Sunday, November 25, 2007

Aqua

252 California (b/w Battery & Sansome)
(415) 956-9662

French/ Seafood in Financial

My tastes in fine dining have evolved since I first started getting really into eating out. My very first fine dining experience was at La Folie, which still to this day I remember as being amazing... but was that just because I didn't have any other restaurant really to compare it to? I bring this up only because I wonder... had this meal at Aqua been my first fine dining experience, would I have been just as blown away?

Aqua is definitely very good. Impeccable service, extremely knowledgeable wait staff, beautiful plating, and good quality food. I went here with my family for my mom's and my birthdays, and we all opted for the 3-course since that was already a good amount of food (as opposed to the tasting menu, which is... 9 courses? I'm too lazy to look it up). Their amuse was a trio of minis that didn't really go together, but their mushroom soup had a kick of hazelnuts, which I am widely known to be a sucker for.

L: Amuse bouche - Monterey sardine over celery root salad, mushroom soup w/ creme fraiche & hazelnuts, smoke ahi tuna croquette w/ roasted bell pepper sauce
M: white sturgeon + veal cheeks, served with cremini and hollowed
potato w/ marrow (very cute)
R: Atlantic cod w/... stuff

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Saturday, November 24, 2007

Thanksgiving Dinner, First Pie, or The Onset of Non-Stop Holiday Gluttony


Thanksgiving really does mark the beginning of lots of eating. Both my birthday and my mom's also fall around this time, and then once December hits, so do all the holiday parties. Luckily the Bay Area maintains good weather so I can still go running.

So as far as I can remember, my family has ALWAYS had Thanksgiving with my dad's brother's family, plus or minus a few people. We alternate between our houses (Fremont or Walnut Creek), and my aunt has almost always made the turkey + "Chinese stuffing," and my dad has almost always made the mashed potatoes and gravy. This year, however, the kids (people under 50) made dinner kind of.

The turkey and sticky rice (my absolute favorite part of Thanksgiving - seriously, I look forward to it every year!) were still kind of made by my aunt, with the help of her daughters/my cousins. They also made some other veggies and an American stuffing. On our side, my little sister "made" the mashed potatoes with the help of my dad. My older sister and her Joe made pumpkin soup, cauliflower gratin, and green beans which I didn't touch because there was a crapload of ginger in them.


I took care of dessert and cheese puffs - I made mini pecan tarts using puff pastry because I happened to have some in the freezer, pumpkin parfaits from the Barefoot Contessa, and an apple pie. They were all firsts, except the pumpkin mousse - I made something similar for my Fall Feast, but not the same recipe (Actually, the Barefoot Contessa's recipe called for yolks... but it didn't say to cook the custard which was really strange... because you'd just be eating raw egg yolks in the mousse.... so I brought it to 160 just in case).

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Friday, November 23, 2007

Tailor, revisited


I just read Frank Bruni's review of Tailor, and I just had to say that I agreed with almost everything he said. He described almost exactly my own experience there.

Photo by the NYTimes.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Thanksgiving at Work, or "PBBH"


We had our second annual Thanksgiving potluck competition at work today, and my team decided to have a honey theme. I decided to do dessert, and the first thing I thought of was a peanut butter banana and honey sandwich. There was a stretch of time (maybe about a month) where I ate those just about every day for breakfast with a glass of milk. YUMMMMMYY!!!

So I thought I'd do a play on that: almond torte with caramelized bananas topped with honey mousse and honeycomb candy.

I didn't win haha (darn you, rice pudding!). But whatever, I know Thanksgiving is less classy and more rustic, but I just wanted to try it anyway. Now for the real meal....

For the very first time in history, the KIDS (as in, people under 50) are making dinner this year! and none of us have ever roasted a turkey... good times ahead. =) I love the holidays!

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

THE WEDDING, professional

Not a huge selection, but that's ok. Non-professional pics (courtesy of Jon) are here.


There was a bulletin board behind the table in case you're wondering why the random gold tablecloth is hanging on the wall haha.




Chai City




So in my last post, I talked about how I fell in love with the chai at Joe: the Art of Coffee. Well I emailed them yesterday, and got a response this morning:

Hi there- thanks for the kind words- We use an organic concentrate called Sattwa- As far as I know we are the only people who have it in New York- We don't sell it, but certainly could sell you a container of it (half gallon?) if you'd like- I have to check what it costs us, but I think each container is around $10.
Best, Jonathan

I think I will buy a 6 half-gallon case. It comes out to $0.69 a serving instead of paying $3-4 at a coffee shop! I will never have to go to Peet's again....

Monday, November 12, 2007

BRR it's cold in here!

So I've been away from the interweb because I've been in NY. It was like SF on the coldest night of the year, except every day = bearable, but this California girl is very happy to be home! The trip consisted of lots of eating, shopping, walking (to pseudo-counter the eating, kind of but not really), and time with good friends. =) WARNING: this is a long-ass post.

L: whole wheat bagel @ Murray's, M: hazelnut latte @ Joe the Art of Coffee, R: pastrami @ Katz

I try to go to NY once a year, yet I still hadn't tried some of the city's staples. I'd only heard of Murray's Bagels from the Amateur Gourmet, and I must say that it was very eh. Honestly, the bagel I had was no better than Noah's.

I also made it a point to go to Joe: the Art of Coffee, but when I walked over to the Waverly location, I realized that I had been here before over two years ago. Random. My NY friends seem to live by this chain, but I thought their coffee was ok. Their chai, however, was incredible. I visited Joe maybe 5+ times during my trip, and all but one time got the chai. I need to find out what they use! Stupid work has their site blocked =P

I also headed over to Katz deli on the LES, and it was way bigger than I thought it would be (it was huge!). The pastrami was, indeed, very tasty when fresh and hot. Definitely not as big as Cyn made it out to be - I could totally eat the entire thing, but then again, I have a freakishly large appetite. But $15 for that sandwich? Are you kidding me?? They're lucky they're famous and can get away with charging that much!

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Fall Feast!


Friday night I stayed in, but with good company:


Pasta with butternut squash & wild mushrooms, side of asparagus. Roasted sweet potato fries with chipotle lime mayo

No pictures, but for dessert we had pumpkin custard with maple caramel. The fries were by far the winner, and the chipotle really made the difference!