Author Archives: j

santa monica farmers’ market

f/2.8, 1/30 sec, at 6.2mm, 200 ISO, on a Canon PowerShot SD790 IS

for the past 5 years, i’ve pooh-poohed the santa monica wednesday farmers’ market as being expensive and overly crowded and having poor quality produce. which is crazy, because many top chefs shop here and there’s a cookbook featuring many of the farmers who sell their goods here. i attribute my skepticism to my obsessive devotion to the hollywood farmers market. change is hard for me. today, i changed my mind about the SMFM. no, it’s not cheap (although i did get some persian cukes for $2/lb which is rare), but i found some of my favorite vendors and discovered some new ones to which i will return.

for example, burkhart (s side of arizona btwn 3rd and 2nd – most of the good vendors are here) had jujubes today and will have them again for 5-6 weeks. they also had grapes, but i found a new grape vendor – not my hollywood guy – he is scott farms from dinuba, ca. he had 4-5 different varieties and i sampled 1 green and 1 red: the sweet scarlet grapes were firm and not too sweet. i nabbed a few bunches and i also got those tiny green grapes that i love so much – also firm and not too sweet. i tried some red grapes at another vendor, but waaaaayyy too sweet. can’t remember where he was located exactly…but the guy behind the table also works for burkhart.

north of arizona on 2nd is coleman farms. we bought shishito peppers and juliet tomatoes from them last week. i purchased the peppers again today. their smell is so strong they fill my grocery bag with peppery goodness. i can smell them now. too bad the internet isn’t scratch and sniff.

peacock farms, also from dinuba, ca, had early girl tomatoes. i asked if they were dry-farmed but she didn’t know what i was talking about. i bought them anyway. i explained that dry farming is when the roots find their own water source. i failed to mention that this kind of farming makes them way sweeter, but maybe i piqued her interest. if i develop a relationship with this farmer, maybe i can get them to dry farm a crop. :) peacock farms also has lots of great produce – many different kinds in all different colors. i think i will return.

lastly, i found yali pears for $2/lb. that’s significantly cheaper than $4/lb at the ferry plaza in sf. we’ll see just how good/authentic they are.

so, all in all, a successful venture. i only spent $26 and can pretty much guarantee that everything in the picture/on the table will both look beautiful and taste amazing.

and then i spent $80 at sm seafood for my gumbo experiment tonight. which will also, hopefully, be beautiful and amazing.

twitter, schmitter

(not to be confused with facebook, schmacebook.) i just spontaneously decided to make some rice. it may have something to do with our new rice cooker. so easy. so tasty. (who needs twitter when you can just update your own blog? i keep thinking i want to twitter…but just can’t commit yet.)

street – 1st of 99

i was soooo excited to blog last night about our first of 99 restaurants: susan feniger’s street showcasing street food from around the world. then we got rearended on wilshire @ veteran so we got home dazed and sore and today we are still dazed and sore but determined to get on with our lives.

LCR accompanied us on this street food venture. he was a bit skeptical, but we suckered him into it anyway (we seem to be able to drag him along to lots of places). it may have something to do with the fact that he was distracted by his new blackberry (who wouldn’t be? distracted by a blackberry, that is, not necessarily LCR’s new blackberry). sorry, i digress. blackberry does that to me.

we started off with the kaya toast (singaporean; toast w/ coconut jam, soft boiled egg, and soy sauce) and even coconut-hatin LCR thought it was mighty tasty. it was probably my favorite dish.

kaya toast

at the same time, we feasted on the borscht with potato pampushki. the borscht was pretty good. not authentic in my opinion, but the pampushki was tasty and i’m not a big fan of potatoes (but am slowly becoming one, i think, as evidenced by m’s potato, sage, bacon, buttermilk, aged cheddar, chives dish).

borscht + pampushki

next up: the vada dumplings. honestly, i can’t remember what the dumplings tasted like. a little doughnut-y but not sweet. good, but not memorable.

vada dumplings

third wave: the moldavian meatballs. whoa! very tasty. this was my second favorite. full of flavor.

moldavian meatballs

lastly, the entrees: tatsutage chicken (swimming in spicy mayo with a soggy crust, but soba noodles, seaweed, and tofu was good) and the spicy peanut noodles (won’t knock your sox off but will satisfy the peanut noodle craving).

tatsutage chicken

tatsutage chicken

spicy peanut noodles

spicy peanut noodles

as for libation, LCR enjoyed his iced chrysanthemum mint tea and m enjoyed her chocolate/mint/rooibos hot tea concoction.

i am not the best person to report on the desserts as i wasn’t too keen on either the egyptian basbousa cake or the triple layer espresso/chocolate/halva. both too big and too sweet.

basbousa cake

basbousa cake

espresso/chocolate/halva

espresso/chocolate/halva

i suppose this review wouldn’t be complete without mentioning the starter. some places give you beer nuts – not here. we got these puffed, marshmallow-y things. like a rice crispy treat, but with ethnic spices (so probably nothing like a rice krispy treat).

mystery starter dish

bottom line: a fun environment, a couple of winners, we may get the bento box for the hollywood bowl. would like to try the mung bean pancakes and vietnamese corn and turkish doughnuts. SG, of course, would tear this place apart due to its lack of authenticity, but you can’t please everyone, i guess – least of all, picky, picky, and more picky SG.

eatatstreet.com | 742 N. Highland Ave. 90038 | 323.203.0500

as for the accident, s**t happens, i guess.

huckleberry’s garden

i’ve been talking about huckleberry a lot lately. the baguette…the brioche…it’s on JG’s 99 list. they focus on sustainable “farming” and local produce. growing your own herbs and produce in planters in your parking lot doesn’t get much more local.

tomatoes!

tomatoes!

more tomatoes!

more tomatoes!

basil!

basil!

even more tomatoes!

even more tomatoes!

if i keep this up, i am going to get pudgy

(is that how you spell pudgy? pudgie? pudgee?) we have been eating phenomenal food and we haven’t even started on a single one of JG’s 99. last night, was photo session #2 with baby G and another opportunity for an ALMRAM.M.J culinary expedition. we brought the clam chowder and sungold tomato/persian cuke salad/sticky toffee pudding dessert and RAM presented the steamed artichokes w/ garlic butter, a crusty baguette from tavern and an arugula salad with roasted hazelnuts, nectarines, figs, plums and cheese.

tonight, we had KL + MC over for hamburgers (3 lbs for 4 people; 80/20; plus 1/2 lb of sauteed bacon and a splash of olive oil and chile pepper flakes) with a carmelized red onion/orange/raspberry/jalapeno spread and wilted watercress and avocado and FM tomatoes, grilled brioche bread from huckleberry, grilled shishito peppers (with a touch of sesame chili oil), maitake mushrooms (grilled in foil with butter and garlic), a fabulous salad with baby lettuces, sungold tomatoes, raspberries, and italian sweet peppers, and ciao bella sorbet (blood orange) and gelato (chocolate hazelnut). we didn’t even get to the salad… i ate my whole burger, half the shishito peppers, 1/3 of the mushrooms, 1/2 a cup each of gelato and sorbet and a cup of coffee. and earlier today, i had a BBQ pulled pork sandwich @ cafe zella, a salad, and a whole bunch of watermelon.

like i said, if i keep this up, i am going to get pudgy.

OMG! best. clam. chowder. ever.

disclaimer: i don’t even like clam chowder. i’ve probably only eaten it 3 times (and i don’t remember the 1st time). my honey made fish stock from scratch yesterday. it permeated the apartment and m was skeptical but it smelled amazing. it was a beautiful combination of leek, shrimp, fish bones, carrots, celery, and lots of cooking love from m. that’s why no one makes stuff that tastes like hers. this morning, i scooped out 1/3 cup, salted it, microwaved it and *devoured* it. it was so rich and didn’t have any congealed fat.

since the broth garnered my approval, m decided to make clam chowder from scratch. we bought the oysters from our neighborhood fish market, gathered the other ingredients from our neighborhood market, bought a crusty baguette from our neighborhood bakery/cafe, and i wiped both of our bowls clean with 3 pieces of bread. mmmm. mmmm. good. see for yourself:

broth

broth

clams

clams

chowder sans clams

chowder sans clams

final product

final product

food!!!

between moving into a new neighborhood, restaurant.com having a massive sale on gift certificates for $1 (that are worth $25), and jonathan gold’s 99 essential LA restaurants (we are planning on going to all 99 in 365 days)…we may never eat at home again (which is too bad, since we also just finished pimping our ride – i mean our kitchen).

asahi ramen

more food! don’t feel like cooking in our tiny kitchen. interested in going out to all the places on the westside that i’ve always wanted to try. i really liked the noodles. hard. salty. better than ramen-ya. i had the shio ramen and m had the tanmen ramen w/ pork. her broth was waaaay good: rich, opaque, full-bodied. my broth was also good, but lacked the depth that hers had. my chashu was better, though. don’t forget that it’s closed on thursday. every time we’ve tried to go here, it’s either packed w/ 8 people standing outside or it’s thursday.

i’m still in love with tonkatsu ramen and shin sen gumi and daikokuya rock my ramen world. but it’s nice to know that i can get my ramen fix without crossing the 405. not crossing the 405 – that’s really what it means to be a westsider.

http://www.asahiramen.com | 2027 sawtelle 90025 | 310.479.2231