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Coop

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Posts posted by Coop

  1. I come to Seattle to do business at the marina in Shilshole 4 or 5 times a year. I never eat down there because there isn't really much activity during the week. Ray's Boathouse has seen better days and I'm still pissed at them for a dinner i had at Ray's Downtown in the 90's.

    I stopped at Paseo which is a large outdoor food stand. There was a half dozen people in the kitchen and I didn't have much other choice so I gave it a try. Seriously the pork sandwich (the #2, most popular evidently) was one of the two or three best sandwiches I have ever eaten. Lots of tender pork loin, fried onions, fresh romaine and lots of juicy dressing and meat juice. All this served on the best sandwich bun I've ever had. I found out later they come from the Macrina Bakery.

    The place got very busy at 12 and everyone seemed very stoked to be there. Evidently these people have a place at 41st and Freemont according to a Seattle Firefighter who seemed to be a regular.

    Can't wait to go back.

  2. [quote=tighe

    I'm beginning to think there's some phenomena where restaurants not in one's hometown just seem better. :laugh:

    Very true.

    As for Purple, we went there in May with no reservations, the place was full and they had no reason to do anything but turn us away. They however gave us the best table in the place, right in the corner window and treated us like VIPs. The wine list there is fairly decent and the food was better then we had the night before at BOKA. Besides the two wives loved it there.

  3. Can I be an ass and ask why you would want to eat at Pichet and/or Campagne when you have Mistral (among others) in your hometown

    tighe, I have had good and mediocre meals at Mistral in Vancouver. The last time was at a private dinner and everything went well until the mains which were very poor. Other times everything was very nice.

    We ate at BOKA last time and found it decent. The macaroni with lobster and the mini burgers were very nice washed down with a bottle of Felsina Chianti Classico. The main courses were a bit poorly done and the service was a bit amatuer. I'm sure we will eat breakfast or lunch there at least once.

    Ling, thank you. I'm glad you like Cremant because I was leaning that way. If we go anywhere for cocktails it would probably be Vessel, now that I know it's really a bar and not a department store window.

  4. Mistral 1st and Blanchard I believe

    Harvest Vine or Lark as well

    Last time we were at the Harvest Vine it sucked. The food was fine but the service was comedic. They couldn't find the wine we ordered, charged us for food we never recieved and generally let us sit un-attended for large periods. Odd because we were there trying to spend money. Managed to spend $500+ for 4 people even without the bottle of Clos Magador.

    Mistral may be a little too formal for this trip. I think Lark may be a possibility. Jonathan Sundstrom's food interests me. A lunch at Earth and Ocean a few years ago was quite good.

  5. My wife and I and another couple are making our thrice annual trip to Seattle for golf, food and wine. We ususally eat at least one meal at Le Pichet and one at either Campagne or Cafe Campagne.

    When we came down in May this year we had a great time at the Purple Wine Bar across from the Olympic and will probably return there for one meal. I would be interested in hearing people's opinion on some of the other possibilities. We will be staying at the Hotel 1000 and are pretty good drinkers so driving is out.

    So what do people think of:

    Cafe Beato

    Cremant

    Ethan Stowell's Italian place

    Volterra

    I would also be interested in other suggestions.

  6. I completely agree with Keith's opinion on the chef's vision. Yes it works for me, but not always for everyone. I think every owner needs to attract the customers that aren't quite as serious as us. Though I may share a chef's vision that doesn't mean everyone at my table feels the same way.

  7. This is a strange question in my opinion. In any business a fine line is walked to keep the customer happy. In the business I am in right now the answer to the question is (is the customer always going to get what they want?) If they are willing to pay for it, yes.

    This may get lost in the restaurant business, where everyone is trying to keep thier prices low and thier costs reasonable. I believe the garde mange may have a different opinion then the owner.

  8. I ate at Sami's a couple of months ago and it had the feel of a soon to be closed place. The ladies working there were less then inspired. the food was okay though, but the room was cold and the waiteress seemed to disappear into the kitchen for long periods. I actually had to look for her to get my bill.

  9. Last night actually. We had a bottle of L'Ecole 41 Schoolhouse Red 2002. It was surprisingly rich with a nose of cassis, cherries, mint. The mouthfeel and balance were perfect. I was shocked. I don't drink this sort of thing very often.

  10. The truth is we use our Liquor Control Board markups to pay for our highways, medical system, and our very well paid provincial civlil servants. The truth is we don't want to see our socialists (BCGEU members) living on the streets.

    Bill I have never noticed your obcession for punning. As for these wines I would probably skip them. I remember wondering why anyone would pay the kind of price the Parradux fetches, especially when it was next to the Uriah 2001 for a bit less. I have to admit that these wines were amongst my favorites back in the 80's and early 90's. I loved the SB when you could get it for about $20 cdn. There was also a blend called the 3 something Merlot. 3 Tree? 3 Palm?

  11. Odd ball Italian! Now you're talking. I did pick a Nero d'Avola from Sicily for my WOW. Why not Veneto or Campania or Provence or Mendoza or Greece or Mexico? This is the World Wide Web.

    IMHO California wine just isn't that interesting. Don't feel scorned though I feel the same about Aussie wines too.

  12. Nice. Take off the blinders dude not all of us live in wine country. Cline Zin is not available in BC. The Columbia Crest merlot doesn't interest me. There have been 4 WOWs from the US, one Aussie, one Italian and an Alsatian. We have less and less participation as we skew more american. Wonder why? When people start expanding thier horizons in this forum then expect more participation.

  13. Our trip to Hooter's are family trips with my two teenage boys. They dream of the day they can go to the Cec' but have to be satiafied with trips to Hooter's or Fatburger or even better the Earl's in Langely.

  14. I need to weigh in on both Hooter's and In and Out. First Hooter's. The one on Robson is still operational I took the two Jr Coop's there before the Golf and Travel Show in February. The food is very lame but the service staff is very talented.

    In and Out is without equal in the Fast Food Burger world. There is occaisionally some variation from location to location. For me the best is the I 5 location in Stockton. If you don't believe me then ask the defending Master's champion, a man who looks like a burger expert.

    Too bad Fatburger may suck.

  15. Yes it is certainly quantity over quality at this place. BTW it has the dirtiest washroom in the Greater Vancouver area. I don't like the way they slice the meats so thick.

    I think it was better about 5 years ago. don't think they have cleaned up in there since then. I'll go west about two miles and have a Bahn Mi at Ben Do any day.

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