When I got back to Southern California I immediately looked up Bubba Gump on the internet. There were only about 5 restaurants then (now there are about 30, stretching as far as Bali and Malaysia.) The nearest one was the original, in Monterey, but one was scheduled to open in Long Beach by the fall of that year (2000.) This made me very happy and I couldn't wait to try that slipper lobster again.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Bubba Gump Shrimp Co.
When I got back to Southern California I immediately looked up Bubba Gump on the internet. There were only about 5 restaurants then (now there are about 30, stretching as far as Bali and Malaysia.) The nearest one was the original, in Monterey, but one was scheduled to open in Long Beach by the fall of that year (2000.) This made me very happy and I couldn't wait to try that slipper lobster again.
Monday, March 30, 2009
A Ploughman's Lunch (For Dinner)
Flank Steak Potato Skins
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Los Olivos Grocery & Sunstone Winery
Los Olivos, though, a few miles off 101, has not changed very much. (Although the owner of a winery in town told me that a dozen years ago there were only four wineries and now there are 16.) There is still a flag pole in the center of town, antique stores, and a general pace of life that does not seem to have accelerated in the same way that the larger towns on the coast have.
Recently some friends and I went up to the area to do some wine tasting. My friend Dave and his wife left before we did, and I suggested meeting in Los Olivos so they could walk around and wait for us. He had no idea where that was and I gave him directions. He was astonished by how cute the town is, and the fact that he never would have found it or thought something like that was there without my directions. (He also recognized several locations in town from the movie Sideways.)
Before going to our first winery we stopped by the Los Olivos Grocery. It's a classic country market with a nice collection of local wines, friendly people and a deli counter. The prices are all high but it obviously caters to people going wine tasting. We all got sandwiches and drove a few miles down the highway to Sunstone Winery.
Sunstone is simply one of the most beautiful places in California. The winery is a Provencal-style building and courtyard, with views overlooking the Santa Ynez River and mountains. I first visited Sunstone about two years ago with a group of friends on a wine tasting tour. It was to be our second-to-last stop of the day but we all fell in love with the place and decided to buy a couple extra bottles and drink there until it closed.
The sandwich I had purchased at the store was the "Tuscan Treasure": prosciutto, salami, provolone, lettuce, red onion, tomato, mayo and Italian dressing on a French roll. It was average in every possible way. Of course, eating it in the courtyard with my friends and a glass of red wine, it tasted like the best sandwich I had ever eaten. I was being completely manipulated by the situation. I did not care.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Fast Food Showdown: Jack in the Box Homestyle Ranch Chicken Club vs. McDonald's Southern Style Chicken Sandwich
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I went to Jack in the Box for lunch. There was a time when I loved JITB and would eat it frequently. I remember many post-basketball meals in high school when my dinner was a Jack's Spicy Chicken, large fries, and toasted ravioli bites. But the last few years I have only been there when there has been a new promotion that looks good, which isn't often.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
George & Sons Gourmet Deli (New York City)
I decided to go sailing with my friend and her parents. We considered options for lunch and someone suggesting getting sandwiches from the deli around the corner and eating them on the boat. This sounded great and I volunteered to pick them up. The deli was fantastic. It was certainly my first time there but it was very familiar, the kind of place I've always hoped to walk into in Los Angeles but know that I probably won't. I bought sandwiches for everyone and a couple six-packs of Sierra Nevada Summerfest. I was pleased to see such a fine California beer for sale in a New York deli.
My sandwich was called the "Brooklyn Bridge": cracked pepper turkey, gouda cheese, romaine lettuce and Russian dressing. It was fantastic, like pretty much every sandwich I've had in New York. And Summerfest was the perfect beer to accompany it.
Monday, March 23, 2009
Money Pot Shabu Shabu
He selected the Money Pot in Arcadia, a shabu-shabu restaurant. I love Japanese cuisine, but mostly sushi and teppanyaki. I have never been a big fan of shabu-shabu. It always seems to cost a fortune, and I'm usually still hungry when the meal is done. (Although making it at home is always fun, if only because it means I get to shop at Mitsuwa Marketplace in San Gabriel, perhaps my second favorite market in California, behind Nielsen Bros. in Carmel.)
I had been to Money Pot once years ago but I did not remember anything about it, other than the fact that it was cheaper than the Boiling Pot on Lake Avenue, perhaps the most overpriced restaurant in the San Gabriel Valley. (My one trip there reminded me of the scene in L.A. Story when Steve Martin is forced to have his financial statement reviewed by the bank in order to make reservations at the newest trendy restaurant in town, where the portions turned out to be minuscule: "I'm done already and I don't remember eating".)
Since there were five of us, we sat at the bar. This seems nonsensical, but the tables only seat four - with only two burners to share - so the bar seemed our only option. The first thing we got was a salad (even though the first thing I ordered was a Coke; that curiously did not come out until after they'd brought lots of food.) The salad was lettuce, fried wontons strips, a couple raisins, and a dressing that I suppose is a standard Japanese miso dressing but really tasted like Thousand Island. In other words, the salad was great, if a bit simple.
I started with some fried dumplings. I asked the waitress if the fried dumplings were gyoza and she gave me a blank look. It turned out they were, although there was nothing remarkable about them at all (they were the exact same dumplings as Dullahan's,) save for the sauce, which was very good. (My brother requested a small dish of some chili paste, a dollop of which I added to the sauce for some extra kick.)
They have three variations of broth available: house, spicy, and flowered. As best I could tell, the house broth was water, the spicy has chili oil added, and the flowered has flowers in it. My parents and my brother all ordered the house, Elizabeth ordered the mild spicy, and I ordered the medium spicy. Accompanying the broths were the traditional ramekans of soy sauce (with scallions and citrus,) and a sesame sauce. I took one tiny taste of the sesame sauce and rejected it. I'm not crazy about the taste of sesame but I do like it as a component. This tasted like pure sesame paste.
Each person received a generous plate of vegetables for the broth: cabbage, enoki mushrooms, carrots, broccoli, fish cakes, and a couple kinds of noodles. I have had shabu-shabu before where maybe two pieces of cabbage are included. I ordered the prime rib. It was $19.95. My parents urged me to get the house beef, which was 6 dollars more, because they said it was much better quality. I stuck with the prime rib, and Elizabeth ordered the house beef so we could see if there was a difference.
The first picture of meat is Elizabeth's, the second is mine. There was definitely more fat on hers and it looked like a higher-quality meat, but after doing a comparison tasting, there was no difference. I suppose if I ate them raw or if they were thicker, it would be noticeable, but after cooking them briefly in a spicy sauce, I couldn't tell. It certainly is not worth an extra 6 dollars for a higher-quality meat.
My pot was very spicy, and I loved it. At one point I took a piece of my beef and cooked it in Elizabeth's broth to taste the difference in spice ("Keep your meat out of my money pot," she said, one of the five funniest things I have ever been told.) Her broth was definitely less spicy than mine, and tasted better with the vegetables than my broth did. But I liked my spicy broth more with the meat.
This was a very good meal, and the first time at a shabu-shabu restaurant that I have ever been full. My dad picked up the tab so I did not see how much it was, but I am sure it was much more than the meal was worth. I do not think I would ever come here for anything other than a special occasion. Still, this was more memorable than my 29th birthday lunch at Chili's.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Dullahan's
Dullahan's probably isn't a place I am going to hang out at late in the evening, but for happy hour, or watching March Madness on one of their big TVs, it is fantastic.