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Showing posts from May, 2013

C Restaurant Overwhelmed?

It's the third year that C Restaurant has offered a tasting menu through Groupon . I'd been there in 2011 and 2012 , and This year, the advertised menu was... Compressed watermelon and pickled rind with side strip shrimp eschabeche North Arm Farms beets with balsamic gel and crisp goat cheese Leek-and-potato soup and a mini baked potato with sour cream, green onions, and pancetta Seared albicore tuna with fingerling potatoes, sunny-side quail egg, and lobster cream Pan-seared scallop with braised red cabbage, caramelized apples, and Calvados froth Pan-seared Louis Lake steelhead-mussel coconut broth and green-papaya salsa Cucumber sorbet with feta cheese and black-olive powder and tomato chips Farm House cheddar with poached pear and saffron gel Chocolate cake with mint ganache and toasted marshmallow Peanut butter-and-jelly macaroons I forgot to snag the menu this time, but the advertised menu isn't exactly what you get. There are minor substitutions her

Pesky Crawfish at Cray

After reading the article in the Georgia Straight about where to get an authentic New Orleans crawfish boil, I went to Cray Kitchen and Bar to try it out. Disaster. Cray offers three types of Seafood Combos: The Pacific ($20) - Shrimp in the shell, Clams, Mussels, Andouille Sausage, Corn on the cob, and Potatoes Cray-ving Crawfish ($25) - The Pacific, plus Crawfish Crab Combo ($29) - Cray-ving Crawfish plus one BC Dungeness Crab cut in half. There are three types of seasoning: Cajun, garlic butter, and lemon pepper. You can also ask for a mix of everything, and all the main ingredients do sort of stand out. It's tasty. The soup that's sitting at the bottom of the large bowl of boiled seafood you get -- it's tasty . I need to emphasize this because when you read the rest of this blog post, you might think I hated my Crab Combo at Cray. That's not entirely true. I didn't really like it, but there's no denying the soup is tasty. Also, after unlimited cra

Inventive Persian Food at Diva At the Met

Diva at the Met presently offers a 5-course or 7-course "Persian Tasting Menu". If you've ever had Persian food  and think you know what it is, you should definitely go. This is NOTHING like Persian food. Yet the ingredients and flavours give it a decidedly Persian / middle-eastern influence. At this point, it is very dangerous to give too much away because what comes to your table is guaranteed to blow you away. From the starter snacks (complimentary, and do not count toward the courses) to the palate cleanser to the dessert at the end, you will be treated to dishes that have clear flavours which do not smother each other. There is a sense that nothing is without purpose and everything is exquisitely composed. Plating will delight you with its prettiness, intrigue you with its often hidden-by-layers content, or surprise you with its simplicity or oddness. To show you any pictures here would be to spoil your experience. When I go to restaurants, I immediately order t

Overbaked Christmas at Magda's Restaurant

A genuine Venezuelan recommended this place, and in the late evening, around 8pm, it had a few tables of South Americans, so it looked like it was authentic, or at least close enough. I can't say I've been to Venezuela, but if this is the sort of food they have, I don't know if I'd be so keen on going there just for the food. There's lots of meat involved here and plainly presented. Portion for price is OK. For example, we had an order of Tequeños (~4" long ~3/4" thick fried white cheese sticks wrapped in wheat flour dough); at $7.99, it came out to over a dollar a piece. An order of Mixed Parrilla (steak, chorizo, pork chop, chicken breast, yucca & Venezuelan guasacaca ) was $25. Initially it looked like an enormous mound of meat, but it was really a layer of meat over an enormous mound of yucca. Considering the 49th and Fraser neighbourhood, price for what you got was just okay but not really tipping over into expensive. An interesting option a