I love food, but I will admit that I am not a hugely adventurous eater. I love to watch the likes of Tony Bourdain travel to faraway places and eat things like, oh, cobra hearts, but i doubt that I'd be able to stomach it myself. In fact, I can hardly stand to think about some of the foods of my own cultural cuisine, Korean.
Frogs aren't considered all that adventurous, and yet, I doubt I could have eaten it, as Reid of Ono Kine Grindz did on a recent trip from his home in Hawaii to San Francisco. The restaurant is Dragonfly, a contemporary Vietnamese restaurant that he read about. He hasn't written any notes about what it tasted like yet, but the picture makes them look, at least to me, pretty damn good.
As if oil and
gas prices weren't enough, now the heavy rains and cold weather in northern California have made fruits and vegetables expensive. Lettuces are
at an all-time high, and it's difficult to find many things that are normally abundant in springtime.
In restaurants, there's gourmet salad at Mixt Greens
and a new
Japanese vegan restaurant, Cha-Ya, in Berkeley. Hanazen is the closest
thing to sushi houses in Japan, and the Inside Scoop
reports that Upper Noe has more Italian restaurants, Budo will re-open as Cuvee Napa with the move of former chef James
McDevitt to New York, Home restaurants is undergoing staff changes, and Le Colonial has a new menu.
San Francisco is abundant with excellent dining opportunities from Chez
Panisse in Berkeley to Thomas Keller's French Laundry, but even New
York, with its own wealth of stellar restaurants, had but four restaurants that were awarded Michelin's top honor of
three stars. Thomas Keller's NY restaurant, Per Se, was among them.
The guide is due to be published in October of this year, and the anonymous reviewing group of one American and
four European inspectors have already started making their way around the Bay Area.
So I forced one of my friends to snatch a copy of this past Sunday's edition of the San Francisco Chronicle with the knowledge that the Sunday magazine would have the
annual Bay Area Top 100
Restaurants. I got it in the mail this morning, and was excited to look through it, but the first thing that caught
my eye was the story about a Burrito Eater.
Charles Hodgkins is the Burrito Eater. His website, www.burritoeater.com, is basically a food blog in which he chronicles his quest
for the "nine mustache" (out of 10) rated burrito in the Bay Area, ranging from Baja Fresh to holes in the
wall. When he started, he thought he would have hit them all by the time he had eaten from 50 or 60 taquerias, but he
says that there are over 170 places to get a burrito from a walk-up style stand. His top two favorites are Taqueria San
Francisco and Papalote.
I wonder if Charles has ever pondered the idea of coming to Los Angeles.
The San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau and Visa are sponsoring this city-wide, month-long event that
is now in its 5th year. There are almost 100 Bay Area restaurants that are
participating by offering a three-course prix fixe meal at lunch ($21.95) or dinner ($31.95) or both.
Reservations specifically for SF Dine About Town can even be made via OpenTable.
I think the event is purely a promotional thing for both the Convention Bureau and Visa during a month which is
typically slow for restaurants. Works for me, because a few of the restaurants are on my SF To-Dine List (A16!). Although, now I need to find a way up to SF. Unless we can convince Visa to do
the same thing in LA!
Even though the crust of your pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving turned out flaky and buttery, consider everyone "pie"-ed out. Try these non-pie ways to use up leftover disk of dough.