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Andrew Fenton

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Posts posted by Andrew Fenton

  1. The jaegerschnitzel at Ludwig's Garten is a satisfying dish, but, hey, it's just jaegerschnitzel. So I fully understand your aversion to Teutonic cuisine, such as it is at most German restaurants in this country. But the beer!

    I like German food fine, if it's only for a meal or two at a time. But after a week or so, it gets tiresome: I miss vegetables. Nonetheless, the occasional schnitzel goes down okay, and I'll drink the beer anytime.

    I'd be interested to see what sort of modern German or Austrian cuisine a Young Turk could come up with. (As opposed to the Turks in Germany who cook up kebabs. That's some good stuff, though.) Most of the German food I've eaten has been in the US or in rural Germany; I'm sure that there are people doing interesting stuff in, say, Berlin, but I've never been there...

  2. I did experience that Philly attitude, although it was in a crowd situation.  Di Bruno's must have served ten other customers while I lingered over things and asked questions about the different cheeses (southern certainly stands out here).  I was clearly out of place in the loud hustle and bustle.  I think the poor guy behind the counter took pity on me  :blink: .  He recommended some amazing cheese, though.

    But as you saw, they're happy to help you out and answer questions. That's a whole lot of DiBruno's (a quality operation if there ever was one) but also not atypical of Philadelphia. Glad you had a good trip.

  3. Right, the 2nd and Market area is a really good good idea. I can't vouch for Campo's cheesesteaks (not having had one either): in my experience, their hoagies are only okay, and other sandwiches are a mixed bag. Chicken parm sandwich was pretty bad, but I liked their Godmother (?) sandwich: basically a meatless roast pork Italian, with greens, provolone, roasted peppers and onions.

    If it were me, instead of Campo's, I'd go to Sonny's Famous Steaks (216 Market) which in my experience puts out a solid product. Not the best, but totally respectable.

  4. Yeah, I'm sure we had another thread about this before; I searched for it and couldn't find it. Anyway, I agree that it's not the greatest flavor sensation in the world, but it's not bad, and it's fun to say "poke".

    Could it be that Livengood's is the only outfit in America that sells poke? Seems unlikely, but it seems like everybody else gets it au naturel...

  5. and as the the No German it's just that I haven't seen any new, interesting German food for quite some time.

    Is there such thing as "new, interesting German food" anywhere? I don't mean that in a snarky way (well, okay, I kinda do), but I can't recall ever having particularly interesting German food. Even in Germany.

    (I mean, unless you count beer as food. Which I do.)

  6. Here is a map link. Zoom to #5 to see where my retirement home will be in relation to Galveston and the Bay Area. Zoom to #6 to see the Bay Area in relation to Houston proper. Right now, I am living in League City. For that reason, most of my tromping will be in this area, because I know it best, with occasional forays into town.

    Interesting. Not a very dense area at all, then. Well, I look forward to the pictures, and the results of your expeditions!

  7. I am going to be in Philly for a grand total of 3 hours on Thursday for a meeting at 400 North Broad Street.  Where can I get a good cheesesteak around there before I have to rush to make a train?

    Craig.

    Hi Craig,

    There's not much of anything in the immediate vicinity that I know of. If pressed for time, you could take a cab to the Reading Terminal Market: that's about five minutes from the Inquirer/Daily News building. There's an okay steak place there (Steve's Prince of Steaks, I think)-- though if you want something REALLY good, get a roast pork sandwich with greens and provolone at DiNic's.

    If you're short on time, you could get a steak from a food truck. Also, there's an old train caboose in that neighborhood which has a little restaurant in it. I've never eaten there, but it looks kinda cool.

  8. Fifi, you can add me to the list of people who are looking forward to reading about your wacky adventures as a 21st century techno-hunter-gatherer.

    Question: where are you going to be doing this foraging? I haven't been to Houston, but can't imagine that there's a ton of wild space there: are you going to have to go far to forage? Or is is my impression of that area mistaken?

  9. Historically, lots of European small farmers grew grapes as well as grain, vegetables and fruit. They'd also raise animals for milk and meat. So does that mean such a peasant wasn't a farmer? Or that the grape (and fruit and livestock) aspects of his land were somehow "non-farm"? I think not; to make an arbitrary distinction is ahistorical and silly.

  10. Welcome, Rich! Thanks for the information, and I hope you'll stick around.

    It sounds like there's some really good stuff going on out there at Hendricks Farms. I'll bet that there is a market for the stinky stuff: as the DiBruno's expansion shows, the public appetite for interesting cheeses is certainly growing. I suppose it's a matter of marketing...

  11. I'm inclined to agree with Russ Parsons. When I went to Dallas all I really wanted to try was great bbq, but these people who were showing me around insisted on taking me to a French restaurant. I gently explained to them that I am married to a French chef, have been to France many times and have also cooked in French restaurants. They insisted, they wanted to show off 'gourmet' Dallas. I gagged on the steak au poivre that was slathered with...um...bbq sauce.

    Cf. Calvin Trillin's comments about "Maison de la Casa House"...

  12. One thig to remember is that tomatoes contribute acid and "spark" to a dish, particularly a rich, braised effort.  Dashing it up with a little vinegar or lemon would probably replace the "technical" function of the tomato. 

    That's a good point. I was thinking tamarind paste, which would accomplish the same goal.

  13. I've never had anything from a supermarket that was worth trying twice. But bakeries and pizzerias will sometimes sell pizza shells (this sounds like what you're talking about with ASDA-- I presume that's some sort of chain?) Here in Philadelphia, Sarcone's-- an Italian bakery that also turns out a very good bakery-style pizza-- also sells shells. The resulting pizza isn't as good as what you'd get from scratch, but it's not bad either.

  14. i don't see the chicken liver appetizer on that menu.  why must everything i love be taken from me?

    I don't know how much it'll sooth your broken heart, but the nice thing about those livers is that the recipe is ridiculously easy to reverse engineer. Since I had it at Pumpkin in the fall, I've made it once a month or so.

    The other good thing is that since chicken livers are almost cheap as free, you can make a ton and eat the leftovers in sandwiches. Which is amazing.

  15. I have to say growing up and spending 22 out of my 24 years on this earth in Philadelphia, I'm a die hard philly guy. Lorenzo's pizza on South St. is the best pizza I've ever had in my life. If anyone has a clue as to how they get it to have such an amazing flavor, I'm all ears.

    The key, I think, is eating it at the end of an evening of drunken debauchery. Then it's guaranteed to be the best. pizza. ever.

  16. We ordered the chip/dip combo, which (pace aliwaks' comments) I thought didn't have much in common with taramosalata other than the presence of fish eggs.  I didn't taste any tahini; much more like onion dip with a spoonful of fish eggs on top,

    tahini in taramasalata? well i never!

    Eh, well, maybe nobody ever. Anyway, I stand by the main point: this was basically onion dip topped with caviar.

    I also liked the zucchini fritters: seven marble-sized balls of ricotta served with a nice smoky red pepper sauce.  If I'd been served them blind, I wouldn't have been able to tell you that they were zucchini-based.  They were mostly cheese; but is there anything wrong with fried cheese?  I think not. 

    i find zucchini fritters are always like that. it's kind of the beauty of them--when i was a kid zucchini was one of my least favorite things in the world, but fritters i'd eat right up. can't go wrong with fry!

    You know, zucchini was the one thing that I wouldn't eat when I was a kid. I hated, hated, hated it; wouldn't even touch zucchini bread. (I still don't like zucchini bread, though I like the vegetable in other forms.) I don't know if I'd have eaten these, but I'd eat them now.

    Anyway, what's the origin of zucchini fritters? Are they Italian or what?

  17. Ye olde tapas place on the same spot-- Pamplona?-- was the second Philadelphia restaurant at which I ate. So for that reason, as well as because of general pleasure at seeing tapas return, MacArthur-like, to Center City, I was glad to have the chance to go to Lula.

    The service was friendly, and we were happy to start off with a bottle of prosecco. One of the reasons we wanted to eat there was that we weren't starving, so thought some little plates would go well.

    We ordered the chip/dip combo, which (pace aliwaks' comments) I thought didn't have much in common with taramosalata other than the presence of fish eggs. I didn't taste any tahini; much more like onion dip with a spoonful of fish eggs on top, served with BBQ potato chips. Sweet and sour shrimp were okay; the sauce was sort of overpowered by tamarind, I thought.

    I also liked the zucchini fritters: seven marble-sized balls of ricotta served with a nice smoky red pepper sauce. If I'd been served them blind, I wouldn't have been able to tell you that they were zucchini-based. They were mostly cheese; but is there anything wrong with fried cheese? I think not.

    The other dish we tried was an arugula, blood orange and bacon salad. It was fine, but really light on the orange: only a couple of small pieces. Sort of a bummer.

  18. Has anyone had any experience with this?

    Here is an old thread about pokeweed. There have been others, but I can't find them...

    Poke can be poisonous, but I'm not sure just how poisonous it really is. A farmer at my local market sells it sometimes: he raises it in his basement, so it isn't exposed to light. The baby poke is pale, whitish green with a purple base. The advice to serve it like asparagus is about right-- I've steamed it and let it chill in the fridge with some vinaigrette. It's not bad, and has the added thrill of vegetable fugu.

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