Tuesday, September 28, 2010

General Chai Directions

Directions
Makes two 8 oz cups of chai tea.
Steep using a tea pot, tea ball, strainer or French press. Note that a French press may not stop extraction when you press the plunger down, so you may want to decant the liquid right after plunging.
(1) Choose one chai spice compound and one tea from your chai kit.
(2) If using two separate pots:
Steep 2 tsp (10 ml) of chai spice compound in 8 oz (1 cup) boiling water for 10+ mins. Steep 2 tsp of tea in 8 oz (1 cup) hot to boiling water for 1-5 mins. Mix the liquids 1:1.
If using one pot:
Steep 2 tsp (10 ml) of chai spice compound in 16 oz (2 cups) of boiling water for 5+ minutes. Add 2 tsp (10 ml) of tea and steep for another 1-5 minutes.
(3) For traditional chai, add milk and sugar. For a refreshing change, try without the milk or sugar. You can even try the spice compound water without the tea!

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Is Tea and Herb or Spice?

Is tea an herb or a spice?
There are no utterly precise, categorical definitions for the terms “herb” and “spice.” Generally, however, an herb comes from the leaf of a plant, whereas a spice comes from elsewhere (seed, bark, etc.). Herbs typically can be used in their fresh or dried form (think cilantro or thyme) whereas spices must be dried or fermented (cumin, pepper, etc.) Herbs often come from temperate zones, spices almost always from the tropics (hence the Spice Route). Since tea is from a leaf, but must be fermented, it is difficult to place in herb/spice duality. We like to think of tea as a special herb or spice, in that it needs delicate, specialized treatment (i.e., proper steeping time and temperature). Coffee, likewise, also would be a special spice.

While the term spice covers a host of ingredients and doesn’t have an entirely fixed meaning (some would consider orange rind to be a spice, others would not), unless you have a special delicate spice such as tea or coffee, spices are generally pretty bulletproof. Most of them can be extracted for long periods and at high temperatures. Therefore, we suggest you just throw your spice compounds in boiling water for 10 or 15 minutes -- you can even steep them more than once. By contrast, you should be extremely attentive to the manner in which you steep your tea. Hints for steeping your tea can be found in this brochure and on our website. Note that herbal teas/tisanes, typically are dried herbs.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Element Spice takes this gourmet concept even further by providing you with several spices compounds and several teas to choose from. If you have the 4 spice compounds x 4 teas kit, you have 4 x 4 = 16 chai combinations to choose from. If you have the 6 x 6 kit, you have 36 chai combinations.

Note that the term “herbal tea” as applied to chamomile or lemon grass, among others, means a non-caffeinated tea substitute, i.e., not tea at all. To avoid confusion, we prefer to use the term “tisane.”

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Winter Fancy Food Show - San Francisco

Went with Myrna, Mary and Leslie. Many highlights, ate way too much.

http://www.specialtyfood.com/do/fancyFoodShow/LocationsAndDates

Just a few highlights:

Teatulia, which responsibly sources teas from its own organic plantantion in North Bangladesh.

http://www.teatulia.com

Himala Salt Zen Cube
A small pink cube of the good stuff that comes with a grater. Whenever you need salt, grate it off the block! Hardly a necessity, but very pretty.

http://www.himalasalt.com/index.php?page=product&category=01--HimalaSalt&display=195

Fran's Chocolates
Met Fran hershelf there. Her sea salt caramels are Obama's fav.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Seattle and Teriyaki

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/06/dining/06unit.html

January 6, 2010
UNITED TASTES
A City’s Specialty, Japanese in Name Only

By JOHN T. EDGE
Seattle

SALAAMA, a Somali roadhouse near the airport here, serves chicken suqaar, a dish of griddled halal chicken, onions and peppers, popular with cab drivers. Interlopers to this clubhouse restaurant order the dish the way the menu advertises it — as chicken teriyaki.

At 5 Seasons Grill, a Vietnamese restaurant north of the city, a banner promises “The Best Teriyaki in Town.” That would be Item 38, com bo nuong, beef short ribs, marinated with lemon grass and other nontraditional teriyaki ingredients.

“This is just like teriyaki,” said Cat Vo, an owner. “Only it’s much better.”

In Seattle, teriyaki is omnipresent, the closest this city comes to a Chicago dog.

At Safeco Field, home of the Seattle Mariners, fans eat chicken teriyaki. Specialty food retailers stock teriyaki sauces, including a triple garlic take from Tom Douglas, perhaps Seattle’s most well-known chef.

Many Hawaiian restaurants serve a version. Some Thai restaurants do too. Tokyo Garden Teriyaki in the University District violates the dictates of traditional American and Japanese cookery with its corn dog teriyaki, a $5 gut punch of deep-fried corn dogs, sliced, tossed with wok-fried vegetables and drizzled with teriyaki sauce.

The Washington State Restaurant Association has identified 83 Seattle restaurants with teriyaki in their name, including I Love Teriyaki and I Luv Teriyaki. (A concurrent search yielded about 40 restaurants named Burger King, McDonald’s or Wendy’s.)

In Seattle, teriyaki is shorthand for a range of dishes, from teriyaki burgers, piled with chopped beef, to pineapple teriyaki, platters of chicken paved with canned pineapple.

The phenomenon, now in its fourth decade, has roots in Asian immigration. (For a 2007 Seattle Weekly article, Jonathan Kauffman wrote that Toshihiro Kasahara, a peripatetic Japanese-born restaurateur, may have popularized the teriyaki sauce style now standard in Seattle when he opened Toshi’s Teriyaki Restaurant in 1976.)

Teriyaki is derived from the Japanese root words teri, to shine, and yaki, to broil or grill. That’s the way traditional teriyaki looks: shiny and incised with grill marks. In Japan, teriyaki is a mix of soy sauce, sake and the rice wine mirin, which imparts a subtle sweetness.

In Seattle, subtlety gets short shrift. Cooks sweeten with white sugar and pineapple juice. They thicken with cornstarch and peanut butter. Ginger and garlic go into the mix, because of the Korean ancestry of many cooks.

Tokyo Garden’s owner, Sujan Shrestha, immigrated from Nepal 11 years ago to attend college. He stayed to help his brother run a company that imports dried cow’s milk and yak’s milk cheese for pet treats.

For Mr. Shrestha, opening a teriyaki shop was just another entrepreneurial tack. “In Seattle, they eat teriyaki,” he said. “It’s American, it’s cheap and it’s good. I’m a businessman; that’s enough for me.”

He serves Nepalese dumplings, known as momo, with a side of coleslaw, along with gyoza, Japanese dumplings. All are prepared under the direction of the sushi chef, José Ramirez, born in Puebla, Mexico.

That corn dog teriyaki is a stunner. But his signature dish is chicken teriyaki: butterflied boneless thighs, marinated in a soy-based sauce, then grilled, glazed with a thicker version of that sauce and sliced into strips.

“Chicken teriyaki is the best cheap food there is,” he said. “It’s ideal for international students. I got through school on oatmeal cookies and coffee. If only I could have had teriyaki, things would have been different.”

Seattle is not the sole American city that loves teriyaki.

Dozens of manufacturers market sauce riffs, like Veri Veri Teriyaki from Soy Vay Enterprises in Felton, Calif. Waba Grill Teriyaki House, which promotes skinless chicken, cooked without oil or MSG, has more than 20 California locations. Teriyaki Madness, based in Las Vegas (but owned by Seattle natives) is selling Nevada on teriyaki, pitched by an Elvis impersonator.

Only in Seattle, however, are teriyaki restaurants so ubiquitous that they’re virtually invisible, said Knute Berger, the author of “Pugetopolis,” a book of essays on modern Seattle mores.

“Seattle likes to talk about local foods, about ridiculous things like fiddlehead coulis,” Mr. Berger said. “Seattle yuppies love the idea of going to some obscure Chinese place for dim sum but won’t dare tell you that they eat chicken teriyaki. Those places are so much a part of the streetscape that we can’t even see them.”

Teriyaki claims its place at white tablecloth restaurants, too. Daniel’s Broiler, a steakhouse on Lake Union serves teriyaki-marinated beef as well as poached rock lobster tails.

But the average Seattle teriyaki spot is utilitarian, with fluorescent lights overhead and neon signs glaring from smudged storefront windows. The quality of ingredients is often measured by the salt water that packers inject into the restaurant’s chicken thighs. “We use a 2 percent chicken,” said Mr. Shrestha, decrying competitors who, in an effort to save money, buy chicken with much higher saline levels.

Economy is one of the virtues of Seattle teriyaki. It’s part of the problem, too. “Teriyaki is cheap and kind of dirty,” said Debbie Sarow, a bookstore owner who often eats a brown-bag lunch at her desk. “Everybody here is focused on what’s in their food, but teriyaki sauce is mysterious. You can’t figure out what’s in there, and that scares some people off.”

Boo Yul Ko and her husband, In Ja Ko, own Manna Deli & Teriyaki, cater-corner from the 5 Seasons Grill. She sells chicken, beef and pork teriyaki plates.

On the front counter, Ms. Ko stacks teriyaki wraps with the heft of lead piping. Engorged with meat, sauce, rice and salad — the constituent ingredients of a teriyaki plate — they rise in pyramids near a ceramic cat statuette, its paw raised in a gesture of welcome. She takes great pride in selling those wraps for $3.99, a price that first-generation immigrants (and college students) recognize as a bargain.

The Kos, Korean natives, moved to Seattle from Idaho in 1999, when their son, Sam Ko, enrolled in Seattle University as an undergraduate. (He went on to earn a dual M.D./M.B.A. degree from the University of Rochester.)

“Seattle has a thousand teriyakis,” Mrs. Ko said one afternoon. Her tone was dismissive, as if explaining the looming presence of the Space Needle to a not particularly bright child. “No Americans do the cooking. Koreans do.”

“This is Seattle food,” she said, extending her argument. “For Seattle people. This is what we eat here. Seattle people eat teriyaki. This isn’t Dallas.”

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Fruits de Mer



































Tuesday went diving at Van Damme State Beach, Mendocino near Fort Bragg. Thanks to Charles and Andy for taking me along. Water was flat, visibility 25 feet, which is about as good as it gets in NorCal. Could see many abalone snorkeling from the surface. Water about 52F. Came home with three abalone and three urchin.

This past weekend we found this funny Russian import market in the Richmond called Europa Plus with various, generally low quality-seeming good. They have unwrapped frozen Alaskan chum salmon filets (or so they say) loose in a cardboard box for $3. See what a Google reviewer had to say (Oct 3), I found myself thinking much the same thing (pirated?).

This place has got the cheapest salmon in the city. I just moved to the Tenderloin last Friday and glad I found this place on the bus today. I shouldn't be sharing this secret. I love salmon as much as the bears who feast on them each breeding season. They sell salmon here at $2.99 lb and it's for real, it might be stolen, but who cares. I bought some frozen and had it for dinner. It was fresh without a doubt. The store also has seasonings, candies and other Russian foods, most of which are in Russian. I'm going back to this place for all my fish feasting needs.

http://www.yelp.com/biz/europa-plus-russian-imports-san-francisco

Anyway, I bought canned Latvian sprats, sardines and mackerel from this mart, just for kicks.

Also in the pictures below, my stash of smoked salmon from the Portlock store in Seattle. I'm hoarding.


Thursday, September 24, 2009

Leaving Seattle

Th

Ivar's and Anthony's are both at SeaTac. Ivar's has clam and salmon chowders on special for 75c a bowl, so of course I had to have some.

Wed

Chocolate University at Theo, part two. Didn't eat quite as much chocolate as last time. Tried 100% cacoa liquers (Ghanaian and Venezulean). Blech! Tasting 100% cacao is only for the professionals.

Tues

Uwajimaya has whole albacores for $3.79 a pound. I was tempted to buy one to try cutting it up (tuna is built fundamentally different than other fish, doesn't have two fillets, but four loins). Didn't want to stink up Jon's kitchen though.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Chocolate

Th
Jon made me and his wife a great dinner with produce from nearby Metropolitan Market in the U.
I also picked up a Beecher's cheese and truffle butter sandwich there. I may have to get another.

Wed
Facebook feed:
went to chocolate university at theo in seattle last night, taught by the COO, brilliant phd biochemist/ops engineer/angel investor. it was a phenomenal discussion of chocolate history, biochemistry, taste, culture, politics, food production, business. i'm thinking of flying back next wed for part 2. i was also on a theobromine bender from all the chocolate.