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Showing posts from October, 2011

Taste of Yaletown 2011 - Hapa Izakaya

Went for my third and probably last Taste of Yaletown 2011  outing last night. It's the Secret Souls Walk  at Garden Park (East 2nd and Templeton) and possibly some poking around the Waldorf's Halloween Carnival of the Souls tonight, so that's it for my weekend. Although there were a few hits and misses, it was mostly an excellent experience at Hapa Izakaya last night. Here's the menu: $25.00 per person (excludes taxes, gratuities and alcohol) Appetizer - Please choose two dishes: 1. Negitoro: Chopped albacore tuna belly served with garlic toast 2. Beef Tataki: Lightly seared AAA beef topped with sesame chili sauce 3. Tuna Carpaccio: Thinly sliced ahi tuna with yuzu dressing 4. Enoki Bacon: Enoki mushrooms wrapped in bacon skewer 5. Bintoro: Lightly seared albacore tuna sashimi with ponzu sauce 6. Ahi Tuna Taco: Sautéed  ahi tuna, pickled serrano tartar sauce with guacamole wrapped in flour tortilla Entrée - Please choose two dishes: 1. Chowder: Halibut,

Taste of Yaletown 2011 - Bistro Sakana

It's only 7:30pm and I'm just back from another excellent Taste of Yaletown dinner! Not early enough to avoid the after-game skytrain rush, but definitely not sorry to have had dinner at Bistro Sakana . It's a very fixed menu with no vegetarian option here, but the variety makes up for it. Here's the $35 menu: $35.00 per person (excludes taxes, gratuities and alcohol) Appetizer Sockeye Salmon Miso Chowder -OR- Atlantic Lobster Miso Bisque -OR- Tai (New Zealand Red Snapper) Sashimi with fresh ginger & ponzu sauce Entrée All of: Wild Sockeye Jalapeno Aburi "Hakozushi": Sockeye Salmon layered with rice, box pressed, flame torched, and topped with jalapeño slices Toro Red Chili Aburi "Hakozushi": Albacore Toro marinated in Junmai sake & miso, layered with rice, box pressed, flame torched, and topped with red chili and key lime slivers Yuzu Black Sesame Encrusted Tuna Tataki: Albacore sashimi tataki encrusted with roasted black sesam

Taste of Yaletown 2011 - Hurricane Grill

It's time for Taste of Yaletown again! Now in it's 7th year, we sadly won't see Capones in the lineup. That mainstay of live jazz in downtown Vancouver has since folded despite an attempt to renovate and revive it . Another institution in Vancouver has folded, gone the way of The William Tell Restaurant, it seems. I'm just back from an early dinner at Hurricane Grill down on the seawall in Yaletown. Honestly, I've never thought of going in there because of the tacky red-text-on-banana-yellow banner. It just didn't seem... classy? Inside, it's hockey bar with lots of TVs on the bar side, just one medium-sized one on the sit-down-restaurant side. If you pay attention, you'll notice the flickering light of the wax candle brought to your table is inside  the candle. No napkins here, just refills of cutlery wrapped in paper napkins, bar style. The whole place feels more bar than restaurant and trying to be both. Anyway I'm glad I went tonight b

Tasty but overpackaged promotion from Kashi

Over a month ago, I wrote about a Kashi offer by e-mail . It offered a sample bar from their new line of healthy bars, and featured a little come-back-to-our-website poll about whether the new bars were tasty or not. I waited long enough for it that I had more or less forgotten all about it. But lo! Last Friday it finally arrived. The bar I chose from their Fruit & Grain line -- Peanutty Dark Chocolate -- has a nearly standard-length package and is 32 grams. This will end up looking a bit shorter than you might expect from the package. The layer of chocolate sprinkled with chunks of peanut is almost 5mm thick, so that's mostly what you taste from the bar. If you like chocolate, this will be a tasty bar without as much guilt from an actual bar of chocolate. Sweet enough to burn the back of your throat, but not too much. You'll want a swig of water after, though. What surprised me most about this "Laurie Timms' Cardboard Challenge" promotion, however, was th

Tofurky and Tempeh for Thanksgiving

This past Thanksgiving, I decided to try some fake meat "Tofurky" instead of real turkey. As a family we've always struggled with turkey -- specifically turkey leftovers and dry breast meat. So I went down to Whole Foods and got a Tofurky. Tofurky is more or less a tofu-based fake turkey meat. It's round (think turkey, minus arms, legs, head, and ass) and has about a tennis ball's worth of wild rice stuffing in the middle. If you get the basic Tofurky Roast, you just get the round of tofurky and have to prepare the baste yourself. The firmness of the "turkey" part is comparable to actual turkey, but the look is a dead giveaway (there's no fibrous look, as you do with actual meat) and the colour and taste is way off. The taste is the worst part -- there's still that mild tang and slight bitterness of tofu. If you're looking for fake meat, this is a poor substitute. It's just too far off. Honestly, how some people say they might mi