Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Food Halls: Daimaru Department Store

I'm on a mini family get away to Sapporo, Japan, the northernmost island. The abundance of local farms and fresh seafood provides for many things that my relatives would call, "very delicious" and "I think the best one." Whereas Adam and I pursue good food at in intramural / club sport level as weekend warriors, the rest of my family pursues good eating at a world class Olympic level. My "ordering" strategy is simply to say, "I'll have whatever you're having." 

One of my favorite things to do when visiting Japan is to wander around the vast gourmet food halls located in the basement of every department store. The food hall at Daimaru department store is smaller than the ones I've seen in Toyko, but even a "small" food hall is filled to the brim with lots of things to see and even more "very delicious" things to try. I wandered around for a good hour yesterday examining the goods and mourning my tummy space limitations. 

Cakes cakes cakes


Strawberry cake expertly packed to withstand a giant earthquake or the commute home. I've never seen so much packaging for one slice of cake that cost $3. 
Paper bag
Cardboard box
2 napkins wrapped individually in plastic
1 plastic fork
1 pack dry ice
1 cardboard divider to prevent cake from moving around in the box
and finally...
1 slice of Strawberry Cake

Wish I could buy one and just attack it with a giant fork


Carefully cultivated watermelons displayed like precious babies

Ginormous seedless black globe grapes

Some dim sum takeaway

Freshly fried fishcakes chock full of local seafood. This was "very delicious"

Zvy Dority would freak out over this display of her favorite food...rice and seaweed

Fried cutlet lunch boxes

Strawberry and whipped cream sandwich? It would be even better if they replaced the bread with cake.

Monday, July 01, 2013

Carbolicious Chinese Breakfast

I'm still jet lagged after four days so I usually require a nap in order to get through dinner. I also take  mini "breaks" from sleeping at night and I'm having trouble sleeping through the night. All this results in waking up at odd hours and much earlier than I'd ideally want to. This morning, I woke up at 4am feeling a little restless so I decided to venture out in search of a traditional Chinese breakfast of soybean milk, fried crullers, bread, buns, rice balls, etc.

Given my aforementioned illiteracy and unfamiliarity with my neighborhood, I had to be a little bit more resourceful when preparing for my early morning adventure. I googled my neighborhood and found a local English speaking blogger with a recommendation for a hole in the wall place that seemed close by. She didn't provide an exact address, but provided enough info to get me close. I walked over to the general area and found a 7-11 where I asked "nee eh li yo may yo shiao de dou jiang dien mah" or "is there a small soy bean milk shop nearby." The super cheerful clerk was then able to get me closer by pointing me to the next alley off the main road. Sure enough, I was able to find the small shop front based on his directions and I knew it was the right place because it matched the photo from the blog. Bingo!

Blog recommendation with general directions and a helpful photo

Bingo! My photo matches the blog photo...must be the right place

I took a photo of the sign just in case

They opened up right around 6am and I got a big pile of food. I ordered one of everything I saw other people ordering because I was worried about missing out and this considerable haul cost me about $3. My favorite was the classic fried cruller in a flat bread. Not only did I manage to feed myself successfully, I didn't get lost doing it so I'm counting it as a win.

Got one of everything I saw other people ordering. 
Clockwise from 12 o clock: 
cold sweetened soy bean milk
fried cruller in a flat bread
veggie bun
rice ball filled with fried cruller pickles and CSDPP (cooked shredded dried pork product aka pork floss)
scallion egg tortilla type thing

Close up of the fried cruller in flat bread. Basically fried carbs inside more carbs

Mango Shaved Milk Ice @ the "Bookstore"

To call Eslite a "bookstore" is a major understatement. It's definitely got a ton of books and a lot of English book, but it's a super cool department store / shopping mall / bookstore / boutique collection. By the time I finished [methodically] wandering around all eight floors, I needed a snack. I got a giant bowl of Mango Shaved Milk Ice. I've had regulars shaved ice, but I'd never had shaved milk ice. They pulled out big opaque milk colored block of "ice" and proceeded to shave the frozen block of condensed milk flavored ice over a bowl of deliciously sweet mango. More condensed milk drizzled on top for good measure. Perfect snack!

I must have looked baffled when they handed me this tray because they assured me that"the mango is under the ice, you'll see it after you dig around."

Sure enough, there was mango buried under the ice

Lots of perfectly ripe and sweet mango

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Not Lost In Translation...Just Plain Lost

I'll frame my adventure last night in terms of Diamonds and Coals. 

Diamonds: I took the precaution of taking a picture of the building so I could recognize "home."
Coals: There are several buildings in the vicinity that pretty much look the same so it wasn't as helpful as I had hoped.

Sorta not so helpful precautionary photo since there are several buildings that look the same to me


Diamonds: Unlike the US, the naming convention for addresses in Taipei is very rational and logical. 
Coals: Woulda been helpful to realize this before I ventured out on my own. I spent a good half hour wandering around my building totally disoriented and looking like I was casing the joint.

Diamonds: People were very friendly and helped point me in the right direction when I asked for directions or asked what they had on the menu.
Coal: People were very helpful AFTER they realized that I'm illiterate and that I wasn't just asking stupid obvious questions in Mandarin like "what do you sell to eat here." The answer is always "[no duh] we sell everything [read the freaking signs you idiot]." I'm learning to preface all my questions with, "I'm illiterate, please pity me, can you tell me what you sell to eat."

How did I get so lost? Turns out addresses in Taipei are organized in a hierarchy. Major street name, lane number, alley number, building number and then floor number. Key piece of information that would have been super helpful when I was wandering around aimlessly. Basically I walked around my neighborhood for a good half an hour running into streets with the same name. What the heck? It's like walking in four directions and finding every street sign (small and major) named "Mass Ave." The street signs were actually saying something like, "This is the 3rd lane and 45th alley south of Mass Ave," but I thought they all said Mass Ave in my confused state. I have to admit the system is pretty genius once you understand it, but super confusing if you don't know what's happening.

Finally, I gave up trying to orient myself using a paper map and pulled out the iPhone. I ended up walking toward Taipei 101 since it's the tallest skyscraper around and was in the direction of civilization or at least very good eats. Once I got going, I was able to find the major streets and figure out where the landmarks were, but the little residential alleys threw me for a giant loop on the way out and on the way back home.

Walked towards Taipei 101 like some sort of beacon...I figured they at least had food there and cabs if I got lost


I cobbled together a very random dinner mostly because I couldn't visually figure out what street stands were selling and I was concerned about getting swiped by a zooming moped. I did enjoy a red bean pancake, a pork filled pastry, some iced tea and a bowl of minced pork rice for a grand total of about $3. The biggest Diamond is [knock on wood], I think I got all of my "getting lost" out of my system yesterday and it's been smooth sailing today.

Barely figured out how to order a bowl of minced pork belly rice for dinner


Nearly got run over by mopeds at the local night market

Saturday, June 29, 2013

It's a Hello Kitty World!

My first full in Taipei did not disappoint. Today, I discovered my favorite Hello Kitty at every turn. Had I gone hog wild, I could be carrying a Hello Kitty bag wearing Hello Kitty unmentionables eating a Hello Kitty donut from Mr. Donut and playing with a little Hello Kitty toy car. I elected NOT to photograph the Hello Kitty unmentionables since I like to keep this blog friendly for all audiences.

Mr. Donut Hello Kitty Donuts: Check out the little pink edible bow on the donuts

Tiny Hello Kitty Toy Car: I totally would have bought one if not for the enormous line

We also checked out the special toy car and train event on the sixth floor of the Mitsukoshi department store. The place was a complete zoo as MGDub's mom GJDubya would say. I'm pretty sure every single child in Taipei was crammed into this place. While I'm partial to Asian babies, not all Asian babies are cute. I wanted a little Hello Kitty car as a souvenir, but I wasn't willing to wade through the sea of kids whining "I want a toy car" in Chinese of course.

Toy train exhibit with all the landmarks of the world including the local fav Taipei 101

Check out his cool Car shoes


Personal space? What a novel concept. Total chaos with everyone is up in everyone else's business.

We escaped down to level B2 to check out the food hall. I was fascinated by these "native" Taiwanese tall watermelons among other finds. 

Tall mini watermelons..."red inside" they tell me

Refreshing Bear Beer not be confused with Beer Bear which would be a bear made of beer

An enviable display of crunchy snacks. Adam's gonna freak out when he arrives next week

Zave Zority, this one is for you. Even though I'm illiterate, I'm pretty sure this snack is super spicy. First off, the pepper looks pretty bad ass. Secondly, there are five peppers on the bottom right and all are filled in so this must be the spiciest snack they make.


Frozen rice burgers. I'm intrigued, but not intrigued enough to actually try it

 Refreshing sweet treat: Tofu pudding with red bean, peanuts and some sort of chewy jelly. It was delicious!

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Giant Ice Cream Photo Collection

A friend once told me gathering three items is all it takes to start a "collection." With five photos [that I can remember] so far, I'm well on my way to building a photo collection of me standing next to giant frozen treats. The first photo is from 2007 when Adam and I went to Japan for a few weeks. Adam had to convince me to take this photo between two soft serve ice cream cones, but ever since then, I've been super enthusiastic about having my photo taken next to any and all giant frozen treats I encounter in my travels. It really hits my "sweet spot" of giant food / fake food / ice cream.

2013: Lavender Festival at Farm Tomita in Hokkaido, Japan


2013: Taipei outside the Godiva at the Breeze



2013: Nashville

2013: Nashville

2013: Seattle



2011: Barcelona

2007: Kyoto, Japan

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Grits Bar: feeding a big crowd with dribs and drabs

For Adam's birthday last year, I bought him a fuzzy logic rice cooker to replace our old school standard rice cooker that we've had for years. It [unintentionally] turned out to be a classic Homer Simpson gift. Adam never wanted a rice cooker and I was the one who wanted a new one, but I'd transferred my yearning for a new rice cooker onto Adam. At least I didn't get the rice cooker engraved with my name. Fortunately, I'm delighted with the new appliance and I've been using it to make all sorts of things. Most notably, easy grits or polenta with almost no work. It's awesome!

Last night, I was on to cook dinner for our church small group. Cook a meal for a dozen people including vegetarians and gluten intolerant folks, only use food I already had and clean out the fridge/freezer while I was at it...challenge accepted! I only had dribs and drabs of a bunch of different things, but I was inspired by previous dinners my friends had cooked. I always loved it when I could top my own [baked potato, taco, chili] with my own toppings [cheese, sour cream, veggies, meat]. Feeling inspired by my friends' genius ideas, I put my rice cooker to good use on the porridge setting and cooked up two batches of grits. I dug deep into the fridge and freezer and found all the little bits of ingredients that were hanging around for a grits topping bar. One friend even said my dinner was "restaurant quality" which was super sweet and nice to hear although I'm pretty sure it was because I liberally salt and pepper all my food. I'm a one trick pony, but it works.

Rice cooker easy grits (From Fifteen Spatulas)
4 cups water
1 cup grits or course cornmeal
1 cup grated cheese (parmesan or cheddar)
Salt + Pepper to season
1/4 cup half and half or milk or cream
2 Tbs butter

1. Put water and grits in rice cooker
2. Cook on porridge setting
3. Stir in other ingredients when it finishes cooking

My dribs and drabs...whatever you have that you're trying to get rid of. Please remember to season with salt and pepper.

  • Bacon bits: 5 leftover slices in the freezer
  • Sausage: 2 andouille and 4 boar sausages from Laurel, also from the freezer
  • Garlic shrimp: small bowl of frozen cooked cocktail shrimp heated with garlic and olive oil
  • Chopped scallions
  • Mushrooms: 2.5 caps from the fridge that yielded only about 1 cup cooked
  • Wilted garlic spinach: half a box of baby spinach cooked down with garlic
  • Green beans: also leftover in the fridge
  • Peppers and onions: leftover in the fridge from Boston Organics

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Travel wardrobe complete...for now

Traveling during transitional seasons through multiple climates poses some packing challenges. Right now I'm on a 10 day trip up the west coast and I'm rather delighted with myself for my packing job. I recently sewed the buttons back on my navy blazer and acquired a new coat and some sneakers on this trip. I don't want to jinx myself, but dare I say that I think I've cobbled together the right mix of clothes to take me from 80 degree sunny LA to rainy 50 degree formal dinner in Seattle to 60 degree city exploring in Vancouver. I think I could even take on colder weather if I had to since I can layer a cardigan, blazer, down sweater and a raincoat if needed.

1 grey sneakers
1 blue patent Birkenstocks
1 pair brown boots

1 skinny jean
2 dresses
3 shirts
1 down sweater
1 raincoat
1 navy blazer
1 cardigan
1 scarf
1 black leggings/tights
1 necklace (nice to have)
1 belt (nice to have)
1 swimsuit (nice to have)

1 purse crossbody
1 foldable tote
1 umbrella

Personal items like underwear, socks, pajamas and sock monkeys are additional. 

Wednesday, May 08, 2013

Planes, Trains and probably an Automobile

I'm heading out today for a trip with plasticmom and Adam that will take us from LA to Seattle to Vancouver. The highlight of our trip is a 36 hour train trip from LA to Seattle aboard the Amtrak Coast Starlight complete with sleeper cars. I've never traveled overnight on a train so I'm pretty excited for this  train ride since I hear the views are gorgeous. I've got my camera packed and I freed up 8 gigabytes off my iPhone just to take photos. All aboard!!!

Monday, May 06, 2013

Design Find: Eames Hang It All affordable alternative

If you've been to our home during the winter, you may have noticed a big pile of coats suspended off a wall in our front entry. You may or may not have wondered what was under that giant pile of coats. It's our adorable Eames Hang It All wall hook that hibernates all winter under a big pile of coats and comes out to play in the warmer summer months when it's been unburdened from its winter coat responsibilities.

I'm a big fan of our Eames Hang It All. We've had ours for eight years and it's moved with us to three different homes. At the end of a long winters day, this little guy gets the job done when it comes to holding a whole lot of coats. The round spherical wooden knobs are gentler on our clothes than pokey wooden style wall hooks and did I mention that the Eames Hang It All is super cheerful and colorful?

While I love the Eames Hang It All, it's not exactly cheap at $199 bucks. That's why I was super excited to find a great alternative from Land of Nod. Land of Nod is the Crate & Barrel brand for kid's furniture and they offer some really great affordable mid century inspired options including the Multiplayer Wall Hook priced at just $14.95. Similar to the Eames version, The Land of Nod wall hook looks sturdy, features the same spherical knobs and is colorful to boot. While the Land of Nod wall hook as fewer knobs than the Eames, at $14.95 you can buy two wall hangers and still be WAY ahead.



Totally covered in coats and miscellaneous winter gear



Footloose and fancy free in summer



Eames Hang It All from Herman Miller: $199


Multiplayer Wall Hook from Land of Nod: $14.95

Friday, May 03, 2013

The Ultimate Sprinkledoodle Cookie Taste Off

May the tastiest Sprinkledoodle win! 


I just love these sprinkle cookies, they're delicious and happy looking. The sprinkles are not just decoration. Encrusting the cookie with sprinkles actually adds texture and flavor. Adam's a fan of the Sprinkledoodle in general, but will sometimes wonder out loud, "if you make them a little bigger it might be chewier," or "the sprinkle to cookie ratio might be higher if the cookie was smaller." To find the optimal Sprinkledoodle cookie size, I decided to make them in four different sizes for "The Ultimate Sprinkledoodle Cookie Taste Off." It was also a good excuse to use my collection of cookie scoops.


The Large cookie is equal to 9 small cookies. As for the slightly confusing "Medium Large" and "Medium Small" nomenclature, you can thank Adam. Somehow, it makes sense to him so I'm accommodating his quirks. 


Cookie Dough (not baked)
Left to right: Large, Medium Large, Medium Small and Small


Baked Cookies
Left to right: Large, Medium Large, Medium Small and Small

The challenge: 
Taste all four sizes of Sprinkledoodles and determine the winningest size. You have to eat all four cookies (95ml cookie dough or 19 units of Small cookies) so it's quite the caloric commitment. Zlexa (Taster 5) is on the Paleo diet so I'm honored that she broke her diet to partake in this taste off. On the other hand, maybe the cavemen would still be around if they'd just enjoyed some Sprinkledoodles in their diet. :)

Taster 1: Adam likes the Medium Large for texture, but likes the Medium Small for size. Ultimately, he cast his vote for Medium Small.

Taster 2: Zrennen, our occasional houseguest who's a pastry chef, likes the Medium Large

Taster 3: Zristina generally likes soft cookies so she went with Medium Large because the Large cookie was just too large.


Zristina

Taster 4: Zana liked the size of Medium Small for portion control, but liked the taste and texture of Large. Zana refused to pick a favorite and wants a Medium Small sized cookie baked at a higher 375 temperature for a little less time to create his ideal cookie.


Zana

Taster 5: Zlexa awards Medium Large with "Best in Show" but likes the Medium Small for the "Coffee Dunkability" award.

Tally:
The winner is Medium Large - 3 votes (Zrennen, Zristina and Zlexa)
Medium Small - 1 vote (Adam)
Abstention - 1 vote (Zana refused to pick a cookie size)

Only Zana preferred the Large for texture. Most others found the Large too big, to "hard to eat," etc. I personally thought the Small size was super adorable, but I'd have to agree with the others that the Small size was all crisp with no chewy center. Zrennen called the Small "a waste of dough."

While the Medium Large did win for texture, everyone agreed that the Medium Small was the bestest size for a cookie so the next challenge is to bake a Medium Small sized cookie with the soft texture of the Medium Large or even Large sized cookie.

If there's a natural relationship between cookie size and cookie softness so the biggest cookies are the softest, one might say there's a natural "Cookie Softness Frontier." See chart below. Basically, the goal is the break past the "Cookie Softness Frontier" and achieve a small soft cookie (orange cookie on the chart). Challenge accepted...for the next Sprinkledoodle Cookie Taste Off, I'll be baking the Medium Small cookie size at three different temperatures (350, 375 and 400) to break through the frontier. Wish me luck on my next Sprinkledoodle adventure in the name of baking science.


Sprinkledoodle Recipe - modified from Lottie + Doof's Sugar Saucer recipe
Ingredients:
  • 4 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1.5 cups unsalted butter at room temperature (3 sticks)
  • 1/2 cup canola or vegetable oil
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 3 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 2 teaspoons almond extract
  • rainbow sprinkles...a big vat of them


Instructions:
  • Mix flour, baking soda and salt in a mixing bowl. Ideally a silicone bowl since you'll need to add the dry flour mixture to the batter. Click here for post about why silicone mixing bowls rock.
  • Cream butter on medium with an electric mixer for about a minute
  • Mixer on low, add the oil into the butter and mix well
  • One by one, add sugar, powdered sugar, eggs, vanilla extract and almond extract. Mix well with each additional ingredient
  • Slowly add the flour mixture in four parts. (This is when you'll thank me if you us a silicone mixing bowl)
  • Chill dough for at least one hour or up to 3 days
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees and line baking sheets with parchment paper
  • Scoop cookie dough (see above table for volume and desired size) and roll in rainbow sprinkles
  • Place on baking sheet and press dough ball down slightly to flatten a tiny bit
  • Bake until cookies are light brown. Obviously Medium Large cookies take longer than Medium Small. 
  • Cool on cookie sheet for a few minutes before moving to a plate or rack. If you touch the cookies right out of the oven, the sprinkles will disintegrate so wait a few minutes for the sprinkles to cool and regain their structural integrity


Bonus fun Chiral* view. Medium Small is the third one down.

*Zorinna taught me all about Chirality in college

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Recipe: Watermelon Rind Chutney







I usually throw out the watermelon rind like any other normal person, but I decided to save it last week and see what I could make out of it. I decided to try this watermelon rind chutney recipe from Epicurious with a some slight modifications using what I had in the house. The chutney turned out great and we've been enjoying it all week. It's got a little bit of warm heat to it, but it's not too hot. A little cream cheese with the chutney will temper the heat a tiny bit to take the edge off.

Ingredients:
  • Diced watermelon rind from 1 small watermelon. Should yield about 6 cups of diced white watermolon rind.
  • 1.5 cups cider vinegar
  • 1.5 cups water
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1/4 cups grated fresh ginger (I keep a frozen nob in the freezer and use a microplane)
  • 1 tablespoon Siracha
  • 1 tablespoon crushed red pepper flake (the kind you put on pizza)
  • 1/2 tablespoon chili powder
  • 1.5 tablespoons minced garlic
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns, crushed
Feel free to mess around with the proportions on the peppers / hot chili paste /fresh pepper ratio. I didn't want to go out on a rainy day to buy fresh peppers so I just raided my fridge.The ratio I used was pleasantly hot so be cautious when adding any more heat. 

Instructions:
  1. Dice up white watermelon flesh only. Remove any green peel or pink watermelon fruit
  2. Boil rind an all the other ingredients in a heavy pot over moderate heat. Stir until sugar is dissolved
  3. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 60-80 minutes until rind is tenter and translucent and you can create a little valley when you scrape the the bottom of the pot. It should be kinda jammy rather than liquidy. Keep simmering and reducing until it's jammy enough
  4. Cool, store in a jar and let flavors mellow and meld for a day
  5. Enjoy! Delicious with cream cheese on crackers.