Showing posts with label vietnamese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vietnamese. Show all posts

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Memento On A Diet



After a longish haitus due to lots of scheduling challenges, Memento (our supper club) returned tonight. We gathered at David & Carolyn's place in Northgate for a meal conceptualized by Marcy & James. This time, Memento was On A Diet. Specifically, each of our 6 courses was allowed to have only 367 calories, 4 grams of saturated fat, and 8 grams of unsaturated fat. It proved quite a challenge, particularly for Dan & I, who were providing dessert.



Marcy & James started us off with an elegant plate of grilled oysters on the half-shell. They came with two toppings - a blackberry vinaigrette and a cherry & tomato salsa. I put blackberry on one oyster, salsa on the second, and both on the third. The trio of oysters were served with grilled romaine lettuce (which we learned is one of the most nutritious lettuces), which had a pesto sauce. The oysters were delicious, sitting in a little briny nectar, and the salsa and sauce were bright and sweet compliments. The plate was such a perfect start to a summer meal out on the deck (and eventually, under the stars).




Next up, keeping things very light, was Anna & Jason's salad course. Mixed greens topped with candied red walnuts shared the plate with blueberries, radish slices, orange cherry tomatoes, and tiny 'sweetie' peppers, all delicately plated with what has become their signature style. All the fruits and veggies were so fresh and flavorful, with the fat of the walnuts adding just the right amount of richness.



Not included in the calorie counts were the drinks, thankfully. Jason & Anna shared a nice crisp white that followed the rosé I had been drinking.



For our third course, Linda & Nancy served a vegetarian version of the Thai dish Larb. Dan & I have made it with chicken (in fact, just this week), but this version used tofu, presented in a butter lettuce cup. You'd never have guessed it was vegetarian if you didn't know, though. The texture and flavor were outstanding. Linda shared her tip for perfect tofu every time - a very hot, completely dry pan. No oil at all. Along with the larb, they served a modern take on a Korean kim chee and a Thai cucumber salad, both of which were vinegary and kept the bright, fresh, summery goodness going. In their entire plate of food, the only fat came from a few peanuts on the cucumber salad.



We also got to try (those of us brave and/or stupid enough) the first batch of traditional kim chee they made, which was deemed un-servable. A mixture of primarily cabbage and chili powder, it was incredibly hot. Not habanero hot, but just the couple bites I had were more than enough. It wasn't one-note, though, and had a wonderful smokiness. At the end of the night, Anna ended up going home with it, but I was ready to fight her for it.



Next up, Carolyn & David prepared an amazing Vietnamese Summer Roll filled with shrimp, vermicelli and Thai basil.



The wrapper was so tender - not toothsome like they so often are (including the ones Dan & I had earlier in the week). They were delicate but sturdy enough to hold together when dipped in the delicious coconut & peanut sauce. This was likely the highest fat dish of the night, given the peanut and coconut... and the fact that everyone enjoyed them so much that Carolyn went in and made another for each of us. Thankfully, there was more peanut sauce to go around, too, as many of us had already licked our dish clean.




The Asian cuisine continued with the next course, presented by Lizzie and her date, Mike.



Based on a recipe from Tom Douglas' I Love Crab Cakes! cookbook, Lizzie prepared scallop and crab cakes steamed in banana leaf wrappers. Some of the scallops are chopped and mixed with the crab, while another portion is pureed, which acts as a binder when the cakes cook. When unwrapped, inside each wrapper was a perfect cake with great seafood flavors, and a texture that reminds me of fish cakes (which I absolutely love). They were served with a spicy & sweet dipping sauce, as well as an Asian slaw.



They also served a cocktail to go along with their dish - a Thai iced tea spiked with Sweet Tea vodka that was a great accompaniment and (since it wasn't included in the calorie/fat counts for the course) added some serious creaminess and sweetness - which was a welcome decadence just before dessert.



Dan & I rounded out the meal with a calorie and fat conscious dessert. I love to bake and make pastries and candies, but after a few checks of calories & fat in things like eggs, butter, cream... even coconut milk or avocado... we had to go in another direction. And the answer was staring us in the face: the shave ice machine I bought for Dan several years back, which has had very little use, until tonight.



With a base for our dish of zero calorie ice, we were able to add all the fixins' traditional in Hawai`i. At the base was a sweet red bean paste I made by soaking, blanching, and then cooking dry adzuki beans with sugar (using a recipe found here). On top of that was a custard based ice cream using eggs from our chickens, cream, milk, sugar and vanilla beans churned in our little Cuisinart Ice Cream Maker. A healthy handful of shaved ice topped that. Shaved Ice is much finer and more like snow than the ice you get in a mainland style 'sno-cone', and is the style of ice used both in Hawaiian Shave Ice (aka Ice Shave, aka Shaved Ice), as well as Filipino Halo-halo. Dripped onto the ice were two syrups - one made of Liliko`i (passionfruit) juice and sugar, and one made of water, sugar, ginger, lime juice and lime zest. Finally, a light drizzle of store-bought evaporated milk, since my homemade version that combined water, dry milk powder and sugar scorched, boiled over, and tasted gritty. It also tasted exactly like a toasted marshmallow, but was just too texturally wrong to serve.

We paired our dish with a cocktail, as well - a vodka soda made with a home-infused ginger & green tea vodka, with club soda and lime.



The entire meal was wonderful, and the company couldn't be beat. This was definitely the lightest Memento Meal we've had, and also the most Asian influenced. There was a strong thread of greens running through the meal, and Marcy pointed out the common element of condiments. We didn't feel at all heavy at the end of the night, and James tallied all the calories and fat grams and we came in under. However, we discovered one challenge of eating such a low-calorie, low-fat meal: there was very little to counteract the cocktails and wine consumed along side our courses. Thankfully, that's spread over a 6+ hour period, but I know I was a little extra boisterous, Dan was pretty tipsy, and we both slept in until 11am, waking with hangovers and a hankering for burgers and fries.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Food Truck Friday - Xplosive



This is the first of what I hope to be a series of weekly posts featuring Seattle-area food trucks. I'm kicking things off with the food truck I waited a long time for: one that features bánh mi.

Bánh Mi are a Vietnamese sandwich served on a baguette, usually with a mayo, a mix of carrots, daikon (a radish), cucumber, jalapeno and cilantro, plus a protein like tofu, pork, or chicken.

4 years ago, I went on a bánh mi binge for my Frugal Fridays series, but was already fully in love with these sandwiches. When my work had offices in the International District, these were the go-to lunch item for a LOT of people, given they're a) ready to go b) cheap and c) delicious. One of the chief complaints I heard when we moved to South Lake Union was that lunch options were too expensive (aka there were no bánh mi for $2.50).

I was elated when Xplosive Mobile Food Truck showed up on the Seattle food scene, with regular visits to Boren & Harrison. They have their own unique take on the bánh mi - combining Filipino flavors with the Vietnamese format. They also feature Filipino/Vietnamese fusion tacos and bún (vermicelli bowls).



On my first visit to Xplosive, I opted for the full-sized Chicken Adobo Bánh Mi, which I was shocked to discover was as long as my forearm, yet was only 6 bucks. The adobo flavor was there, but it still tasted solidly like a bánh mi, so was wonderfully satisfying after so long without one. It was more than enough for lunch, which made me wonder about another menu item: the "grenades".



The grenades are bánh mi sliders, which go for just $3 a piece, including tax... very close to the old I.D. standard bánh mi pricing. Given how substantial the full size is, my hope was the grenade would be the perfect lunch portion. Today, I went for the Lemongrass Tofu Grenade, which measured in at five inches - not quite on the same scale as similarly priced bánh mi at places like Saigon Bistro. The flavors were good, and there was a nice balance between the heat of the jalapeno and the other flavors. I may end up a little hungry later, but maybe that just means I should've ordered one of their dessert items. My only substantial complaint would be the wait. My first visit seemed extraordinarily long, given the line of people waiting already and my own wait. Today, I got there right when they opened (before they remembered to turn down the music so they could hear my order), but there was still a bit of a wait. I'm so accustomed to bánh mi being a grab and go item (rather than any component being cooked to order), that even 5 minutes seems like a long time to wait. Maybe I just need to adjust my expectations.

Xplosive Mobile Food Truck on Urbanspoon

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Goodbye Lunch @ Flying Fish



Today was the last day for my office mate, who scored a job at one of the biggest and best law firms in Seattle. To send her off properly, a bunch joined her for lunch at Flying Fish.



I sipped a hibiscus drink called Aqua d' Jamiaca, which was a little strong in flavor (it wasn't alcoholic, but could've used something to water it down a bit.)



For my lunch, I went with a sandwich billed as a Chicken Banh Mi - the Vietnamese sandwiches that many folks at my company became positively addicted to while we worked in the International District. This, however, was not anything like the banh mi I love. It was served on ciabatta bread, slathered in so much mayo that my hands became covered every time I took a bite, and the ingredients fell all over the place when I tried to eat it. Good banh mi are often considered such because of the amazing baguettes with which they are made - crispy on the outside, soft on the inside, denoting the French influence on Vietnamese cuisine. The baguette is sliced only part way through, creating a perfect pocket to safely house the tasty filling, held in place with just a light spread of mayo. Ciabatta was too dense, and being sliced in half didn't hold anything in place - which may have explained the extra mayo as an attempt to cement the filling to the bread. The sandwich also looked a little lonely on the plate.

That said, maybe I would've enjoyed my lunch more if our server wasn't so obviously having a bad day, and visibly frustrated with our table for not giving him all our attention when he wanted it. The restaurant is fairly loud at lunch, so I think our group of 8 didn't all hear him ask about drinks - creating some confusion.



I wasn't the only one who ordered the "banh mi", and the other folks seemed to enjoy it - though one smartly asked for no mayo. But the two people that REALLY enjoyed their lunch were the two that got the Kobe burger. It came with fries and looked delicious.



Flying Fish on Urbanspoon

Friday, April 22, 2011

Papaya Vietnamese Cafe via Delivery



Ruth and Sarah came over tonight for some cocktails and Karaoke in our tiki bar - and after belting out some numbers, we got a little peckish.



2goServices came to the rescue, enabling us to get a Vietnamese fix without having to leave the bar - by way of Papaya Vietnamese Cafe.



We ordered Pork Skewers with Vermicelli, Green Papaya Salad with Shrimp, Soft Shell Crab Summer Rolls, and Coconut Fried Rice with Chicken - all of which were delicious... though I have to admit that after a couple margaritas, my palate might not have been as discerning.



Papaya - Vietnamese Cafe on Urbanspoon

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Eating Blood, Tendon & Knuckle at Hoang Lan



The area around the Othello Light Rail station is jam-packed with restaurants - from Mexican to Cajun, Chinese to Southern, Thai to African. But more than anything, there are Vietnamese restaurants. I count about a half-dozen in a two block radius. But reportedly the best is Hoang Lan.



Not much to look at, it's your typical acoustic tile ceiling, formica tables kinda place, with a TV in the corner playing Vietnamese shows, and a clientele of exclusively Vietnamese folks. In fact, a fair number of the people eating tonight appeared to be family of the owners, as they all sat together to eat.

What's not typical at Hoang Lan is the soup. I'd read some reviews that claimed it serves possibly the best Pho in Seattle - a title it vies for with Pho Bac III. But I was there for something slightly different: Bún bò Huế.



Similar to Pho in many regards, Bún bò Huế is like its cousin from the wrong side of the tracks. Like Pho, it's a beef broth with vermicelli noodles (thicker here than at other Pho places). And it's served topped with onion and cilantro, with a plate of lemon wedges, shredded lettuce, bean sprouts, basil, jalapenos, and some sort of shredded vegetable we couldn't identify. But unlike the tamer Pho variations, Bún bò Huế has pork hock, pork blood cake, and delicious little beef tendon meatballs swimming in the broth, along with strips of beef. It's like a big bowl of offal, and it's really, really good. I can definitely see now why the words Bún bò Huế are bigger on the sign out front than Hoang Lan.

Dan stuck with the more familiar Pho Ga (chicken soup), which he said was equally great.



Hoang Lan on Urbanspoon

Friday, October 22, 2010

Rebranding Is Everything



This week I made a visit to a restaurant just down the street from my office, which I've visited a few times before. The first time I visited, it was the Frontier Cafe - serving great pulled pork and other sandwiches. The next time, the sign still read Frontier Cafe, but the menu was clearly transitioning to more traditional Vietnamese fare. Today, the transformation is complete, and Mimosa Cafe is clearly the hot new Bahn Mi shop in Seattle's financial district.

I ordered the Tofu Bahn Mi again (it was what I had during my second visit), and was again delighted by perfectly fried, generous chunks of tofu in warm, soft bread, with all the fixin's (jalapeno, cilantro, etc). And again it was paired with a little bowl of chicken congee - though this time he checked if I was vegetarian before including it (something I was surprised they didn't do the last time I visited). Service is quick, and the prices are fair - though not the bargain basement pricing folks are accustomed to in the International District, just a short walk South.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Pho Bac



My friends Adam and Robert met me for lunch today - a semi-regular, yet far to infrequent occurrence (we're working on that). Both Adam & I were feeling under the weather, so Robert suggested a couple Pho places, with Pho Bac coming out on top.

I hadn't been back to Pho Bac in maybe years now (really?!), but was pleased to see the same staff and familiar menu items that I remember from our frequent visits when I worked closer by. It'd been so long, I'd never tried anything but the vegetarian pho, so this time I tried out the chicken in the more traditional beef broth (Pho Ga). I added plenty of jalapeno slices, basil, and sprouts, plus generous amounts of hoisin and chili-garlic sauces, doing my best to sweat out the cold I could feel creeping up on me (update: it didn't work). The chicken was good, but I think I've come to associate Pho with tofu and veggies, so in the end I wished I'd had the Pho Chay, like Robert did.



Pho Bac III on Urbanspoon

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Thoa's for Restaurant Week



After falling in love with Hawai'i, Dan & I discovered a Seattle restaurant called the Islander that served great Hawaiian & Pan-asian food and delicious drinks in a Polynesian inspired setting - and had a beautiful patio overlooking Puget Sound. We spent Valentine's Day there; we had them cater our engagement party; we brought friends there; and before all that - before it was even the Islander - Dan was in a short film in the space (it was an Italian joint at the time).

Then the owner decided to close the Islander and open a Vietnamese restaurant called Thoa's.

Dan & I were heartbroken - and this was just the first of three Hawaiian restaurants in the area to close (it was followed by Trader Vic's and Luau). Despite our connection to the space, we couldn't bring ourselves to go back after the changeover... until tonight.



Driving through downtown the other day, we saw the sign for Thoa's and agreed maybe it was time to check it out. Then we discovered it was part of Seattle Restaurant Week, and that sealed the deal. So tonight we bit the bullet, put aside our grudge, and returned to the space for a 3-course meal with a $25 price tag.

Dan arrived first and was happy to find that the drink menu still included many of our favorites, including the Mango-Ginger Margarita ($9), which he ordered. I decided to try a new addition to the menu - the Thai Bom ($9), a delicious Thai Iced tea based cocktail very similar to the one I had at Spice Room recently (and again they accommodated my lactose intolerance by swapping cream out for coconut cream). Thoa's version is more true to the original Thai Iced tea recipe, with the additions of Amaretto and vanilla infused vodka.



We both opted to enjoy the $25 fixed menu, starting with Jicama Summer Rolls (normally $7), which were incredibly fresh and served with a slightly sweet tamarind dipping sauce.



There was a little delay with our entrees, so our friendly and attentive server brought over a bowl of steamed & salted edamame to keep us satiated while we waited - which wasn't that long of a wait.





Of the three entree options available for the special menu, I went for the Vietnamese Steak Frites (normally $20) - a stir fry of sorts featuring beef tenderloin cubes and thin potato fries, tossed with red & green bell peppers and onions and tomatoes. The beef was tender and flavorful, and the potatoes were surprisingly not heavy - though it was served with a bowl of steamed rice that seemed like starch overkill.






Dan couldn't resist the Five Spice Duck Breast (normally $19), which he graciously let me sample. It was well worth the wait, cooked perfectly and seasoned wonderfully - the five spice giving it a rich, peppery flavor that balanced the duck. As a side was a coconut kombucha squash, which was equally rich in flavor.



Rounding out our three courses was a Fried Banana with Ice Cream (normally $7). Unlike the fried bananas at Aloha plates that have a thick batter of coconut and panko, these had just a thin tempura style batter, and were served warm topped the ice cream.



We were both very happy with our dinners and drinks, and pleased to see that the menu and decor hadn't changed that much - with old favorites like Loco Moco, Ahi Poke, and Sweet Potato Fries still available. And getting to sample the menu at a reduced price was a great excuse to finally return, getting $67 worth of food for $50 - not counting the complimentary edamame (normally $3).

Thoa's may not be the Islander, but it still has plenty of aloha.



Seattle Restaurant Week continues until April 29th.

Thoa's Restaurant & Lounge on Urbanspoon