Wishing everyone in cyberworld a safe and merry Christmas! Keeping with the list theme, here's more "Best Of 2010"
Best Hawaii Restaurant: Sushi Izakaya Gaku I fell in love with their tofu with dashi jelly, spicy tuna tartar, and homemade tamagoyaki. And If you thought salmon couldn't get any more fatty and melt in your mouth, you gotta try their toro salmon sushi.
Best foodie book: Ruth Reichl's Garlic and Sapphires. I love this book. It details her life as a food critic for the New York Times, and her adventures going incognito so as not to be recognized by the restaurant staff. It was fascinating reading about the special treatment she got dressed as a hot blonde, and the nonchalant service she received dressed as an old lady. She drops recipes here and there throughout the book like breadcrumbs leading you from one chapter to the next.
Recipe you must try: Pumpkin stuffed with everything good. This recipe is from KCRW. This dish is testament to the fact that you really cant go wrong with cheese, cream and bacon. Click here for the recipe.
Market of the year: Nijiya. I was perusing my year in food, and I laughed remembering that crazy long obsession I had with Asian food the first half of the year. I have Nijiya to thank for supplying me with the ingredients to make okonomiyaki, beef tendon soup, and congee. Plus, I love how it's open till midnight.
I'd love to hear your "Best Of 2010"s. Leave a comment with your favorite restaurant, foodie book, market or recipe of the year!
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Best of 2010!
Ah, I love food lists. Here are my top picks for 2010!
Favorite Restaurant of 2010: Petrossian! This is a hands down pick for both me and Brad. Each time we've been there, we have had the best service, the most delicious food, and--strangely enough--the whole place to ourselves! I have no idea why this place is not more crowded than it is. Petrossian, by the way, is a caviar lover's dream. You must get the beef tartar, which is layers of beef tartar with loads of caviar stuffed between each layer. This is Brad's favorite dish. They also have egg salad sandwiches heaped with caviar, caviar tasting blinis, and even an espresso "caviar" panna cotta. The dish that I fell in love with, however, was not a caviar dish. It was their soup. Or soups to be exact. I have tried three of their soups (cauliflower, mushroom and borscht) and they were (I am not exaggerating) the best soups I have ever tasted.
Favorite Brunch Spot: LA Mill in Silver Lake. Sometimes I miss the east side, and a visit to LA Mill fixes that longing with an espresso shot of hipsters and well-crafted food. There is also no other brunch place that can come close to the stylish modern interior of LA Mill. Sitting there eating my little puffs of brioche dougnut holes, I feel both at home and in heaven.
Favorite "Slow Food" Restaurant: Rustic Canyon in Santa Monica. Everything at Rustic Canyon is wonderful in that "rustic" sort of way. Since their menu changes with the season, I would love to come back here again soon.
Favorite "Everyday Meal" Restaurant: Govindas! And by "everyday", I mean that I would eat there every day if I could. Govindas has been my 2010 restaurant obsession. I love their clean and healthy dining options, and their price of $8 for all you can eat food. Govindas is a part of the Hare Krishna Temple and all their cuisine is vegan/vegetarian.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Wedding Food!
Since wedding food stereotypically gets a bad rap, I naturally worried about the food at my wedding. I was so surprised when I took my first bite of my wedding dinner and it was actually delicious. Another bite of juicy mango chicken, and another of crispy-skinned pork bao confirmed that this was a fantastic wedding dinner. In addition to salads, misoyaki butterfish, and mango chicken, we also had two carving stations: a whole roasted pig which was carved for Chinese pork bao, and prime rib.
I didn't take any pictures of my meal (*gasp!*), but thankfully Brad's mom did! That's her artfully arranged plate above. Scroll down to see more wedding pics.
Our wedding favors were two chocolate dipped shortbread cookies
from Honolulu Cookie Company
We fed each other cupcakes from Hokulani Bakery. Then I fed myself some more!
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Yakbap
Our friends Mike and Michelle gave us some yakbap! According to Mike, it's a Korean celebratory dish made with sweet sticky rice, brown sugar, and other goodies. It is absolutely heavenly. The richness of the coconut milk combined with the nuttiness of the sesame oil makes for a satisfying dessert. The sticky rice is so soft and fluffy, it melts on your tongue.
In Mike and Michelle's version of yakbap above, they included dried cherries from Trader Joes. Here is the recipe from Mike's uncle.
Yakbap
Cook: 5 cups of mochi rice.
Mix in well: 1/4 cup sesame oil while rice is still hot (less if you like)
Add: 12 oz. dark brown sugar (adjust to your taste)
Optional: a) 1 cup coconut milk b) prunes c) pine nuts d) cooked chessnuts
Form: into rectangular pans to 1.5" thick
Bake: 40 min @ 350F (check earlier to make sure the edges don't get hard)
Let cool, then cut with a plastic knife.
Mix in well: 1/4 cup sesame oil while rice is still hot (less if you like)
Add: 12 oz. dark brown sugar (adjust to your taste)
Optional: a) 1 cup coconut milk b) prunes c) pine nuts d) cooked chessnuts
Form: into rectangular pans to 1.5" thick
Bake: 40 min @ 350F (check earlier to make sure the edges don't get hard)
Let cool, then cut with a plastic knife.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Our First Hanukkah Dinner!
Truffle Pate, herb cheese, asian pear and crackers from Trader Joes
Challah Bread from Trader Joes, served with cultured butter
Roasted Brussel Sprouts with thinly sliced onions
Potato Latkes with sour cream, apple sauce and chives (recipe courtesy of Brad's mom)
Peeling and grating all of those potatoes was the toughest part. I made the pot roast a day ahead so that the flavors could develop overnight. The brussel sprouts were roasted with just olive oil, pepper and salt. I bought them on the stem from Trader Joes, and it took a big knife to hack them all off. I felt like Indiana Jones.
The meal was a success! For dessert we had pumpkin ice cream and a raspberry tart that Ron and Fran brought. Delicious!
Potato Latkes
4 large potatoes
2 eggs
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
1 tbsp flour or matzah meal
lots of grated onion (1-2 small ones)
Peel or wash the potatoes and grate on a medium grater. Pour off half of the liquid. Add beaten eggs and rest of ingredients. Fry on both sides. Serve hot with applesauce and sour cream.
Notes: Put the onions in first; it keeps the potatoes from turning. Also, soak the potatoes in water if you peel them.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Pumpkin Stuffed With Everything Good
Brad and I heard an episode of Good Food on KCRW and they were talking about a pumpkin recipe called "Pumpkin Stuffed With Everything Good". Once we heard the words cream, cheese, bacon and pumpkin, we knew we had to try it. As expected, this was a spectacular dish. You can either serve it in the pumpkin (everyone spoons out their servings), or you can serve it cut up. We substituted sausage for bacon, and used Gruyere for the cheese.
We served the pumpkin with a side dish of brussel sprouts with cranberries, walnuts and bacon. Click here for the recipe.
Ingredients
1 pumpkin, 2½–3 lbs
Salt and freshly ground pepper
¼ lb stale bread, thinly sliced and cut into ½-inch chunks
¼ lb cheese, such as Gruyère, Emmenthal, cheddar, or a combination, cut into ½-inch chunks
2–4 garlic cloves (to taste), split, germ removed, and coarsely chopped
4 slices bacon, cooked until crisp, drained, and chopped (my addition)
About ¼ cup snipped fresh chives or sliced scallions (my addition)
1 Tablespoon minced fresh thyme (my addition)
About 1/3 cup heavy cream
Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg
Salt and freshly ground pepper
¼ lb stale bread, thinly sliced and cut into ½-inch chunks
¼ lb cheese, such as Gruyère, Emmenthal, cheddar, or a combination, cut into ½-inch chunks
2–4 garlic cloves (to taste), split, germ removed, and coarsely chopped
4 slices bacon, cooked until crisp, drained, and chopped (my addition)
About ¼ cup snipped fresh chives or sliced scallions (my addition)
1 Tablespoon minced fresh thyme (my addition)
About 1/3 cup heavy cream
Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Ruth Reichl's Sort-Of-Pad-Thai Noodles
I love Ruth Reichl's writing. She sprinkles recipes throughout her autobiographical books, which makes them all the more fun to read. In one of her books, she had a recipe for sweet, spicy noodles. She said it was sort of like pad thai, but better. I made it the other night for Brad and we agreed it was indeed better than the original! It is very simple to make.
Here is the recipe:
Friday, December 10, 2010
Mastros, Beverly Hills
You know that commercial where a couple go to a fancy schmancy restaurant and are served tiny portions of food? They have to have a second dinner at home because they were still hungry after dinner!
When I was at Gordon Ramsay's restaurant a while back, I felt like I was in that commercial. I ordered a mushroom soup and they brought out a pitcher the size of a coffee creamer and then poured the tiny amount of soup into my amusingly large soup bowl.
If you spend the same amount of money at Mastro's, however, you will eat like a sumo wrestler. We went here for a friend's birthday party and we got the private room with a window overlooking the kitchen. We ordered the rib eye (split), oysters on the shell, and all the trimmings (including lobster mashed potatoes, green beans, brussel sprouts, and shishito peppers). The lobster mashed potatoes definitely lived up to the hype. Every bite I took contained a meaty, buttery piece of lobster.
By the end of the meal, I was uncomfortably full. Everybody had leftovers, and our steak was just as good the next day!
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Helena's Hawaiian Food, Honolulu
This was my first time trying Helena's Hawaiian Food in Honolulu, and I fell in love with the place. I prefer Helena's to Ono's; Helena's is less salty, and I love their combos and side. We got take out to take to the beach. If you don't feel like paying for admission to a tourist-y luau, this is the place to come for authentic Hawaiian food. If you're not sure how much to get, just ask the waiter or cashier and he or she will set you up with the perfect amount of food!
(front to back) poi, chicken long rice, lomi lomi salmon
(front to back) squid laulau, ahi poke with opihi, lau lau, short ribs
haupia coconut dessert in the back
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Patrick's Road House, Santa Monica
The Jessica Burrito
Breakfast croissant sandwich
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Oatmeal Two Ways
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