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raji

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Posts posted by raji

  1. I think service suffers a bit for this as it can be difficult to flag down one of the (very busy) servers.

    Nothing a well-placed "sumimasen" can't fix... _feel_ the nihongo bryan-zan

    But, let's be honest, this place is really all about the ramen.

    Even at a "ramen brasserie" as Ippudo claims, I'd stick to the ramen, gyoza and/or items that could be toppings but arrive on the side i.e. charshuu. FYI Santouka is known for their toroniku charshuu in Japan, and while they pretty much nail the ramen, they haven't gotten that totally down yet....

    We ordered a bowl of the shiromaru and the akamaru.  While we generally preferred the latter we found that, by the end, the broth was out of balance.  The extra sauce and sesame make the last few spoons of broth a bit bracing.  The shiromaru may as well be noodles in pork gravy.  It's almost like eating essence of barbecue minus a bit of the smoke.  This was extremely rich, but, I felt, a bit underseasoned.  I thought the additions in the akamaru (at the onset) really balanced the bowl and added complexity.

    The noodles, meh.  They were fine; I'm not too into the the thinner style.  Cooked well, nice chew, but not enough elasticity for me.  The pork loin in the shiromaru was tasty if a bit tough.  Quite liked the belly in the akamaru.

    All in all, I really liked this place and will go back at off-hours for their lunch deal.  With that said, this ramen isn't radically different from what you can get at most decent ramen shops.  An order of magnitude better?  Probably, but Santouka is a viable substitute for me.  Although I haven't been to Setagaya for several months (a revisit is certainly in order) I find that broth, the sharp salinity of it in particular, to be more distinctive if not explicitly better.

    You say pork gravy like it's a bad thing....

    While I'll be the first to admit that it's hard not to like a broth that is SO rich, as Ippudo's is, I still think it's a much better broth than Setagaya. If they put out a well-executed seafood and salt-based broth, then it's just a matter of taste, but they don't.

    I was back at Setagaya last week and was even less impressed than I was the time before that. I will write up a review in the Setagaya thread but to be honest, their broth was not exactly flavorful. It was saltwater; I didn't even bother with any spices or chili oil or anything to flavor it towards the end of the bowl, because there was no point, there was no flavor to enhance. This worked out, the watery, mild-flavored broth worked on a blazing hot, sun-beating-down-on-our-shoulders Saturday afternoon last, but honestly, if I'm gonna drop 2 digits on a ramen, I'll wait for sundown and go for the animal fat.

    Noodles - that's a matter of taste, if you don't like hosoimen, kyuushu-style, like Ippudo's, you never well and you will prefer the nearly udon-like bouncey Setagaya noodles, but I don't factor my personal tastes, broth noodle or otherwise when I say that Ippudo is far superior than Setagaya.

    Needless to say I think all of us are eagerly awaiting what Santouka will do in Manhattan. If I haven't before I'll mention again that this was my favorite ramen-ya in Shibuya.

  2. It's funny, I had a similar experience to what is a very similar restaurant, Marseilles in Hell's Kitchen, just Monday night. Everything was expertly prepared and very, very tasty and their wine program still benefits from several GREAT sommeliers they have had..

  3. We were in Tokyo last week and for a long time had been struggling to get into the Ginza Jiro locaiton, without success. When we got to Tokyo the consensus among several people we bumped into (including a prominent Japanese food writer) was that it wasn't worth the hassle, and is overrated.

    We did eat at Mizutani, and I'll agree with the poster who described it as a reference meal. (As an aside, the night before our meal at Mizutani our hotel concierge slipped a note under our door confirming our reservation and noting that the restaurant requests that customers do not wear perfume or cologne. This was a good sign.)

    We had three sushi meals in Tokyo. Sushi Dai in Tsukiji at like 7am. $30/person, and at least as good as Yasuda. Kyubei was a definite notch above Sushi Dai, the rice in particular.

    Mizutani was on a completely different level from any other sushi we've ever had. We had a piece of uni there from Hokkaido that was perhaps the single greatest thing I've ever eaten. The flavors kept coming in waves.

    Having said all of this, Yasuda is still excellent sushi. In fact, that the quality of the food is so good there is all the more impressive considering that he's not 15 minutes away from Tsukiji.

    LOL stinky foreigners!

    Besides Sushi Dai, how much were the other meals? And in ¥en if you remember? (the dollar is _normally_ around 1 to 120 yen...)

    Even though I love Yasuda, I'd consider them overrated too. I mean, I do have to convince people that there _are_ other worthy sushiya in NYC.

  4. I stopped into Mitsuwa on my way home to Manhattan. They are having an event today and hopefully it will be all this weekend. Octopus balls, a strange sashimi-ish concoction, every kind of croquette, fresh mochi, a delicious looking plum desert,  sweet potato and much more.

    They also had a special on some expensive thin cut angus beef short ribs that I have been eyeing for a long time. Now I need to figure out what to do with flanken that is cut 1cm thick. Suggestions are always welcome.

    The Uni is a new brand and looks much more luscious. Another find is the raisin rolls at the Red Tomato counter.  Sort of like Parker House rolls. Great with a slab of butter.

    So, for those of us that summer where we winter, get thee to NJ.

    Looks like they're having another gourmet fair!

    http://openpub.realread.com/rrserver/brows...e=/mitsuwa/njad

    They also had a special on some expensive thin cut angus beef short ribs that I have been eyeing for a long time. Now I need to figure out what to do with flanken that is cut 1cm thick. Suggestions are always welcome.

    Yakiniku, Shabu-shabu, sukiyaki, nabe, beef negimaki

    (in order of preference...)

  5. Warm day = shio or shoyuramen - you want an "assari" ramen with the sun out. liquid lard would definitely drag you down

    Cold day and/or drunk = tonkotsu ramen which is what you had

    If that was ikura instead of mentaiko, I'd say that lunch special is a decent deal.

    Ikuradon rocks my world. Santouka offers a special with their shioramen, ikuradon and an egg, I think it's $13? And spoony bard is saying they'll be open in Manhattan by the end of the year?? Where oh where?!?!?!

  6. jesikka you mean "deserves" to be in the upper echelon, right?

    No, she was talking about price. She was saying that although it's not inexpensive, it's not in the the top eschelon of expense of New York.

    (At least I think that's what she was saying.)

    Maybe. Anyway, Tokyo and NYC are sister cities and one of the benefits we enjoy is authentic Japanese food of every type. I consider it a quintessential NYC experience to get Japanese food.

  7. I second the Eisenberg's recommendation. That's old NY and the owner intends to keep it that way. Get an egg cream. Wish the automats were still open.

    Grimaldi's gets a bad rap on here because of it's popularity but I still get the consistently best margherita there than anywhere else. I haven't been to Difara's lately. Mind you this is a couple decade's sample size. But whatever, even if it was only #3 or #5, it is a must-go because you can enjoy the Brooklyn promenade after that. Every visitor to NYC should walk the brooklyn bridge and end with a Grimaldi's margherita

    jesikka you mean "deserves" to be in the upper echelon, right? Ushi's easily in the top 3 in the city, and you can expect a pretty eclectic mix of fish there. Hideo's great, go there.

  8. I was. I assume Dinosaur and Daisy Mae's are able to do because they got cheap space on the west side, which you need for those big cookers and smokers. Good barbeque, wherever, is always destination dining - it's always on the outskirts of town somewhere at some dump, it's almost never in the center of town. I enjoy Blue Smoke but I think that's mostly due to the Danny Meyer influence, and the standard is great

  9. I highly doubt that they are serving the same ingredient quality at the same level of execution as when they first opened. Some friends have told me about their visits and they're over it -

    I don't know why but certain Japanese restauranteurs feel like they need to offer a spectacle along with the food because Americans will simply not be excited by good Japanese food alone. i.e. Benihana, Ninja, Megu, Morimoto - that, and NY offers a venue for their flagship where they will really display the cajones

    That said, an initial visit to Megu will be marvelous. A 2nd visit will be decent if you order nothing you ordered the first time. After that, there's a severe dropoff when you start to actually get actively pissed that you're paying for an ice sculpture bhudda and over $10 for asparagus.

    Here's the perfect situation for Megu: you have clients in from out of town, say, the midwest, and you really want to score a good impression. They might be back in a year at which point again you'll be forced to shell out the exorbitant sum for a visit there.

    First few times I went there I always saw members of the NY Knicks there. Nuff said.

  10. Why does NYC BBQ need to be so goddamn expensive... because it can be? I assume

    That's part of the reason I'm so fond of Daisy Mae's, it's not cheap but not expensive, you don't feel like you're eating a $13 bowl of ramen or anything ;-)

    I feel like the pricey ones in Gramercy and Chelsea are there for out-of-town or expat Southerners

  11. Just went to Old Homestead,paid $41.00 for a less than satisfactory,almost tasteless Burger,any  votes for the best Kobe Beef anywhere in USA .

    Do you mean American Wagyu/Kobe-Style, Japanese Wagyu/Kobe-style, or meat that is actually from the Hyogo prefecture?

    The best beef of Japan is actually Matsuzaka - yes, like the pitcher.

    But any of the Tajima strain will be very very good - the climates of Kyushu, Shikoku and parts of Kansai really produce the best.

    With Seryna closed I would suggest the Wagyu kaiseki at Sugiyama for the penultimate ishiyaki Wagyu experience

    http://www.sugiyama-nyc.com/11701.html

    (the ultimate, of course, a flight to Japan... or at least Hawaii...)

    http://www.ebisu-toraji.com/EN/hawai/index.html

  12. So, no second iteration of Kuruma Zushi?

    Is there a particular sushi master I sh/would request if visiting Kuruma?

    Mm you should just go for the old guy, I forgot his name.

    I haven't heard anything else about a 2nd kuruma, but she _was_ told that last year... guess they decided against it....

  13. Any other food in the general region (say 8 blocks in any direction around the NYC Courthouse area) is also cool.

    Budgets constrain us to keep under $15 bucks for entrees. I'm not scared of street food, but my companion is. Time is also important, as we must be able to return to the NYC Courthouse within 15 minutes of getting a phone call.

    I know I haven't indicated a specific interest in say, asian food, but I'm open to trying new things, while at the same time allowing my companion to order something that is more "familiar" to him.

    Yah you are echoing the standard "jury duty" request that comes up every few months.

    IMO The problem with NYC's chinatown is that the more upmarket side of Chinese and SE Asian food is just not well represented. Most of the kitchen workers are Fukienese migrants and a lot of the places are cheap with cheap ingredients for people who don't want to spend a lot of money. Which is why you can find consistently better in Vancouver and even the 'burbs. It's kind of the same situation with NY's Indian food - the best and worst are represented, the worst being 6th street Bangladeshi row, but if you go out to Edison you find a huge well-off Indian population who built an oasis out there.

    There's also a lot of incredible deals to find among that mess, but it's almost mind-numbing for a NYer over the years to keep track of which dive is good when. Which is why we have Pan!

    Non-scary places you might try -

    Ping's Seafood - This is as close to a pre-97 HK restaurant as you'll find http://nymag.com/listings/restaurant/pings-seafood/

    Look who wrote the review!

    Dim Sum Go Go - I'm not a fan cuz you can piece together better cheaper around Chinatown, so it's a luxury item

    http://nymag.com/listings/restaurant/dim-sum-gogo/

    X.O. Kitchen - It's no Chinatown Brasserie but if you go and see what other people are ordering, you can do quite well there - everything there is for the most part freshly made which is a big plus

  14. This rant is not meant to take anything away from Momofuku Ko. It is a wonderful restaurant. But it has to be said that what Chang is doing — as good as it is, and as much as we enjoy it — is a whole order of magnitude below what the best restaurants are capable of.

    So, Ko is "ghetto fabulous" and L'Atelier is "haute couture", but they each have their own merits

  15. Nobu is better then http://www.inagiku.com/ at tempura?

    Some of my Japanese friends suggest that Inagiku should be the best, it's been so long since I've had it. Nobu's is technically very very good.

    Not sure why DeChellis didn't push the Japanese angle more, even though there are more than enough stylized Japanese "scenes" open on the west side of manhattan...

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