Thursday, August 21, 2008

Five Napkin Burger




I wouldn't travel all the way to mid town for this burger, but it was good. We had the turkey burger with grilled peppers and Five Napkin Burger with lots of cheese on top. The ambience is fun and the food came really quick. Next time, I will try the veggie burger which is supposed to be very tasty and home made.

La Superior

A new Mexican street food join opened up around the corner from my apartment. It's a very small, casually decorated spot. They don't deliver and BYOB for now, but the menu looked pretty interesting. I tried cactus salad. As I love seaweed, a bit slimy cactus was enjoyable. But maybe not for many people. It's simply seasoned with cheese and salt.
Enchilada is very unique here. Instead of red rich sauce, they use salsa verde with lots of cheese.

Tacos here are $3, which is a bit pricey for this single-tortilla tiny tacos. But they are good. I personally have no eye for Rajas...

This popular street food was my favorite. Tiny tortilla looking thing has cheese, chorizo, lettuce inside. Very good snack!

Bird Man

Once in a while, a school of pigeons fly in circle over the buildings in my neighborhood. A couple of the neighborhood buildings seem to have a bird man, who feed and fly the birds. Not sure exactly but he maybe the one.

Dim Sum GO GO

If you don't care so much about cart-style dim sum, Dim Sum Go Go on the lower Chinatown is a highly recommended spot. It's much cleaner than most Chinese restaurants, with two floors which serve even a long line to customers relatively quickly.

I personally don't eat the steamed rice thingy often, but this one with scallion and cilantro became one of my new favorites. As they steam most dishes on order, it's not too greasy and taste fresh out of the steamer.

They specialize in dumplings and other steamed dim sum dishes. Everything we picked was good and is not slimy as you sometimes get from a cart.

A side of steamed Chinese broccoli is always a good compliment to meat/sea food centric dim sum. Some places over steam but here they keep the crunch perfectly!

A sneak shot from the next table. These people now how to enjoy dim sum!

Dim Sum Go Go
5 E. Broadway, New York, NY 10038

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Ippudo


Ippudo is a franchise ramen joint from Japan. They specialize in thick, rich tonkotsu (pork flavor) with smooth, straight noodle. I've already been twice and I do think it's as good as you get in Japan. However, the price is much higher and the ambience is totally different. It's more like a bar lounge and the menu has only a few ramen options but many appetizers. I guess western people don't buy the idea of slurping a bowl of noodle in a short time. To my fellow western friends, I sincerely ask that you set aside your appetizers and focus on the ramen when it's served.

You may have to wait a little but normally they seat you in less than 20 minutes. Weekends are really busy though.

Ippudo NY
http://www.ippudo.com/ny

Casa Mono


I've been to most of Mario Batali's restaurants and all have been a great dining experience. For my friend's birthday, I went to Casa Mono near Union Square, about which I have been hearing great reviews.

The restaurant is pretty small. You get locked into your seat. Service is fairly good. Not too uptight, not too casual. Their wine list is amazing in a way that they have nothing under $35 but lots of $xxx. We tried $40 red wine as per the server's recommendation. I liked it so much that we emptied 2 bottles.

I'd say the razor cram and fried sardine were the best pick of the night. Especially the sardine was fried light and crispy on the outside, moist and fluffy inside. They were quite big—three pieces served—but we quickly finish the plate.


The least two favorites were the quail with fig salad and pumpkin goat cheese croquette. While the fig salad was really tasty, they salted the quail too much. Pumpkin was too sweet to my taste (I am used to and fond of Japanese kabocha pumpkin which is less sweet and more fluffy).

Overall, I had a good time. And I might try again to see if they normally use less salt overall...

Casa Mono
www.casamononyc.com

reservation suggested

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Biggest Puppy

This picture is from 2 years ago when I visited my friends in Pasadena. They have 3 German Shepherds. The biggest one is the baby. He sits on the lap every time people try to sit on the flower. They come wake me up in the morning. Oh, I miss them!

Fragrant Lilly

Some people can't take it. I love it. The lilly at the market caught me with its intense, elegant smell. After a week, the two bunches are still doing well, all flowers bloomed.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Jeff Koons

I just took a mini trip to Chicago. Stuck in the glamorous ballroom in Marriott hotel all day for this academic exhibition, I almost missed to experience Chicago. I sneaked out from the conference and gave myself one hour to do something touristy. The closest thing was the Museum of Contemporary Art, where Jeff Koons was featured.

There is a debate over him being called an artist since he creates his artwork without actually producing them but by having other people to make them into a form. Well, maybe a half artist. But I don’t think people are recognizing the excellence or beauty of the production process. How nicely Michael Jackson is molded or painted in gold has so little to do with the piece’s artistic value. I think.


Perhaps, Murakami, who recently captured attention from media and industries, also holds the fame as an artist and a pop culture visionary.

Friday, August 01, 2008

Keeping Cut Flower Fresh

Here's a tip to keep cut flower fresh from the flower vender at the Union Square farmer's market:

Start with a clean vase: Sterilize your vase prior to use. The build up of bacteria can cause your flowers to breakdown much faster than they may naturally.

Clean foliage from stems that will be submerged in water. Ethylene gas submitted from foliage, as it break down in water, can cause flower heads to wilt.

Rinse vase with cool to lukewarm water. Flowers, like people, tend to absorb water more effectively if it is not ice cold.

Cut stem ends at an angle, 1/4" to 1/2" from the bottom, and immediately submerge in water. An angled cut allows for more surface area from which flowers may drink. Repeat entire process every 2-3 days.

Along with the basics, adding a couple drops of bleach and some 7UP or Sprite can help to keep your field cut flowers brighter and longer. Keep in mind that your flowers can be adversely affected by heat, by cold, by wind and by smoke.

Summer Food

During the summer, I leave for work a bit early and walk through the farmers market in Union Square. My favorite in this market is one of the Korean farmers. They got Japanese vegetables, some of which are hard to find. For the summer, they have Japanese eggplant, seedless cucumber, okra, Japanese sweet pepper and mizuna leaf.

Using these summer vegetables:

Okra and Chicken
Cut chicken breast, onion and okra into about 1/2" cubes. If you have, fine chop some fresh ginger and garlic. Stir-fry chicken and ginger/garlic first and add the vegetables. Season with salt, pepper and some chili sauce or soy sauce if you like.

Fried Eggplant and Shishito Pepper in Bonito Broth
Cut Japanese eggplant into 2 inches. Deep-fry the veggies quickly in vegetable oil (salad oil, corn, canola oil)
Put them in bonito broth with a bit of mirin and soy sauce with grated ginger. (I personally love the ginger. Really good combination with eggplant.) Put a piece or flakes of dried hot chili if you like.
Leave it for a while and chill in the refrigerator till it cools down. (no need to make it super cold)