on the road: Scottsdale AZ

August 2, 2011

It was a quick trip back in May. A chance to visit friends and see what goes on in the laid back centre of Scottsdale.

Scottsdale… where the doorman has a sign taped to his table “No firearms allowed”.
Scottsdale… where having the tagline, “Day-drinking reinvented”, is ok.
Scottsdale… where “pool party” means 100 strangers, Patron on ice and free cover for the ladies.
Scottsdale… where bad tan lines and super hero costumes go hand in hand.

If you go:
The Mission: Modern Latin Cuisine
Le Grand Orange Grocery: for brunch and gifts, I wanted one of everything.
Spanish Fly: Mexican Beach Club – prepare to stare
Hotel Valley Ho: for the pool party
The Coach House: Scottsdale’s oldest tavern, good company and cheap beer.
Mabels on Main: chiq cocktails
Kazimeirz World Wine Bar: real jazz, great wine

from top to bottom: The Coach House, painting class at the Academy of Art, happenings at The Valley Ho Hotel, pool party at the Spanish Fly, biking along the Arizona Canal from Scottsdale to Phoenix

Categories: on the road.

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on the road: China Beach BC

March 17, 2011

via iPhone | cheese & chowder

Ok, so it’s not exactly “on the road”, but if you’re feeling cagey, a day trip up Sooke way can set your mind at ease. This time of year, it’s fresh and green… and quiet. While the 1.5km walk down to the water may be a bit more fun if you’re exploring from your campsite on a hot summer day, there’s nothing like the sound of crashing waves any time of year. A stop at Mom’s Cafe is customary. Giant grilled cheese with house made chowder anyone? We conducted a couple circles looking for a new spot but ended up back where the pie is high and mayo runs heavy.

China Beach in March

China Beach trail

Categories: on the road.

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locals only: Zambris Restaurant

October 18, 2010

via iPhone, inside Zambris | Distinguished Zambris business card - custom size

Zambris Restaurant opened in it’s new location in the Atrium Building at the beginning of the month. When I visited, the place was packed with young and old, creating a vibrancy on this downtown corner that I haven’t felt in Victoria. Floor to ceiling windows, chandeliers and retro glass globe fixtures are a huge improvement over their previously limiting locale.

Check out their menu, videos and details on their new private function room (booked until Jan 1st) on their much improved website. At 820 Yates Street, open 7 days a week 11:00 am to Midnight. Closed between 3:00 pm and 4:30 pm daily.

www.zambris.ca

Categories: locals only.

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eye candy: Floating Dining Room

August 4, 2010

This time of year you can’t spend enough time outside or near the water. Add fine dining, an elegant room floating on recycled plastic bottles and cuisine from C Restaurant and you have what I would call a summer trifecta of perfection.

Read more about the floating dining room and make a reservation at inhabitat’s website or at C Restaurant’s site.

from www.inhabitat.com

Categories: eye candy.

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locals only: Taste Victoria

July 15, 2010

Victoria’s second annual festival of food and wine gets underway today. Tonight is an evening of tasting of more than 100 British Columbia wines and local cuisine prepared by top Vancouver Island chefs. The weekend is filled with tempting events including Sips and Seafood Saturday night at the Inn at Laurel Point.

See the Taste website for event info.
Proceeds from Taste go to TLC The Land Conservancy.

from www.victoriataste.com

2010 Participating Wineries:
Alderlea Vineyards
Artisan Sake Maker at Granville Island
Averill Creek Vineyard
Blasted Church Vineyards
Blue Mountain Vineyard and Cellars
Calona Vineyards
Cherry Point Estate Winery
Deol Estate Winery
Dunham & Froese Estate Winery
Garry Oaks Winery
Gehringer Brothers Estate Winery
Jackson-Triggs Okanagan Estate
Merridale Ciderworks
Mistaken Identity Vineyard
MooBerry Winery
Mt Boucherie Estate Winery
Muse Winery aka Chalet Estate Winery
Painted Rock Estate Winery
Peller Estates
Red Rooster
Rocky Creek Winery
Salt Spring Island Vineyard
Sandhill
Sea Cider Farm & Ciderhouse
Seven Stones Winery
Starling Lane Winery
Sumac Ridge Estate Winery
Therapy Vineyards
The View Winery
Venturi Venturi-Schulze Vineyards
Victoria Spirits
Vista D’oro Farms & Winery
8th Generation Vineyard

2010 Participating Restaurants, Artisans & Retailers:
Ambrosia Conference & Event Centre
Amusé Bistro
Antichi Sapori Italian Food Company
Bistro 28
Chateau Victoria, Vista 18
Coast Victoria Harbourside, Blue Crab Bar & Grill
Delta Ocean Pointe, Lure
Fairmont Empress, The Empress Room
Hotel Grand Pacific, The Pacific Restaurant
Inn at Laurel Point, Aura
The Little Piggy
Little Qualicum Cheeseworks
Marina Restaurant
Nautical Nellies
Paprika Bistro
Ristorante La Piola
Salt Spring Island Cheese Co.
Silk Road
Spinnakers Gastro Brewpub

Categories: locals only.

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eye candy: June issue Food & Wine

June 7, 2010

from www.foodandwine.com (L) / from www.trinaturk.com (R)


On the plane back from Alabama, I had a thorough look at Food & Wine’s June issue. I was so impressed that I promptly dropped off my subscription request at the Denver airport. Here’s a roundup of a few highlights:

Chinese Coleslaw
Pretzel Crusted Crab Cakes
Ginger Marinated Bulgogi Style Chicken – Tried this last night, recommended.
Thai Turkey Burger
Fat Tray from Alessi
Dry Fly Distilling, a craft distillery in Spokane, Washington.
Trina Turk cocktail napkins
Bodum picnic charcoal grill
www.33beers.com Beer Journal
V Lounge, Waikiki – pastry chef from Nobu has opened his own pizza joint.
The Ranch House, Honolulu – local favorites
Table One Halekulani, Waikiki – personally designed menus by Chef Garg
La Cantine Merci, Paris – fashion, a used-book café, a haberdashery and a flower shop with a communal table.

I know it’s Food and WINE and there were some good recommendations in this issue. I didn’t have much luck finding them at the BC Liquor Store. Supposedly we should be on the lookout for 2009 South African Chenin Blancs or Sauvignon Blancs.

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Categories: eye candy.

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taste test: Red Fish Blue Fish Tacones

May 26, 2010

Tempura Cod Tacones one: $5.00 / two: $9.00
Sweet-smoked chili adobo + pea shoots + lemon pickled onions

It’s a deal, it’s a steal. Plenty of moist fish with a crispy coating, crunchy slaw-like filling and one is enough for lunch. The best part is they offer sustainable 100% Ocean Wise seafood and an earth friendly reuse and recycle system. The clam chowder seemed popular as did the Wild Pacific Fish and Chips (salmon, halibut, cod). Next time I’d like to try the Local Shrimp Roll (“lobster roll style”), curry chips, BBQ Thetis Queen Tuna, BBQ Fanny Bay Oyster Sandwich….. Red Fish Blue Fish is located in the Inner Harbour at 1006 Wharf Street at the foot of Broughton on the pier below Wharf Street. They’re open until 5pm 7 days a week, 3pm on rainy days like today.

red fish blue fish tacones

Tempura Cod Tacones at Red Fish Blue Fish, via iPhone

Categories: taste test.

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flavour of the week: Misoyaki Butterfish

March 31, 2010

One of my favorite restaurants is Roy’s. Hawaiian fusion, great cocktails, amazing food, friendly people. This recipe is for Butterfish, also known as Black Cod, also known as Sablefish. It can be little oily for my taste, but delicious prepared this way. It’s a locally sustainable fish, so I’m excited to add this recipe to my files.

Top: restaurant version Hibachi Grilled Salmon, Roy’s Original Blackened Island Ahi & Hawaiian Style Misoyaki Butterfish, Bottom: my version (before the sauce)

Hawaiian Style Misoyaki Butterfish With Kim Chee Lime Butter Sauce
Serves: 2
Active Time: 45 mins
Start to Finish: 1.5hrs (+ marinating)

7oz. butterfish

Miso Marinade
1 cup sake
1 cup mirin, a sweet Japanese beverage used mostly in cooking
1/2 lb sugar
1/2 lb miso paste

(Note: Marinade quantity is sufficient for several pieces of fish)

Kim Chee Lime Butter Sauce
3 tbsp olive oil
1 small sweet onion, chopped
1 tablespoon shallots, chopped
1 clove garlic
1/3 cup white wine
2 tsp fish Sauce
1 tbsp fresh lime juice
2 tbsp cream
2 tbsp fresh cilantro, chopped
2 tbsps unsalted butter
1 tbsp kim chee sauce (when was the last time you hit up Chinatown?)
3 tbsp chili sauce

Preparation:

Combine marinade ingredients in small saucepan and simmer until it becomes a dark, caramel color. Authentic sake, mirin and miso can all be found at any market specializing in Asian foods. After marinade has cooled, submerse fish completely and refrigerate for 24 hours.

Using a small amount of the olive oil, sauté the onion, shallot and garlic, until they become translucent. Deglaze the pan with white wine and fish sauce, and then reduce by half. Add cream, lime juice and a pinch of cilantro. Reduce the mixture until it thickens and slowly blend in the kim chee sauce and butter. Strain sauce through a fine sieve or cheese cloth and then mix in 1 tablespoon of cilantro and the chili sauce.

Take the marinated fish and place it into a sauté pan on medium heat with a small amount of oil. Cook for 2 to 4 minutes on each side. Place fish on the center of the plate on top of your starch of choice. Ladle the Kim Chee Lime Butter Sauce around the fish and top with chopped cilantro.

While searching for this recipe, I came across Oh-So Yummy, take a peak, lots of restaurant recipes and reviews.

Categories: flavor of the week.

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on the road: Food Hawaiian Style

March 30, 2010

I prefer my food to have a Hawaiian state of mind. Check back for this week’s flavour – Misoyaki Butterfish.
*gluttony disclaimer: photos are not from one visit

Categories: on the road.

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locals only: Pizzeria Prima Open House

February 12, 2010

An update to this post, Pizzeria Prima Strada is having a Bridge Street open house between 2 and 4 today! 2960 Bridge Street, samples and a tour of the new digs.

Categories: locals only, newsflash.

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locals only: New Pizzeria Prima Strada

February 2, 2010

from http://primastrada.blogspot.com/

Pizzeria Prima Strada is opening a new location on Bridge Street! They’re describing this new location as a “warm urban environment with lots and lots of amazing reclaimed wood. Family style tables will accommodate up to 16 people-perfect for you and your lunch pals. Hungry on your way home from work? Call in for a take-out pizza to grab on your way home.”

Pizzeria Prima Strada practices the traditional techniques of the masters by using Caputo 00 flour, Italian plum tomatoes and local ingredients, including Mozzarella di Bufala from Canada’s only Water Buffalo herd.

Lighting at the Cook Street location was surely not an afterthought, same goes for this new restaurant. Check out those cool rectangular fixtures!

If you haven’t tried their pizzas (salads are good too), get in there and enjoy a tumbler of wine along with a slice.

Keep posted on their blog or sign up for the newsletter for info and deals on their main site.

Categories: locals only.

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on the road: Weekend in Seattle

January 29, 2010

Purple Royal and Cockadoodle dress from www.anthropologie.com

It’s a great time of year to catch a hotel deal in Seattle. The Canadian dollar is strong, the wine is cheap and Nordstrom, Anthroplogie and J.Crew offer refuge in inclement weather.

Kenmore Air is the way to go this time of year when the Clipper times are unhelpful and there’s no time for ferries and I-5. There is a new spiffy streetcar that takes you from Union Bay right up Westlake Ave (past Whole Foods), a $2.25 pass lasts a couple hours.

Check out the unbeatable sandwiches and apple fritters at Pike Place Market’s Three Girls Bakery, the chowder at the seafood joint across from Three Girls and the coconut buns at Mee Sum Pastries.

Chosen for it’s tasting menu, Purple Cafe and Wine Bar on 4th was a pleasant surprise. It was packed so we sat at the bar and ordered one item at a time from the tasting menu. Each small plate is offered with an optional 3oz. wine pairing. Along with a full dinner menu and massive wine list, they have the most extensive collection of champagne cocktails I’ve ever seen – 16 in total.

Hotel Max has daily deals at the sushi bar and interesting decor. The dj in the lobby at the W Hotel is an entertaining stop after an evening at Purple. Stop in at Cafe Campagne for a croque madame and glass of bordeaux.

Watson Kennedy is full of goodies for the home, many of which I’ve read about or seen online but haven’t seen in Canada. Everything is sorted by vignette, based on colour or theme. Designer-dreamy.

The topic of last week’s contest was the Downtown Public Library on 4th. Near the SAM (Seattle Art Museum) if you want to have a peek. We have Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas and former Seattleite Joshua Ramus to thank as principal designers on the project. An amazing 362,987 square feet, capacity for 1.45 million books and materials and a high-tech book-handling system that you can see in operation when you walk in. There are 400 computers and lots of GREEN. Too bad.

Categories: on the road.

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happy hour: Kir Royale

November 27, 2009

happyhour-2

Continuing with my previous post, I found that many people in France enjoy a Kir as an apéritif. Originally the wine used was Bourgogne Aligoté, a lesser white wine of Burgundy. Apparently the wines now used are based on region and the bartender’s choice but often you’ll find a Chardonnay-based Burgundy, like Chablis. In most restaurants, about a 1/4 oz. of cassis is poured in first, and topped with wine.

A Kir Royale is made with champagne instead of wine, and I like to add the cassis last so it floats at the bottom.

Categories: happy hour.

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on the road: England, France & Spain….. all in one day

November 27, 2009


All in a day’s work. Hit the pavement in London at the crack of 4am with luggage in tow, catch a slightly delayed train to Gatwick, wait on the tarmack for a good hour or so, land in Bordeaux airport, met with my parents’ outstretched arms, pass out in the car, take in the amazing views in Socoa, sangria on a sunny patio in Hendaye, little ferry ride to Portua, Spain (you know, because going to Spain for the afternoon is just one of those things I like to do on occasion), dinner out in Saint-Jean-de-Luz at Zoko Moko, to bed in a 14th century home. Not a bad day overall.

Categories: on the road.

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locals only: The Oyster Bar

November 17, 2009

locals-1Worth checking out is the Oyster Bar at 614 Humboldt Street in Victoria. An offshoot of their next door neighbour, Pescatores and newly opened this Fall, the deep red room has high-ceilings, a large central bar, booths around the perimeter, and room for a larger gathering by the front window. They offer an impressive selection of fresh oysters by the half shell as well as various cooked versions along with other delights: Pescatores Anti Pasti Platter, Local Albacore Tataki, Crab and Cambazola Stuffed Artichoke Hearts and Apple BBQ Baby Back Ribs. Their cocktail menu is more exciting than most and all of their beers are local. Check out the decent daily deals:

Every Day! • $1
Buck-a-Shuck Until 6pm

Sundays • $6
Glasses of Prosecco

Mondays • $5
Enjoy a $5 cheese plate with the purchase of any wine

Tuesdays • $6
Martini Night

Wednesday • $8
Buck-a-Shuck All Night, Double Super Caesers $8

Thursdays • $5
All Draft Beer $5

Categories: locals only.

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flavour of the week: Soupe à l’Oignon

November 2, 2009
French Onion Soup

French Onion Soup

It’s amazing what you can do with a 3lb. bag of onions. This is a lazy (wo)man’s favorite, and cheap to boot. Great for a day like today, wet and chilly. Even better the next day. You can do without the booze in the recipe, but if can spare some, at least try to throw in some white wine.

Soupe à l’Oignon Gratinée
(French Onion Soup)
Serves: 6-8
Active Time: 30mins
Start to Finish: 2-3hrs

3 Tbsp. butter
1 Tbsp. olive oil
2 ½ – 3 lbs white or yellow onions, thinly sliced
½ tsp. salt
½ tsp. sugar
1 Tbsp. flour
8 cups beef broth, preferably homemade or quality store-bought stock
1 cup dry white wine, such as Riesling or Sauvignon Blanc
¼ cup Cognac or good brandy
Thick slices of baguette, toasted
1 – 1 ½ cups grated gruyère cheese

In a heavy dutch oven (or soup pot), melt butter and oil over medium low heat. Add onions and stir to coat with the butter. Cover and cook over low heat until translucent and wilted, around 10-15 minutes. Remove the cover and turn heat up to medium high. Add the salt and sugar. Cook, stirring occasionally while onions begin to brown. Cook until onions are caramelized, a deep brown color, about 30-40 minutes (note: the onions took 2hrs to reduce and brown for the soup I made this week! The onions were extremely juicy. I’m wondering if it was because they were organic?)

Sprinkle flour over onions and cook for 3-4 minutes. Pour in 2-3 cups of beef broth, stirring constantly to incorporate the flour. Add the rest of the broth, cognac and white wine. Bring to a boil and turn heat down to low. Simmer for 1 ½ hours with a loose lid, adding a little water if liquid is evaporating too quickly. Stir occasionally.

At this point you can either go the traditional route and pour soup into individual, oven-safe bowls, or just place everything in the pot. Either way, place bread slices on the soup and top with cheese to completely cover the bread. If gruyere isn’t available, use a stongly flavoured cheese. Broil until cheese is melted, about 5 minutes. Serve immediately, with some good, cheap red wine.

(adapted from Julia Child’s The Way to Cook and the Gourmet Cookbook)

La Frégate

La Frégate

On my recent trip to Paris, I had the best onion soup (twice) at La Frégate restaurant. Located on the Left Bank, on the site of the home of Marshal D’Artagnan, who inspired Dumas to write his masterpiece “The Three Musketeeers”. It’s a great place to drop in if you’re visiting the nearby Louvre, Tuilerie Gardens or Musée d’Orsay.

Categories: flavor of the week, on the road.

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on the road: manchester

October 30, 2009

On a day trip to Manchester from Stockport, we wandered the chilly streets looking at the shops and eating our way along. If you walk directly out of the train station, you’ll run into a massive pedestrian street full of designer boutiques and department stores.

Manchester

Manchester


KRO Manchester

KRO Manchester


We stopped in at Kro for lunch. Kro translates to “Danish Village Pub”. It was kind of like eating in an IKEA living room. Not a bad thing. We happened upon The Living Room, which I recalled reading about before we left. It became apparent that it was a hot spot for the well-dressed working set to share a drink on a Friday afternoon. We squeezed our way in avec practical shoes and rain coats anyway. I loved their brand, menu design and the combination of slick white leather booths with a traditional, dark wood bar.

Categories: on the road.

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locals only: Aura Waterfront Restaurant

September 25, 2009

Taste Test - Aura
A great spot to stop in at the bar or sit by the window and watch the action in the harbour is Aura Waterfront Restaurant at the Laural Point Inn. I haven’t had dinner here (yet), but return for the great local wine selection and the Sesame Calamari described as “crispy lightly spiced calamari, fresh orange segments, baby tatsoi greens, tobiko, cucumber ginger yoghurt.” Light and slightly sweet, and great for sharing along with another “small plate” or two from the menu like the “oceanwise” crusted wonton prawns with togorashi mayonnaise, warm edamame and lime salt. You’ll be treated to a brioche popover just for stopping in. Until November, take the Harbour Ferry from the Inner Harbour to Fisherman’s Wharf for a short walk along the water to the restaurant.

Categories: locals only.

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