Towse: views from the hill

July 21, 2007

View from the top

Filed under: food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 3:56 pm

Went to the Bankers Club 20th annual lobster feed last night as part of AIWF-NorCal last night.

We gathered for before-dinner drinks at the bar with incredible views to the south and then moved into the dining room. We’d grabbed seats next to the west windows for dinner when we arrived and were glad we did.

The food was not to die for. The hors d’oeuvres reminded me of the finger food you’d get at the Club and, at dinner, the lobster was “presented,” i.e. broiled, cut in half, put back in the shell, herbed bread crumbs on top yadadoo and not the fresh boiled crack-those-shells lobster I’d been expecting from the cutesie plastic lobster bibs they had at each chair. I prefer my lobster straight with melted butter and not all gussied up. I know others disagree with me. Before the lobster we had steamed mussels with an excellent broth and Caesar salad. The lobster came with potatoes and cobbed corn. Dessert was strawberry shortcake.

The wines were good. We’d brought a Husch chardonnay we’d picked up at the winery back in mid-May. Others brought others. AIWF brought some from the cellar.

The views from the 52d floor as the sun set over the Golden Gate were absolutely fantastic.

Become a member of the Bankers Club and you can enjoy the view whenever you’d like. Or you can opt for the less pricey choice and have dinner at the Carnelian Room, which is what the Bankers Club rooms become in the evening.

July 15, 2007

SFist: Hot Stuff: Chocolate Salon at Fort Mason

Filed under: events,food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 12:12 am

SFist: Hot Stuff: Chocolate Salon at Fort Mason

More on the Chocolate Salon from SFist.

How come I hadn’t heard about this ahead of time?!??! Some of us mark things ahead of time on our calendars, you know.

Maybe tomorrow, which looks to have no prior commitments.

(Unfortunately, his nibs doesn’t like chocolate, so he’ll be unlikely to be enthusiastic about an outing …)

San Francisco CHOCOLATE SALON

Filed under: events,food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 12:03 am

San Francisco CHOCOLATE SALON

First I heard of this.

Here I was spending hours on a Saturday afternoon talking up the San Francisco Climate Challenge out in front of Rogue Ale (at Union and Powell) when I could’ve been at Fort Mason for the first major chocolate rumble on the West Coast in decades.

Dang!

And the week leading up had all sorts of events!

Double dang!

(Of course, we had our roofer/leak guys here so I couldn’t’ve gone anyway but still … dang!)

June 28, 2007

Some folks with faaaaar too much time on their hands

Filed under: food,toomuchtimeontheirhands,video — Towse @ 12:15 am

(For those who can’t embed: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kvdq8cRNBM)

Rube Goldberg cooks ramen.

For jeffkos ’cause we all know how much he likes ramen and because I’m tinkering with the bookmarks I recently moved to http://del.icio.us/towse and I happen to be poking around in foodie links and came across Matt Fischer’s (moved since I first found it while he was at umr.edu) Official Ramen Homepage which eventually led me to YouTube (as all things do) and ’cause kos said the bikini wax post “did nothing to help my day along. Not a thing.” Here’s something to help your day along, Jeff. The things I will do for my funs.

Just six and a half minutes of your time. (You could be watching an egg hardboil.) This is better. Trust me.

NOTE: Japanese play-by-play …

June 7, 2007

cochineal, also known as carmine — derived from the dried bodies of pregnant scale insects

Filed under: food,life,news — Towse @ 6:57 pm

theage.com.au has a terrific article, Meaty Bites (by John Bailey) which begins thusly,

Masterfoods in Britain recently announced that Mars Bars would now contain animal product – specifically rennet, an extract pulled from the stomachs of calves. Sweet-toothed vegetarians the world over howled in protest and the company quickly restored the original recipe and issued a blatant apology for its error. But how many other foods contain sneaky meats and furtive fish?

Number one on Bailey’s list is Nestle Strawberry NesQuik which gets that unearthly pink color from “colour (120)”. That 120 is cochineal, also known as carmine, and is derived from the dried bodies of pregnant scale insects (the yummy sounding Dactylopius coccus costa).

Yum!

His article goes on from there naming most cheeses (rennet there too), anything with gelatin (check the yogurt label), Guinness (Guinness!) and other you-may-not-realize-they’re-not-vegetarian foods.

Bailey also specifically mentions Lea&Perrins Worcestershire sauce, which contains anchovies and has since forever.

I actually knew this (as of last night) because I was making a cheese sauce for the cauliflower (white sauce, shredded cheese…) and added a bit of Worcester sauce for some added punch along with chopped grilled onions and fresh-ground pepper. I said to his nibs, “What’s in Worcester sauce anyway?” and he read the ingredients off the label: vinegar, molasses, high fructose corn syrup (!!), anchovies, water, hydrolyzed soy and corn protein, onions, tamarind, salt, garlic, cloves, chili peppers, natural flavorings and shallots.

Anchovies? Who knew? Well now you do, I do, and anyone who read John Bailey’s article does too.

Skoda Fabia TV Advert

Filed under: design,food — Towse @ 12:31 am

Yum!

June 2, 2007

[URL] San Francisco Herb Co.

Filed under: food,San Francisco,shopshopshop,URL — Towse @ 7:13 pm

As mentioned in the post immediately preceding this one, I came across the San Francisco Herb Co. today while searching for a source of Long Life Tea (my supply being about four mugs-worth from the bottom of the bag).

San Francisco Herb Co. is local. The 26K sqft warehouse is located at 250 14th St. The small retail operation at the front of the warehouse is open M-SA 10-4.

San Francisco Herb Company provides Wholesale prices on the highest quality culinary herbs and spices, extracts, teas, dehydrated vegetables, nuts, seeds, botanicals, essential oils, potpourri ingredients and fragrance oils.

You can browse through the available stock, which is sorted into the following categories:

  • Herbs and Spices – Baking
  • Herbs and Spices – Botanicals
  • Herbs and Spices – Miscellaneous
  • Catnip
  • Green Tea and Other Bulk Tea Products
  • Dehydrated Vegetables
  • Essential Oils
  • Extracts
  • Fragrance Oils
  • Nuts and Seeds
  • Potpourri – Ingredients
  • Potpourri – Pre-Mixed
  • Potpourri – Recipes
  • Spices
  • Spice Blends

The bulk of their business is mail order. The online catalog is worth a look. I’m planning a field trip to the retail outlet. Soon.

[URL] Gernot Katzer’s Spice Pages

Filed under: food,science,URL — Towse @ 6:58 pm

Web wandering brought me to Gernot Katzer’s Spice Pages.

I’d had the brilliant idea two days ago of creating a Web site called wherecanifind.com/ where, f’rex, if I wanted to know where I could find Long Life Tea in San Francisco, I would go to wherecanifind.com/sanfrancisco and type in my request.

Handy helpful w2.0 folks would swarm the site, providing searchers with solutions.

Alas. I went to godaddy.com and every single wherecanifind.* has been snapped up, except .mobi and …

Well, another brill idea up in smoke.

But I still wanted to know where I could find Long Life Tea in San Francisco, so I searched and came across the San Francisco Herb Company down on 14th St. which had not only a HUGE inventory but also a small retail operation. (A later post.)

Rambling through the SFHCo site, I came across a reference to Nigella sativa, which I used to have growing in our old front yard. SFHCo was selling it as a cooking spice. Who knew you could use the seeds for cooking? (I always saved them to scatter the next spring …)

But was the Nigella sativa really the one I’d been growing in my front yard?

Check Google images!

No. Turns out I’d been growing Nigella damascena AKA Love in a Mist.

Ah, well. Still curious, though, a further search took me to Gernot Katzer’s Spice Pages where he gave me the lowdown on N.s. in great and gory detail.

What a site. Depth and breadth about spices.

solid information on (currently) 117 different spice plants. Emphasis is on their usage in ethnic cuisines, particularly in Asia; furthermore, I discuss their history, chemical constituents, and the etymology of their names. Last but not least, there are numerous photos featuring the live plants or the dried spices.

May 31, 2007

New eats in the ‘hood: Nua

Filed under: food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:39 pm

His nibs was at a business dinner last night and, as it was the last night free before the younger younger one heads back to Beantown, the younger younger one and I went out on the town on our own.

First choice for eats would’ve been Da Flora, where the younger younger one has never eaten but, as we discovered when we tried to get in over the weekend, the chef there had emergency dental work done last weekend and the restaurant was closed. The restaurant didn’t look like it was opening last night when we walked by it in the afternoon (on our way to XOX Truffles and the art supplies store at Columbus and Chestnut that I visit some times to drool over paints and canvases and stuff). Other plans had to be made.

A couple weekends ago, after we’d been to “the California Wine Classic” (a fundraiser for the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation), we’d stopped off at Dell’uva, a new winebar that had opened that evening. (565 Green, SF). As we were sitting there, absorbing the scene, we looked across the street and said to ourselves, “selves? You haven’t eaten at Nua yet and they’ve been open far longer than Dell’uva.”

With DaFlora not an option, the younger younger one and I decided to eat at Nua.

Nua
550 Green Street, San Francisco, CA 94133
415.433.4000
dinner Tu-Su

Yumpscious food. The wine list can be a bit pricey for my blood and his nibs wasn’t there to help me wade through it. The nice guy there helped us choose a wine by the glass to go with the appetizers and mains we were planning. Delicious pairing, but $10/glass? Ouch.

For appetizers we shared brandade-stuffed Piquillo peppers ($9). Tasty. My companion thought them too salty. We also had the chicken liver mousse and a rustic country pate made with pistachios, crostini ($11). Very tasty. The mousse comes in a ramekin and melts in your mouth. You wish you were at home and could lick the ramekin clean. The mousse and pate come paired with a kumquat-quince marmalade. Delicious.

For main dishes we ordered the Parisienne herb gnocchi (with baby artichokes, mushrooms and Pecorino Romano) ($14) and the duck confit (with pistachio apricot couscous) ($21) and that’s where we hit our first hiccup. (Did I mention the service is terrific, our water glasses were always full, the client/staff ratio was probably 2/1?)

First (and only) hiccup? They brought our gnocchi … and the Porterhouse pork chop.

Wah?

“No. That’s not what I ordered,” I said. “I ordered the duck confit.”

“Oh. We’ll fix that right away. Why don’t I leave the pork here for you while you wait for the duck.”

“Um. No. I really don’t want the pork.”

So, they took it away and the duck came later (along with apologies at different intervals from at least three of the staff). No problem. Mistakes happen.

The gnocchi was delicious, tender, drenched in butter with mushrooms. I know how hard it is to make gnocchi. These were perfecto. The wait staff said the gnocchi was so tender and delish because they were made with wheat flour, not potato, and there was that to be sure, but the gnocchi I make are not made with potato either, but with wheat flour and ricotta and they are delish but nothing like this.

The duck confit was two sturdy legs worth with meat that fell off the bone. The couscous was delish.

Of everything we had, I was tempted to ask for another order of the gnocchi for dessert, but our wait staff told us that there was a cherry clafouti on the dessert menu that wasn’t to be missed and I didn’t want to break the heart of the person running the dessert end of the menu. So we ordered the clafouti and I had a glass of (what else) muscato for dessert.

Definitely a place to return to. His nibs needs to try the food (and check out the wine list). That Nua comp’d me the muscato as an apology for the mixup with the pork and duck just added to the good vibe of the restaurant.

Nice to have a new place nearby with good food. (Not that we don’t walk a ways for good food, including the dinner at bushi-tei on Sunday and a walk over to Cow Hollow Tuesday night to have a dinner-by-special-request at Isa with the younger younger one.)

May 28, 2007

A Sunday walkaround

Filed under: art,food,life,San Francisco,shopshopshop — Towse @ 8:28 pm

We ate again last night at bushi-tei. The younger younger guy joined us. For the first time we tried Waka’s tasting menu. Superb. We added an extra dish, one I’ve mentioned before — seared fresh foie gras, pumpkin pot de crème, pistachio crunch, red onion marmalade — which we shared amongst the three of us. The description sounds weird but this is really one of the tastiest things ever. I wanted the younger younger guy to sample it because I rave about it so much. Perbacco Chardonnay with dinner. Sparkling sake with dessert. The bushi-tei staff is terrific. The food is delish.

We walked to dinner and back with a side trip to visit Sunday Open Houses at 1998 Broadway #905 and 2502 Broadway, two very different homes for sale. After visiting 2502, we backtracked through Pacific Heights and wandered down Fillmore where we stopped at the California-Pacific MC Thrift Store, Zinc Details, Design Within Reach, and the Goodwill (‘natch) which was having a Memorial Weekend Sale: 50% OFF ALL CLOTHES!

We poked through the stores at the Japantown mall before stopping in at bushi-tei (with our Goodwill bag in hand) for an early (6 p.m.) dinner. Six-plus miles of walkabout in all.

Whilst in Japantown wandering around before dinner, we made a sidetrip to visit Ruth Asawa’s fountains at the Buchanan Mall. Lovely work she did. The fountains remind me of her Aurora Fountain, on the west side of the Embarcadero, between Mission and Howard.

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