Month: February 2007

  • Pizza Week Ends over at Pizza Locust

    I can’t believe I ate the whole thing…

    Read about it here.

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  • Primeval – Episode 3 – Review

    The plot thickens as Cutter finally meets up with his long-lost wife.

    (more…)

  • Hot pot is big in the Lunar New Year

    China View => Huge hot pot in Chengdu

    Local residents dine around a huge hot pot in Chengdu, Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, Feb. 16, 2007. The huge hot pot measures 12 meters (39 feet) in diameter, and 4 meters (13 feet) in total height. The maker of the pot has applied for a World Guinness Record as the world’s largest hot pot.

    … and I bet it just tasted like those nasty fish balls they put in hot pot all the time.

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  • Pizza Week Continues

    Pizza Week Continues

    I’m so glad I didn’t weigh myself before pizza week started, now I’ll never know how much weight I’ve gained.

    So far this week we’ve reviewed: Sauce, Z Pizza, Ray’s and Patsy Grimaldi’s over at the Pizza Locust.

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  • Love Those Dumplings

    Din Tai Fung

    Foo(d) Bar Blog => Din Tai Fung

    There’s a funny thing about doing food and restaurant reviews. Even though I know fully well that each person has their own taste and that you can’t hope to agree with anyone except perhaps yourself, there’s a certain weird self-affirmation when you run across someone who records a similar impression of a restaurant – particularly one you consider exceptional.

    In this case I came across this new review over at the Foo(d) Bar Blog, which I believe is also based in the Phoenix area, but in this case is reviewing Din Tai Fung, a restaurant in my wife’s old neighborhood: Taipei, Taiwan. (What are the odds?)

    Referring to their world-famous xiao long bao:

    What makes Xiaolongbao different from other types of steamed buns and dumplings is the filling. In addition to meat, the dumplings are also stuffed with gelatenous stock before being steamed. Once steamed, the gelatin melts and becomes the soup inside the bun. When you eat a xiaolongbao, you get a nice combination of meat, soup, and wrapper. The soup buns at Din Tai Fung were awesome. The soup was very hot, and it was easy to scald yourself if you didn’t let them cool just a bit before eating. Wait too long, though, and the soup wasn’t quite as good. What also makes the xiaolongbao unique at Din Tai Fung is the number of pleats in each dumpling. Apparently, the buns at Din Tai Fung have more pleats than most other places, which is a result of years of experimentation by the owner.

    Read the rest of his review via this link.

    If you’re ever in Taipei, you can hardly go wrong at Din Tai Fung. (They also have branches in Japan, Hong Kong, China, Singapore, Korea, Indonesia and here in the States in the Los Angeles area.)

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  • Primeval – Episode 2 – Review

    Episode 2 of Primeval was another entertaining story; however, it either didn’t suffer from as many annoying scientific faux pas or I didn’t notice because I was sitting with my feet off the floor, curled up in a fetal position on the sofa.

    Spoilers if you continue reading…

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  • Kobe Teppan & Sushi

    I was doing some work down off I-10 on Elliot road about a year ago and every time I’d go there, I’d pass Kobe Teppan & Sushi. Despite a long-standing interest in Japan and things Japanese, my interest has never extended to the food.

    I remember one of my Japanese teachers telling me that the first thing she did when returning to Arizona from a visit to Japan was to stop a Mexican food place to get some food with flavor. Ah, the facade is ripped aside. The Japanese like to think that (a) Nihongo(Japanese) is to difficult for Westerners to learn well and (b) the flavors of their food are too subtle for western tastes to fully appreciate. But my teacher’s confession tells me that they really know it hasn’t got any flavor, either.

    All stereotypes of Japanese food aside, I do appreciate teppanyaki. It’s still not very strongly favored food, but grilled meat is grilled meat. It tastes pretty good no matter who is cooking it.

    I had the Kobe Steak at about $40. Irene had the “Osaka”, which sirloin and lobster for about $36. We both choose the chicken fried rice option which ups the price $2 more. Irene had a Kobe Tofu appetizer which she thought was delicious.

    Not the tofu fan myself, I tried some nonetheless. Must be a flavor I’m immune to because it tasted rather like flavorless mass marinated in an only slightly flavored sauce and then deep fried.

    Teppan dinners are a set progression and a bit of a stage show. The chef, who works right at your table, not only prepares your food in front of you, but puts on a show juggling, spinning and just otherwise entertaining with the food, the spatula, the spices and, most worryingly, the very sharp knife.

    The dinners are a set progression, they start with the soup (miso) and a salad (ginger dressing). The miso soup was just that, miso soup. The salad dressing was pretty good. I’m not usually partial to ginger dressing, but this was good.

    Fried rice was prepared next and it was good, although not nearly as good as Benihana’s fried rice.

    Each meal comes with the three grilled shrimp and they were just fine.

    Finally the meat and seafood items are cooked, simultaneously, some green roughage, onions, mushrooms and the like are grilled.

    My Kobe steak was good. It was properly prepared and very tender, but it wasn’t the most flavorful cut of meat. I snuck a chunk of Irene’s sirloin, and it was much more flavorful. I didn’t have any of the lobster, but Irene tells me it was really good.

    All in all, we enjoyed out dinner. It was both filing and entertaining.

    I will take a moment to say that both Kobe Teppan and Benihana’s (the only two Teppans I’ve been to in the US) are nothing like those I’ve been at in Taiwan. In Taiwan every department store basement has one (or more) teppan places, but those I’ve seen have all been very matter-of-fact and skip the entertainment portion of the show. They are also immensely cheaper, reaching the level of fast-food prices. Irene tells me they do have the entertainment style teppan also. Perhaps on our next trip there I’ll talk them into taking me.

    Kobe Teppan & Sushi (receipt says Kobe Steakhouse)
    1125 W. Elliot Road
    Tempe, AZ
    (Corner of Elliot & Hardy)

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  • Sometimes, nightmares come true

    Watch your toddlers...

    Spaunsglo at FLICKR posted this disturbing photo.

    This is literally a nightmare I’ve had come true.

    Time to move the pens back up higher on the shelves. James has already crayoned the tables, chairs, desks and beds. So far, my Macbook is safe, but now I’m worried. It’s so pretty and white, like a piece of newborn paper.

  • Dinosaur footprints found in Mexico

    Reuters => Mexican man finds forty dinosaur prints in desert

    MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – A Mexican man has discovered dozens of dinosaur footprints dating back up to 110 million years along the banks of a dried river, scientists said on Tuesday.

    The article goes on to explain the prints are from an early cretaceous dinosaur, as yet unidentified, and that each is 24 inches long.

    Afterwards, the article begins to fall apart, particularly when it concludes with this gemstone:

    Mexican researchers say those prints may have been made by a brontosaurus.

    Seriously? Brontosaurus?!?

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  • Fossil Myths

    The Independent => Fossils: myths, mystery and magic

    Fresh on the heels of Primeval we have this interesting article concerning some of the misconceptions and folklore that sprung up about fossils before we lived in this enlightened age of reason. For example:

    The fossil Protoceratops, which means “first horned face”, was a sheep-sized herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous period (about 100 million years ago), that lived in what is now Mongolia. Protoceratops had a large neck-frill but, unlike later ceratopsians, lacked well-developed horns.

    The folklore Fossilised skulls of this dinosaur with a bird-like beak have been unearthed in the Gobi desert, which is where the myth of the gold-guarding griffin originates – a ferocious beast with the body of a lion, the head and wings of an eagle and talons as big as bull-horns.

    The griffin myth probably originated from the tales of Scythian gold miners who may have come across Protoceratops skulls on the edge of the Altai mountains, in what is now Siberia. The uncanny resemblance between these two creatures suggests that the fossilised skull and bones of the real dinosaur may have been the inspiration for the vivid descriptions of the mythological beast.

    Nowadays, of course, we know better. It’s been decisively proven that fossils are just the remains of animals that God made too big to fit through the door of Noah’s Ark. Silly god, he never could measure to save his life.

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