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Grocery Shopping


huiray

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Surprisingly our produce is inexpensive and usually in good to great condition at my HEB. Conversely, one of the expensive Korean markets has how you say...? Etiolated green onions... But Hung Phong is a bit more down to earth and fresh especially on Saturdays. Boxes and boxes of iced fresh fish leaking on the floor and the vegetables Asians favor. It's where I get my pork belly. All gone by mid afternoon.

 

Pretty sure one can grow green onions near year round in my area so that's on my list. I sure use a lot of them.

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I dropped by a relatively new "Asian" grocery in my area last night.  (Viet Hua Supermarket.  caroled, you  might want to check out this place if you haven't already done so)  I was actually hankering for some baby clams when I drove over - but the ones they had were pitiful this time - so I changed tack...and of course picked up other stuff as well.  :-)

 

What I got:

 

Fresh winter-type bamboo shoots (Thanks for the Crepes, I include here a pic of these)

Fresh ginger

Fresh "flower-patterned cap" Chinese mushrooms ("far koo")

Vietnamese/Thai basil (rau hung que)

Fresh young garlic - YUM!! **

Green onions/scallions (9 bunches for $3)

"Yu Choy" a.k.a. "Choy Sum"

A skinny type of mustard greens (雪里紅), I've posted these various times on the dinner/lunch threads

Coriander leaves/cilantro (3 bunches for $1)

Garlic

Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce

Lee Kum Kee garlic chili sauce

Lee Kum Kee black bean garlic sauce

Fresh BLACK POMFRET (黑鯧魚) -- I have seldom seen this around here -- so when the clams turned out to be a bust this caught my eye and were an irresistible buy. :-) 

 

Pic of the bamboo shoots and the young garlic:

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p.s. The garlic bulbs had already been decreased by two, as i had fished two out last night to add to the "chicken soup" I was preparing. :-) 

 

** ...and I can't help comparing this to the ones that would appear in my local Farmers' Markets in a month or two, where they would be at least 50¢ to $1 EACH bulb... Oh, I might buy those too, if not anything else because I wish to support local growers – but the "organic" nature of those bulbs versus what would be presumably the "non-organic" nature of the ones in Viet Hua (or other Asian markets) doesn't really excite me or motivate me that much...

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Surprisingly our produce is inexpensive and usually in good to great condition at my HEB. Conversely, one of the expensive Korean markets has how you say...? Etiolated green onions... But Hung Phong is a bit more down to earth and fresh especially on Saturdays. Boxes and boxes of iced fresh fish leaking on the floor and the vegetables Asians favor. It's where I get my pork belly. All gone by mid afternoon.

 

Pretty sure one can grow green onions near year round in my area so that's on my list. I sure use a lot of them.

 

Those "etiolated" green onions in the Korean market - by any chance did they look something like these or these (but smaller, maybe)?  If so then they were purposely grown that way, using selected varieties of (usually) Allium fistulosum.  Called negi (as the most generic name) in Japanese.  (and, a Korean market is likely to carry Japanese stuff as well as Korean stuff, even more than a Chinese place or an "Asian" place while "Pan-Asian" places should have at least some Japanese stuff, of course.)  There have been discussions about negi here on eGullet also.

 

I can buy negi and/or their Chinese equivalent ("tai chung") in my local Chinese/Japanese/"Asian" markets, usually the larger-sized varieties but occasionally the small, slender ones (both of which would have large lengths of the white stalks)

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They looked like some slightly overgrown green onions that had yellowed- perhaps due to lack of nutrients and/or light or age. Long white stalks... perhaps: I was drawn to them even though they weren't as fresh looking. Pretty sandy so I just assumed they were local, as in someone's backyard patch. 

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Huiray,

I have seen Viet Hua so many times, but are usually only near it when we go to dinner as Formosa ( night worker, sleeps mostly in the day)

We always say we'll go after dinner, but when we are done, we all just want to go home.

The photos on the site linked look so clean and spacious, as opposed to the narrow and cramped Asia Mart. Will definitely go and check this out. Thanks for the recommendation.

With Kim Shook coming in June, maybe we can take her, as well as stock up some goodies to cook while she is here!

And this old porch is like a steaming greasy plate of enchiladas,With lots of cheese and onions and a guacamole salad ...This Old Porch...Lyle Lovett

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  • 2 weeks later...

Some of the things I came home with from the Indy Winter Farmers' Market.

 

Ramps!!!  These came from just south of Bloomington, IN.

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Red-streaked sorrel & Dragon Tongue mustard greens, both hydroponic.

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Fresh-picked baby portobello mushrooms (and some giant shiitakes), grown by a fellow who looks just like the protagonist from that excellent TV series "Breaking Bad" :-) ; and beautiful fresh broccolini.

DSCN4554a_800.jpg

 

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With regards to this earlier post and this one as well, I picked up some small/slender "larger-type green onions" from a large Vietnamese grocery/supermarket (Viet Hua) today.  This place has always had these but usually larger (2-3 times as fat & longer,  which were also present in the bin today) and labeled as (Mexican) cebollitas - which they probably really are.  I use them as substitutes for negi. Other places also sell these "cebollitas" around here.  Radtek, perhaps you might have a passing interest in seeing these.

 

DSCN4557a_800.jpg

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I actually looked for them today at Hung Phong. Their "big day" is on thursdays so missed out- thought it would be today.

 

They had good looking asian vegetables like chinese broccoli and such but just regular green onions/scallions. I bet on thursday...

 

Otherwise I found frozen duckling with head and feet on for $2.49/lb so I got a 4.5 lb bird. And some Nem!

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Saturday 2015-0425.

 

Indy Winter Farmers' Market (last weekend):

Hydroponic "Miner's Lettuce" (see below) & Dragon Tongue mustard greens

2 doz farm-fresh chicken eggs

1 doz farm-fresh duck eggs

Smallish & still-closed-capped Portobello mushrooms (see below)

2 bunches ramps (see below)(last of the season from this guy)

 

Goose the Market:

2 duck legs

Asparagus (from Anderson, IN)

Dodge City Salami (see below) [smoking Goose]

Hot Capocolla (see below) [smoking Goose]

Andouille sausage (one link)** (see below) [smoking Goose]

Fresh ground chuck (very good meat)

A nice crusty baguette

 

** The car and house (currently) smelled/smells pleasantly of the sausage...very very nice.

 

The Fresh Market:

De Cecco fedelini & angel hair pasta

Broccoli rabe (I intend to mate this with the capocolla for pasta)

Middleneck clams (currently soaking in salted cool water)

Grated Parmigiano Reggiano

 

 

Miner's lettuce.

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Ramps & portobella mushrooms.

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L to R: Hot capocolla, Dodge City salami, Andouille sausage.

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I had wanted some Finocchiona salami but they were out of it. (I have bought this at various times over many years at Goose the Market) Their Dodge City salami is close – instead of fennel it uses fennel pollen instead plus some other minor tweaks.

Edited by huiray (log)
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huiray, that's a beautiful haul.  I'm looking forward to finding ramps soon, either in our woods or at our farmers' markets. The capacolla and salami look wonderful, too.  Will you use those for snacks, or in something?

Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
HosteG Forumsnsmith@egstaff.org

Follow us on social media! Facebook; instagram.com/egulletx; twitter.com/egullet

"Every day should be filled with something delicious, because life is too short not to spoil yourself. " -- Ling (with permission)
"There comes a time in every project when you have to shoot the engineer and start production." -- author unknown

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huiray, that's a beautiful haul.  I'm looking forward to finding ramps soon, either in our woods or at our farmers' markets. The capacolla and salami look wonderful, too.  Will you use those for snacks, or in something?

 

Thanks, Smithy.  I guess you are heading back to Minnesota?

 

The capocolla was really meant for a sauce w/ broccoli rabe/rapini (which I also picked up) and sun-dried tomatoes, with pasta...but who knows.  The Dodge City salame is for chomping on.  Truth be told, I've already munched on both.  :-)   The andouille is for whatever comes to mind, although I doubt I would make a gumbo with it - just not something I would normally do.

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From Broad Ripple Farmers' Market today.  First market of BRFM of the year/season.

 

Green frisee lettuse, rainbow Swiss chard, baby portobello mushrooms, greenhouse tomatoes, purple asparagus, fiddlehead ferns, morel mushrooms.

DSCN4685a_800.jpg

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Glorified Rice,

 

That is exactly what I thought at first and was searching the labels for the word yogurt.  :laugh:

 

Do you use this in your coffee or other things?

 

 

It tastes HORRIBLE. Its got that UHT taste like that canned table cream from Nestles you get at the Mexican stores.

I think they are trying to bring European style creams to the USA.

It has something called NISIN in the ingredients

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisin

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Wawa Sizzli FTW!

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Today's farmers' market produce:

 

Broad Ripple Farmers' Market — Broccoli florets, stout green/purple-tipped asparagus, baby carrots, green romaine & curly green lettuces, coriander with roots on (by special request), cremini mushrooms w/ tight caps (another special request).

 

Carmel Farmers' Market — Red romaine & red-green lettuces, stout-stemmed & thick-fleshed leaf spinach, purple asparagus (these average ~11 inches long), White Icicle radishes, farm-fresh green-shelled eggs.

 

DSCN4743a_800.jpg

 

DSCN4756a_800.jpg

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Found a new Asian market today. Focus is Vietnam and Philipines but they had a bit of everything. Very comprehensive and indicative of high turn-over. Frogs. Duck heads. Pig blood. Extremely reasonable prices.

Edited by radtek (log)
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jFeUjiR.gif

 

 

Pillsbury makes a huge line of frozen Indian breads, did anyone know this?

For some reason I collect Hamburger Helper

And that green stuff is a unique GREEN Japanese style SRIRACHA.

 

Finally tried that green Sriracha. OMG its fantastic...Buy some ASAP. Its hotter than Red Sriracha but oh so satisfying

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Wawa Sizzli FTW!

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Finally tried that green Sriracha. OMG its fantastic...Buy some ASAP. Its hotter than Red Sriracha but oh so satisfying

 

Well, that certainly encourages me to go look for it or order it online! (I have not seen it around my parts yet, not casually anyway)

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Saturday 2015-0516

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Broad Ripple Farmers’ Market:  Ramps, morel mushrooms, thin/pencil green & purple asparagus, shiitake mushrooms, bunching broccoli florets, chicken carcasses (pastured chicken) for stock.

 

Carmel Farmers’ Market:  Green/baby garlic, baby kale, teeny green zucchini, two heads of spinach (whole, somewhat spreading heads), BBQ'ed rib tips (pork) w/ tangy sauce.

 

The rib tips & sauce - snarfed down by me and Emerson (my cat) for lunch at home after rewarming in the microwave.  Yes, yes, I had most of it.  I also had the chopped Napa cabbage as accompaniment, not him. :-) 

DSCN4847a_800.jpg

 

Most of the veggies etc - most were just part of the full amount.

DSCN4848a_800.jpg

 

The ramps.

DSCN4853a_800.jpg

 

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Asia Mart:  Live “long clams” (razor clams), soft tofu, canned whole straw mushrooms, holy basil chili paste, jarred baechu kimchi, fresh longans, bitter melons, Persian cucumbers, large mustard greens (“kai choy”; 芥菜) (which were actually relatively smaller plants – looks like the new crop of the season), rice bran oil, 8-year-old drinking quality rice wine (a Shaohsing wine variety) (the usual stuff I pick up from here, other than salted cooking rice wines), Noodle King wonton flavor bowl noodles, Nong Shim kimchi noodle bowls (a case), Little Cook “Pork & Mustard Stem” noodle bowls & vegetarian mushroom noodle bowls, Thai basil/Vietnamese rau húng quế, Vietnamese mint variety rau húng cây, young Chinese celery, green onions/scallions (6 bunches for $2), angled loofah (“Chinese okra”; Luffa acutangula), Chinese chive flowers, limes, fresh rice noodles (“hor fun”; 河粉; sheets cut into wide strips), fresh ginger, fresh woodear fungus, Korean radish.

 

Some of the more interesting things for many folks here (I think).  Some are just a part of the whole batch.  Hmm, I forgot to include the mint.  Most of the other stuff listed but not included in the picture I rather suspect would be commonplace to "everyone" (I believe).

DSCN4859a_800.jpg

Top left to bottom right: large-type mustard greens, Chinese chive flower buds, Thai basil, angled loofah, woodear fungus, young Chinese celery, Korean radish.  As a gauge of size the loofah is 22 inches long excluding the stem.

 

The Shaohsing-type wine & two jars of the holy basil chili paste.

DSCN4862a_800.jpg

 

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Namaste Plaza:  Tilda basmati rice, wax potatoes, curry leaves (கறிவேப்பிலை), fresh gunda, fresh hot green chillies.

 

No pic, sorry.

 

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Broad Ripple Farmers' Market:  Morel mushrooms, baby spinach, heirloom tomatoes & cherry tomatoes, broccoli rabe, young carrots, nasturtium plants.

 

Carmel Farmers' Market:  Spring onions (at 8 for $1), ENORMOUS lettuces (red-leaf, green wavy leaf, romaine) at $2.50 each, young kale, Icicle radishes, young sugar snap peas, lox-cream cheese-avocado-veal puff pastry, onion epi loaf.

 

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Claus' German Sausage & Meats:  Coarse Braunschweiger, pressed tongue, Westphalian ham, potato Wurst, short-tied Knackwurst, calf's liver, bulk Hengstenberg Sauerkraut, pork Schnecken.

 

DSCN4923a_800.jpg

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I'm with kayb about the charcuterie. The lettuce heads are amazing, too. What a lovely abundance spring is bringing!

Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
HosteG Forumsnsmith@egstaff.org

Follow us on social media! Facebook; instagram.com/egulletx; twitter.com/egullet

"Every day should be filled with something delicious, because life is too short not to spoil yourself. " -- Ling (with permission)
"There comes a time in every project when you have to shoot the engineer and start production." -- author unknown

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