Monthly Archives: August 2010

African Breese Biltong

biltong
Around Vancouver in 52 Restaurants > Africa > South Africa.

Vancouver has a pretty decent selection of East African restaurants (which I will certainly get to telling you about now that we’re touring though Africa), but Matt and I went on a road trip to Pemberton last weekend which just happened to take us past African Breese Imports in North Vancouver. African Breese, a South African import shop, specializes in all things South African including soap, BBQ sauce, candy and Rooiboos tea. Labels are often in English and Afrikaans and even with familiar brands like Cadbury chocolates, the products are utterly foreign. We walked around in awe at all the wonders but we were here for the meat.
Biltong

Biltong is a cured meat, a softer kind of jerky, made with beef and pork and sometimes ostrich and other meat (my Oxford Companion to Food suggests zebra). It’s spiced with coriander seeds, cut into strips and dried for days, at which point it becomes preserved and perfect for storing.  Unlike jerky, however, the meat is still relatively soft and the fat hasn’t been removed, which makes it much more palatable in my opinion. The biltong at African Breese has been on my list since it appeared on Vancouver Magazine’s List of things to taste before you die, but I didn’t realize there were so many kinds! Traditional, hunter and spicy blends filled the display case, along with some ”chili bites” and droëwors sausage, also in several flavours. Chili bites looked to be smaller, dryer slices of meat than the biltong, whereas droëwors are long, slender pieces of meat, similar to a peperoni stick or dry sausage. We didn’t try the chili bites but we got one each of karoo, traditional and spicy droëwors and a bag each of hunter and spicy biltong.

I thought I would like the spicy biltong best, but the hunter is complex and sophisticated and I couldn’t stop eating it (although that may have just been the salt). Coriander seed, fennel and sugar play against each other to be sweet-savoury-salty and we were sold. The salt and black pepper flavours linger on the palate. Matt describes it as being “very ‘meaty’ – more so than most jerky – without being offensive or overwhelming”. The spicy variety is similar in flavour to the hunter, but with a nice initial bite of heat sits somewhat separate from the rest of the flavours.

The droëwors were gone too fast to take specific tasting notes, but they were similar in flavour to the biltong while being an even more interesting texture. They are made from thin boerwors (farmers’) sausage but I could have sworn that they were hand-rolled. Lumpy sticks of beef and pork meat wrapped in a dry casing with pockets of both air and fat, each bite was different. And delicious. The karoo was my favorite and differed subtly in spices from the traditional. They are the perfect meat for a journey and although they were designed for quite a different sort of journey, they were no less enjoyed on the Sea to Sky.

Bitter Lemon

All that dried meat called for some liquid, so we had also got some water, ginger beer and this delightful bitter lemon soda (with quinine!) to wash it down. I am in love with this drink and will probably be drinking it for the rest of summer, hopefully with a stick of karoo in the other hand.

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African Breese Imports
1054 Marine Drive, North Vancouver

Exploring Richmond’s Alexandra Road

cattle cafe
I’ve wanted to check out Alexandra Street, also known as “Wai Sek Kai” or food street for quite some time now, but with 200 + Asian restaurants and no guide, I always felt a little bit intimidated. Enter Tourism Richmond and suddenly the street made sense. Myself and a handful of other hungry food writers followed happily as we ate our way through the three block feeding trough.

The first stop was Well Tea bubble tea and Taiwanese restaurant, popular with students and young people. The choices were unlike anything I had had before; grenadine yeast juice, and caramel milk tea with tapioca noodles instead of pearls! I later found out that by “yeast” they meant yogurt which brings things a little closer to home but I had already ordered an Earl Grey milk tea with kanten, a type of agar that is lower in calories than the traditional tapioca.

Winter Melon cake

Next we stopped in at Kam Do Bakery where we sampled a winter melon pastry (their signature treat) and an egg custard tart. Not having much of a sweet tooth, I would eat the winter melon pastry (also inexplicably called “old wife” pastry) again and again. It is a subtly sweet and gelled custard wrapped in a flakey pastry with the result being just rich and pleasing without being too rich or too sweet or too oily. Yum.

Laksa noodles

Alexandra Road is a jumble of all kinds of Asian restaurants sharing space. There are Malaysian, Taiwanese, Thai, both Japanese izakayas (gastropubs, really)  and traditional sushi joints, plus all types of Chinese eateries. At its inception in the late 80′s there were many Hong Kong style cafes, but now that immigrant patterns have changed and many more people are moving here from mainland China, the dining scene is starting to reflect that with Shanghainese and Beijing-style eateries.

Our first sit-down meal was at Cattle Cafe, a comforting Chinese-style diner with dishes like bakes seafood in cream sauce and choose your own noodles / sauce /topping. The photo above is of one of the most delicious laksa’s I’ve had in a while…a Malaysian style spicy soup with vermicelli noodles, brisket and basa fillet.

Some of the dishes were a little bit more adventurous (but no less delicious), like this unagi BBQ eel sandwich with cucumbers and sauce. Kind of like a Chinese grilled cheese sandwich, but then not really like it at all. I’m determined to recreate this for lunch this week.

BBQ Eel Sandwich

The next stop was Nan-chuu by Gyoza King, a dark and sexy Japanese Izakaya where we sampled more strange and wondrous stuffs; chicken skin skewers, gizzard skewers, chicken hearts, salmon nori and more. It was the Hitachino Nest cask ale and the mushroom-bacon yakisoba that made me start planning a repeat visit. The beef tongue (below) was also spectacular, its sweet, rich flavours being complemented on all sides by the beer. beef tongue

Finally we dragged our bellies into Jang Mo Jib, Korean for “mother-in-law” because she is the one running the kitchen while the rest of the family takes care of operations out front. Our guides had already ordered ahead for us and in short order out came soon dae jub see (blood sausage), jok bahl (BBQ pork feet), hae mool pah jun (seafood pancake), tohng gahl bee (BBQ short ribs) as well as some amazing glass noodles and an assortment of picked sweet potatoes and kimchi. 
stacey
Walking back to the skytrain, I started running down the list of strange delicacies we’d sampled…agar, bitter melon, chicken hearts, gizzards and skin, blood sausage, pig’s feet…I am an adventurous eater by most people’s standards and so I had had most of the “exotic” delicacies of the tour before, but I relished the idea of trying them as part of different cuisines and especially to be able to finally have a solid understanding of what Alexandra Road has to offer. Now there are only 197 restaurants to get through!

pig foot

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Alexandra Road is between No. 3 Road and Garden City in the Golden Village area of Richmond.

Well Tea
4811 Hazelbridge Way, Richmond

Kam Do Bakery
1120 – 8391 Alexandra Road, Richmond

Cattle Cafe
1020 – 8580 Alexandra Road, Richmond

Nan Chuu Japanese Izakaya
1160-8391 Alexandra Road

Jang Mo Jib Korean Restaurant
8320 Alexandra Street, Richmond

Miku Sushi

How have I not been to Miku Restaurant yet? I pass it constantly (albeit usually on early morning runs or late night walks with my fiancé) and I’ve heard so many good things about it, but somehow it was only recently that I managed to get in a superior sushi experience there.

My old friend and former boss, Jame Healy has had practically everything on the menu, so with him in charge out came a crunchy scallop roll with tobiko and crumbled tempura, a red wave roll (crab & avocado in maguro with pine mushroom sauce), aburi tuna, lush fatty bincho toro – the belly meat of white tuna, and the dish I keep hearing about – Aburi Salmon Oshi Sushi.  Aburi is Miku’s signature style, lightly flame-seared and infused with flavour. Oshi means pressed, so here you have fresh salmon seared then drizzled with a secret soy sauce, pressed and topped with a jalapeño. The flavour combination is exquisite and if I didn’t have such an addiction to toro and hotate (scallops), this would have been the favorite.

The location at the bottom of the Guinness Tower is a bit of a strange one – the 60′s decor of the office building is not quite in line with the swish minimalist Japanese style, but a lot of attention to detail has gone into both room and dish aesthetics. When I saw the edamame arrive at the adjacent table plated on some kind of twig nest, I regretted not ordering it, but the soft shell crab karaage came the same way, with a side of chili cream sauce and was delicious in the extreme.

I may just have to schedule my next run at lunchtime.

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Miku Restaurant
#2 – 1055 West Hastings St. Vancouver.

Charming Chen’s

malantou

A couple of days after the Richmond dinearound adventure, a friend invited me out to try Chen’s. Four Chinese restaurants in three days may seem excessive, but I’m  not one to turn down xiao long bao ever, so off we went.

Standing in line waiting for a table, the guy in front of me felt compelled to turn around and tell me how good the soup dumplings were. I grinned and said I had heard similar rumours until I realized that he was the same dude that had passed us in the parking lot with the Colorado plates. Colorado! That’s dedication. Tucked away in a strip mall in Richmond, I have no idea how he even found it, but he seemed pretty pleased to be there.

The first dish was the malantou, a bok choy type of dish, marinated and mixed with bean curd. It has a strange taste to it that I can’t quite put my finger on, but this being only the second time I’ve had it (the first at Suhang, only a couple of days prior), I clearly need a bigger sample set.

noodles in bean sauce

Next up was a noodle dish, in bean sauce, that was tangy and near perfect and then the beloved xiao long bao arrived. Soft and fragrant, they were a little too hot to eat at first so we balanced them on spoons, waiting for them to cool down. Until I have a row of XLB lined up in front of me, one from every shop in town (oh happy day!) it’s going to be pretty hard to rate them accurately. That said, I thought Chen’s dumplings were pretty top notch.

xiao long bao

And then the pan-fried pork dumplings arrived at the table. Delectable goodness, they were thicker-skinned xiao long bao, steamed and then fried so that the outside crisped. Of course this made them even trickier to eat and we almost all made a mess, but it was worth it. I will be having these again and again.

pan fried pork buns

The last dish, beef noodle with bean curd slices, was the only one that didn’t satisfy. Oily and spicy (with no complexity of flavours behind the heat), I worried as much about my sweater as I did about my tongue and finally abandoned the effort. It sure looks pretty tho:

spicy beef noodles

What a great dining experience. I can’t wait to go back.

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Chen’s Shanghai Kitchen
8095 Park Road, Richmond

*Cash only*

Richmond Northern China Dinearound

pickled napa, beef and pork "jelly"

It used to be that I thought Richmond was where the airport and IKEA were located and so I rarely made the trek, save when I was travelling or redecorating. But then the richness of the food culture opened up from the Richmond Summer Night Market to the splendours of Alexandra Road (with more than 200 Asian restaurants) – and now it’s a gastronomic destination in it’s own right. This is in large part due to the efforts of Tourism Richmond who recently invited me on a Northern China dinearound to a couple of restaurants specializing in key cuisines.

The first stop was the Point Zero Four Fusion Restaurant, a casual hot-pot and Chinese BBQ eatery frequented by students and families. When we arrived, a spread was already laid out for us, including a selection of cold appetizers, many of them pickled or cured in some way; Beijing-style pork “jelly” - boiled meat and pork skin allowed to gel into cubes, pickled Napa cabbage and lotus root, spicy black fungus, and beef slices with sour chili sui choy.

We filled up on hot pot cooked in two distinct broths (a milder chicken and scallion mix and a spicy chili soup) and served with two distinct sauces (sweet and sour Canton sauce and delectable Beijing bean curd and salted leek sauce) and BBQ’d skewers but there was a surprise. And then another.

A spicy chicken wing had been offered, almost as a dare. How bad could it be, I thought? And then it arrived at the table, coated in chilis and served with a “fire extinguisher” of frozen grapes and tomatoes.

spiciest chicken wing "ever"

I went slowly and had some grapes and while it was a little too hot to have much flavour, it wasn’t all that bad. I was the only one of the group to finish it all, but then some ”Chinese Famous Liquor” brand baijiu (56% proof rice wine, similar to grappa) was brought out and I was sure I was going to be breathing fire.

Chinese Famous Liquor

Somehow I managed to not kill my tastebuds and we continued on to secret Suhang, tucked in a corner of a strip mall. This is a more formal Shanghainese restaurant, specializing in some exotic delicacies. We had ma lan tou, a marinated bean curd and vegetable dish (made with a special type of leafy green, similar to spinach, that needs to be ordered from China and then flash-frozen), crispy smoked fish, gluten with sesame oil, peanuts and mushrooms, yellow fish deep-fried with seaweed and served with Worchestershire sauce.

gluten

But the pièce de résistance was a Hangzhou-style clay-baked chicken. Rice, gizzards, eggs and assorted other ingredients are wrapped in lotus leaf then covered in clay and baked for 5 hours in the oven. You have to order ahead for this one but then it arrives at dinnertime, looking like an asteroid on a plate. Deconstructed, it’s a delicious dish, but I’m not sure the same effect couldn’t be attained by roasting a chicken.

clay baked chicken

By this time our bellies were full to bursting but we still had one more stop and at least one more coveted item to sample. Anyone who reads this blog knows how much I love xiao long bao, those little dumplings filled with soup (and I’m sure some kind of edible crack), and Shanghai River has some of the best around. They arrived at the table and people dug in almost immediately, despite the temperature and despite the 2 previous dinners. They’re just that good. We also had an order of crab-filled xiao long bao, which I have only had at Joe’s Shanghai Restaurant in New York City. I don’t like them nearly as much as the pork dumplings (something aout the sea taste doesn’t come across as well) but these were miles better than theirs.  

crab xlb

Next up was a Peking duck with hoisin sauce. Traditionally divided into two dishes – the skin and then the meat – we had a platter of crispy fried duck skin wrapped in crepes with scallion and hoisin followed by stir-fried duck meat and lettuce wraps. Both were done well, although I’ve had more flavourful versions in other restaurants.

sesame dumpling deliciousness

I was planning on skipping dessert, because I don’t normally have a sweet tooth and I was so full anyways, but all of them intrigued me; a sweet, milky dessert soup, deep fried dumplings with red bean paste and pink sugar, and sesame dumplings with peanut coating. This last one, the sesame and peanut deliciousness, has now made it into the dumpling love club along with the xiao long bao. It is not too sweet, actually even a bit salty, with a creamy inside. It wasn’t on the menu but Stacey, our guide, assured me it can be found at most Shanghainese places. Despite ordering something similar yet not at all the same at Chen’s a couple of days later, I plan on attempting to order it everywhere from now on.

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Point Zero Four Fusion Restaurant
160-8500 Alexandra Rd.

Suhang
8291 Ackroyd Road, Richmond

Shanghai River
7831 Westminster Hwy., #110

Around Vancouver in 52 Restaurants: Americas

Photo Credit: ecstaticist.

Well, I’ve made a bit of a dent in my project to review Vancouver restaurants in a world tour kind of format. The Americas are a big place (comprising North America, South America, Central America and for our purposes the Caribbean as well) with a lot of unsettled history and so regional cuisines and dishes are still constantly evolving.

For example, many of the culinary trends we associate with Europe originated in the New World; “consider the list of foods unknown to Europeans until the sixteenth century; tomatoes, coriander, chilies, cocoa, avocados, bananas, beans, pine nuts, pecans, peanuts, squash and tobacco. What the Europeans did bring was significant – rice and wheat, olives, beef, mutton, goat, pork, almonds, cinnamon and nutmeg, raisin and wine grapes, and Seville oranges and limes.”

With Canada being part of the Americas, this should have been a pretty easy category to fill up, but North American food isn’t typically considered ethnic, except possibly with regards to Cajun/Creole and Southwestern cuisines. As for the rest of the Americas, Vancouver is not overrun with South American or even Mexican restaurants, but here is a sampling of the best.

The Americas (and Caribbean):

1. (French) Canadian: Frenchies

2. American: Modern Burger

3. American round2: Memphis Blues

4. Mexico: La Taqueria

5. Mexico round2: Las Tortas

6. El Salvador: El Rinconcito

7. Central America: El Caracol

8. Peru/Colombia: El Inka Latin Deli

9. South America: Cobre

10. Peru: Mochikas Peruvian Cafe

11. Brazil: Samba

12. Jamaican: Jamaican Pizza Jerk

13. Jamaican: Calabash

14. Cuban: Havana

Please also see the Reef, a Tale of 2 Jerks,  and more Havana.

Italian, Seattle Style

antipasta misto

Frequent business trips to Seattle this year have padded my Seattle Dining Notes list, to the point where I have several eating and drinking favorites marked out in different areas of town. So when a coworker suggested we go for Italian at a place close to the Westin Hotel, downtown I was eager to add a new neighbourhood and new cuisine to the collection. That said, I wasn’t expecting to be utterly blown away by the place. Barolo Ristorante is a gem.

pheasant gnocchi

My coworker and I had an antipasto misto and a couple of glasses of pinot grigio to start (should have been a barolo, I know!).  Slices of prosciutto and salami wrapped around pieces of roasted garlic, mozzarella and etc. disappeared between sips of wine and chit chat.

Before long our mains arrived. I had ordered the pheasant gnocchi, offered with a warning from our server to “please not order them if we ever wanted to enjoy gnocchi anywhere else” and my coworker chose some kind of decadent ravioli dish. Both were heavenly in the extreme, the dark richness of my pheasant anchoring the pillowy soft gnocchi to the plate while her oversize shells floated languidly in a cream sauce.

There was no way we had room for dessert but then somehow there was a lovely summery panna cotta with fresh berries and a cafe corretto – espresso with a side of grappa – to finish off the evening.

The service was somewhat unpolished in contrast to the food and the clean, modern room but the staff was kind and it didn’t detract from the experience all that much. Next time I’m state-side, I’m going to be back – this time with a reservation since even on a Wednesday night they were full up, proving that Italian food done right is one of the greatest pleasures.

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Barolo Ristorante
1940 Westlake Avenue  (in the Metropolitan Tower), Seattle.

Powell Street Festival

okonomiyaki

I leant my car to a friend last weekend, so my fiancé and I spent a significant amount of time wandering around the city, part of which included checking out the Japanese Powell Street Festival. It was a first time for both of us and didn’t disappoint.

menu of deliciousness

Of course the first thing I had to check out was the food. There was a takoyaki, yakitori and of course, sushi, as well as an okonomyaki station and several vendors selling ramen. We weren’t very hungry from the heat, but I couldn’t resist trying the yakimochi, BBQ’d rice cakes that looked for all the world like grilled soap:

mochi

Cooking softens it up considerably and served drizzled in soya sauce and wrapped in nori, it was quite tasty.

And then I saw the SPAM sushi. WTF? Raw SPAM? SPAM with rice? I had to find out.

spam sushi

There were no surprises; slice of grilled SPAM with some teriyaki sauce, sandwiched between pressed rice and wrapped in nori. Wikipedia tells me that this is a popular snack in Hawaii and the large size of the musaba strikes me as similar to the grab-and-go fare that Michi Sushi use to have. I have a bit of a phobia about canned, processed meat but it turned out to be not all that bad…the Japanese version of a ham sandwich maybe.

spam sushi

Aside from the food adventures, we had arrived in time to watch a sumo tournament and walking home provided a whole lot of interesingness in the form of a self-guided historical walking tour through the old Japantown. I really want to spend some more time exploring the area but failing that, I’ll definitely be checking out future festivals.

double happiness

More photos of the event on flickr.

Sushi, Sake & Summer

Tojo

Last Sunday there was a little something special happening at Granville Island, after hours. A fudraiser/book launch hosted by Edible BC saw the summer set mingling, sipping, sampling and dancing in support of author Evaleen Jaager Roy’s book, Four Chefs One Garden and the YWCA’s Crabtree Corner. While a full moon was rising over False Creek, Tojo’s Hidekazu Tojo (above) plated piles of hand-rolled sushi while the band played and guests moved from fresh fish to St. Hubertus wines, Osake Artisan Sake, Granville Island beer, Victoria Gin and back again. It was a gorgeous night, a delightful event and a resounding success – thousands of dollars were raised for underprivileged women in the Downtown Eastside.

Here are some of the highlights:

salmon

Chunks of fresh salmon, ready to go on the grill.

DSC_0004

Rows and rows of meticulously hand-rolled sushi.

Osake

Artisan sake maker, Masa Shiroki, on hand for sake sampling.

cucumber prawn rolls

Cucumber prawn rolls.

hoi polloi

Summer mingling.

sushi and sake

More photos can be seen here.

Calabash Caribbean

Akee and saltfish

Around Vancouver in 52 Restaurants > Caribbean > Jamaica

Conveniently when I was working my way through Vancouver’s Caribbean restaurants (and hoping I wasn’t going to have to make the trek to Calypso in Surrey or Kingston 11 in North Van), Calabash Bistro opened a block and a half away from me. Yes, sometimes sheer laziness pays off. And also conveniently, they were open one night when I was sweaty and cranky from unpacking boxes and more than happy to plunk a couple of cold ones down in front of me.

I ordered the Ackee and Saltfish, a dish that has intrigued me for some time, simply because of the sheer foreignness of it. What is an ackee? What is a saltfish? All I knew was that it is the national dish of Jamaica. As it turns out, an ackee is a fruit that is so poisonous raw that it can kill if eaten before it ripens. So it needs to be boiled before eating it and it can only be exported in cans. Saltfish is not that interesting. It is, as you might think, another name for salted cod. At Calabash, it’s sauteed with cilantro, spices, peppers and tomatoes and served with rice, peas and fresh greens. It was enough to make me forget the pile of boxes waiting at home for me and slide a little farther into my chair, still clutching the Red Stripe.

They make their own sauces in house, including curry, jerk and Jamaican ketchup. I tried the jerk sauce on a side of fries and was thoroughly convinced to come back for the jerk chicken. Hot and spicy with a world of flavour to back it up, it filled the balance between the beer and the dinner and the hot, muggy evening. Their menu is small…only a handful of dinner items, but you could stop in several times and not get tired of the variety of flavours.

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Calabash Bistro
428 Carrall Street, Vancouver