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Andrew Fenton

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Posts posted by Andrew Fenton

  1. According to Campbell's website, the lower sodium chicken noodle soup has 140 mg of sodium per can; the regular has 890 mg per serving (1/2 cup = about half a can?) Unfortunately, they don't list ingredients online, so it's hard to tell whether they use a different salting agent, or just less of the same one.

  2. As always, nice pics, Phil.

    I was under-impressed by Saigon Maxim. The fried dumplings were excellent. They have a portable fry cart that comes around to finish them off, which is just brilliant; I think I need one of those for my own house. And the deep-fried bacon-wrapped shrimp nuggets were great. (How could they not be?)

    But everything else was only okay, I thought. Many of the steamed dishes were over-steamed and gummy, and none of them really rocked my world.

    It could be because it was Saturday; the place was fairly empty, and there wasn't a lot of turnover or a huge amount of variety. A Sunday trip might be more satisfying, I don't know.

  3. It really is. Osso buco is one of my favorite dishes-- maybe my favorite dish-- and this is a great take on it. I especially like the variation on gremolata: pickled garlic, whole parsley leaves, a little bit of sweetness to brighten things up... Tremendous.

  4. I definitely have to give Ansill credit for keeping up the quality. Thursday was the third time I've been, and it was just as good as the first.

    The shirred eggs are, if anything, better than before. My complaint about them had been that the foie gras was a little extraneous-- it didn't add much to the dish-- and was a little overcooked. This time around, it was perfectly cooked; and there were two pieces instead of one. Still extraneous, but very tasty.

    New to me was the osso buco sandwich, which is really extraordinary. A pile of melting, gelatinous meat, with a deep, rich reduction that suffuses the brioche.

    It occurred to me, as we were eating, that Ansill is a place that really gets the idea of small plates. At a lot of restaurants, small plates just mean, well, a smaller version of something. But Ansill's dishes fit perfectly with their size. You wouldn't want more than a couple of the eggs; they'd be too rich. A few bites of bone marrow crostini are ideal; more would be excess. Ditto the osso buco-- it's actually quite substantial, and I wouldn't be able to eat much more than there was.

    Oh-- and to answer the lingering Bread Question. This time around, they gave us a basket of bread with a crock of butter dusted with pink salt. My favorite part of Pif's service, and I was delighted to see it imported from the mothership.

  5. I haven't the froggiest-- er, foggiest idea-- how to prepare frog sashimi. But for this question:

    Anyone have a clue on the steps needed to prepare it? Do you knock the frog out? Freeze it to make it fall asleep? Just hold it down and skin it while it wriggles around?

    you could look at this thread from about six months ago. It's not all goofing around, really.

  6. Well, you know I just can't restrain myself... anyway, fools are more or less the same thing, too.

    Still, to give the verrine its due, while I've seen many preparations of sweet layered foods served in a glass, I haven't seen very many savory foods. (In a crockery dish or a cup, sure. But nothing that's as visually compelling as the dishes in the article.)

    And I suppose "verrine" is something of a play on "terrine": a preparation that also often comes in layers.

  7. Pierre, it sounds as if Da Ruggero, on the southern edge of the city, might fit the bill well. It's a Slow Food-recommended osteria, with basic, high-quality Tuscan food (ribollita, bollito misto, etc.) I had a lovely meal there back in the spring. It's not tourist-free (this is Florence, after all), but it's far enough off the beaten path that non-Italians who eat there are pretty serious about food.

    And of course, you have to go to Nerbone. This is required: there will be a test upon your return.

  8. dang that makes me hungry.  i love that sandwich.  but i get so tired trying to convince people from out of town that it's good.  people, it's just salt on salt.  what could be wrong with that?

    More like salt on mushy salt. It is a good sandwich, no doubt about it, but I can't help but wonder if it couldn't be made better, like with a really crispy fried fish cake.

  9. A comparison based on breed of cattle would also be really interesting.  I don't know what breeds we were eating last night.  The Wells Angus was, well, Angus.  But the others... Hereford?  I don't know.

    I think that CAB is a trademark, rather than a specifier of a particular breed of beef. The trademark means the beef meets certain standards.

    It's both. Angus is a breed of cattle; CAB is a trademark referring to a subset of high-grade Angus. An explanation, at the CAB website.

  10. thanks for the reassurances.  I want to go and try based on your recommendations.  It will still be a little painful.  I lived in Italy when the lira was still alive and used to get a pizzette fired in a wood burning oven for $1.00 and it was the best I have ever tasted and now judge all pizzas against that one.

    If it makes you feel any better, a good pizza on the Via dei Tribunali in Naples now commands the outrageous price of around 5 euros.

    Unfortunately, we're not in Naples (and I curse the fates for it nearly every day!)

  11. The bartender, as he described him, also didn't really know much about the food; when my friend asked what was in a (mumble -- a seafood bisque? Something liquid with seafood), he was told something like "Shrimp, and mushrooms, and other stuff -- you'll like it." He pressed for more detail and got a similar reply.

    The seafood bisque describes on the menu what was in it.

    Do people not read menus anymore ?

    Hold on- is the seafood bisque on the menu? I'm pretty sure it wasn't when I was there; and it doesn't seem to appear in the menu photos that Percy took. Granted, menus change-- but it sounds to me like this was a special. In which case, the server ought to be able to describe it.

  12. I even got a vegetarian friend of mine hooked on them (he missed meat), but he was a bit concerned about what the "natural flavor" in the ingredient list was. We used to joke that "natural flavor" was just a euphemism that manufacturers would use to trick vegetarians into eating meat-derived products...  :laugh:

    My understanding is that "natural flavor" typically means MSG.

    (But maybe in this case, it's delicious, all-natural Soylent Green. Who can be sure?)

  13. As Ben Franklin said about beer (quoted on the tile wall of the Gray Lodge gents) "...proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy."

    (Actually, he said it about wine. The beer thing is a misquotation, though a very common one. Anyway, the main point-- that wine, beer, cheese, bread and other products of yeasty goodness are miraculous-- is beyond question!)

  14. Philadelphia is a small town... and no coincidence that it's the hometown of Mr. Kevin "Seven Degrees" Bacon, I think.

    That's one degree of separation too many, Andrew.

    yes... right... you win the prize! for catching my deliberate error!

    yeah, that's the ticket...

    mmm... bacon...

  15. Ok, I haven't been, but I have been reading all your thoughts and reviews.  The food looks good, and from the reviews make me very interested in making a reservation.  One thing that keeps sticking out to me is the price for those pizzas - $15 for a margherita is outrageous, and a pizza for $22.00?  I would think that the pizzas are supposed to be an appetizer, or something for multiple persons to share as an appetizer.  But even when you look at it that way, the prices are still unbelievable.  That must be one fancy oven to have to recoup, and it won't take long at an average price of over $18.00.  The menu looks like it has some very country/peasant style dishes, but with the pricing, the owners seem to be making the restaurant a destination/special occasion place rather than an everyday establishment.

    The pizzas are good-sized: one makes a fine main course, or you could split it as an appetizer among 2-4 people.

    As to price: it isn't cheap. But it's hard to have top-quality ingredients and preparation and still do things on the cheap. Beyond that, I'd encourage you to go back and read the many posts on that subject that have already been made in this thread.

  16. It's funny how my restaurant-going occurs in streaks. The missus and I have probably been to Rangoon more than any other restaurant in Philadelphia; for a while, we'd head over there probably once a month or so. But it'd really been a while.

    I think, too, that it's a place I tend to enjoy exponentially more when I'm in a group. There are several dishes I feel like I have to order-- but I'll be just as happy if I only eat a little bit of them, as long as I get some. More people= more things to sample= more happy me...

  17. What a coincidence, I was having the same thought: that it's been too long since I've been to Rangoon, and was on my way there last night with a couple of friends. But we ended up parking closer to Sang Kee, and were sucked into its powerful gravity - where we ran into Shacke!

    the eGulleteers are everywhere...

    too funny! As we were walking home, we walked by Restaurant M, and stopped in to have a drink and talk to Katie Loeb. (Who mentioned that she'd seen you walking by not long before.)

    Philadelphia is a small town... and no coincidence that it's the hometown of Mr. Kevin "Seven Degrees" Bacon, I think.

  18. I was in the neighborhood yesterday and since I'd never been there, decided to stop in for lunch. Since I was in a little bit of a hurry, I just had a sandwich: ham and cheese on a baguette. It was a very good Serrano ham sandwich; but even more than that, it wins the Oscar for "best use of olive oil on a sandwich". It's fruity and herbal and pairs well with the ham and cheese. I asked the waitress about it; she told me that they infuse parsley into their oil. It's really good stuff.

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