View allAll Photos Tagged toothsome

I've been broadening my whole grain horizon recently and kamut is my latest item. This spring salad is adapted from Heather's Farro Salad in 101 Cookbooks. Obviously, kamut took the place of farro in my version. The rest of the salad includes yellow split peas, green peas, roasted spring onion, unripened goat cheese, red leaf lettuce in a citrus vinaigrette.

 

I much prefer kamut over wheat berries. It is more toothsome and nutty. The slightly longer cooking time doesn't really bother me as I just need to schedule in some advanced preparation time. Despite looking deceptively light, this salad packs a wallop of calories from the kamut and peas. Very filling in a sneaky kinda way.

 

I scaled down the recipe to 3 servings. Nutritional analysis available here.

fried suckling pork, pork & beans, hen's egg, pickled beets ($13).

 

A kind gift from the kitchen.

 

As if we hadn't ordered enough (4 appetizers, 2 sides and two orders of the Pit Master Platter; dessert TBA), the kitchen was all but too kind to send a few more plates our way.

 

Aside: Totally unexpected and secretly something I was thrilled to see arrive at our table because I was eyeing the dish. However given our carnivorous main course, decided to forgo. But chef must have read our minds (or wanted us to suffer a coronary! Little did he know of the cardiovascular health both JY and I posses. And how JY and I first met - when I was doing my grad studies in Cardiovascular studies at the UofT!).

 

JY coined this substantial platter correctly: breakfast for dinner. Only it's a breakfast built for food aficionados building a pile of griddles thick bricks of buttered egg bread (brioche like) a crispy fried, fall-apart tender suckling pig roulade and perfect runny sunny side fried egg over a toothsome bed of saucy beans. If there was ever an English breakfast to swoon over, this would be it. Starch built with clean and flavourful fat, cut through with the dense sweet rods of pickled beets.

 

This would make a good dinner for one. as for a plate of the Raw Salad on the side a nice glass of wine and call it a night.

 

I just might do that one of these days (after teaching my Combat class. Ha!).

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

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Amuse: Tomato Consumme served over fresh spring vegetables

(fresh peas, broad peas, asparagus, basil leaf)

 

Two words describe this small teaser: crisp, clean. The clear consumme embodied all essence of the tomatoes the juice was filtered from and paired sweetly with the fresh, toothsome dainty pieces of picture-perfect vegetables. A light hand drizzled a mist of oil on the top of the vegetables which floated and melded with the consumme providing a floral smooth finish to the light starter. I found this very pretty to look at before consuming the amuse in small ladylike bites.

 

Sauté of Scottish Langoustine Tails with Parmesan Gnocchi and an Emulsion of Potato and Truffles

(£5.00 Supplement)

This was a stronger and richer starter pairing beautiful medallions of sweet and meaty (almost toothsome/bouncy) langoustine tails with pillowy soft (thin chewy exterior with a moist and semi-purée-like interior) blini-sized pancakes, on a thin puddle of rich beurre blanc. Ethereal rings of battered onions (or shallots) provide the perfect textural contrast and a subtle sweetness to the delicious course, while more of those chanterelles make an appearance, inducing sighs of gastronomic delight with their delicate touch. La crème de la crème is the viscous black stroke of truffle and potato purée found on the plate, whose flavour is musty, robustly aromatic and a perfect foil to the clean briney sweetness of the langoustines.

 

Soft, moist and toothsome oatmeal cookies are filled with pureed banana and three types of chocolate additions for a great, kid-friendly treat!

 

Recipe

2 large, overripe bananas, mashed

2 eggs

1/2 tsp cinnamon

1/4 tsp nutmeg

1/2 tsp Kosher salt

1/2 cup dark brown sugar

2/3 cup granulated sugar

1/3 cup melted butter

1 tbsp vanilla

2 cups 5-minute oats

2/3 cup instant oats

1 cup Kamut flakes

2 cups whole wheat flour

1 tsp baking soda

1 1/4 cups chocolate chips / chopped chocolate candy

 

Beat together the bananas, eggs, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, sugars, butter and vanilla until well combined.

Add the oats, Kamut flakes, flour and baking soda, mixing well.

Fold in the chocolate chips.

Cover and refrigerate overnight.

Heat the oven to 350F and line baking sheets with parchment.

Scoop heaping tablespoonfuls of dough onto the cookie sheets.

Bake for 14 minutes. Cool completely on the sheets

Makes ~ 40 cookies

Adapted from www.applepiepatispate.com/bread/semolina-cornbread-recipe/ - this was such a unique recipe I had to try it! Cornmeal and semolina flour form a toothsome, sweet base that I added vanilla and corn kernels to. Buttermilk keeps it nice and tender, so it won't dry out as fast as traditional cornbread!

 

yummysmells.blogspot.com/2010/07/sweetness-of-corn.html

with prawns, Dungeness crab and mixed seafood ragout in a white wine reduction (Main course portion).

 

I was surprised when the squid ink pasta arrived as it looked rather quaint for a main course size (vs. appetizer size?? i.e $27.95 vs $19.95). There were, however more shellfish on the plate than pasta which might have been a good thing as (if it were homemade) the pasta was rather thick (I am used to squid ink pasta being more toothsome and slightly thicker, but this was like stretched dough) that was well cooked (i.e. limp pasta). Being squid ink based, it did have the characteristic salty/briney flavours, from which the slightly salty tomato sauce had me reaching for my wine/water glasses, but I couldn't help but be disappointed in the texture of the noodles. The large sea scallops were cooked a lovely medium (still creamy in the middle, although being as fresh as they were, I would have preferred them more on the med-rare side), the clams mainly taking up space on the plate with their shells, and the "prawn" a little smaller than the jumbo species I'm used to (and more like a large shrimp). Again for the price I felt this pasta dish could have had more noodles that were better made. Sadly, I have to give this dish a barely pass (the only thing saving it were the sea scallops and the nicely cooked "prawn").

Cucurbita maxima

OP (open-pollinated)

100 days to harvest

American heirloom

Large (10-20 lb) banana-shaped, salmon-colored fruits

Sweet, silky, flavorful flesh prized for pies

Must be ripened for several months before eating

5+ fruit/plant

 

PROJECT FINDINGS:

The Georgia Candy Roaster is an excellent storage squash with an early ripening timeline. It performs well raw in a quick-cure style. Additionally, due to its size, little waste and ease with which it is disassembled, it is good for larger production models. It is an easy shape to store, cut and utilize quickly and efficiently, which would benefit both professional and home kitchens. The cavity is easily cleaned. It has a good toothsome character and performs well in a variety of applications such as pureeing for soups soufflés, ravioli fillings and baking. It will do well cubed for risotto, and would likely perform well in sous vide processing.

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

Leave your comments: ‪#‎ShivangiReviews‬

Shivangi Reviews Official Website: www.shivangireviews.com

JOIN my Facebook Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/shivangireviews/

FOLLOW ME ON Twitter: @shivangisinha

Food Reviews on:

Wix: jhenwick.wix.com/shivangireviews

Blogger: shivangireviews.blogspot.in/

Website: www.shivangisinha.com/

E-mail: shivangireviews@gmail.com

FOR MORE PHOTOS LOG ON TO: www.flickr.com/photos/shivangireviews/sets/

For Greg!

 

This was the last postcard in this series of postcards of female film stars and musical instruments.

 

German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 1310. Photo: Arthur Grimm / C.C.C. / Allianz. Maria Frau in Stern von Rio/Star from Rio (Kurt Neumann, 1955).

 

Italian model and actress Maria Frau (1930) was a very photogenic starlet of the European cinema of the 1950s.

 

Maria Frau was born in Sassari on the island of Sardinia in 1930. Very photogenic, she appeared in a few photo shoots of various weeklies. In 1950, she was cast in the lead role of a 13th-century mystic in the historical film Margherita da Cortona/Margaret of Cortona (Mario Bonnard, 1950). Her voice was dubbed by Lydia Simoneschi. It was the start of a brief career in the European cinema. She again played the female lead in her next films Luna rossa/Red Moon (Armando Fizzarotti, 1951) opposite Renato Baldini and Il lupo della frontier/Frontier Wolf (1Edoardo Anton, 1951) with Piero Lulli. Other Italian productions in which she starred were the adventure film Sul ponte dei sospiri/On the Bridge of D

Sighs (Antonio Leonviola, 1953) with Françoise Rosay, Questi fantasmi/These Phantoms (Eduardo De Filippo, 1954) starring Renato Rascel. Her first foreign film was the French comedy J'avais sept filles/My Seven Little Sins (Jean Boyer, 1954) in which she played one of the seven lovely illegitimate daughters of an old French count (Maurice Chevalier) who keeps an index of all his past loves. D.B. du Monteil at IMDb: “Maurice Chevalier is absolutely unbearable as an old beau who wants to be still young (‘Tomorrow I'm 20’ is one of his repetitive songs). Only 'ham' can describe his work; the same can apply to the seven girls who pass for his illegitimate daughters (?), for his son (played by stage and TV actor Louis Velle), who is more interested in insects than in women, for the servant (an abominable Paolo Stoppa).”

 

Back in Italy, Maria Frau co-starred as Cleopatra opposite Totò in his comedy Totò all'inferno/Totò in Hell (Camillo Mastrocinque, 1955). Then she appeared in the German-Italian adventure film Stern von Rio/Star from Rio (Kurt Neumann, 1955) with Johannes Heesters and Willy Fritsch, and in the French-Italian detective film Vous pigez?/Diamond Machine (Pierre Chevalier, 1955) opposite Eddie Constantine in his standard guise of hard-boiled American G-man Lemmy Caution. Hal Erickson at AllMovie: “The plot is the usual mélange of intrigue, double-crosses and impossibly beautiful women. The delectable damsels in this outing include the toothsome Maria Frau, Nadine Tallier and Irene Tunc.“ In 1957, Frau left the film business to marry a Roman nobleman. Her last film was the Peplum La Venere di Cheronea/The Venus of Cheronea (Fernando Cerchio, Viktor Tourjansky, 1957) in which Belinda Lee featured as Aphrodite. Hal Erickson calls it an ‘overheated melodrama’: “Naturally, the plotline requires the curvaceous Lee to disrobe at the slightest provocation, and just as naturally, the censors had a hissy-fit every time she bared her knee or shoulder. The principal attribute of La Venere di Cheronea is the excellent colour cinematography of Arturo Galles.” Maria Frau has acted in 16 films.

 

Sources: D.B. du Monteil (IMDb), Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Wikipedia (Italian) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

with cippollini agre dolce ($22)

 

One of the few remaining orders we secured for our table. Unfortunately the bone itself offered not that much of the lean and toothsome venison that clung to a large bone. Beautifully sweet and tart cippollini onions crowned the rustic dish and ample beans helped to pad the still growling tummy. For one this is good, for two to share, not enough. Similarly for $22, it's a pretty pricey taster.

Last night I made Red Snapper Veracruz, and it was darn tasty. It probably wasn't the best fish to eat from a sustainable cuisine point of view, given that I live in Norway and the fish was caught and frozen in Vietnam and flown to Bergen before making it our plate, and the mercury levels were probably higher than I should admit, but damn was this a toothsome dish. The sauce took about an hour and a half to make, and it was well worth the effort. We successfully stripped it down to the bare bones, cartoon-style skeleton and head.

avocado/coriander/fennel/grapefruit

 

The third course was an artful platter with a host of refreshing, almost palate cleansing flavours and textures. The garden consisted of firm supple hiramasa sashimi and a lightly marinaded toothsome tartare that were accompanied by fine shavings of radish, crisp licorice-y fennel, citrus segments, briny crunchy salicornia (sea asparagus), buttery ripe avocado (stacked slices fanned out like fish scales) and little pops from coriander sprouted seeds. Tying it altogether was a tight grapefruit foam that echoed those clean notes. (I fail to recall what the saucy dots were, but would guess red pepper sauce and aioli.)

 

Absolutely love hiramasa. It along with kampachi and hamachi are all in the same sweet, buttery, firm fleshed fish family that are just spectacular undressed, on their own. Needless to say, I was looking forward to this course, not only because of the fish, but also because it was a light transition from the heavier foie course to the belly warming chicken dish.

(fresh peas, broad peas, asparagus, basil leaf)

 

Two words describe this small teaser: crisp, clean. The clear consumme embodied all essence of the tomatoes the juice was filtered from and paired sweetly with the fresh, toothsome dainty pieces of picture-perfect vegetables. A light hand drizzled a mist of oil on the top of the vegetables which floated and melded with the consumme providing a floral smooth finish to the light starter. I found this very pretty to look at before consuming the amuse in small ladylike bites.

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

Leave your comments: ‪#‎ShivangiReviews‬

Shivangi Reviews Official Website: www.shivangireviews.com

JOIN my Facebook Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/shivangireviews/

FOLLOW ME ON Twitter: @shivangisinha

Food Reviews on:

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Blogger: shivangireviews.blogspot.in/

Website: www.shivangisinha.com/

E-mail: shivangireviews@gmail.com

FOR MORE PHOTOS LOG ON TO: www.flickr.com/photos/shivangireviews/sets/

The wild elderberry twigs that traveled thousands of miles to rest here in our verdant soil are busting out with messages from my sand sister. Like hummingbirds grafting silence on silence, there is a residue in the air that speaks even without words and the swelling buds on the twigs have told me all of this. As though in my own voice. The coarse grind of life has left it's texture on my skin so that I am thick like summer air and toothsome like peasant bread fresh risen from a hot brick grave.

 

Ripe seeds fall like earthy children, to the ground, to the surface of wet fall soil in a chaos of fertility. Some will rot like human hope, yet many will germinate impossibly bright to emerge in spring with the rising heat and the brighter longer light at the same moment that the hens' eggs begin to fill straw nests for the hungry.

 

There is a world of sick out there. In here. Everywhere. I would like to heal it all. I would like to reach my hand out to your fevered skin; to cool it with my feverfew petals and my cold breath. Let me lay wilted comfrey leaves across your brow in hopes that it might still your racing heart; fill your panic with calm, compress your inflamed spirit so that it might lie still long enough to see its own shape in the context of the moon.

 

You have seen yourself naked a thousand times and enjoyed yourself in skin and light and air, yet you are still finding the limits of your spirit with blind fingers, sightless eyes, in a darkness so complete that even the night shivers in its skin with apprehension. Here you find the fences of your capability expand and shrink according to your experiments and these outlines are gorgeous, they show a sister robed in the humility of limitation; a junction at which new definitions might be drawn with the charcoal of cold fire.

 

It isn't for you to fit, but to define.

 

I walk graves everyday. I feel the dead in the soil, far beneath the asphalt. I speak with what has breathed in early dawn and died by nightfall. Ephemeral beings given only the briefest voice with which to express a thousand years of experience. Yours is a voice that resonates past twilight, into the moon, past the darkest hour.

 

When that light of yours flickers against impossible blows, let me light the rest of the way. I owe you a path into the morning. Into the protection of warm soil. Damp undergrowth and layers of decomposed leaves. Be ready.

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

Leave your comments: ‪#‎ShivangiReviews‬

Shivangi Reviews Official Website: www.shivangireviews.com

JOIN my Facebook Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/shivangireviews/

FOLLOW ME ON Twitter: @shivangisinha

Food Reviews on:

Wix: jhenwick.wix.com/shivangireviews

Blogger: shivangireviews.blogspot.in/

Website: www.shivangisinha.com/

E-mail: shivangireviews@gmail.com

FOR MORE PHOTOS LOG ON TO: www.flickr.com/photos/shivangireviews/sets/

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

Leave your comments: ‪#‎ShivangiReviews‬

Shivangi Reviews Official Website: www.shivangireviews.com

JOIN my Facebook Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/shivangireviews/

FOLLOW ME ON Twitter: @shivangisinha

Food Reviews on:

Wix: jhenwick.wix.com/shivangireviews

Blogger: shivangireviews.blogspot.in/

Website: www.shivangisinha.com/

E-mail: shivangireviews@gmail.com

FOR MORE PHOTOS LOG ON TO: www.flickr.com/photos/shivangireviews/sets/

daytime

dreaming

whiskered wishes

fleeting fluttering

feline foodie

fancies of

fish, chicken, turkey

butter-pats, cheese

gobs of licked thick cream

stolen, given

grabbed with grace

in your sleep

dancing deliciously

toothsomely

to your

dish

  

This is a hearty bowl of food - tons of shrimp and tender kale tossed in a tangy-sweet dressing and toothsome brown rice, topped off with a handful of shredded nori for good measure!

 

yummysmells.blogspot.com/2010/11/craving-some-kale.html

Marinated beef rib with pineapple reduction, served with Thai red rice.

 

A new item on the new Linda menu. I've been addicted to the fall-off-the-fork tender beef, it's sticky sweet glaze and that grilled pineapple. I'm not a huge sweet person, so the extra pureed pineapple reduction is unnecessary for my palate, but is helpful when it comes to the toothsome drier Thai red rice. I'd imagine this is fairly friendly to those who avoid refined carbs. I order it because it's good.

Jay County Indiana

550 West

roasted in smoked bacon. Potato gnocchi 'au poivre' with spring onions, baby beets and wild leeks. Red wine sauce and English mustard.

 

I have a weakness for certain proteins. It's almost a given every time I see game on the menu that I end up ordering it (yes, UE, more so than lamb. :P ). I paired this course with a 2004 Shiraz, 'Redstone' Coriole (McLaren Vale, Australia).

 

Medium rare venison disks are surrounded by smokey bacon (I suppose this is the running theme in both my starter and my main) that give the lean protein a little extra boost. Bacon and meat - another classic pairing, and nothing over the top. Just good. The bed of sauteed greens were hearty, while the dumplings of pan fried gnoochi were almost creamy. Crisp sweet potato and beet chips gave great textural contrast to the moist vegetables, the petite roasted beets, sweet and the mushrooms, toothsome. I liked how the mustard sauce cut through this unctuous dish which was good overall.

 

Seen on: planetgreen.discovery.com/food-health/get-down-to-healthy...

Home made ($10).

 

Aromatic golden curried mutton paired with fantastic toothsome chewy (and non-greasy) tender roti. Those rotis were really quite excellent and worth heading back to Richmond Hill for.

Lucky Peach's unbelievably detailed ramen issue reawakened my craving for the toothsome noodles.

The story behind the picture here: jetlagrnr.wordpress.com

This was the giant cocktail shrimp that had the crowds ooh-ing and ahh-ing. Quite a generous shrimp (6-1s?) topped a mixed shrimp cocktail (a little soupy and quite briny), paired with some tortilla chips for crunch and added volume, as well as dusting of baby herbs and a wedge of lime. Unfortunately, the prized specimen in my cup was fairly disappointing: messy shelling job (the tail was nearly ripped off), and de-veining (nothing's quite like seeing the fat rope of the digestive system) and the shrimp (although toothsome), a little fishy (i.e. Cantonese = mui).

 

CN Tower-360 Restaurant At The Tower

301 Front Street West

(416) 362-5411

shop.cntower.ca/en/onestore/displayGroups.do?brandId=cntower

Some new shots. I think I've been looking at too many magazines.

Deep-fried fish shaped dumpling of banana & sweet potato.

 

Cute presentation (and another item I had admired from previous images I had seen). Delicious toothsome sweet potato starch dumping (very QQ texture) surrounding a hot, cooked (think deep fried banana) fruit center. The fried filo chip tails were crisp and not oily at all. I loved the little blackberry topping and tiny jelly eyes. :) I can see different fruit or sweetened bean pastes working in this dessert.

 

Image also featured on: www.torontolife.com/features/best-winterlicious-2009/

Kim is a Jedi master of breadmaking. In fall and winter especially, all it takes is for someone to mention soup and homemade bread and Kim starts putting things in a bowl, proofing yeast, and by dinnertime we have magnificent, warm, fresh rustic loaves at the table. They are always slightly different, as she varies the flour and shape according to her mood, the menu plan, and other details; yet they are always the same, with a unique flavor and texture. Kim's breads are like listening to two different versions of the same song by the same artist: you can tell it's Satchmo on the cornet, even though some of the notes aren't the same as the last time you heard him play this tune.

 

Lately, Kim has wanted to branch out. And the most common bread that we purchase is, of course, classic French. (Our local grocery's in-store bakery makes a wonderful French baguette at a reasonable price, so we usually opt for convenience and freshness.)

 

We looked in a few cookbooks to get inspiration, and finally ended up (of course!) with The Divine Julia's "Mastering the Art of French Cooking," volume 2, which has her recipe for French bread. We started with bread flour (not all-purpose flour), because it his higher in gluten, the all-important component that helps the carbon dioxide make even, soft bubbles as the bread rises.

 

And rise it does... This is near the end of the first three hours of rising; it started out as a ball of dough that barely covered the ring at the bottom of that bowl. Shortly after this, Kim punched it down to release the CO2 and let it rise a second time, for two more hours, before shaping into loaves.

 

Eventually we made two demi-baguettes and a very free-form epi, the loaf cut to look like a head of wheat.

 

The fresh bread lasted about nine minutes once we got it to the table. Some of us just spread fresh butter on it; Kim and I spread some St. Andre cheese and enjoyed a lovely Spanish wine with the sliced French ham and sopressata salami, plus a few other cheeses.

 

Next time: we want to make larger loaves, let them rise a bit longer, and cook them a little more. The bottom crust was PERFECT on the two baguettes: we bought a perforated, semicircular pan for cooking baguettes, and it worked beautifully. But the top crust wasn't quite as golden-brown as we'd like it (due mainly to a problem Kim had when she burned her thumb through a faulty hotpad and the epi slid off directly onto the heating element; the smell of burning bread made her think the whole batch was overcooking, when it could have stood another 10 minutes. Next time we'll use a functional hotpad...)

 

Right now we're debating the next venture to undertake. We also love ciabatta, the Italian bread sometimes called "slipper loaf," with a chewy, spongy interior and a hard, toothsome crust. But Kim has her eye on brioche, the French egg bread that is just slightly sweet and very, very rich.

 

Got any favorite baking URLs? Cookbook recommendations? (I could swear Jacques Pepin has a section on baguettes in La Methode... I'll have to dig it out and take a look.)

What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

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What excited me about SodaBottleOpenerWala when it opened in Gurgaon was trying out “Parsi/Irani/Mumbai street food” sitting so close to my office. When I got to know about it opening in Khan market which is quite close to my house, I was obviously thrilled. I was delighted to be a part of its launch. The interiors and decor transport you to the Irani restaurants of Mumbai—the walls, the pictures, the menu, the bakery corner, the furniture..everything was just so interesting- full marks on creativity. Everything seems to resemble the home and lifestyle of the quintessential Parsi from old Hindi movies. Personally I found the ambience much better than the Cyber hub outlet. Sitting in such an ambience amidst Parsi perennial delicacies that started flowing, I was having a wonderful time. I was just thinking of which dishes to try when Danesh Irani, a Parsi stand-up comedian from Mumbai walked in and took the audience by surprise. He narrated hilarious incidents about Parsis which made our evening even more enjoyable.

Coming to the food- authentic with great amount of detail paid to the manner in which it is served. We hungrily devoured Berry Pulao, Mutton dhansak, Vada pao to start with. Berries and fried cashews gleaming appealingly, it was a matter of seconds before we dug in. Mutton Dhansak was simple, yet toothsome, mutton cooked to perfection adding fantastic delight. We also tried Patra ni machchi- fish cooked with green chutney wrapped in banana leaves, Vengna no Patio- a tasty spicy brinjal preparation that I loved even though I am not a brinjal fan and Tamota Sali Par Eeda- baked us with Parsi tomatoes. And all of them were super attention-grabbing. The drinks were well made and interesting with the glass bottle presentation making it even more alluring.

Candies from the good old grandma days were a final end to our meal- kala khatta and boiled orange candy which induced strong childhood recalls, stockpiled on the shelf were lines of archetypal ‘martabaans‘ or bucolic Indian glass jars. We even had fresh home-baked style cookies- shrewberry biscuits and berry nankhatai which was full of crisp goodness.

Chef Anahita was sweet enough to take time out and come talk to us. The staff was polite and more than helpful to make us understand what the dish was.

Everything fell into comfort zone! And I would definitely fo there the next time to try out the rest of the stuff that I could accommodate in my overstuffed tummy.

XOXO

Shivangi

Review Credit: Malvika Sinha

LIKE ME ON Facebook: www.facebook.com/shivangireviews & spread the joy!!

Leave your comments: ‪#‎ShivangiReviews‬

Shivangi Reviews Official Website: www.shivangireviews.com

JOIN my Facebook Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/shivangireviews/

FOLLOW ME ON Twitter: @shivangisinha

Food Reviews on:

Wix: jhenwick.wix.com/shivangireviews

Blogger: shivangireviews.blogspot.in/

Website: www.shivangisinha.com/

E-mail: shivangireviews@gmail.com

FOR MORE PHOTOS LOG ON TO: www.flickr.com/photos/shivangireviews/sets/

Mid-consumption.

 

Nice composition and great execution. The kitchen was obviously more than capable. I also like how the parmigiano reggiano added more depth to the (rather flavourless) medium grilled beef. The pairing with sweet grilled corn, dense meaty eggplant and toothsome potatoes was quite enjoyable. (I ended up (as usual) clearing my dining companion's plate.)

 

This was the night's secondi for the $45 Tasting Menu. Honestly, a great value and an enormous amount of very well made food for one.

Sauté of Scottish Langoustine Tails with Parmesan Gnocchi and an Emulsion of Potato and Truffles

(£5.00 Supplement)

This was a stronger and richer starter pairing beautiful medallions of sweet and meaty (almost toothsome/bouncy) langoustine tails with pillowy soft (thin chewy exterior with a moist and semi-purée-like interior) blini-sized pancakes, on a thin puddle of rich beurre blanc. Ethereal rings of battered onions (or shallots) provide the perfect textural contrast and a subtle sweetness to the delicious course, while more of those chanterelles make an appearance, inducing sighs of gastronomic delight with their delicate touch. La crème de la crème is the viscous black stroke of truffle and potato purée found on the plate, whose flavour is musty, robustly aromatic and a perfect foil to the clean briney sweetness of the langoustines.

 

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