August 28, 2012 Off

Potatomato is on Twitter now!

//// By in Food: Los Angeles

If you’re interested, please follow us at @Potatomato_blog!

August 27, 2012 1

Yuko Kitchen (Miracle Mile)

//// By in 07: Mid-Wilshire, Favorite Food Entries

Part of the reason why we’re on hiatus is because we’ve settled. And by ‘settled’, I mean that we just want something easy, accessible, effortless, good and cheap ALL the time. And we found just the place: Yuko Kitchen at Miracle Mile. They served Japanese home cook food. It has a petit charming cafe space, warmth and friendly staff, fresh organic ingredients and tasty homemade treats and coffee. You just felt like going there like it’s your second living room. So we’ve been coming here all the time for the past few months.

Yuko's Kitchen

The space reflects the quirks of the owner and her friends.

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It has a nice patio and Japanese animated films are always playing on the screen.

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A strange ladder that leads up to the magical male bathroom. 🙂  The walls featured local artists’ works on the wall (works from my friend’s Cryptik are on the right).

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The Mint Lemonade is amazing. A Must!

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Garlic Albacore Rice Bowl. Fresh and delicious! The combination of jalapeno and picked radish added a lot. They gave you a bottle of tonburi sauce if you wanted more dressing. The rice bowls came with a huge bed of salad at the bottom.

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BBQ Eels Rice Bowl. So good!

Yuko's Kitchen

Beef Plate: a combination plate that includes the soup of the day, spicy Tuna on crispy rice appetizer and dessert. It reminded me of Kid’s set menu.

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Garlic Shrimp Rice Bowl: The shrimps are so fresh and crispy, perfectly cooked.

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They also have some ‘fusion’ items. Bow-lito is their take on a burrito using seaweed paper. Taco Rice Bowl: Ground Beef, Chic Pea, Tomato salsa, Avocado,  Jalapeno Sour cream on bed of Organic green and Rice. Surprisingly good!

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They have a lot of Japanese vegetable sides to add on too.

Yuko's kitchen

They made their own pastries as well: Sesame Marshmallow.

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Everything here is tasty. The owner’s unique taste reflects on the non run-of-the-mill food, and you just feel there’s a lot of heart. The food is cooked with fresh ingredients and given in generous amount, it’s no wonder that this place is packed during lunch hour (there’re a lot of offices nearby, including where I’m working now.)

Yuko’s Kitchen
5484 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90036
(323) 933-4020

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August 3, 2012 Off

Dai Ho (Temple city)

//// By in 01: San Gabriel, Favorite Food Entries

Back from hiatus! We have so many food entries back up for months and have been quite overwhelmed with updating them all. So let me take the first step now and get back right into it.

These days, more and more Japanese ramen shops are popping up faster than I have time to go try them. It’s definitely a good trend for ramen lovers in LA. However, I think for a satisfying bowl of noodle, Taiwanese style beef noodle soup are horribly underated. For those who haven’t try it, I urged you to give it a try at Dai Ho. Dai Ho is a little restaurant in Temple City that’s known for their signature Beef Noodle and small marinated and pickled dishes. It gets crowded at lunch time and they only operate from 11 am to 3 pm.

Dai ho beef noodle
Dai Ho’s Beef noodle is easily THE Best in Los Angeles.  The rich beef stew broth was fantastic. I could taste a bit of tomato in the broth as well, which gave it a nice touch of sour and sweetness. The spiciness is just right for me and the beef was flavorful and oh so tender. I personally wish there’re more tendon in it. The noodle is great too.

There’s not a lot of choices on the menu as getting the beef noodle is a no brainer, however they do have few other choices. I hear good things about them but have yet to try them. The side dishes we got were good too.

At $9 a bowl, the beef noodle quite pricey for San Gabriel Valley Chinese restaurant standard, however if most ramen charge $9-12 a bowl, why not a great bowl of beef noodle?

Dai ho Restaurant
9148 Las Tunas Dr, Temple City, CA 91780

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April 6, 2012 Off

LQ+SK Weed+Chinese Herb Dinner

//// By in Favorite Food Entries, Food: Los Angeles

Chef Laurent Quenioux, Chef Thi Tran and Nguyen Tran from Starry Kitchen hosted a secret 7 courses weed + Chinese herb dinner last Sunday at a private residence somewhere in Encino. My husband and I were some of the lucky ones chosen to attend the event based on our answers to a funny questionnaire. In fact it was my husband’s answers that got picked! I guess he did a better job in showing how much we’d like to attend.

My experiences with edible weed are cookies or brownies which usually have unpleasant grassy taste, so it was interesting to see how fresh marijuana leaves would be incorporated into the cooking. Our host Nguyen Tran stressed that they intent to use the herb as ingredients and not meant to make us high. In addition, the dinner uses Chinese herbs that are mostly unknown to people outside of Asia but are familiar to me as I grew up drinking Chinese herbal medicine.

The details were given to us few days prior and the instruction was to meet at a supermarket parking lot in the Valley where they would pick us up in a van with a “Grammar rodeo” sign (a Simpson reference) on it. It was byob so we brought a bottle of white and red each based on their wine pairing recommendation.

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We’re taken to a nice private residence that’s on a hill at Encino. Here’s the view from the backyard of the house.

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Mixologists were there making specialty cocktails. Here’s one with cannabis-infused sesame oil. It was quite strong (I’m a lightweight however) and the sesame oil did provide an interesting but subtle flavor.  They gave us 3 more cannabis-infused cocktails throughout the night.

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Four tables were set in the living room. On the top left pix are our host and chefs of the night. My impression is that most of the attendees were from the press and people who seem to know the host/chefs personally one way or another. We seem to be one of the few non-related people who got in through the questionnaire? At our table, there’re two writers from High time Magazine and the famous food writer Jonathan Gold!

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Amuse Bouche: Logan, winter melon, hamachi, duck breast
Chef Laurent always love to start with hamachi. The Logan and winter melon shot was sweet and refreshing. The duck breast is thin, prosciutto-like.  It’s a amuse bouche with a lot of flavors, great start!

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1st course: Papaya soup with american ginseng, wild boar, partridge, salsify
The picture was taken before they pour the soup. The soup is sweet and very Chinese tasting due to the ginseng,  salsify and the apricot almond in it. It was the star of the dish, nice depth and flavors. My roasted partridge was a little overdone and dry. The braised wild boar was however tender and soft.

So far no sight of cannabis yet, but I was feeling the effect already from the cocktails.

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2nd course: Silky bantam Chicken, chicken skin, avocado, pink grapefruit, cannabis leaves, cirturs oil, pickled beets, solomon’s seal
Finally a dish with actual cannabis leaves! Bantam chicken is known as “black chicken” in Chinese, it has white feature and dark skin. It was prepared like a galantine, and it tasted like a galantine. The fried chicken skin was very bacon-like. The cannabis leave didn’t have that overwhelming grassy taste you would expect. It worked as a side green you ete the chicken with.

A note on the ingredients: Solomon’s Seal is a herb used often in Chinese medicine (it has a much more boring name in Chinese, call 玉竹, or Jade bamboo) and often used in soup. I’m guessing it was used during poaching of the chicken.

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3rd course: spare Ribs, angelica root, wolfberries, bergamote glazed pork belly, green apple, green garlic, cauliflower gremolata

Another very Chinese tasting dish, particularly due to the Angelica root and Goji berries (wolfberries). Angelica root has a very distinctive flavor and is very common in Chinese medicine. Its slightly bitter flavor balanced well with the rich, melt-in-you-mouth spare ribs and pork belly, and the the goji berries gave a touch of sweetness. It’s one of my favorites of the night.

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4th course: Spot Prawns, herbal lobster “jus”, head tempura, favas, peas
The “herbal lobster jus” tasted very marijuana-ish sans the grassy-ness to me, yet there’s no marijuana in it. The herb in question was tarragon. The flavor overall was intense, rich and buttery. The crisp peas gave a good clean crisp balance. It is another of my favorites.

For me, the “effect” started to kick in by this point.

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5th course: Monkfish, cannabis epazote pesto, nettles, shiso and young carrots.
This dish perhaps was the most “lethal” when comes to cannabis intoxication. You could taste it a lot. The congee was great, almost risotto-like. The fish was just alright for me as I’m not a fan of the texture.

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6th course: Beef Culotte, Onion bacon cannabis tart, sunchocke, morels
The most french and “traditional” tasting dish of the night. It’s hearty and straightforward. A solid good finish.

By this point I was very very full and the “effect” grew stronger…

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7th course: Osmanthus panna cotta, Rhubarb, frozen cream, blood orange sorbet and cannabis soil
and a take home gift of chocolate truffle box with “steam”.

Osmanthus is known as “five flower” in Chinese which has a distintive flavor and is known for “cooling down” your chi. The osmanthus Panna cotta reminded me of Chinese osmanthus pudding you could sometimes get in Dim sum restaurant. It went well with the tartness of the sorbet. We all had a “whhaatt” reaction to the asparagus. Palate cleansing I suppose?

Untitled Here’s a picture I took with the amazing Jonathan Gold who sat next to me! You can read his review of the dinner here. The journalist from New Yorker and NPR were also there, I can’t wait to read their experience on it.

The price for the dinner was $150 which includes everything (tax and tips). It was quite pricey but in the end, I’m glad we went. The experience alone worth it. The people we met were fun to talk to and it was great to hear personally from Jonathan Gold that he actually read Potatomato! It was nice to talk to him about good Chinese food in LA and he answered our long time question about why there’s no good Turkish resturant in LA.

Even though our host stressed how they’ve greatly reduce the effects of the herb and that diners shouldn’t have feel much, by the end of the meal, I was fully “effected”. Perhaps I’m just such a lightweight as it’s not a regular habit of mine. It stayed with me in a more constant manner than the inhaling method. I felt it till the next morning. I went to work with glassy eyes, though I have to say it actually made me me more concentrated!

I encourage those who haven’t join yet to follow Chef Laurent Quenioux on his mailing list so you’ll be updated with what he and the SK team will be up to next. Sign up for LQ mailing list here.

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March 30, 2012 1

LQ@SK (pop up)

//// By in 06: Downtown LA, Favorite Food Entries

I’ve always been a fan of Chef Laurent Quenioux and enjoy his culinary creations since the Bistro K days. Soon after the closing of Bistro LQ, he had collaborated with the staffs of Starry Kitchen for special pop up dinner events known as LQ@SK, which take place at Starry Kitchen at Downtown. Last Wednesday (March 21st) was the last night of LQ@SK , and we were there!

The pop up dinner showcases an interesting 5 courses prix fixe menu for $45 with an optional cheese course. The reasonable price plus the BYOB reminded me of the good old days of Bistro K.


Amuse bouche- Pretzel bite, Vienna Sausage, Mustard Greens artridge


1st course: Hamachi, Lemon Curd, Black Sesame Cremeux, Soy Gel, Avocado Smear, Tobico, Uni Air
It’s an interesting dish with lots of ingredients and flavors. The Uni foam and the black sesame cremeux (at the bottom of the fish) surprisingly compliment the Hamachi. The soy gel (a condense soy sauce?) and avocado bring in additional flavors.


2nd course: Skate Fish and Chips, Chyote, Argan Oil, Epazote, Chorizo, Lime, “La Ratte”
The breading of the fish was crispy and the chopped chorizo was a nice touch. It’s probably my least favorite of the night. Not that it’s not tasty, just that it’s less surprising and interesting than the others.


3rd course: Rabbit Albondigas, Teriyaki Foie gras, Miso Dashi Broth, Red Tosaka, Ramps Tempura
The picture was taken before they pour the dashi broth in. This is incredible, my favorite dish of the night!  It’s a foie gras dish that tasted light and Japanese.


4th course: Oxtail, Comte Grilled Cheese, Pickled Vegetables, Tarragon
The main meat course is oxtail. The meat was very tender. It’s hearty but not heavy. My 2nd favorite of the night.


5th course: Tonka bean Tres Leche, Cajeta, Guava Gel, Blood Orange Sorbet, Serrano Lime Thai Basil Seeds
refreshing!



We opt for the Cheese cart for 3 cheese. The girl who’s in charge of the cart picked three for us. Our favorite was the blue cheese. It went so well with the truffle honey that’s part of the condiments.

Complimentary macaroon.

Overall we all had so much fun and enjoyed this interesting and creative meal a lot. Too bad this is the last LQ@SK pop up dinner. Hopefully it won’t be the last collaboration between them and I’m looking forward to what Chef Laurent Quenioux will do next!

I know most food critics/majority of foodies out there championed the whole “few ingredients + simple = good food” thing , how you don’t need so many ingredients in one plate, less is more etc etc. Yes that is very true, I believe and appreciate simple food myself too. However, it’s also nice to experience a meal like this once in awhile. There’s a sense of surprise and always a fun experience, for both the chefs and diners.

This Sunday Jon and I will have the opportunity to check out a special and secret (shhhh) Weed+Chinese Herb collaboration dinner from Chef Laurent Quenioux’s + Starry Kitchen’s Chef Thi Tran. We’ll see how it goes!

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