Poco-Cocoa

Things & Stuff

  • Tasting Austin: Fino for lunch

    We already know that I love Fino. What we didn’t know was that I love Fino for lunch! Last week my coworkers took me there for my birthday lunch, and oh, but it was fabulous. Seriously, if I could, I’d eat at Fino and Asti for lunch every week.

    And now I’m REALLY excited because Fino is now doing brunch on Sundays… fresh tomato bloody Marys, mimosas with orange, grapefruit, or pomegranate juice, made-to-order doughnuts, steak and eggs… I can’t wait to try it out.

    But back to lunch. Feast your eyes on this goodness:

    nicoise salad

    Nicoise salad with tuna, spinach, haricot verts, potatoes, egg, white anchovy, fried capers and Nicoise olives…

    olives

    Fried anchovy stuffed olives and chorizo stuffed mushrooms…

    beef and pita

    Beef pinchitos with tzatziki and pita…

    sliders

    Merguez sliders with manchego cheese and caramelized onion…

    pizza fattoush

    Pizzetta with fried egg (I was coveting this pizza… I’ll definitely order it next time), and my fattoush salad with beets, pistachios, watercress, cucumber and crispy bread…

    semifreddo

    And for my birthday dessert, my beloved strawberry semifreddo with rosewater coulis and pistachio tuille.

    Not pictured is my fantabulously delicious celery root bisque and Justin’s gazpacho.

    I think lunch should be this fabulous every day. 🙂

    April 9, 2009
    Austin, Edibles
  • Tasting Austin: Trio Happy Hour

    A few evenings ago, I attended the media/food blogger happy hour at Trio. I had never been there before, and I’m happy to say that now I’d love to go back!

    The space is beautiful… of course, you can’t really go wrong in the Four Seasons Hotel. My favorite part was the patio, overlooking Ladybird Lake and furnished with comfy couches and tables. If it weren’t for the mosquitos, it would have been perfect.

    The service was impeccable… Chef de Cuisine Todd Duplechan and Sommelier Mark Sayre were on hand the entire evening to make recommendations, answer questions, and chat about food and wine. There were waitstaff everywhere, making sure glasses were filled and plates were cleared. I don’t know whether our fabulous service was simply because it was a media event, but I’m willing to give it another shot on my own.

    Did I mention that during happy hour, the appetizers and wines are half-off? I think normally I might balk at a $15 tuna tartare, or a $19 glass of champagne. But at half-off? Give me one of everything on the menu!

    And actually, that’s exactly what the staff did. We tried every appetizer, several wines, and several desserts. I was amazed at how generous the restaurant was.

    Here’s a run-through of what we tasted:

    Oh, disclaimer: I forgot my camera. 🙁 So these photos are from my iphone, and they don’t do the food justice.

    oysters

    Baked gulf oysters with shrimp, bacon and shoestring potato. Very bacony, very good.

    beef sashimi

    Seared beef sashimi with fava beans and glass noodles. This had a great flavor to it, and was a bit spicy.

    tuna tartare

    Tuna tartare with avocado and soy lime vinaigrette. I LOVED this one… it was served with the long crackers that are pictured below. In my book, you can’t go wrong with sesame oil and lime. Or avocado. Or raw tuna.

    ribs

    Garam-masala rubbed pork ribs with muscat grape gastrique. The chef actually bought a piglet, and it was fed nothing but pecans until it was slaughtered. I really wanted to see if that made a difference in the flavor of the pork, but the ribs were pretty spicy and seasoned, so that nuance was lost. They were still really good though, and really tender.

    mussels

    Mussels with blue cheese, prosciutto and riesling broth. Mussels aren’t my favorite thing… they taste too… mossy somehow. But paired with chunks of prosciutto? Perfect.

    croquettes

    Smoked shrimp croquettes with green mango puree, fennel and pickled sugar plums. Now these were good. The smokiness of the shrimp was lovely, they were perfectly fried – not too oily, and the pickled sugar plums really sealed the deal.

    fondue

    Crab fondue with herb bruschetta. My first thought was that the fondue was really bland, but I think that is only in comparison to the spicy flavors of the other appetizers we were enjoying. Eaten on its own with the bruschetta, it had great subtle flavors. I think I wanted the fondue to be a bit thicker… it seemed more like a thin bechamel.

    cheese

    Texas cheese plate. Oh, how I love cheese. I wish I could remember which dairies were featured here, but I only remember that we tried (from top to bottom), a Bosque blue, a taleggio-like cheese that got all soft and creamy as it lowered in temperature, a fabulous queso fresco with epazote, and a goat cheese wrapped in hoja santa.

    There were also truffle fries that I somehow missed, but I heard they were good (and rich). I also didn’t get a photo of the lamb sliders with tzatziki and cumin. These were really tasty, but my favorite part was the bread. Todd used eggy potato bread to try to replicate that school-cafeteria soft roll goodness from his youth.

    Also missing from the photos was the chipotle cheddar mac-n-cheese. I know I’m weird, but chipotle is not my favorite chile. Still, these were tasty, and I was pleasantly surprised at the texture of the macaroni… it was still al dente, unlike most gooey mushy mac-n-cheeses I’ve had.

    I was really happy with the wine list, but I think having Mark nearby to walk me through it made it even better. I had a glass of the Gilbert Picq Chablis, which was so smooth and so silvery. (I love wine, but my wine vocabulary is nonexistent… I often describe wine as tasting velvety or jumpy or something odd.) I also tried a glass of the Palacios Remondo Rioja Crianza, which was smoky and delicious. I took a whiff and told my friend, “it smells like fireworks!” Yep, I’m weird like that.

    I was really happy with all of the food, but I have to say that I was REALLY happy with the desserts. Unfortunately, I didn’t write anything down or get photos, but seriously, they were good. There was a blackberry napoleon with a tiny macaroon on top, a flourless chocolate cake with salted caramel ice cream, a warm chocolate bread pudding with chocolate foam, and an amazing peanut butter-chocolate crunch with liquid grape jelly and a milk shooter. They were inventive and fun, and all of them tasted wonderful.

    Aaaah, happy hour. With such great wines and foods, it really is happy.

    April 8, 2009
    Austin, Edibles
  • So tired…

    I don’t know how it’s possible for me to still be tired, even after I took a nap this afternoon. But somehow I am. 

    Yesterday morning we drove up to Dallas to spend the day shopping at Canton Trade Days with my family. It. Was. Exhausting. That place is huge, and overstimulating, and overwhelming, and overflowing with junk. We did find some good junk, though… a vintage bottle opener and a match safe for our kitchen, a vintage radio, a vintage ice crusher, and some old vinyl (Willie Nelson! James Taylor! Jackson 5!). It was also my worst food day EVER… from Polish sausage on a bun to peanut M&Ms, from Cheetos to chicken-fried chicken. I am seriously craving some veggies right now. 

    We drove back to Austin this morning, and oh, it’s so good be home! I love our little city, our green trees, our friendly people, our wonderful restaurants. And our gorgeous, happy little kitties. 

    I hope to have some interesting foodstuffs to blog about soon, but tonight, all I can think about is sleep. So it’s off to bed for me. 

    Have a great week!

    April 5, 2009
    Random Thoughts
  • Happy my birthday!

    I had the BEST birthday ever this year. But hopefully I’ll be able to say that every year…

    It started on Saturday, with margaritas and fun at Cuatro’s. So many of my friends came, and we chatted and laughed and drank margaritas all afternoon.

    On Monday (my actual birthday), my coworkers took me to lunch at Fino. I’ll have to post photos of that soon… it was delicious! I’ve been there many times, but never for lunch; it’s such a great lunch spot. I had the fattoush salad and the celery root bisque. And the strawberry semifreddo for dessert. So yummy. And my friends at work gave me a gift card to Barnes & Noble (they know me so well). Plus my parents and Justin’s parents sent birthday moolah.

    And THEN, on Monday evening, Justin gave me my birthday present: dinner at Uchi with the omakase tasting menu. Wow. Just… wow. We started with glasses of Veuve Cliquot champagne (only the best for my birthday!), and continued with tasting after tasting. I had a couple of glasses of JJ Vincent Bourgogne Blanc, and Justin had a couple of glasses of cold hoyo genji “shining prince” junmai sake (described on the menu as well-rounded with hints of fresh almonds and hazelnuts).

    I don’t remember what tastings came when during the evening, but we had:

    • An amuse-bouche of jellied yuzu… I don’t remember what else was on it but it was so bright and light
    • The uchi salad – tiny glasses of small leaves of romaine lettuce sprinkled with puffed rice and panko crumbs, and served with an edamame dressing
    • Nigiri, with black bass and lemon zest, tuna and ginger, and aji and wasabi
    • Usage foie – a roasted rabbit and foie gras cake with mustard seeds and kyoho grapes and a creamy tofu sauce
    • Machi cure – maplewood-smoked baby yellowtail wtih yucca chips, asian pear, marcona almonds and garlic brittle; you piled everything on top of the yuca chips to eat it
    • Ho-o shipo shita (which our waitress referred to as tongue-in-cheek) – beef cheek, tail and tongue cooked sous vide, a slow-poached egg (it was just the yolk, perfectly runny! I have no idea how they did that), red and green leaf lettuce, and Korean pepper
    • Hotate tataki – seared diver scallops with watermelon radish, parlsey and heirloom yellow tomatoes
    • Shun no sakana – pan-seared black bass with shishito (pepper), citrus juices and Japanese cucumber
    • Omaaru ebi – Maine lobster with red radish, honeydew melon, fresh basil and jalapeno
    • Hirame usuzukuri – thinly sliced raw flounder with smoked sea salt, yuzu zest, daikon radish and fried quinoa (which they called “quinoa candy”)
    • Okashi (dessert) – all hazelnut: hazelnut sorbet, hazelnut parfait (creamy outside, hazelnut crunch inside), hazelnut croquant (like a tuille, thin cookie), and hazelnut butter (plus toasted hazelnuts)

    It was amazing. The service was impeccable, the head sushi chef Masa was friendly and talented, and the food! Oh, the food. (Sigh.)

    And last night we had dinner at my friends Brent and Laura’s place, and they made me my own two-tier chocolate cake with chocolate icing. Brent called it “cakewad,” because it wasn’t a perfect two-tier cake (more like a cake mound), but I loved it, because it was smothered in icing.

    Have you ever heard of such a fabulous birthday? I’m so happy to have such wonderful friends and family. I think my 31st year will be a good one.

    April 1, 2009
    Random Thoughts
  • Fish-Rice

    fish-rice

    When I was growing up, I ate fish a few times a year, and it was always on Fridays during Lent. I remember not understanding why we had to eat fish… “but we’re just not supposed to eat meat, so can’t we just have cheese pizza or cheese enchiladas?” For some reason, no, it was a day for fish.

    If we were out of town, we looked for a Long John Silver’s, or a catfish parlor. I tried lots of fish sandwiches from many fast food restaurants, and I ate lots of baked fish plates from Furr’s Cafeteria.

    But sometimes, we ate fish at home. There are two main fish meals that I remember: my dad’s ceviche and my mom’s lemony baked fish with rice. I just called it Fish-Rice. I remember it seemed exotic, because it had mushrooms in it, and we never ate mushrooms. In fact, I’m not sure my mom used mushrooms in anything except this dish.

    So anyway, I got some free tilapia filets at Central Market with one of their coupons, and I decided it was time to make Fish-Rice. My mom’s recipe is hand-written and wonderful; of course I made some adaptations, and I’ve included my recipe below. I love the brightness of the lemon, and the bits of celery and mushroom. I love that it’s a simple casserole with lots of flavor. I love that it reminds me of my mom. Someday soon I’ll need to get my dad’s ceviche recipe, too.

    Mom’s Lemony Baked Fish with Rice

    • 1 pound tilapia fillets
    • 3 tablespoons butter
    • 1 cup diced celery
    • 1/2 small onion, diced
    • 8 ounces white or cremini mushrooms, sliced
    • 3 cups cooked brown rice
    • 1 teaspoon salt
    • 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
    • Freshly ground black pepper
    • 2 tablespoons minced fresh dill
    • Juice and grated zest of 1 large lemon

    Cook celery, onion and mushrooms in butter until softened. Toss with rice and remaining ingredients, except fish.

    Coat a 9 x 12-inch baking dish with cooking spray. Lay fish fillets in one layer in the dish; top with the rice mixture. Cover and bake at 350 degrees F for about 45 minutes, or until fish flakes easily with a fork.

    Makes 4 – 6 servings.

    Source: my mama.

    March 26, 2009
    Food + Drink
    edibles, Olympus Stylus 800, recipes
←Previous Page
1 … 166 167 168 169 170 … 270
Next Page→

© poco-coca