thick, compact crema. Its natural sweetness is easy to enjoy without sugar. Lavazza’s best selling Bar blend in the U.S.


Lavazza Info and Rank!

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1740 in Gourmet Food
  • Size: Vacuum packed, 1000-gram (2.2 lb) bag with one-way valve
  • Brand: Aroma Cafe Culture
  • Model: 4202
  • Ingredients: Whole beans, espresso roast.
  • Dimensions: 2.20 pounds

Features

  • Premium Lavazza whole bean espresso!
  • Traditional espresso with a full, rich taste
  • Naturally sweet, creamy and decadent flavor
  • Best selling Lavazza espresso beans in the US!
  • Suitable for professional and home espresso machines

Customer Reviews

Disapointingly Mild2
Being a long time consumer of Lavazza Creama E Gusto which I find most enjoyable, I thought I’d give Super Creama a try.Very disapointing on flavor and fullness. For a latte I find it necessary to double the quantity in the basket and cut the milk by 80-90% so instead of a 10 oz
double, it’s a single shot expresso with a dash of milk. The bean is a medium brown in color that is reflected in it’s charater. Back to “Creama E Gusto”

Il Espresso Migliore5
I bought a high End Gaggio Espresso machine for my wife for a special occasion last year. While searching around for espresso beans I couldn’t find any that reminded me of Italy. Finding the Lavazza Super Crema was the best. Especially in the 2.2lbs bag. So you know we go through a bag in 45 to 60 days. I’ve given up drinking regular coffee and now either go Espresso or Cafe American.

I would recommend this Espresso to anyone who would enjoy a smooth, and aromatic blend and the Crema is the best. Buon bere.

DELICIOUS, FRAGRANT, BIG BANG FOR YOUR BUCK ~ A LITTLE GOES A LONG WAY!!5
While these beans may seem a little pricey, they are well~worth the price, as the quality is excellent, delicious, smooth, non~bitter, and fragrant. PLUS you get twice the flavor and the coffee yield for the money. A little goes a long way with this fine quality Imported Italian super delicious coffee!!

The Zen of Bankruptcy?

Posted in Gastromical on March 12th, 2008 by gastromical

 

Customers flood restaurant after Sun story on rave review

 

Sunny Freeman, Vancouver Sun

Published: Monday, March 10, 2008

RICHMOND I What a difference a New York Times food critic can make.

Zen Fine Chinese Cuisine, the Richmond restaurant on the verge of bankruptcy last week before being called “the world’s greatest Chinese restaurant outside China,” was overwhelmed with customers that packed every table on the weekend.

The Sun reported Friday that New York Times critic Jennifer 8 Lee had picked Zen for the accolade after visiting 15 countries on six continents for her new book.

When owner and chef Sam Lau arrived at work Friday, he already had 19 messages on his phone.

“People wanted to get in this weekend to say they’ve been here or to give their support,” said Valerie Anne-Owen, who jumped in to help the family-run business cope with an influx of customers.

“[Lau] didn’t sleep at all last night. … He wasn’t totally prepared for that response to the article,” she said Sunday.

Despite rave reviews — including one in 2004 from Sun critic Mia Stainsby — and slashing prices by more than half, Zen hadn’t turned a profit since last year and rarely received any bookings.

Anne-Owen said there are some reservations available for the rest of this week. But, she said, a reservation is crucial because chef Lau spends hours crafting his cuisine.

His renowned soup served in a coconut, for example, must roast in the oven for two hours. For Saturday’s dinner, he roasted 22 coconuts.


Euro Patisserie Napoleon Slices, Vanilla, 8.6-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 5)  

Euro Patisserie Napoleon Slices, Vanilla, 8.6-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 5)
From Euro Patisserie

List Price: $24.95

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

 

Product Description

12 party servings. Kit includes: pastry layers, instant custard-mix, icing, no baking…easy, fast and fresh! 12 Napoleons ready to prepare. No baking! Ready in 5 minutes. Product of Holland.

 


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #47189 in Grocery
  • Brand: Euro Patisserie
  • Released on: 2007-04-13
  • Number of items: 5

Features

  • Case of five 8.6-ounce boxes of vanilla flavored pastries (total of 43 ounces)

 

French: La Trouvaille - London Bridges?

Posted in Gastromical on March 12th, 2008 by gastromical

French: La Trouvaille

 

La Touvaille
12a Newburgh Street
W1F 3RR
020 7287 8488

The Victims: Howard, Ben, Antonia

The Damage: £45ish each?

The Background: We have it in our heads to go to Dehesa, the new tapas place run by the same folks from Salt Yard. Dehesa doesn’t take reservations, so the American early-diner in me is a bit worried about getting there and getting a table. We meet up at the Soho Hotel first (which is very nice, by the way) and then before you know it it’s 8 p.m. and Dehesa tell us it’s an hour and forty-five minute wait. If I heard that correctly. I think I did. And that’s crap because there doesn’t seem to be anyone waiting. But we’re S-o-L.

So we wander the streets for a bit and Howard suggests La Trouvaille which looks all cute and cozy downstairs. Upstairs is all sparkly white and bare and Antonia points out that their Starck chairs are knock-offs.

Service is sweet and very French. Attentive at first, but suffering from a terrible case of ennui later in the meal and we are passed over to someone else.

Starter: Foei gras with eel and leeks, a fastastic combination. I want to have foie gras and eel every day for lunch for the next week. But then I’d probably get gout, which is not a good thing.

Main: Rabbit. I do love rabbit. Carrot mash. (They called it flan.) More foie gras. Spinach. Lovely. Fantastically so. I am very happy. So is everyone else.

Discussion Points: Proper use of the semicolon. Why people can’t write anymore. Diagramming sentences. Its vs It’s. Their/they’re/there. Scrabulous. Why no one likes an editor, when so many of us really need one. Hmmm.

The Weird Part: My request for bread…it was like they didn’t really believe I was asking for bread. And the wine…they kept the wine very far away from us. This would have been fine if the service was super-attentive and always on the lookout for an empty glass, but it wasn’t.

The Verdict: Pretty decent. I like foie gras and eel. I’d take my mom here.

Coming up…Market in Camden, National Dining Rooms, Fouronine in Clapham, Japanese street food, the Fox & Anchor in Clerkenwell, tea in Hackney…

 


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Kellogg's Pop-Tarts Frosted Cinnamon, 28.2-Ounce, 16-Count Boxes (Pack of 8)  

Kellogg’s Pop-Tarts Frosted Cinnamon, 28.2-Ounce, 16-Count Boxes (Pack of 8) From Pop-Tarts

List Price: $30.32

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Customer Reviews

Great backup for the pantry5
Sometimes a Pop-Tart is just what you need, right? Well, we like the frosted brown sugar cinnamon the best, and with the subscribe & save feature from Amazon we can have these as backup snacks/emergency breakfasts in the pantry. Very good value, too!

cheaper than warehouse club5
I love taking Pop-Tarts to school, great snack for energy. This order keeps me going for weeks.

Super!5
Ordered the pop tarts and they came within a week. Really nice to have this option available to us. . .thanks!

Lomeli’s Italian Restaurant - Sterling Review from Customer

Posted in Gastromical on March 10th, 2008 by gastromical
 

poohsta…

 

Lomeli’s Italian Restaurant Mar 09, 2008 

This place is truly a hidden gem in the South Bay area of Los Angeles. I’ve been going there since 1997 and it is also one of my “must haves” on visits back home.

This is truly a local’s place and guaranteed you will see the owner, Carlo Lomeli, on almost every visit. Carlo opened this restaurant back in the late 70’s and from what I hear, it’s always shared this amazing popularity.

Everything I’ve tried on their menu over the years is fantastic and reasonably priced. They have dinner combinations that include a glass of wine, salad or soup, garlic bread, pasta with choice of sauce, and ice cream (spumoni or vanilla) for dessert, for around $9-$12.

For garlic lovers like me, they have a couple choices that definitely satisfy my desire to ward off vampires - their fresh tomato, basil, garlic w/olive oil option has fresh chopped garlic spooned all over. This last time I tried their seafood pasta - option of Alfredo or Italian style cooking (olive oil, butter, wine, lemon juice, generous amount of garlic & spices, served over angel hair). Needless to say, I couldn’t come within 10 feet of anyone for two days but it was worth it!!! :-)
Their ravioli is another awesome option - they are the BIG ravioli’s stuffed with either cheese, beef, chicken, or spinach. I definitely recommend the cheese ones. For those who are not big garlic fans, you can get plain bread and their other options are pretty mild (my Mom cannot eat garlic and she loves this restaurant).

Lomeli’s also offers catering trays which are a great deal if you are having a get together elsewhere. That is actually how I found out about the restaurant as my old company had them cater a lot of events and lunches for us because we were such a large group.

Be warned, peak times like noon and around 6-8pm can elicit a wait time but trust me, it’s worth it. The restaurant is very small, located in a strip mall off Van Ness and Redondo Beach Blvd in Gardena. (It’s basically on the border of North Torrance, Redondo Beach, and Gardena).

The ambiance is great too - traditional red vinyl booths, dimly lit tables, waiters dressed in black (ask for Adam, he’s the best!), and Carlo even sometimes making a personal appearance to your table when things slow down (which can be rare). Because of the lighting, I didn’t want the flash of the bulb to disturb anyone so I don’t really have any photos of the food!! Sorry Mel!!! :-)) The only photo I currently have is one of my seafood pasta in it’s take out container….you can still see all the chopped garlic amongst the scallops though!!! YUMMMMM

If you go, make sure to check out Carlo’s wife’s hoola hoop awards and articles in the front of the restaurant. She’s made the Guinness World Book of Records twice for most number of hoops!! (I read the last time was 82 hoops simultaneously for 3 revolutions!)

Tags

italian local authentic cheap

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My leftovers - shrimp scampi and…

 

 

 

   

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Orgran Rice & Corn Lasagna, Mini Sheets, 7-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 5)  

Orgran Rice & Corn Lasagna, Mini Sheets, 7-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 5)
From OrgraN

List Price: $28.00

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
Average customer review:

 

Product Description

Thank you for purchasing Orgran Lasagne sheets, from our RisOMais natural selection. This product is naturally wheat free, gluten free and provides taste, versatility and nutrition over ordinary wheat based lasagne sheets. When compared to wheat pasta, this product is also easier to digest and assists with providing nutrition and variation essential for a well balanced diet and sell being. You can now enjoy your favorite lasagne dish without compromise as Orgran lasagne sheets provides taste, versatility, quality and the natural nutrition of rice and maize. Absolutely delicious, this product is produced on the unspoilt southern peninsula of eastern Australia, isolated by thick untouched bushland, regional green agriculture and clean natural beauty of the nearby rugged coastline. The Orgran production plant is also one of the few plants in the world specifically designed and producing in a strictly controlled totally wheat free, gluten free environment to ensure highest quality and purity of food. Our very unique processes encompasses traditional methods to retain the delicate natural flavor of the grains and also ensures the product offers the highest biological benefits to meet the strictest demands set by consumers of natural foods and those on specialized diets. Orgran is a world leader and trusted name in natural nutrition and foods for well being. You can be safe in the knowledge that no artificial colors, flavors or preservatives have been added to this product.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3122 in Grocery
  • Brand: Orgran
  • Released on: 2006-02-06
  • Number of items: 5
  • Dimensions: 6.00″ h x 8.00″ w x 19.00″ l,

Features

  • Case of five 7-ounce boxes (35 total ounces)
  • Made with Australian variety rice and sun-ripened maize
  • Wheat free, gluten free, and dairy free
  • An ideal alternative to wheat pastas
  • Produced in Australia in a special facility to eliminate any cross contamination of grains

Editorial Reviews

About the Brand
The Orgran selection of health foods is the primary product of Roma Food Products, an Australian-owned company primarily involved in the development, production, and marketing of health, gourmet, and dietetic foods. A well-recognized brand among health professionals and consumers, Orgran enjoys great success within Australia and is successfully exported to numerous countries around the world. Their motto: “To encourage and enable healthier lifestyles.”

The Orgran range of products is totally natural, with nothing artificial added. Full of flavor and natural nutrition, the range is suitable for a wide variety of people with restricted dietary requirements. The Orgran production plant is totally dedicated to the manufacture of dietetic foods. The state-of-the art facility is dedicated to totally wheat-free and gluten-free production, eliminating the threat of cross-contamination.

Who Are Orgran Products Suitable For?
The Orgran range of products is suitable for a broad range of consumers, including:

COELIACS: The entire range of Orgran products are wheat-free and gluten-free.

FOOD ALLERGIES & INTOLERANCES: The Orgran range of products are totally natural. Free from artificial colors, flavors, and preservatives. In addition, the products are also dairy- and egg-free.

DIABETICS: Orgran products have been reviewed by Diabetes Australia and are suitable to include in the menu plans of diabetics in consultation with their health professional.

WEIGHT PROBLEMS: Low in fat and containing no cholesterol, Orgran products are suitable to include in weight-reduction programs.

NUTRITIONAL DEFICIENCIES: Orgran products undergo minimal processing to retain the highest possible nutrient content available.

VEGANS AND VEGETARIANS: Orgran products are free from animal derivatives.

 


Customer Reviews

WARNING!!4
The box of pasta we received (actually, it was one box with 5 boxes of lasanga) had mostly shattered pasta in it! (the penne we ordered was fine, maybe lasagna is just too fragile to travel by mail!), and Amazon graciously and quickly refunded my money. I’m hoping we can salvage enough intact sheets to make one meal…gave 4 stars without trying it. I will keep looking for a store that carries gf lasagna noodles, haven’t found it yet…

lasagne minisheets5
Finally, a lasagne noodle that cooks and tastes like the real thing. I made my first batch of lasagne without cooking the noodles but found that the noodles were too firm and chewy, so I cooked them for four minutes before making the lasagne and everything was just great. My husband loves lasagne and says that this tastes as good as any I made with the regular noodles.

Really Good5
I thought it tasted just like the regular lasagna. I didn’t boil the pasta like it said. It was a little chewy on the edges but really good. You really can’t taste the difference. When I got the lasagna, some of pasta was broken. I used the broken pieces anyway and it was fine. Orgran is probably the best pasta brand I have found yet!

Koeppel Packs it in - Goodbye to Currents he Says

Posted in Gastromical on March 10th, 2008 by gastromical

Goodbye to all that dining

By Fredric Koeppel

Saturday, March 8, 2008

My first official review of a restaurant appeared in The Commercial Appeal’s Playbook section in February 1988. It was about the short-lived Luau restaurant at the airport.

My last review, of Currents, appears today, a bit more than 20 years — and many great and not so great meals — later.

That’s a long time to write about and review restaurants in the same city, but it’s also a length of time that provides perspective on the region and its dining out habits and the cycles of growth and development in the restaurant community.

Twenty years ago, Memphis was largely a meat and potatoes town. While La Tourelle and Chez Philippe provided classic French cuisine, most Memphians in a celebratory mood dined on steak and lobster or Italian-American fare or variations on Creole food. Ethnic cuisine meant chop suey and egg foo young or enchiladas at Panchos. I used to write that the city could support eight fine-dining restaurants, and if a new one opened, an old one would close.

That’s no longer the case. However we define fine dining or white-tablecloth restaurants, by food or atmosphere or price, such establishments proliferate from Downtown Memphis out to Collierville. And ethnic cuisine? There’s the area where the real change has occurred. An influx of immigrants from Southeast Asia and the sub-continent brought our town and region Vietnamese, Thai, Cambodian and Indian restaurants, while Chinese restaurants have greatly improved. The succeeding influx of Hispanic transplants brought family-owned places, especially in northeast and southeast Memphis, where the authentic food resembles what a real family would have on the table at dinner.

It’s been gratifying to witness these changes in the local dining scene and to participate and write about them. I couldn’t begin to count or even remember the numerous times I’ve taken a bite of some new dish or been introduced to a new concept, whether humble or refined, from the Pie Lady all the way to Erling Jensen, and thought, “Wow, yes, this is what good eating is all about.”

It’s been good, it’s been bad, and it’s been ugly. In 20 years I’ve had a death threat from a restaurant owner — serious enough that the CA provided security for me for a short while (the budget was better then); a letter from an attorney barring me from entering his client’s establishment; a waiter who illustrated what a lamb shank is by raising one foot, pulling up his trouser leg and pointing to his shin. I’ve had waiters sing to me, kneel by the table, and even pull up a chair, sit down and tell me their life story. I’ve had waiters argue that I pronounced the names of ingredients wrong, that I didn’t know how wine needed to be served, that I didn’t understand the relative doneness of steaks, that I was ordering the wrong dish. I’ve written reviews so glowing that the restaurant couldn’t deal with the increase in customers and had to close, and I’ve written — very rarely — reviews so negative that the result was the same.

And, inevitably, I’ve come to some conclusions about dining out and the restaurant business.

1. Most restaurants are woefully undercapitalized when they open. Chances are you won’t make a profit for three or even five years; be prepared for hard times.

2. Most problems with service are the result of improper training. When waiters flub the basic or finer points of taking orders, serving food and wine and clearing the table, it’s usually because they haven’t been told how to act. It’s management’s responsibility. On the other hand, when your waiter says, “Hi, guys, my name is Steve,” he has been told to do that.

3. The spirit that prevails in the kitchen influences the dining room. Chefs, owners and managers who concentrate on their jobs, watch the details, handle their staffs respectfully and enjoy what they’re doing help create an amenable atmosphere that spreads through the restaurant. I’ve seen restaurants ruined by chefs who wanted to spend more time in the dining room shmoozing with patrons than in the kitchen taking care of business.

4. Restaurants are growing more expensive, yet so many of these fine dining or white tablecloth establishments offer variations of the same menus and similar dishes. What’s in it for the diner plunking down $35 for an entree?

5. As awareness of wine has grown in the region, restaurant wine lists have expanded beyond the roster of usual suspects. Excellent examples are the all-Italian list at Bari and the eclectic, helpful list at Circa.

I love eating in restaurants — current favorites are Cafe 1912, Bari, Saigon Le, Umai, and the bar at Interim — but I’ll admit that I — and that means “we” — won’t mind staying at home for awhile. In our house, the ambience, the service and the food are always terrific. Plus there are dogs and cats.

I’ll conclude this look back at 20 years with a retrospective on some restaurants I reviewed (a few several times) that meant a lot to me but that closed during my tenure as restaurant reviewer at The CA. I will always miss these places:

La Tourelle; Wally Joe; KoTo; Restaurant Raji; Mick’s (no kidding); Aubergine; Bistro 122; Puck’s; Midtown; Hemmings; 25 Belvedere; Ben’s.


 

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Product Details

Tortuga Original Caribbean Rum Cake, 33 Ounce Cake  

Tortuga Original Caribbean Rum Cake, 33 Ounce Cake
From Tortuga

List Price: $35.00

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
Average customer review:

 

Product Description

A taste of the Islands. A taste of the Caribbean! A Product of the Cayman Islands.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6459 in Grocery
  • Brand: Tortuga
  • Released on: 2006-10-06
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.75″ h x 3.25″ w x 9.00″ l, 2.06 pounds

Features

  • Moist and luscious, authentic rum cake
  • Baked in the Caribbean from a four-generations old family recipe
  • Hand glazed with 5 year old Tortuga rum then vacuum packed to lock in freshness
  • Original golden with walnuts - our most popular flavor
  • 33oz cake serves 12 to 14

Customer Reviews

Soooo Good!5
We first sampled one of these cakes about 18 years ago on a visit to Grand Cayman. You are hooked after the first bite. We never come back from the Carribean without cakes, but when they run out we order from here. I love the banana, coconut, and pineapple just as much.Don’t hesitate to order.

AMAZON CRUSHED MY CAKE!5
YOUR BOX WAS VERY INTACT SO IT WAS OBVIOUS CAKE BOX WAS CRUSHED PRIOR TO PACKING! GLAD IT TASTED SO GREAT IT MADE UP FOR YOUR LOUSY SERVICE!!

FANTASTIC5
This is the best Rum Cake I’ve ever tasted. The first time I had this was in the Cayman Islands. To know I can stay here and still get them is even better!

The Buddah Lobster Comes Calling

Posted in Gastromical on March 10th, 2008 by gastromical

This is great Coffee March 7, 2008

Filed under: Coffee, Ethical Food, Favorite Produce, Interesting, recipe’s — michael @ 9:26 am

 


‘This is great coffee’

A surreal conversation between 2 rubber toys in my kitchen at home.

The picture is interesting from the point of view of combining a few themes, Coffee, Technology,

and a Sea Creature- the Lobster ! Not forgetting the humble man robed in yellow.

My Favorite method of cooking Lobster requires a bit of speed and advance preparation!

What’s needed:

One ‘live’ Lobster, one Sharp cooks knife, a Hot Grill, Soft herb butter, a Cloth, Chopping Board.

Hear goes - Place the live lobster on the chopping board, Slice through the middle between the eyes all the way to the tail, flip over and remove the inner ‘gal sac’ & intestine all the way to the tail.

Season with Maldon Salt and soft herb butter

Place under the hot grill for 3-5 minutes -keeping a watchful eye on the cooking Lobster !

serve with a Watercress Salad.

 


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Product Details

Igourmet Honduran Wild Rock Lobster Tails, 5lb Box  

Igourmet Honduran Wild Rock Lobster Tails, 5lb Box
From Igourmet

List Price: $277.99

Availability: Usually ships in 5 to 7 days
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

 


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #27121 in Grocery
  • Brand: Igourmet
  • Released on: 2007-10-09
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 4.00″ h x 5.00″ w x 6.00″ l,

Is that Ah-Capella in Florence? Foodie Search Finds Gold in Michelangelo’s Italy

Posted in Gastromical on March 10th, 2008 by gastromical

The finest food in Florence

In Florence, you can still dine as Michelangelo did - if you’re in the know. Anthony Capella certainly is


Piazza della Passera, Florence, Italy

The sign above the queue for the Uffizi Gallery says: “You have between two and three hours to wait.” No problem: I have an online reservation. I stroll smugly past the hapless queuers – only to find a 45-minute wait to pick up my ticket.It’s the same all over Florence – and not only at the galleries. The restaurants, it seems, are full. At Il Latini, the queue for a space at one of the cramped communal tables stretches around the corner at four in the afternoon.

At Trattoria Sostanza, they are splitting groups up so they can squeeze them in. At the other end of the scale, to eat at the three-Michelin-star Enoteca Pinchiorri, I would have needed to book weeks or even months in advance.

The truth is, just as a certain sort of tourist rather likes to queue, because it reassures them that what they’re about to see is special, so Florentines see queuing for food as a good thing. The frenetic, passionate activity of this city, so evident in its architecture and paintings, is fuelled today by hunks of bloody beef served cheek by jowl on rough wooden tables, just as it has been since the 15th century.

If it’s serenity you want, try Urbino. And if it’s salads you’re after, you can always go to a restaurant set up by a foreigner. I decided to head away from the centre in search of a calmer version of authentic Florentine food – the kind of unhurried, home-cooked dishes that explain a city’s culture and history more viscerally than any audio guide.

To this end, I based myself in Oltrarno, the quieter part of Florence, south of the river, though I was hardly slumming it: my room in the Palazzo Magnani Feroni had a 20ft-high ceiling and an air of majestically faded grandeur. With just 12 bedrooms – all suites – this must surely be one of the city’s more imposing B&Bs.

Pandemonio, in Via dei Leoni, was just the kind of backstreet trattoria I’d had in mind. Most of the diners were eating bistecca alla fiorentina, great slabs of local Chianina beef weighing more than a kilo. These days, they’re usually shared between two people, although one trencherman nearby managed his without help.

These steaks are black on the outside, blue in the middle, slathered with olive oil and salt. You only have to get on the outside of one of these to understand why Michelangelo, Donatello and their ilk were able to pound away at such prodigious slabs of marble – though whether they did so immediately after lunch is another matter.

At Bricco, on Via di San Niccolo, the menu was even more straightforward. The antipasto consisted of crostini, toasted unsalted bread spread with various pâtés, including a simple but delicious one made from onions stewed in butter. It was followed by ribollita, a thick Tuscan soup made with beans and black cabbage: hearty, cheap and full of flavour, this was a favourite dish in the city long before the Duomo got its dome.

A more creative approach is on offer at the lovely Quattro Leoni, on a tiny little piazza near the Pitti Palace. Florence is one of the few parts of Italy not to go in much for pasta, but here a dish of fiochetti, pasta parcels filled with pear and served in a sauce of asparagus and tangy taleggio cheese, was memorably good, while slices of grilled bruschetta came soused with green new-season olive oil from the owner’s own estate.

Appropriately enough, the restaurant is only a stone’s throw from the statue of Cosimo de’ Medici’s dwarf, Morgante, who sits on a tortoise in the Boboli gardens, naked and potbellied – a warning to Cosimo’s subjects, apparently, of the dangers of overindulgence.

For a truly authentic Florentine experience, though, you need to hit the streets. This city has the most extraordinary love aff