Sunday, February 08, 2015

Exploring dining with East Side Pride

The difficulty in scheduling dinner with a group of long-time friends of mine has always been an exercise in stretching out our long-term planning skills.  Mostly to blame is my wife and I who commit to lots of different activities long into the future.  The thought this time was to find some place we could just go and eat, saving the rest the normal rotating host from trying to overdo it and spending the rest of the night exhausted.  The task of finding a place was given to the two foodies of the group and we both have been wanting to try the Tongue in Cheek, based on the trusted chatter we had been hearing.  You can read more about them from their site, however, they are very dedicated to their mission, and it is prominently displayed through-out the restaurant.  In every interaction we had with the staff and owners you can tell they are truly passionate about being devoted to using only properly sourced food, but creating each dish with care. 


We arrived a half-hour early to our reservation in order to try the happy hour drinks at the bar.  The place was already swarming with guests and it was a lively bunch.  Kathy tried the sangria, which she thought was ok while I tried the flight of cocktails.  The cocktails (six) of them are served in 2 oz.  martini glasses.  Fun presentation, interesting array of flavors, from sweet to spicy – a drink for all tastes, but not all drinks fit all tastes.  I enjoyed nearly all of them.  Jack’s Pool – mixture of dark rum, curacao and other sweetness was a great start, the Mother of Dragons, was nice a battle of whiskey jalapeno spice and OJ, while the Tickle My Tiny Pickle a mixture of gin, vermouth with a little pickle brine and a pickle was my favorite.  Kathy liked the When in Rome, smoooooooth she described it.  It was good mixture of sweet and bitters.  The Why Not Minot was ok and just as our friends arrived I started the Cross Eyed Mary, which had nothing interesting to it except you could taste sriracha, which is not what I wanted in a drink.  Everyone at the table tried it and roundly rejected it.  It sat unfinished at our table.  All in all a great idea of cocktail tasting, a value to me at $12.

As we settled into our table, the atmosphere was extremely vibrant, which is a nice way of saying it was very loud.   While we had trouble hearing our waitress, she was very helpful and repeated questions for us and was very knowable on their interesting wine list.  The group of six ordered four rounds of their six teasers.  We all had our winners and losers, but the clear favorite was the charred feta, which is exactly what is sounds like, a tiny square of feta, grill marks, in a nice little jam.  The teasers are just that, tiny little tastes that are fun to start a meal. 

The soup of the day was a cream soup using sweet potatoes and carrots with flavored oil on top. Half of the group got the soup while the other half got only tastes and regretted on not getting the soup.  Very rich tasting soup that lingered the flavor.  It seems like it would have been great to pair this with a light wine, it just called out for a companion drink.  It was great on its own, with the few slurps I was able to beg of my companions.

The burgers were coming out of the kitchen on nearly all the tables around us and it tempted three of us to get our own.  Nice complete burgers, topped with a mellow cheddar, arugula, aioli, very good house pickles and the most significant taste is that it is made with a high quality beef – which clear stood out while eating.  It is served with french fries which were delightful.  This burger is mentioned in many local writings as one of the best, I think it is very good and in the mix.  The meal that would bring me back is the steel head trout.  It was cooked perfectly, nice bed mix of chorizo, parsnip and super yummy beans. I was able to steal a few bites – just a dish I wanted more of that evening. Other dishes I was able to sample in the group were the pork belly and the steamed pork buns – all were good.  That is all I can say as I was stuffed at that point and not a good judge anymore. 


A good evening to catch up with friends, no one was pushing out the door and we lingered  for a long while as the place began to empty out.  I want to go back again and try more.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Roasting Coffee at home

I had been reading about the appeal of brewing coffee with fresh roasted beans for years.  There are some intriguing gadgets that will roast and grind then make coffee for you.  They were subscription based, I did notice a kickstarter last year.  I am leery about going all-in on one machine, plus I am thrifty these days since quitting my job.

I was reading a blog post on coffee last year about doing this on the grill some the comments mentioned people using a popcorn machine, and found one at Goodwill for about 7 dollars. (Actually the long story was I saw one for 7 dollars at Goodwill a year ago and thought it was too expensive then regretted and asked family members to keep an eye out and they found one for me six months later.  Missed opportunity of roasting!)

Simple enough to do and I will keep at it.  You can find the green beans from a number of suppliers, I got mine from amazon.  

I recommend doing this outside until you get the hang of it.  Burning beans can be a nasty smell.


First I started the popper to heat up, takes about a minute Then, I dumped about 3/4 cup of the green beans into the popper, I used a wooden spoon to move the around a bit too.



After about four minutes they are starting to change color.  Then they start to crack making a popping sound, this first tell they are almost done.  A few pop then the rest join in.


After about eight minutes you can see they are nearly done. You get a second less clearer popping sound, I then keep it going for 45 seconds more.  These were a bit less roasted then others I have seen. Then I dumped them on a baking sheet.  You will see a bunch of the chaff, it is very light simply blowing on the beans will send them on the way.

You need to let the beans rest.  Some say a day, some say 30 minutes, some 12 hours.  I did about four hours, ground them and got them ready for french press brew.


Six minutes later......



Very happy with the first batch.





Sunday, January 29, 2012

Italy Winks

A quick post to tell our tale on our trip to Italy.
We arrived in Milan early on New Years Day.  We were joining our nephew and Kathy's sister school trip later that day and had about six hours to kill so we dropped our luggage off and took the train to Milan and enjoyed the quiet streets.


The streets were being cleaned up from the massive party the night before.

  Here is a shot of the famous duomo.  

Right across the street is this famous square, the floors were sticky and we walked across from the party the night before.

We stopped at a cafe and shared some pastries and cappuccino. 


 Then we got back and waited for everyone!  

Got to our hotel that night just outside of Venice. The house dog was watching over and greeting guests.

The next morning we got up early and headed to the ferry to Venice, but stopped on the island of Murano to see some glass blowing and other stuff.

Example of the kind of work they had there.

Venice!

Tours and tours of stuff, we went into Doge Palace, worth the visit if you like historical stuff and beautiful art.  If you dont like that stuff it is nice break for when it is raining, if you like getting wet and hate art and historical stuff stay home.  No one wants to travel with you.

So we debated whether to do the tourist thing and go on a gondola ride, just go - that way when everyone asks you can say yes and it was boring, only made more boring by having an unhappy guide. 

So grabbed lunch and then went to the top of the tower by the Piazza, even through the rain it was worth the trip up.


We made it to the Grand Canal and smiled!

We wandered back through the streets to meet the rest of the group.  The city was getting dark and the holiday lights were up, make the scene even more pretty, wish I had room to share all the pictures.

The next day we headed to Florence.  Just before we got there we stopped just outside to overlook the city and took some pictures

We got to our hotel and dropped off our bags and went out walk around and see the sites.



The fake David.  We saw the real David the next day.

Out to dinner that night and watch Karla get embarrassed by our singing wait staff.

Tour of ancient instruments.  This is moments before the guard tried to take away my camera for taking pictures.....

Went to the local market to get some fruit and food. Fun.

Next day stopped a great pizza place for lunch, Kathy's four seasons pizza.

More rain the next day.  Climbed to the top of duomo, 436 steps up.  Nice work out.  One kid in the group had to do it twice as he forget a book at the top.

Wandering the streets at night before dinner.





The next day on the way Azizi.

Walking the streets around the town after our visit to the cathedral.

Stopping to eat lunch , yum.

Rome!  Pigs in Space!!! or soon to be in my stomach. 



Outside the Vatican....

The Colosseum 

The Forum.


Spices and spices.... sigh....

The catacombs.

Spanish Steps.  Concert was about to start at the bottom of the steps, it was crazy packed.


Inside the vatican....

Outside the vatican...



Awesome cannoli experience...

Last night.... out to dinner outside the Colosseum