Monthly Archives: January 2009

Celebrating Australia Day with Sugar

fairy-bread

I somehow managed to pass over Robbie Burns Day (my heritage and a holiday I grew up celebrating) AND Chinese New Year (which I at least know something about) yesterday without too much thought, only to come to work today and partake in an Australia Day celebration.

lamingtons

Although it doesn’t say anything to that effect on Wikipedia, I’m left with the impression that Australians celebrate their national holiday with copious amounts of sugar. There was fairy bread – white bread spread with butter and coated in sprinkles – which is apparently a staple at children’s birthday parties, butterfly cakes – cupcakes with the tops cut into wing shapes and held on with whipping cream, lamington cakes (pictured above), pavlova, and some chocolate Tim Tams and other assorted Austalian candy.

butterfly-cakes1

It was quite the spread of sweet things for 10 o’clock in the morning and I was vibrating from the sugar not very far into it. I balanced it out with a couple of Vegemite toast soldiers that most of my coworkers deemed inedible, but which I thought were easily the best part.

So Happy Australia Day! I love being a part of different cultures and traditions (especially concerning food), so now I’m tempted to look at the calendar and see what else is coming up. Groundhog day, anyone? Uh, maybe not.

Schnitzel Sandwich; King of Sandwiches

schnitzel-sandwich

I have found a new King of Sandwiches. And rather than being set up in a castle, it’s been hiding out in a tiny mall in Yaletown. Yes, head down Mainland until you find a place called the Euro Pastry Shop and then order the Euro Chicken Schnitzel Sandwich. Make sure you’re hungry. And make sure you’re sitting down, because this sandwich is impressive.

Breaded chicken schnitzel with fried eggplant and zucchini nestled in with tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and lettuce. Your choice of bread is light rye, sourdough, dark rye, marble rye, white or wheat and while my coworker chose wheat bread (for some semblance of health), I gave up and went with plain white in the hopes that I might be able to finish it all.

This is an enormous sandwich. You bite into it and then you keep biting, through all the delicious layers, until you have a mouthful, then you do it again. It seemed like a losing battle to me, except that I was propelled forward by how good it all was. The schnitzel was savoury and meaty without being greasy (the peppers especially are provide a grease-cutting tang) and the addition of eggplant and zucchini made it simply a sandwich that cannot be competed with. Delicious.

It is possible to get the schnitzel sandwich without the eggplant and zucchini, which I will likely do on any day that doesn’t preceed me being lost in the woods for a month before, and of course they have many other sandwiches on the menu as well that are begging to be sampled.

Euro Pastry House on Urbanspoon
_________________________________

Euro Pastry House
#114 – 1058 Mainland Street, Vancouver

Keep Going on to the Next Noodle Bar

next-duck-noodle-soup

For some reason I have been walking past Next Noodle Bar since it opened, not quite avoiding it, but not going in either. The other day I decided to finally give it a try and what I found inside what not quite what I was expecting. Set up beside Prima, the storefront looks sleek and somewhat upscale, but upon entering, the casual, quick service and bustle are evident. I was seated quickly, handed a plastic menu and asked for my order before I could get through all the pages. They’re clearly used to a busy lunchtime crowd and there’s nothing wrong with that, but the food can be hit and miss.

next-chicken-lollipops

I couldn’t resist the idea of the chicken lollipop appetizer; breaded balls of chicken, fried and skewered on sugar cane with a sweet chili sauce, and they were good, but good in the way that fried mozza sticks are good…because they’re greasy with a tinge of sugar and hit all the tastebuds at once, including the guilt receptors.

Still, they were something different and flavourful, which is more than I can say for the Imperial duck noodle soup that followed. The duck was tasty, but the noodles and broth were both bland and no amount of condiments could to fix it.

The menu has noodles, rice  and soup dishes (among others) and while there appeared to be something for everyone, the menu is really too broad to be useful.  Dishes come from different areas and countries, but too many to be cohesive and often completely whitewashed so that you can’t taste the regional flavour anyways.

It’s that “Pan-Asian” style that caters to white people by trying to incorporate too many flavours and cuisines and ending up doing none well. I’m not really a fan, but it was busy while I was there and as long as there are diners needing decent, quick lunches it will continue to be. You could do a lot worse for $7-$10 entrees in that neighbourhood, but then you can do better as well.

Next Noodle Bar on Urbanspoon
___________________________________________

Next Noodle Bar
560 Robson Street, Vancouver

Holiday Eating and Dining Plans for 2009

prawns-in-garlic2

The theme for 2008 was not ever being home and a huge part of that (a sub theme if you will) included some spectacularly good eating out. I started this post by making a list of the top meals of 2008 but so many of them happened in the last week of the year that it made me seem like I just had a terrible memory.

medina-fricasse

There were a couple of fantastic meals at Boneta (easily my new favorite restaurant of the year if you don’t count Tailor in New York City) and several from old favorites Dona Cata, HapaSalt and Medina, but it’s been this holiday time that has taken the year of good eating to possibly unbeatable proportions.

Christmas eve started with a spread for some friends; Susie and I made homemade caramel, fudge and cookies, chicken livers marinated and grilled with red onion, Parkerhouse rolls to wrap around cold cuts, homemade crackers to go with a selection of cheeses, cherry tomatoes stuffed with feta, carrot soup and mulled wine kept warm on the stove.

Christmas day was a traditional English dinner at my dad’s place with a roast turkey, Waldorf salad, mashed yams, roast potatoes and parsnips, flaming figgy pudding and lots and lots of wine.

venison

Later Boris and Rachael had a Christmas open house at his parent’s place on Bowen Island. There was homemade creton on homemade soda bread, Czechoslovakian cabbage soup, and then thanks to an underweight fawn that had frozen to death in the backyard, 4 courses of venison. Steaks sauteed rare with grapeseed oil and salt and pepper, heart cooked with a bit of garlic and served on a cracker, roast with dried apricots, cranberries and prunes, garlic mayo and wine (among other things, I’m sure), followed up with venison shank cooked to perfection in the aforementioned cabbage soup. It was a meal that I am not likely to ever have again, and it was incredible. Special thanks go to James for his suburb butchering and cooking skills and to Boris for hosting and delicious cooking as well.

Another evening, some friends and I made gargantuan, decadent tourtières from the Au Pied de Cochon cookbook and it seemed like even before I had finished digesting it, we tucked in to the aforementioned Phnom Pehn eating extravaganza.

For New Years Eve I ate at Campagnolo restaurant (I’ll be putting a review up on Foodists soon) and feasted on seared tuna, fried chickpeas, roast pork and fagioli beans with cipolline onions. Just  incredible.

black-eyed-peas

Even the non-feast days had a ridiculous amount of decadent eating. There was bread pudding with arugula and gruyere for breakfast one day and seafood towers and steak lunches for lunch on another. Travis made his traditional broiled shrimp with garlic and scallions at some point between Christmas and New Year’s and later in the evening on New Year’s Eve made good luck black-eye pea and ham soup.

I somehow managed to not gain any wait through all of this, but only because all of my muscles must have atrophied. I don’t intend to be out of the house quite so much in 2009 – I want to do a lot more cooking for one thing – but this is the short list of places I want to eat at this year:

La Quercia
Vij’s
Les Faux Bourgeois
Red Sea Cafe

Ajisai Sushi
Michi Sushi
Senova
Pied-a-Terre
La Buca
Raincity Grill
DB Bistro Moderne
Lumiere
Octopus Garden
Quattro
C
Gastropod

UPDATE: And now I’ve just made plans to eat at DB Bistro Moderne,  Michi Sushi and Gastropod, so it looks like this list will not be too hard to get through.

A Special Phnom Penh Eating Extravaganza

I’ve raved about Phnom Pehn in the past so I won’t review it again, but I couldn’t help sharing these photos from an incredible dinner recently:

crab

tamarind crab

scallops

fresh scallops in their shells

squid

squid in garlic and onions with peppercorns

butter-beef

butter beef

special-beef-salad

special beef salad

baby-lotus-root

baby lotus root and a couple of other dishes I neglected to post…sausage, pea shoots, fried rice. Then for dessert:

cocnut-pudding

coconut pudding

durian

durian and a gelatinous rice pudding, in slices.

mark-and-solange

Thanks Mark for the invite and thanks especially to Solange who came in on her day off to make sure everything was just amazing.

__________________________________________

Phnom Penh Restaurant

244 East Georgia Street, Vancouver