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huiray

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Posts posted by huiray

  1. Soup & Salad.

     

    Tomato soup.

    DSCN1128a_600.jpg

    EV olive oil, chopped-up onion, chopped-up celery, tomato flesh w/ juices, sea salt, water, fresh basil, simmer, break up w/ a stick blender, simmer.

    Served w/ a generous dollop of basil pesto & basil sprigs.

     

    On the way there: tomatoes [Van Antwerp Farm] after de-skinning and de-seeding.

    DSCN1107a_500.jpg

     

    Salad.

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    Red-leaf lettuce hearts, cooked (fresh) soybeans; sugar snap peas & peeled baby potatoes both just-barely cooked (separately, though) in salted simmering water; golden beets cooked to crunchy tenderness & de-skinned; hard-boiled eggs; chopped parsley.

    ETA: ...and sliced wong nga pak (Napa cabbage) leaves.

    Vinaigrette made w/ whole-grain Dijon mustard [Maille], EV olive oil [Alziari], Agrodolce Bianco Delizia Estense, Maldon salt, turbinado sugar.

    • Like 15
  2. On 9/2/2016 at 7:47 PM, Toliver said:

    McD's has resurrected the "2 McPicks for $5" here in my area. They've added back in a fourth item.

    Now the choices are:

    10 Piece Chicken McNuggets, a Quarter-Pounder with Cheese, a triple cheeseburger (O.o), and the Filet o' Fish sandwich.

    As before, you can mix and match or just order two of the same item.

    Game on! :)

     

    I've been sampling the "2 McPicks for $5" at a few places in my area, devoting it to just the Filet-o-Fish. Not bad. But, as has been mentioned, the slice of American cheese has shrunk to approximately a quarter-slice. Regrettable. Still, in most places it is "melted in" insofar as *that* goes. :-) Some places give what *seems* like a little bit more cheese, but overall they aren't THAT substantially different from place to place - but some places do do it just slightly better than others. I have a couple places that I will be returning to for more. The pics below do not account for all theF-o-F's I've had. A couple places had me wishing for a 3rd F-o-F after I had eaten the second one. Nowhere served me a F-o-F with a quart of tartar sauce; in fact, I would have asked for more if I had been ordering one of these at some other time - and being charged for the "more" nowadays, of course, whereas in years past there was no extra charge.

     

    A sampling of F-o-F sandwiches from three places:

    #1

    DSCN1081a_400.jpgDSCN1082b_400.jpg

     

    #2; and #3 with the bottom bun peeled back (& torn) to show the"melted-in cheese".

    DSCN1089a_400.jpgDSCN1123b_400.jpg

     

    • Like 2
  3. 2 hours ago, jmacnaughtan said:

    ETA: I seem to remember huiray talking about Chinese cooks doing this - cooking vegetables in fat rather than in steamers.  Seemed like a good idea :)

     

    1 hour ago, liuzhou said:

    I've mentioned this many times, but in over twenty years in China, I've never, ever seen anyone steam vegetables. Fish, yes. Eggs. Pork. Bread and buns, of course. But never vegetables. They are always stir-fried (in lard (pork fat) or oil) or used in soups/hot pots..

     

    As I've also said before many times, I've never seen a bamboo steamer in a domestic kitchen in China. None of my friends have them and I wouldn't know where to buy one if I had to. There is a street full of kitchen supply shops only ten minutes walk away. They don't have them. They are only used in dim sum restaurants and dumpling/steamed bread shops, although even there they are dying. The metal ones are deemed to be more hygienic.

     

    1 hour ago, jmacnaughtan said:

    Sorry, it must have been you I was thinking of.  My apologies.

     

    Perhaps you might have been thinking of what I described as blanching in simmering water to which some oil has been added. That I often do, with many types of vegetables, then dress with a sauce of my choice. I described it previously in this post

     

    As for bamboo/metal steamers here's what I said in another old post. Other posters (e.g. Keith_W, Dejah) not residing in mainland China also chimed in on that thread about steamers.

  4. Earlier in the day...

    Soft boiled eggs.

    DSCN1103a_500.jpg

    Drunk straight from the bowl. Slurp, chew, gulp.

     

    Then...

    Boiled edamame w/ Maldon salt.

    DSCN1105a_500.jpg

     

    Later on...

    Chinese take-out from a local place.**

    Hot & sour soup. Added some chopped scallions.

    DSCN1116b_600.jpg

    Quite good, actually.

    General Tso's Chicken (左宗棠雞; Jyutping zo2 zung1 tong4 gai1). With rice.

    DSCN1119a_600.jpg

    There was more of both. :-) 

    **ETA: From this place.

    • Like 15
  5. 44 minutes ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

     

    The person with the General's name was from Texas.

     

    I note Carolyn Phillips' All Under Heaven does not have an entry for General Tso's Chicken.  The talk section of the Wikipedia entry makes an amusing read:

     

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:General_Tso's_chicken

     

     

    Ah. What is his dialect group?

     

    GTC is an American-Chinese dish, so I would not expect it to appear in that "All Under Heaven" book. I would murmur that American-Chinese cuisine can be considered as an acknowledged cuisine in its own right.

  6. On 9/9/2016 at 3:26 AM, Thanks for the Crepes said:

    Mr. Wells was doing his professionally remunerated job while dining at Per Se, and he was not free to just walk out. In order to turn in the copy he was being paid to do, he had to endure less than wonderful experiences (multiple) to their end.

     

    Yes. It's his job, for which he is being paid a salary. If he walked out before the entire meals (multiple) were done he would be accused of not giving the restaurant a thorough and fair review, for all the dishes served. I would consider it dereliction of duty.

     

    As for the two-star rating - the profile on him linked to here explains why he did so.

    • Like 1
  7. 5 hours ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

     

    The person in question pronounced it (as best I can say) "Chu".

     

     

    You're in New Jersey, USA.  Was this in NYC or a Chinese restaurant in NE New Jersey? If so, it's possible the chap in question was from Fujian/"Fook-chow" or Jiangsi/"Kong-si" or related areas (i.e. a Wu dialect speaker) --- I *think* the pronunciation would then be closer to "chu" (as you describe) or "tsu"?

    FWIW the Cantonese for it would be zo2 in Jyutping, and Cantonese is still a widely-spoken dialect (if not necessarily the dominant one) in many areas in North America. (Certain forms of Fujianese would compete with Cantonese in NYC, I believe, and possibly NE Jersey; newer Chinese-heritage immigrants I suppose would speak standard pinyin/Mandarin more routinely)

     

    For myself I can't remember the last time I ate General Tso's Chicken. A long time ago, anyway, even if I guess I have had it in the past.

    ETA: I think I ought to check out a plate or two of it again, soon. :-) 

  8. Ligurian-type-inspired pasta w/ pesto.

    DSCN1085a_600.jpg

    Fresh basil pesto made w/ a French-Italian inflection (basil, garlic (Music), pine nuts, Pecorino Romano, Parmigiana Reggiano, Maussane-les-Alpilles olive oil, plus some Arbequina olive oil). French filet beans (both yellow & green) cooked in simmering salted water. Ozette fingerlings cooked similarly. Torcetti pasta [The Fresh Market] cooked in the same pot of water. All assembled & tossed in large bowl. Plated, dressed w/ fresh basil & additional Parmigiano Reggiano.

    • Like 17
  9. A dry ramen plate.

     

    Yakisoba last night.

    DSCN1078a_600.jpg

    Two farm-fresh eggs beaten w/ some salt, hon-mirin, sake, water, ground white pepper, oil. "Flash fried" in a very hot pan w/ generous oil for a bubbly lightly-browned omelette (less than a minute in all), removed & reserved, roughly "chopped" into strips.

    A bit more oil in the pan, then lots of sliced lightly-crushed garlic (Music), some of the white parts (sliced thinly on the diagonal) of an entire large-ish negi, toss/stir quickly; chopped hakusai (wong nga pak; Napa cabbage), stir in on high heat; the yakisoba seasoning packets (2) from the nama yakisoba package [Maruchan] (fresh yakisoba), then still-wet fresh yakisoba (from the package) rinsed under hot water, stir in, splash some water in, stir/turn over; add back in the reserved egg strips and the rest of the sliced white-parts of the negi, final toss & stir. Plate, garnish w/ the green parts of the negi, a quick drizzle of Bulldog tonkatsu sauce.

    • Like 5
  10. Last night.

     

    Pasta w/ tuna, tomatoes, capers.

    DSCN1060a_600.jpg

    EV olive oil [Maussane-les-Alpilles Fruité Noir], medium heat; chopped smashed garlic, diced Vidalia onion, soften but not brown; several olive-oil-packed anchovy fillets [Bella Famiglia], mash up, gentle sauté till they "dissolve" into the mix; white tuna in olive oil [Ortiz, El Velero Bonito del Norte] with some of the oil as well, break up a bit, gentle stir-around/fold-in; some hot red chile flakes, Salina salted capers (rinsed, soaked), stir/gentle sauté; chopped Cherokee Purple tomatoes, stir in, fishing out skins as the tomato pieces soften; just-cooked wet linguine [Rustichella d'Abruzzo], fold in on heat; chopped parsley [from my deck].

     

    Plus sautéed long flat pole beans.

    DSCN1054a_500.jpg

    The beans ("fagioli corallo") were cut French-style into shorter segments, blanched in simmering water to which a shot of "kan sui" (potassium carbonate/sodium bicarbonate solution) had been added, drained, rinsed; then sautéed w/ sliced garlic (olive oil) and some Agrodolce Bianco Delizia Estense (this one) splashed in just before the end. (The blanching in alkaline water "fixes" the green, at least for a while, in the subsequent presence of acid from the white balsamic vinegar; yes, they eventually still turn olive-y green but it takes a while)

    • Like 18
  11. 42 minutes ago, chromedome said:

    I should clarify, I'm not referring to the already-existing prepared veggie hot dogs, sausages, etc (veggy manufacturer Yves makes a faux-lamb product called "Lack of Ram," which cracks me up). I'm canvassing for reactions to a) realistic simulations of natural, raw meat form plant sources, or b) actual "meat" produced by an animal-free process.

     

    Neither appeals to me, nor even the notion of doing those things. I'm NOT a vegetarian/vegan and am certainly an omnivore - but in the E/SE Asian style, as that is what I am by heritage. I eat vegetables as vegetables, and cook and treat vegetables as what they are, and am not perturbed by the absence of meat in many of my meals. I am amused by the deceit that vegetarian burgers have to look and taste like meat. It's pandering, in my view, and even a little cowardly - insofar as it applies to the carnivorous Western diet.  Why not simply rejoice in those vegetarian dishes without pretense that it looks and tastes like meat!!! Sigh. But I suppose I am not the demographic you are looking for. 

    • Like 2
  12. Various meals.

     

    Another round of phở. (see here for the prep)

    DSCN1027a_600.jpg

    Ran out of normal limes so grabbed some fresh calamansi limes from the plant on the deck.

    Raw shaved ribeye, tendon, tripe, raw onion slices, chopped scallions, broth augmented by simmering more w/ the oxtail meat + recovered fatty marrow & etc from the bones.

    Calamansi limes, sawtooth coriander, Thai basil, coriander, bean sprouts.

     

    Pad woon sen, the night's version.

    DSCN1042a_600.jpg

    Hot peanut oil, garlic, dark meat chicken, some of a sauce mixture, poblano pepper, sweet red Carmen pepper, white onion, eggs, presoaked glass noodles, rest of the sauce mixture, Thai basil, bean sprouts.

    Sauce mixture: Fish sauce, oyster sauce, dark soy sauce, sang chau, sesame oil, white pepper, Shaohsing wine.

     

    Soup.

    DSCN1048a_500.jpg

    Shaved ribeye & tong ho (茼蒿) in some of the Phở broth/stock diluted down w/ water.

     

    A tofu & mince rice plate.

    DSCN1052a_600.jpg

    Hot peanut oil, chopped smashed garlic, sliced young ginger (season's fresh crop), minced sirloin, hoisin sauce, oyster sauce, Bulldog tonkatsu sauce, soft tofu block crumbled by hand into the pan, lots and lots of chopped scallions.

    White rice.

    • Like 19
  13.  

     

    20 hours ago, Thanks for the Crepes said:

    ... Then I read the part where Pete Wells had a better time at Senor Frog's than at Per Se...

    ... People who went there to enjoy good food hate it, and people who went there to drink, party and dance with their own party of good company love it...

     

     

    And, just for the hell of it, here's a clip taken by Kat Kinsman (one of those at that meal, referred to in the New Yorker article) of Jason Biggs having a good time. :)

     

    https://twitter.com/kittenwithawhip/status/765991106949554176?ref_src=twsrc^tfw

     

    • Like 1
  14. Glad folks appear to enjoy the article.

     

    11 hours ago, Thanks for the Crepes said:

    Then I read the part where Pete Wells had a better time at Senor Frog's than at Per Se

    Here's an Eater article on this. :-)

    Sadly, the NYC Señor Frogs has closed.

     

    Eater.com put out a follow-up article on the New Yorker profile: 

    http://ny.eater.com/2016/9/6/12812332/pete-wells-profile-8-things-we-learned 

    A commenter there remarked that Chang did not come over well. I myself would agree.**

     

    As for the review on Momofuku Nishi, for those interested here it is.

     

    ** As an aside, I for one look askance at the adulation heaped upon Chang here in the USA. His vaunted pork buns, just as one example, are but a rework of a dish/preparation that has been known and eaten for years and years in E/SE Asia; and food bloggers etc (some of whom I respect) in those locales have laughed at this weird adulation in the States of this pork bun, and at the notion held by some that he even invented it (not!).

    • Like 3
  15. 2 hours ago, blue_dolphin said:

    According to this local Gilroy news article, McDonald's is sourcing the garlic from Christopher Ranch, so it is local to the area.  It says the recipe was offered as a Garlic Festival special at one McD's location in Gilroy, sold out and was eventually expanded to most of the Bay Area McD's.  It also says the fries are made to order by tossing the cooked fries with a purée of garlic, olive oil, parmesan cheese, parsley and salt.

     

    I would expect them to get soggy quickly.  A video of someone tasting them showed them being served with a fork. 

     

    1 hour ago, Smithy said:

     

    Thanks for that link.  I guess that explains the name!  Too bad their execution - at least, for those you tried - is as bad as their grasp of geography. (The San Joaquin Valley isn't over there. 9_9) Still, I think I'd like to try something with the flavors described by @blue_dolphin from the Gilroy paper's article.

     

    It sounds like something not dissimilar from what a burger joint in my area serves - see here, scroll down to the fries. Yes, it gets soggy fast. You have to eat it while it's still hot, right after they toss the fries w/ the dressing. You need a fork after 5 minutes or so (at best) if you haven't scarfed it down yet. And if the fries were not cooked in hot-enough oil (i.e. they were slightly greasy to start with) they go downhill even faster. So, getting it from the drive-thru at a McD, with time delays between the fries being done , the holding of them, the dressing, etc - then driving away then eventually opening the wrapped-up fries (steaming away under the waxed paper or whatever) may not be the best idea anyway, if that is anything like what might have happened? (and the steamed hot parmesan just converts to oil...)

  16. I don't remember having lettuce or tomato slices with a Filet-O-Fish in the USA nor even back in the 70's in the UK. But my memory may be playing tricks on me. Still, I don't think I *want* lettuce and tomato with it. I think it is complete the way I've had it served, with a slice of American cheese  and lots of tartar sauce. No fancy cheeses please, no special chopped-pickles-tartar sauce on it.

     

    For myself, the F-O-F is fine for what it is. It isn't gourmet food. Sure, it was better years ago - but time marches on and nostalgic reminiscences are subject to the Law of Diminishing Returns. It is not eGullet-oh-so-special food. Just eat it. Well, I do - and like it - and would always willingly eat one and seek it out when I am in the mood.

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