A "Gwai Lo" Lunch
Saturday, November 22, 2008
On Monday, I was left to my own devices again, so I decided I wanted to take a bit of a break from going to HK-style cafés (cha chaan teng/荼餐廳) and Chinese fast food everyday, and also up my vegetable intake a little bit. So I went to Taste, a higher-end grocery store with a whole floor dedicated to ready-made foods (a little like Sunterra, come to think of it) and picked up a salad. Of course being the carb-lover that I am, I couldn't resist the salad with the pasta in it! So it was the Tri-Colour Ravioli Salad for me.
I'd noticed a park on the end of the street where I work and decided I wanted to have lunch there instead of going back to the office (which was locked anyway) or the dingy cafeteria beside it. They had a little gazebo, but one guy was standing in there for a while, so I sat myself on a park bench to enjoy the nice weather and my lunch.
In the beginning, I only encountered spinach raviolis, which tasted very cheesy and yummy. Thus, I'd completely forgotten that it was a tri-colour ravioli salad until I hit a...
PUMPKIN RAVIOLI! This was by far my favourite of my three flavours. The sweetness of the pumpkin played off really well against the savoury flavours in everything else.
The mushroom ravioli was my least favourite; the first bite reminded me of Campbell's Cream of Mushroom soup, and subsequent bites reminded me of butter. Still, I finished my salad and was happy with my gwai lo/vegetable fix and still had time to take a few more photos and go exploring. (And by exploring I mean, take photos of the suprisingly nice temple right next to the park.)
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Labels:
All Out+About,
Hong Kong,
Shopping
Location:
Hopewell Centre, Hong Kong
Chinese fast food
Friday, November 21, 2008
Last Friday, the two dietitians (Cora and Wilson) were gone, and the clerk (Winnie) was meeting friends, so I was left on my own devices. Part of me contemplated getting some non-Chinese food at Fat Angelo's (still haven't tried it), or Fatburger (haven't tried it cuz word on the street is that it's a ripoff, even by non-HK standards) but I ended up gravitating toward Hopewell Centre and wound up in a "Chinese Fast Food" place called Café Oasis, a subsidiary of the better-known Fairwood group, which happens to *ahem* disallow photography and reinforces the rule with signs outside the café and crappy lighting inside.
Chinese fast food works similarly to regular fast food restaurants in that they have some items pre-prepared and everything works kind of in an assembly line. The only difference is that the focus is on Chinese food, which seems more elaborate because it involves a lot of dinnerware and cutlery (i.e. everything in plastic bowls vs. a burger wrapped in foil + fries in a cardboard container), but the service is not sit-down and is fast for the kinds of dishes they're making. Also, watching the cashiers use pens to briskly poke in your order on the touch-in screen is kind of amazing.
I paid HKD$36 (less than CAD$6) for a dish with bitter melon and pork (I chose it because it was the picture with the most vegetables, but when the dish came I learned that the star of the show was actually the sauce), a hefty bowl of rice, a dish of steamed egg that was probably the equivalent of four eggs, and an iced tea. It was all very satisfying and I thought the side of steamed egg was a nice touch. I wandered around Hopewell again for a little bit because they have a little anglophone bookstore (actually part of a big Australian franchise) called Dymock's. That's where I picked up a free copy of HK Magazine, a free anglophone weekly which I liked so much I went back and grabbed this week's issue today. I enjoy the content because it is different from the usual Chinese media, but some of the writing/ideas could use a little work (I make a great copy editor/food writer—CALL ME!) I learned about the HK Jewish Film Fest, and had all intentions of going, but when I went to get tickets they were all sold out! Also, they mentioned where I work in the first issue I picked up, and had a little blurb on how to become a dietitian this week, though I'm a little offended that they feature it as an alternative career path for people who want to drop out of the rat race.
The next week all of us in the office went to Café Oasis again, where I learned that if I had an SJS employee card I would've gotten a 10% discount! Wilson and Winnie offered to buy the lunches (another volunteer was there that day) and we could pay them back. I skipped the steamed egg and iced tea (considered a "specialty" drink), and ended up paying HKD$24.30 (~CAD$4) for more Chinese fast food.
Café Oasis
Shop 201-206, Hopewell Centre
183 Queen's Rd E, Wan Chai, Hong Kong
Tel: +852-2856-8663
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Chinese fast food works similarly to regular fast food restaurants in that they have some items pre-prepared and everything works kind of in an assembly line. The only difference is that the focus is on Chinese food, which seems more elaborate because it involves a lot of dinnerware and cutlery (i.e. everything in plastic bowls vs. a burger wrapped in foil + fries in a cardboard container), but the service is not sit-down and is fast for the kinds of dishes they're making. Also, watching the cashiers use pens to briskly poke in your order on the touch-in screen is kind of amazing.
I paid HKD$36 (less than CAD$6) for a dish with bitter melon and pork (I chose it because it was the picture with the most vegetables, but when the dish came I learned that the star of the show was actually the sauce), a hefty bowl of rice, a dish of steamed egg that was probably the equivalent of four eggs, and an iced tea. It was all very satisfying and I thought the side of steamed egg was a nice touch. I wandered around Hopewell again for a little bit because they have a little anglophone bookstore (actually part of a big Australian franchise) called Dymock's. That's where I picked up a free copy of HK Magazine, a free anglophone weekly which I liked so much I went back and grabbed this week's issue today. I enjoy the content because it is different from the usual Chinese media, but some of the writing/ideas could use a little work (I make a great copy editor/food writer—CALL ME!) I learned about the HK Jewish Film Fest, and had all intentions of going, but when I went to get tickets they were all sold out! Also, they mentioned where I work in the first issue I picked up, and had a little blurb on how to become a dietitian this week, though I'm a little offended that they feature it as an alternative career path for people who want to drop out of the rat race.
The next week all of us in the office went to Café Oasis again, where I learned that if I had an SJS employee card I would've gotten a 10% discount! Wilson and Winnie offered to buy the lunches (another volunteer was there that day) and we could pay them back. I skipped the steamed egg and iced tea (considered a "specialty" drink), and ended up paying HKD$24.30 (~CAD$4) for more Chinese fast food.
Café Oasis
Shop 201-206, Hopewell Centre
183 Queen's Rd E, Wan Chai, Hong Kong
Tel: +852-2856-8663
Read More...
Labels:
All Out+About,
Hong Kong,
Restaurants
Location:
Hopewell Centre, Hong Kong
Birthday Dinner at Yee Tung Heen (怡東軒)
Thursday, November 20, 2008
It's been over a week since my birthday, and I'm getting used to telling people that I'm 22. I also finally had a slice (read: a quarter) of my birthday cake this evening (which wasn't bad, a kind of tiramisu with a strange banana aftertaste), partly because I'm so busy as described in my previous entry—sleeping has won over blogging many a night—and because I come home so FULL from my grandma's every night. I'm always forced to be the human garbage can and attempt to finish the big plate of vegetables (I like them, but not THAT much) and then fruit is served immediately after supper (and again there's lots of coaxing for me to keep eating). Combine that with not very much exercise (though I do walk a little bit everyday) and I'm worried that I might gain a Senior 15, which is kind of embarrassing.
Fortunately, the dinner happened not long after I arrived in Hong Kong, so I wasn't worried about these things yet. My dad took my grandma and I to Yee Tung Heen, the Chinese restaurant in The Excelsior in Causeway Bay. My dad ordered each of us the Lobster Set Dinner, which meant that we all got to choose what kind of shark fin soup we wanted (plain chicken broth), what kind of lobster (my grandma and I both went for the steamed garlic while my dad ignored his various health issues and went for the cheese), and another dish each that we all ended up sharing.
The dinner started with the soup.
Usually you end up getting a few pathetic strands of shark fin in a big bowl of thickened broth, but here they didn't skimp—there was an impressively large slab of shark fin, big enough that we used chopsticks to eat our soup. Would've liked more other ingredients though, and like most commercial soups, I found it a little salty.
The star of the show was up next. When my dad first ordered the dinners I was afraid that I'd have to eat a whole lobster by myself and was glad that I didn't have to. Still the meat from the claw was a little hard to get at (that's what I hate about eating crustaceans) and I was a little jealous that the wait staff removed all the shell from my grandma's lobster for her. Fortunately, my dad helped me out and I was able to get to the succulent meat. Yum.
Just because I'm a little obsessed with the "plate rule" (½ veg, ¼ starch, ¼ protein) and having bread with lots of fibre, my mom thinks I have orthorexia and called my dad to let him know that I "require" tons and tons of vegetables at supper time. So the other dishes we ordered were quite vegetable-oriented. Clockwise from top: roasted goose (not a vegetable), bok choy with shredded pork (not worms), and sea cucumber with spinach. All were yummy and we forced ourselves to finish everything, which meant we barely had room for dessert, let alone cake.
Dessert was tiny little egg tarts topped with a little bit of bird's nest (which I have affectionately dubbed "swallow spit" because it's made from soaking the nest of swallows (the Wikipedia entry says they're called "swifts" which ruins the fun), which are made out of their spit, which is full of minerals which and other wonderful things that allow it to be structurally sound.
The tarts were a terrible way to cap off the meal. For lunch we'd actually picked up some egg tarts at a bakery in Wan Chai and they were better than these. The filling was overcooked and the pastry just tasted like a moist mass and was not flaky at all. Despite the expensive accessory these egg tarts were a big fail and almost ruined an otherwise good meal.
Yee Tung Heen (怡東軒)
2/F Excelsior Hotel (怡東酒店)
281 Gloucester Rd, Causeway Bay, HK
Tel: +852-2837-6790
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Fortunately, the dinner happened not long after I arrived in Hong Kong, so I wasn't worried about these things yet. My dad took my grandma and I to Yee Tung Heen, the Chinese restaurant in The Excelsior in Causeway Bay. My dad ordered each of us the Lobster Set Dinner, which meant that we all got to choose what kind of shark fin soup we wanted (plain chicken broth), what kind of lobster (my grandma and I both went for the steamed garlic while my dad ignored his various health issues and went for the cheese), and another dish each that we all ended up sharing.
The dinner started with the soup.
Usually you end up getting a few pathetic strands of shark fin in a big bowl of thickened broth, but here they didn't skimp—there was an impressively large slab of shark fin, big enough that we used chopsticks to eat our soup. Would've liked more other ingredients though, and like most commercial soups, I found it a little salty.
The star of the show was up next. When my dad first ordered the dinners I was afraid that I'd have to eat a whole lobster by myself and was glad that I didn't have to. Still the meat from the claw was a little hard to get at (that's what I hate about eating crustaceans) and I was a little jealous that the wait staff removed all the shell from my grandma's lobster for her. Fortunately, my dad helped me out and I was able to get to the succulent meat. Yum.
Just because I'm a little obsessed with the "plate rule" (½ veg, ¼ starch, ¼ protein) and having bread with lots of fibre, my mom thinks I have orthorexia and called my dad to let him know that I "require" tons and tons of vegetables at supper time. So the other dishes we ordered were quite vegetable-oriented. Clockwise from top: roasted goose (not a vegetable), bok choy with shredded pork (not worms), and sea cucumber with spinach. All were yummy and we forced ourselves to finish everything, which meant we barely had room for dessert, let alone cake.
Dessert was tiny little egg tarts topped with a little bit of bird's nest (which I have affectionately dubbed "swallow spit" because it's made from soaking the nest of swallows (the Wikipedia entry says they're called "swifts" which ruins the fun), which are made out of their spit, which is full of minerals which and other wonderful things that allow it to be structurally sound.
The tarts were a terrible way to cap off the meal. For lunch we'd actually picked up some egg tarts at a bakery in Wan Chai and they were better than these. The filling was overcooked and the pastry just tasted like a moist mass and was not flaky at all. Despite the expensive accessory these egg tarts were a big fail and almost ruined an otherwise good meal.
Yee Tung Heen (怡東軒)
2/F Excelsior Hotel (怡東酒店)
281 Gloucester Rd, Causeway Bay, HK
Tel: +852-2837-6790
Read More...
Labels:
All Out+About,
Hong Kong,
Restaurants
Out East
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
I can't believe that I'm on the last leg of my internship already! The first ten weeks flew by so quickly; five weeks in Montreal, five weeks in Calgary, and now I'm out here in the far east—in Hong Kong!
My apologies for not posting sooner. Right now I leave the house shortly after 9 am to head to work, finish work shortly after 6 pm, go to my grandma's house for dinner, and don't get home until 8 or 9 pm. I don't know if it's jet lag, but recently I've been pooped at that time and have to lie in bed for a little bit before I force myself to shower and do a bit of homework and go to bed at midnight.
Tonight I didn't hit that "8 pm wall" and now it's almost 1 am! No matter, a little sleep deprivation is worth getting this blog caught up to my adventures so far, foodie or not!
Sunday, November 9
- Dim sum with dad and grandma this morning. Checked off #68 on The Vegetarian Hundred - they served a little "salad" with gluten pieces and cucumber in a slightly spicy sauce. It's funny how North Americans are so conscious of celiac disease these days and the whole naturopathic movement is all into getting rid of gluten in our diet when it's still a "staple" in Asian vegetarian cuisine. I enjoyed it; it has a texture that's in between firm tofu and fish ball, and I didn't feel sick after so I don't think I have celiac.
- Also had a SAGGY soup dumpling for the first time in a long time. It squirted me on the chin when I bit into it, but fortunately it wasn't hot.
- Had the day off work today, but went down to the area anyway just to see how long it would take me so that I wouldn't be late for actual work! Walked around and did MORE shopping. There's a lot of little stalls selling food, baby clothes, hair accessories, etc. etc. For a few days I was walking past a TAIL hanging from a market stall but it's not there anymore. I wonder if someone bought it?
- I read on Christopher Dewolf's Urbanphoto blog that there's an observation lift in Hopewell Centre, one of the office towers in the area, so I decided to go check it out.
- On my way home I bought a pair of shoes for my cousin's wedding for HKD$60 (~CAD$9.30). Score!
- Started work, which was a bit of a whirlwind of activity. I'm told to do a lot of things, but nothing feels official...
- Everyone's really friendly though, and we went for lunch at a 茶餐廳 (HK-style café) called Sun Chiu Kee (新釗記). Between the five of us, we shared two rice dishes, two noodle dishes and each ordered a hot drink to finish off the meal, and it cost us HKD$37 (~CAD$5.75) each. The food was decent for a place where you have to share tables and I didn't even have to pay! (My dietitian treated me because it was my first day.)
- It's my birthday! A little bummed that I can't celebrate with my friends, but what can you do...
- Spent most of the day entering data on a community program we're doing in a more rural part of town (going on Saturday) targeted toward families with kids aged 4-10. One of the dietitians treated me to a Vitasoy Calci-Plus Soya Fibre drink. Mmmm fibrrrrre... Mmm black sesameeeee. Was on a sugar-high for a little while as I checked some personal emails (shhhh!)
- We went for lunch in a little hole-in-the-wall Japanese place. Left shortly after noon to avoid the lunch crowd (lunch is usually from 1-2 or 12:30-1:30 in Hong Kong). Got ten pieces of low-quality sushi plus a drink for HKD$38 (~CAD$5.90). Strangely enough there were photos on the wall advertising foie gras sushi (for HKD$30/pc) and sushi cakes.
- After lunch we went to a local bakery to get egg tarts. They were nice and warm but I wish the pastry was a little flakier.
- Celebrated my birthday with my dad and grandma at the Excelsior Hotel. More on that when it's NOT 1:38 AM...
Labels:
All Out+About,
Hong Kong,
Restaurants
Location:
Hong Kong
Scotch and Chocolate!
Sunday, November 02, 2008
This event was so much fun that I don't think I needed to come up with my own "creative" title for the entry. It was a great session; Andrew Ferguson from the Kensington Wine Market was very knowledgeable about scotch and scotch tasting, and he squeezed in a lot of interesting facts and knowledge as he led us through the six scotches we tasted that evening. He also whipped out a map of Scotland to show us where the different scotches were made, which reminded me of a similar map in my Intro Microbiology course pack (Yay Niven! - The related article's on page 12) And of course, the chocolate and desserts provided by Nectar were divine. Again, I'd like to apologize for the lack of pictures, but to make up for it, the organizers were kind enough to provide us with little forms and golf pencils so I could take good notes!
We started the evening off with a taste of Famous Grouse 12 Yr, which is fairly well-known/accessible compared to the other ones we would try as the evening progresses. Didn't take any notes here, I guess at that point in time it just tasted like scotch. Paired interestingly with the white chocolate ("Ivoire") that we had on the table.
Next we tried two scotches from Edradour, the smallest distillery in Scotland. The difference in these two scotches was the casks that they were finished in; one was a Port Finish (i.e. a cask that used to hold port) and one was a Madeira Finish (Madeira is a Spanish wine where they "do everything possible to fuck it up" and for some reason it's really good.) Both are bottled at "cask strength" which means they bottle it right out of the cask instead of filtering it and all that fancy stuff like they do with most scotches. This means that more alcohol is left in the scotch and in the case of the Edradour Port Finish, it was 57% alcohol and you could smell it right away. For these stronger scotches, Andrew taught us the trick of sprinkling in a few drops of water to "cut through" the alcohol, which then brought out the more spicy notes (See, I'm getting good at this.) The scotch was very strong and spicy, which surprised me a little because I'd expected it to be sweet, being a Port Finish and all. It went well with the dark chocolate we got, Manjari, which is a 64% chocolate that has a bit of sourness/fruityness when you have it by itself.
The Edradour Madeira Finish was 65% alcohol, but compared to the Port Finish, it smelled/tasted a lot more mild. My notes say, "Nose: Rum; Palate: Sweet" This was my second favourite scotch of the night, but nobody else's first or second favourite, which made me feel a little alone when we had the mini-vote at the end. Both the Edradour scotches cost $88.49/500 mL
My favourite scotch of the night was the KWM Tullibardine 1987. It was 54.6% alcohol, so after "cutting it" with a few drops of water came the fruity and "sherry-like" (I haven't had sherry really, so don't know what that actually smells like) came out on the nose. In my notes I wrote "refill", which I'm guessing means that this came from a cask that was already used once for scotch already, which will affect its flavour. Apparently in the States you're only allowed to make whiskey in new oak barrels (way to love the environment, Americans!) and so that's why their whiskeys tend to be more one-dimensional than scotches, who can buy these used barrels from the Americans, or from anyone else, really. (In this case they just reused their own.) The Tullibardine was my favourite not because it's almost as old as I am, but because it tasted creamy, and when I had it with a bite of the flourless chocolate cake with pink peppercorns (not as good as the Dolfin chocolate bar version of that flavour combo) it made it taste even creamier! It was so crazy to taste the difference of a pairing that worked. Unfortunately at $189.99 per bottle I don't think I'll be getting any for my birthday.
The last two scotches we tasted were very smoky because they used a traditional drying process involving peat instead of the "newer" drying process that uses coal. Andrew told us a story about the Secret Stills Isle of Skye (1986!) that I vaguely remember; I think Secret Stills is a separate bottling brand owned by beverage company Diageo who also owns Talisker, the only distillery on the Isle of Skye (thanks Wikipedia!) I think since Diageo only sells a certain amount of scotch as Talisker, it uses this Secret Stills brand to sell any overproduction? I don't know, I'm unfortunately still at the stage of my life where I drink to get drunk/be social, not so I can tell you the history of what I'm drinking. Anyway, the scotch smells like it's really from an island. You do get that peaty smoky smell first, and then you smell the sea salt. Fortunately when you taste it it's not salty scotch, but it has this smoky flavour that is just really neat. This was Tiffany's favourite and when she found out it costs $230 she was like, "Damn expensive taste!" (Haha.)
The last scotch of the evening was the Finlaggan Cask Strength, which is actually distilled in Islay. Finlaggan is actually small lake in the middle of Scotland with very tiny islands where a very powerful family ruled a bunch of land in Scotland/Ireland back in the day. There is actually an artist's interpretation of the island on the bottle and the island is just basically a tower, it's so tiny. Anyway, the flavour was very similar to the Secret Stills Isle of Skye because of the peat, but it had a bit more bite. On the first sip it was kind of fizzy and reminded me of Coke. And then afterwards it lingered longer in my mouth like I was breathing in really humid sea air. Very cool, but again, not something I can afford at $85.99.
I'd hoped that it would be a more tag team sort of thing where they got someone who knew about chocolate as much as Andrew knew about scotch because the chocolate was kind of left by the wayside. In addition to the Ivoire and Manjari, we also got a milk chocolate (Jivara), 70% cocoa chocolate (Guanaja), cocoa nibs, and some weird chocolate-coated rice krispie things (they were just tiny little balls) to try with the scotches. None of them really stuck out for me as an exceptional pairing, but it was interesting to note the difference in taste when you combined a piece of chocolate with scotch. We also got pieces of Nectar's really yummy smoky chocolate tart with salted caramel (so good) and towards the end they brought out a milk chocolate ball in honey and a dark chocolate ball drizzled with reduced balsamic vinegar.
All in all, it was a good night and I was glad Tiffany and I walked a few blocks through awesome Inglewood before heading home (I was thankful there was a bottle of water in the car too!) I did feel a little miserable in the morning, but that might've been because I stayed up to do a bit of homework!
Nectar Desserts
1216 9 Ave SE (upstairs)
Calgary AB
403-263-8486
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Labels:
All Out+About,
Calgary,
Restaurants
Location:
1216 9 Ave SE, Calgary, AB, Canada
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