Grace and Ben

January 24, 2010

New York City recommendations

Filed under: Dining Out, Travel — Grace @ 12:39 pm

We made our first trip to NYC recently. We had a wonderful weekend and want to review a few of the restaurants and services we used.

nyc

(View of downtown Manhattan from the Brooklyn Bridge at sunset. Click on the photo for more NYC pics.)

Neighborhoods frequented:

West Village (three days): just south of Meat Packing District and Chelsea.  Quaint European-style residential area from which one can walk north to Central Park in an hour, south to financial district (WTC) in 30 minutes, or east across Manhattan through Greenwich Village (also European) to the lower east side (which we didn’t have time to explore) and Chinatown in 45 minutes.

Flushing-Main Street (one day): Flushing is supposedly the most diverse neighborhood in the country…the Main Street stop on the 7 train is the center of the Asian sub-neighborhood.  Quick subway ride into Manhattan.

Accommodations:

Jane Hotel: Grace Excellent price for the location. We paid $79/night for a single bed. Shared bathroom and shower.Internet was fast and rooms were clean and quiet, but poorly ventilated. We had to turn on the A/C to offset the very warm radiator heat that we couldn’t control. Nonetheless, for the location, it was worth a little bit of discomfort. We walked all over the city and felt very safe and comfortable in the West Village neighborhood. Ben It felt like a luxury college dorm. Excellent lounge downstairs.

Lexington Marco Hotel in Flushing, Queens: Grace Didn’t like the immediate neighborhood, however, the Main Street area was very “authentic” and bustling on a Friday mid-morning (it is the third busiest intersection in NYC); >95% Asian people. Ben We enjoyed some steamed pork-filled buns and scallion pancakes purchased from street vendors ($5 total) in downtown Flushing.  Perhaps a little unsafe after dark if you go the wrong direction from the hotel.  The rooms were large and clean and the staff were friendly. A good deal if you need to stay near La Guardia ($99/night for a king non-smoking room with WiFi).

Sites:

Brooklyn Bridge: Grace Didn’t know that there was a pedestrian walkway on the bridge. Thanks for the tip, Joyce! It was beautiful at sunset, but difficult to find the “on ramp” to the pedestrian walkway (hint: it is also where the cars get on…there is no stairway access).

High Line Park: Grace Awesome modern park that just opened on abandoned elevated train tracks. Love the architecture and use of abandoned railroad tracks as a (long) walking path and outdoor space. Great views of the meat-packing district and architecture in Chelsea. Ben This was an expensive undertaking.  The coolest park I have ever been to.

Chelsea Market: Another favorite.

Metropolitan Museum of Art: Grace A little overwhelming. Too too much to see in one day or even one lifetime. Contains a number of very historically important works of art. We didn’t have the energy to visit the sculpture areas and missed much of the anthropological exhibits.

Museum of Modern Art: Grace Awesome contemporary art; also overwhelming. Expecting to see lots of Monet and Van Gogh (late 1800s, early 1900s), but there were plenty of works by living artists. It was very crowded on a rainy Sunday afternoon, but we still enjoyed the works by Kandinsky, Pollack, Chagall.

Restaurants:

General thoughts: Ben Compared to Chicago, the food is cheaper, drinks more expensive, and service is generally much better (in terms of quantity or quality, sometimes both).  The sheer quantity of restaurants is amazing.  It seems like everyone eats out in New York.  Food is healthier and people are thinner.  Chicago is more about finding gems, whereas with a little research, we felt like every place in New York was a gem…more likely, the standard is just higher.

Spicy Tasty restaurant in Flushing Queens: Grace Service was good, but I’ve better Chinese food; too spicy. I think I just don’t like the mah la Szechuan flavors. (Ben) Service was bad but that the food was very good, and just right spice-wise.  The four dishes we sampled presented a surprising variety of textures and flavors.

Perry Street: Ben Though probably full of wealthy locals and foodie tourists (celebrity chef alert) for dinner, the brunch menu was an amazing deal. Found the decor nice in its minimalism, bordering on sterile, and thought service was low quality, but the quantity of robots waiters made up for that.  Very yuppie crowd.  The austerity seemed to be intentional…the food was the star here.  I enjoyed the amuse bouche, my “house-made burrata” with Cranberry jelly, and my house-cured Salmon benedict (best benedict he’s ever had), and his desserts.  Enjoyed Grace’s dishes (cod and salmon, both cooked perfectly).  This place has a Michelin star. Grace Felt like a princess eating at such a fancy restaurant (with 5 people waiting on me and watching my every move. It reminded me of eating at Tru in Chicago, but for about 1/4 of the price).

Wallse: Grace Really, really liked this Austrian restaurant for brunch. Hope we can go back for dinner someday. Has a strange fetish for German (and now Austrian) food. I enjoyed my weinerschnitzel (country-fried pork chop). The service was very friendly, personable, and down-to-earth. Ben Enjoyed my rabbit spaetzle. When we ordered our food, the waiter interjected his recommendations. A single waiter did the job of three Perry Street waiters.  We felt more comfortable here than at Perry Street, with the home-y atmosphere.  Certainly not as good of a value as Perry Street.  Not sure how this place earned its Michelin star.  The food is home-style Austrian.  We got much less food, fewer drinks, five less waiters, and less overhead cost, yet it was more expensive than Perry Street!  It wouldn’t make more sense to go back here before we go back to Perry Street, but I think we both probably would.  Is it just the charm?  Austrian food is nothing to write home about.  The menu is also thin and random.  Too many mixed drink options.

Joseph Leonard: Grace Excellent experience from the moment we walked in the door until we walked out. The food was thoughtfully prepared with fresh, seasonal ingredients and the staff were young, hip and helpful. It felt like we were in a “real” New York neighborhood restaurant. This is a place where we would eat regularly if we lived in NYC and had a decent income (or no kitchen, which seems somewhat common in that city). Ben Like a combination of our favorite Chicago restaurants (Mado+Publican+Paramount Room). Tiny space, real positive festive vibe created by the staff.  Thanks, “Tables for Two.”  If I lived here, this is where I would take guests, at 5:30 PM, because it gets busy!  Every dish was excellent.

Co.: Grace Tasty, well-priced pizza place. Good for a nice dinner. Our favorite part was the video of some burning logs projected on the wall. I thought it was just a generic video of a fireplace (like the screensaver on someone’s computer). Ben Thought it was a real-time video feed of their wood-burning oven. Enjoyed the wine selection.  Like Perry Street, this place had a huge staff.

January 22, 2010

A new quinoa recipe for you

Filed under: Baltimore, Dining In — Grace @ 6:23 pm

This recipe is from All-Recipes.com. I like it because it doesn’t require many fresh vegetables (which are hard to keep around in my kitchen). Just onion and garlic. Everything else is non-perishable.

final product

Spiced quinoa

Ingredients:
1 Tbsp olive oil
1/2 onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1 tsp curry powder (can be omitted, but i like the smell)
1 tsp cumin
1/4 tsp cinnamon
3/4 cup quinoa
1 1/2 cup vegetable stock
1/2 cup raisins soaked in hot water for 5-10 min before using in dish
1/2 cup pinenuts, toasted before using in dish (see photo)–beware pinenuts cost $8 for a handful. must have been a very bad harvest this year. I omitted this ingredient the first time I made this dish and it tasted just fine.
1 can garbanzo beans (my favorite!!!), rinsed and drained

1. Saute onions and garlic in olive oil in a saucepan. Add quinoa, salt, pepper, curry powder, cumin and cinnamon. Then add vegetable stock.
2. Bring to a boil, then simmer for 20 min.
3. Mix raisins, garbanzo beans and pinenuts into the quinoa. Enjoy!

January 9, 2010

Treasures at Trader Joe’s

Filed under: Baltimore — Grace @ 5:39 pm

I ventured out to Trader Joe’s in Towson, MD this afternoon. This store is located inside of a big shopping mall so I took the opportunity to buy myself two shirts from United Colors of Benetton and a small t-shirt for Ben from J Crew. Here are a few of the treasures I found at Trader Joe’s.

January 8, 2010

It’s a mystery to me

Filed under: Baltimore, Dining In — Grace @ 7:57 pm

How can a dish that contains no butter taste so buttery and delicious?

I cooked braised lentils tonight, adapted from a “Braised French Lentils” recipe found in Annie Sommerville’s cookbook Everyday Greens.  Somehow, through this French-inspired cooking process, my lentils began to taste like smooth butter! How is that possible?

Here’s the recipe for you to try and discover the secret to its buttery richness:
lentils
Ingredients
2 Tbsp olive oil
1/2 yellow onion, diced
1 tsp minced garlic, minced
1 medium carrot, diced
1 celery stalk, diced
1/2 cup red wine (very important!)
1 cup lentils (plain old cheap green lentils from Eddie’s supermarket)
4 cups cold water
1 bay leaf
2 sprigs fresh thyme
3 fresh sage leaves (maybe this is the source of my buttery flavor?)
salt and pepper

Instructions:
1. Heat oil in a large pot. Add onions, 1/4 tsp salt, pinch of pepper and cook over medium heat until onions soften (3-4 min). Add garlic, vegetables, 1/4 tsp salt and pinch of pepper and cook until tender (5 min).
2. Pour in the wine and cook until the pan is nearly dry (4 min)–this step is critical!
3. Add lentils, water, bay leaf and herbs and simmer until beans are completely tender, but still hold their shape (45 minutes). Taste and add more salt and pepper if desired. Remove bay leaf and bare thyme sprigs and serve.

January 7, 2010

Bittman Bread

Filed under: Baltimore, Dining In — Grace @ 7:20 pm

Don’t try to bake a whole wheat yeast bread without a breadmaker. Make Bittman bread instead.

I learned this lesson last weekend as I tried to knead my very hard dough. It was painful and I sweated a lot (and had to wear high-heeled clogs so I would be tall enough to knead my bread at my kitchen counter). Today, I made a bread from a recipe published in the New York Times by Mark Bittman. It was much easier and tastier. I made a slight alteration to the recipe by not using corn meal and increasing the wheat flour content. The quickbread is delicious!


Bittman Bread

Ingredients:
PAM for greasing breadpan
2 cups buttermilk ($0.99 at Giant supermarket)
3 cups of whole wheat flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup molasses

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 325 deg F. Grease loaf pan with PAM.
2. Mix together dry ingredients (flour, salt, soda). Stir molasses into buttermilk. Add liquid ingredients into dry ingredients and stir to combine (just until flour is not powdery on bottom of bowl–has a very dry consistency). Pour into baking pan.
3. Bake for 45 minutes (until toothpick comes out clean). Cool on rack for 15 minutes. Then enjoy (I had raspberry jam with mine!)

January 2, 2010

Culinary success

Filed under: Baltimore, Dining In — Grace @ 7:51 pm

I tried a new recipe today. It was nice to cook again. I haven’t cooked much since before Christmas. I ate lots of delicious midwestern cuisine (turkey, ham, sweet potato pie, rice pudding, green bean casserole) in La Crosse. When Ben and I were in Chicago, we tried banh mi (Vietnamese sandwiches) at the new French market in Ogilvie and we ate amazing tacos at Paul Kahan’s new joint Big Star, followed by a nice dessert of wines/champagne/cheese/cake at Volo. Anyways, onto my new recipe. It was an adaptation of a meat-containing recipe in allrecipes.com but I eliminated the meat and substituted brown rice for white rice (which prolonged the cooking time, but tastes amazing!).

rice_beans_chickpeas

Middle Eastern Rice with Black Beans and Chickpeas

Ingredients:
1 tbsp olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
1 cup uncooked brown rice
2 tsp ground cumin
2 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp ground tumeric
1/4 tsp ground cayenne pepper
2 cups veggie stock (I made from scratch)
3 cups garbanzo beans (equal to about 2 cans), drained and rinsed
1 cup black beans (I made from scratch)
1 bunch chopped fresh cilantro
1 bunch chopped fresh parsley
salt and pepper to taste
Directions:
1. Heat olive oil in saucepan over medium heat. Stir in garlic and cook for 1 minute. Stir in rice, cumin, coriander, tumeric and cayenne pepper. Cook and stir for 2 minutes, then pour in veggie stock. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for 1 hour.
2. Gently mix garbanzo beans, black beans, cilantro and parsley into the cooked rice. Season with salt and pepper.

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