A friend coming to visit always implies that you will be out doing more, drinking more, eating more, and just generally out and about more—most assuredly pretending that you lead a far more exciting life that you actually do. For this weekend, I played the role of the worldly eater, duly impressing my friend (as well as myself) with how may different cuisines we could fit into a weekend. Dim Sum in Chinatown, French cheese and wine in central park, Ethopian food in Morningside Heights, Creole cuisine midtown, and New York bagels for breakfast daily. Feel free to skim the highlights below….
We walked only a few blocks from my dorm to fulfill our dreams of a meal eaten completely with our hands. As soon as our utensil free meal at the Ethiopian restaurant, Massawa, came out of the kitchen, we were in heaven. Its as simple as 1,2,3—first you take the injera spongy flat bread, then you use it to scoop up a variety of tebsi (beef cubes with pepper and onions), pureed chickpeas, okra, lamb with berbere spice, and anything else the chef decides to pile on your plate. Lastly, you stuff it (leisurely, of course) in your mouth, breathing a sigh of relief at the unpretentious and flavorful sustenance you are slowly chewing.
The trip to Chinatown was painless enough; we even managed to procure a purse or two out of the walking-a-mile-the-wrong-way-to-the-restaurant ordeal. When we finally arrived at the Golden Bridge dim sum compound (you will soon come to understand why I call it such) we sat in a airport-like waiting room, ticket in had (we were number 64), anxiously waiting to be seated in the hotel ballroom of a restaurant. Minutes later, the lady over the speaker called 33…then 64. Out of order? Yes. Did we complain? No. After settling in with our cup of tea, we were ready to start hailing carts. Cha Siu Sou, a flaky pastry with BBQ pork inside found its way to our table first, followed by Jin Deui, which is a clear, sweet and chewy dough filled with something possibly resembling chicken and shrimp, then deep fried and rolled in sesame seeds. How could that be bad? In fact, how could any of these fried, doughy, sweet yet savory, seasame coated bites be bad? Answer: they couldn't. We licked our fingers for a renegade piece of dough or a drop of sweet soy. Nowhere near full, we moved on to the rice noodles—one batch of plain noodles with hoisin sauce and sesame, and another dish where the noodles are wrapped around a piece of fried dough that somewhat resembles the inside of a churro. Soaked in a sweet soy sauce, the friend dough-noodle combo is done before the next cart rolls around. Through the meal, I’ve been getting a back massage (read: poked and prodded and laughed at) by a little Chinese boy who finds me far more amusing than the food. The fact that the place is filled with Asian families whose children just can’t seem to get enough of making it as difficult as possible for us to eat does not bother me, only because I know it means that this food is good. And it is. Accordingly, we get some seconds of each as well as an order of steamed bok choy to indulge the health nut at the table, and pay the $5 per person bill so that we can head back out to the streets of downtown Manhattan. Chinatown still has another treat in store for me—I grab a fresh coconut for a few dollars and watch as the vendor lops of the top with a large knife, sticks a straw in the top, and hands me my coconut milk on the go. On a hot day in Chinatown, the sweet, cool, liquid is just what I need.
Preview of things to come (and I'm only listing these restaurants because I am in a constant state of excitement due to each one): Deliciously innovative cuisine from Wd~50 and Providence followed by a trip to Chez Panisse, the mother of all organic, local and just damn good food. Grace and Catch both come somewhere in between...all promising to make these few months the best of my life. I'll keep you posted...
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Thursday, June 7, 2007
From Truffles to Popcorn
Per Se was life changing. Zagat got it right with the exclamation that it is “in a class all its own.” Ouest was a great post-Per Se meal—easing my transition back into the real world of food with a crispy piece of sturgeon over mushroom and edamame risotto followed by a tangy orange cheesecake. Delicious. Nothing will ever compare to the fifteen course mind-blowing, five hour extravaganza, complete with kitchen tour, several bottles of wine, and delicacies ranging from caviar to lobster to butter soaked morels—but Ouest at least cushioned my palate from what awaited back at school (namely, Ollie’s). There, my friends, for the sake of brevity and moving on to current events, was a summary of what may have been the two most culinary orgasmic days of my life.
Fast forward: My job. Mission: Figure out some semblance of self-control so that the constant flow of recipe testing, popcorn tastings, and brownie contests does not cause immediate and premature heart attack. Working at a food magazine is, in fact, everything I dreamed it could be in terms of the serious level of taste bud overload. A recap of my last two days on the job will give you a clear picture:
* Wednesday: Eat my yogurt and granola bar when I first wake up, so that I can last until 12, which is the approximate time that the first recipe wafts alluringly out of the kitchen. On cue, a buttery tagliatelle pasta with flank steak appears, followed by the pumpkin and cream cheese frosting cookie cake whoopee pies (being tested for the second time this week, so obviously I had to taste for the difference). An asparagus salad with onions and orange slices appears, not as a test, merely as an afternoon snack for those of us lucky enough (or crafty enough) to find themselves “conveniently” chopping something in the kitchen. Soon after, the interns embark on a mission to pick up lamb gyros in Queens, from the vendor who won the “Vendy Award” in 2006. I try one while I am there, for the sake of research—it is, indeed, heaven in a gyro. We deliver the gyros to the test kitchen where they will taste and prod the poor lamb (or mystery meat as I heard them unfortunately claim) until they figure out exactly what spices make it so damn good. After picking up a few last groceries for the kitchen, the clock is fast approaching 6 and I hurry to call and get a product sent in for a photo shoot on Friday. Eventually, I head off to dance, musing about the delicious day I just had.
* Today: Again, for the sake of brevity—I have just one thing to say: Popcorn taste test day. Thirty different popcorns. Several appalling flavors. Nausea. My whole day was spent preparing for this (“No I can’t order that for lunch! It’s popcorn day! Have to save up!). At the moment, all I am left with is a severe I Can’t Believe its Not Butter hangover and a desire to never touch a kernel of popped corn ever again. Such are the pitfalls of life at a food magazine.
Fast forward: My job. Mission: Figure out some semblance of self-control so that the constant flow of recipe testing, popcorn tastings, and brownie contests does not cause immediate and premature heart attack. Working at a food magazine is, in fact, everything I dreamed it could be in terms of the serious level of taste bud overload. A recap of my last two days on the job will give you a clear picture:
* Wednesday: Eat my yogurt and granola bar when I first wake up, so that I can last until 12, which is the approximate time that the first recipe wafts alluringly out of the kitchen. On cue, a buttery tagliatelle pasta with flank steak appears, followed by the pumpkin and cream cheese frosting cookie cake whoopee pies (being tested for the second time this week, so obviously I had to taste for the difference). An asparagus salad with onions and orange slices appears, not as a test, merely as an afternoon snack for those of us lucky enough (or crafty enough) to find themselves “conveniently” chopping something in the kitchen. Soon after, the interns embark on a mission to pick up lamb gyros in Queens, from the vendor who won the “Vendy Award” in 2006. I try one while I am there, for the sake of research—it is, indeed, heaven in a gyro. We deliver the gyros to the test kitchen where they will taste and prod the poor lamb (or mystery meat as I heard them unfortunately claim) until they figure out exactly what spices make it so damn good. After picking up a few last groceries for the kitchen, the clock is fast approaching 6 and I hurry to call and get a product sent in for a photo shoot on Friday. Eventually, I head off to dance, musing about the delicious day I just had.
* Today: Again, for the sake of brevity—I have just one thing to say: Popcorn taste test day. Thirty different popcorns. Several appalling flavors. Nausea. My whole day was spent preparing for this (“No I can’t order that for lunch! It’s popcorn day! Have to save up!). At the moment, all I am left with is a severe I Can’t Believe its Not Butter hangover and a desire to never touch a kernel of popped corn ever again. Such are the pitfalls of life at a food magazine.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
To list, or not to list...
So, it has been an eternity. I know. I have devised a plan to get my lazy self back on top of things. I will post my to do/to write list up right here so that the pressure to fulfill expectations hopefully overrides my laze (I realize that is not a real word, but one of my goals in life is to get a word in the dictionary, so I figure that I should probably get going on that). My things to blog list is as follows:
1.) Per Se/ Ouest/ Melisse
2.) My Rachael Ray internship exploits (including, but not limited to: loving the test kitchen, feeling important in meetings with Nestle, as well as the tiring venture of setting up my phone and email system) <--sidenote: I have my own cubicle. Weird, right?
3.) New book obsessions (okay, Anthony Bourdain is officially who I aspire to be...minus the being a man part, of course)
I intend to tackle each item in the coming days--look out!
1.) Per Se/ Ouest/ Melisse
2.) My Rachael Ray internship exploits (including, but not limited to: loving the test kitchen, feeling important in meetings with Nestle, as well as the tiring venture of setting up my phone and email system) <--sidenote: I have my own cubicle. Weird, right?
3.) New book obsessions (okay, Anthony Bourdain is officially who I aspire to be...minus the being a man part, of course)
I intend to tackle each item in the coming days--look out!
Friday, April 20, 2007
The Case of the Maple Waffle Swirl
Today I was forced to stand outside, waiting for my friends as they naively bought their Haagen-Dazs ice cream. Sadly, I now feel obliged to to tell the tale of Haagen-Dazs and its corruption.
It began only few months ago when a food obsessed girl spotted a sign advertising the Haagen-Dazs "create your own flavor" contest. Hit with a brilliant idea, she rushed to her local diner--dragging her boyfriend along--to film a witty video of her eating a warm Belgian waffle with caramelized pecans, vanilla bean ice cream, and maple syrup drizzled on top. This was destined to be her flavor inspiration and go on to win the title of 'best new flavor'. She called it Maple Waffle Swirl. After posting it on the competition board online, she returned to the website daily to scope out the competition. Lemon Bar Ice Cream? Wimpy. Peppermint stick? Already done. Rootbeer float? Too simple. Lillikoi Butter and Honey? Too intense. Maple Waffle Swirl? Perfect. Suitable for adults and children alike, fun yet classy, it was Haagen-Dazs personified. Then, one fateful day, she stumbled upon a new posting--"Blueberry Belgian Waffle" an ice cream creation posing as an original, when really, it was simply Maple Waffle Swirl plus blueberries. I was mad. I mean, she was mad. Obviously posted at a later date, Blueberry Belgian Waffle was clearly an impostor.
Fast forward to last week. The top 3 finalists were posted. Blueberry Belgian Waffle--nestled smugly between the Coco y Cacao and the Caramelized Pear & Toasted Pecans. I ask you, where is the justice in this ice cream filled world of ours? Perhaps these tragic series of events will force you to understand why I now must stand alone (outside of Haagen-Dazs).
It began only few months ago when a food obsessed girl spotted a sign advertising the Haagen-Dazs "create your own flavor" contest. Hit with a brilliant idea, she rushed to her local diner--dragging her boyfriend along--to film a witty video of her eating a warm Belgian waffle with caramelized pecans, vanilla bean ice cream, and maple syrup drizzled on top. This was destined to be her flavor inspiration and go on to win the title of 'best new flavor'. She called it Maple Waffle Swirl. After posting it on the competition board online, she returned to the website daily to scope out the competition. Lemon Bar Ice Cream? Wimpy. Peppermint stick? Already done. Rootbeer float? Too simple. Lillikoi Butter and Honey? Too intense. Maple Waffle Swirl? Perfect. Suitable for adults and children alike, fun yet classy, it was Haagen-Dazs personified. Then, one fateful day, she stumbled upon a new posting--"Blueberry Belgian Waffle" an ice cream creation posing as an original, when really, it was simply Maple Waffle Swirl plus blueberries. I was mad. I mean, she was mad. Obviously posted at a later date, Blueberry Belgian Waffle was clearly an impostor.
Fast forward to last week. The top 3 finalists were posted. Blueberry Belgian Waffle--nestled smugly between the Coco y Cacao and the Caramelized Pear & Toasted Pecans. I ask you, where is the justice in this ice cream filled world of ours? Perhaps these tragic series of events will force you to understand why I now must stand alone (outside of Haagen-Dazs).
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Publicity!
Hey all, I've been published! Just in the Columbia Spectator...but still, published nonetheless! The article is all about expensive restaurants in the city. Yum.
Secret Lives of Foodies <--- Click!
P.S. Per Se: 8 days to go.
Secret Lives of Foodies <--- Click!
P.S. Per Se: 8 days to go.
Saturday, April 14, 2007
A Culinary Itinerary

Apologies for the long interlude between this entry and the last, my energetic sister has been in town visiting—consequently, consuming all of my time.
In the last week, however, my sister has provided a perfect excuse for multiple satiary outings into the city.
Hudson Cafeteria, with my boyfriend as a pre-sister arrival celebration, was the first on the list. We arrived in quite the celebratory mood and left disappointed and looking forward to forgetting our meal while wathcing Will Ferrell’s new film—which was (sadly) much higher quality than the meal we received at Hudson. The tuna tartar: tasteless (Will Ferrell’s jokes: tasteless as well, but at least I laughed). The appetizer of mushroom pizza with truffle oil was good, though it was neither appetizer size nor had any trace of truffle oil (or class for that matter). It was just a pizza, similar to the one I ate while watching last Sunday's Entourage premiere. My filet tasted the same as my boyfriend’s lamb, both brisket-y in taste and texture. I, personally, like my brisket to be called brisket and prefer it served by my grandma during Hanukkah dinner.
Jane, a downtown restaurant (just a short walk from the Houston street Subway station), provided a nice setting for a welcome dinner. The toasted ricotta gnocchi appetizer did, indeed, taste like “pillows of heaven” as one of my dining companions promised. The octopus salad literally had one long octopus tentacle, making it hard to share as well as visually a bit hard to stomach. The Ahi Tuna was fine, though I could have just done with the black rice with shitake mushroom and ginger underneath as an entire meal, and done without the overly expensive price tag for underwhelming fish. For desert, perfectly warm and crispy (though still tender inside) chocolate chip cookies with vanilla gelato floating in milk, kept my stomach happy and warm the entire walk home. Altogether, mostly pleasant, though not mind-blowing in any way.
Serendipity, needing no introduction or review to attest to the greatness of the frozen hot chocolate, provided a setting for gorging as well as an “impromptu” photo shoot of my sister and I simultaneously drinking two chocolates at once. All I can say is: do your self a favor and order the Peanut Butter version of their famous treat, sure to give you a sugar hangover for days to come, along with a permanent smile.
Monday, April 9, 2007
Diving in. Face first.
Seeing as my last blog post is the size of a Carmine's plate of penne vodka, I hope to keep this one on the shorter side. So, for the record, I'm trying.
I've been reading this book on food writing (yes, there are books just about writing about food) called Will Write For Food (witty, eh?) that I hope will aid me in my ongoing quest for culinary stardom. The author suggests these silly little exercises at the end of each chapter and I thought I would share a few that I have done with you.
A.) Completing these sentences:
The donut smelled stale, like... the wafting odor of a beer sitting by a California pool mid-August, having been forgotten by its tipsy owner.
The roast beef sandwich tasted as though... it was slaved over by a Jewish grandma who lovingly tells you to call her Babushka as she piles the salty meat and the creamy cole slaw higher than anyone’s mouth could ever fit.
B.) Describing eating your favorite piece of fruit:
The Santa Ana winds were particularly strong as I first bit down into the meaty flesh of the mango. Slicing the skin off half the mango, no silverware in sight, I headed face first into the sunny fruit. My feet were cooling in the pool—I sat at the waters edge, the rest of my body burning. The corners of my lips stung with the tangy kick that follows the birthday cake sweet initial flavor. My cheeks sticky, I sucked the remaining mango pulp that clung to the pit, straggling pieces catching in between my teeth. When I slid down into the water I could still feel the mangoes slippery texture on my tongue while the buttery honey flavor coated my mouth.
Okay, so, first exercise equals weird and funny, second exercise equals corny and sprinkled (okay drenched) with way too many adjectives. Was I eating the mango or trying to have sex with it? Can't wait for the next chapter, perhaps I can somehow work in the Buttercup Bakeshop cupcake I enjoyed today. Using my sister as an excuse for a cupcake field trip, we headed to Buttercup on 72nd to see if an equal to Magnolia could be found so deliciously close to school. I found that, tragically (for my waistline), they can.
I promised brevity, so look forward to a rant on my latest dining foray into the city in my next posting: hurray!
I've been reading this book on food writing (yes, there are books just about writing about food) called Will Write For Food (witty, eh?) that I hope will aid me in my ongoing quest for culinary stardom. The author suggests these silly little exercises at the end of each chapter and I thought I would share a few that I have done with you.
A.) Completing these sentences:
The donut smelled stale, like... the wafting odor of a beer sitting by a California pool mid-August, having been forgotten by its tipsy owner.
The roast beef sandwich tasted as though... it was slaved over by a Jewish grandma who lovingly tells you to call her Babushka as she piles the salty meat and the creamy cole slaw higher than anyone’s mouth could ever fit.
B.) Describing eating your favorite piece of fruit:
The Santa Ana winds were particularly strong as I first bit down into the meaty flesh of the mango. Slicing the skin off half the mango, no silverware in sight, I headed face first into the sunny fruit. My feet were cooling in the pool—I sat at the waters edge, the rest of my body burning. The corners of my lips stung with the tangy kick that follows the birthday cake sweet initial flavor. My cheeks sticky, I sucked the remaining mango pulp that clung to the pit, straggling pieces catching in between my teeth. When I slid down into the water I could still feel the mangoes slippery texture on my tongue while the buttery honey flavor coated my mouth.
Okay, so, first exercise equals weird and funny, second exercise equals corny and sprinkled (okay drenched) with way too many adjectives. Was I eating the mango or trying to have sex with it? Can't wait for the next chapter, perhaps I can somehow work in the Buttercup Bakeshop cupcake I enjoyed today. Using my sister as an excuse for a cupcake field trip, we headed to Buttercup on 72nd to see if an equal to Magnolia could be found so deliciously close to school. I found that, tragically (for my waistline), they can.
I promised brevity, so look forward to a rant on my latest dining foray into the city in my next posting: hurray!
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