Chez Fongga

October 24, 2008

Culinarium CSA Week 4

Filed under: Foodicus and I — Tags: , , — fongga @ 21:58 pm

Just a note before I go on, this is actually week 19 for the CSA, but my week 4.  Just in case there was any confusion.  The first shot is partially prepped since it was a late night and I realized I had not taken an image until I was almost finished.

LARGE:
1 bunch long beets- tops didn’t look appetizing, but interesting shape
1 pc. Acorn squash
1 x 10 oz. Bunch swiss chard- the leaves are really crisp
1 qt all red potato- when cut open, the flesh is pink, really nice.
1 bunch carrot
2 pc. sweet onion, candy
2 lrg pc. / 4 sm. pc. Garlic
1 x 8 – 10 oz. Bunch collards
2 pc. Sweet bell pepper
1 pc. Cauliflower-fresh and really bright toned.

So there are two shots for this week, since I had to pick up the share in two parts.  I had arrived with my box and I was directed to a set of boxes that was suppose to be the large share.  I should have noticed that the box I was working with was white and smaller than another set of brown and slightly larger boxes beneath.  In any case, I filled up my box and didn’t check the list till I had stopped at school.  Turns out I was missing the collard greens, cauliflower, and peppers.  So I called the store, and they seemed surprised.  In any case,  there weren’t other options offered, so I went back the next day to pick up the remainders.  I was already going down for a gym class, so it was a short walk over.  However, when I went to pick up the groceries, it was referred to as extra goodies.  I commented that it was more like picking up the remainders.  I’m not sure that was handled properly, since I was inconvenienced to go pick up the rest of the share.  Perhaps an offer to add the items to the next week’s share or some other resolution would have worked out better.  However, given that this whole process is new for them, perhaps they need to work out a resolution process.  However, from this point on, I will have to check each of the shares myself.  Unfortunately I’m starting to feel like a Tier 1 supplier having put a containment program on my tier two supplier. Pink and purple potatoes from CSA share.

October 19, 2008

Culinarium CSA Week 3

Filed under: Foodicus and I — fongga @ 19:01 pm

I picked up my share friday as opposed to thursday, due to time conflicts.

LARGE share:
>Eggplant – 1 lrg / 2 sml pc- received 2 medium sized pieces.  I had to cut off the head of one piece as it was soft and mushy.
>Watermelon- no show
> 2 pc. Head lettuce- received one whole head of roman lettuce instead, lots of washing and drying.
> 1 qt. All blue potato
> 1 bunch beets, red, round-  1.5-2″ dia.  beet tops thin and many leaves not usable

>1 bunch green onion
> Tomato – 2 lrg / 4 sml.  – no show, received a green pepper
> 1 qt sunchokes- looks like ginger root.  should be interesting
> 1 pc. Hubbard squash- 1 piece sphagetti squash substitute

Oct 19 followup-  So I cooked the peppers, eggplant and the blue potatoes in a moussaka recipe from the Joy of Cooking.  The blue potatoes looked cool while I was prepping them, and they turned into a purple yam colour once cooked.  I also tried a piece of the sunchokes which was quite tasty, though subtle.  I’ll be using that with some cooked beets in a root salad for dinner this week while I’m at school.  M suggested it as a nice change from the usual sandwiches I end up eating. Below left is a cross section of the moussaka and the bottom right is a cross section of a blue potato.

October 18, 2008

Mengrai Gourmet Thai Review

Filed under: Foodicus and I — Tags: , , , — fongga @ 10:29 am

Tonight we went to Mengrai for dinner which started at 19:30 and ended at 22:00, 2.5hrs duration.  The meal total was ~$100 for two, including tip and taxes.  It’s a Thai food restaurant located at 82 Ontario street, about a 10min walk east from the Queens subway stop.  The walk there, on Queen street wasn’t bad, though many of the shops were closed, paper covered windows seemed to the the trend now a days.  The staff did tell me of available parking at an auto shop besides the restaurant, but that was full.  Unknown to us, there was a large party happening at Mengrai.

Many of the reviews on line were posted circa 2005.  We figured it should be well established.  There were several doors available to us, so we picked the closest one.  There was a thin curtain between the inside and the outside, so a draft blew into the dining area as we walked in.  Not sure how they deal with this problem in the winter time.  The decor was old stone, apparently an old brewery existed in that local prior to its transformation into a restaurant, with lots of buddha images along the wall.  They also had a large gold Buddha in the middle of the dining floor that seemed to dominate the area.

The menu were a couple of pages long, with a little bio on Sasi, the chef, and two pages, one presenting more regular Thai fare, and the other ‘royal’ cuisine.  Two inserts, representing a $35 and $55 fixe prix dinners were also part of the ordering system.  Several dishes had a transcendent sauce covering it, not sure if that was translation problem, but it seemed oddly out of place.  I ordered the $55 fixe prix, non-vegetarian, dinner and M ordered the an appetizer platter and Andaman King Prawn entree.

The thai iced tea was tasty and sweet, reminded us of the black grass jelly so familiar to our childhoods.  Plus it didn’t hurt that we had a grass jelly drink just the other day.

We were seated by the window, which didn’t have much of a view, but the worse part was that an outside light was glaring directly at me.  It was highly uncomfortable so I rearranged their curtains and blocked the offending light.  The accoustics were also bad at our table, and I kept hearing voices coming from the wall, it was rather creepy.

We probably should have taken notice when a waiter comes by and says, ‘The kitchen is trying their best, please be patient.  Did you want chopsticks?”  We replied okay and yes, but they never came. Perhaps he was too busy schmoozing with the regulars.  Thanks for the warning, after we’ve ordered.  In any case, the appetizers were nice, a cubed seared salmon was very tasty with just the right hint of spiciness.  The 18 herbed beef salad was coarsely  chopped and certainly looked rushed, as pieces of cucumber weren’t even cut through.  The coconut soup was rich and creamy, with 2 pieces of shrimp and lots of mushrooms, perhaps too much.  An avocado king prawn was served.  It stood tall on a pedestal of cucumber, positioned with a bamboo skewer, with cherry tomatoes garnishing the sides.  But unfortunately you couldn’t see any of the colours since it was all covered in a green thick sauce.  It looked almost mouldy from my angle, and I hesitated cutting into it.  The flavour was very tasty, but within 2 minutes the prawn was no more.  I even stretched out the dish by cutting the prawn, cucumber, and cherry tomato halves into tinier pieces

So we sat around and wondered if they were sorely understaffed in the kitchen or they mismanaged their capacity planning.  They obviously cater to large groups, and takeout was still going out the front door, but our dishes still had an ~20min wait in between. they were still accepting walk in customers, and seating people.  More customers were arriving at 20:30-21:00.  Perhaps capacity was opening up in the kitchen.

It did move a little bit faster at the end, perhaps with the push of a waitress, but by that time the damage was already done.  We noticed other tables that were filled before we arrived were still there.  My #54 curry chicken arrived as did the Andaman Bay prawns on sticky rice.  The sticky rice was chewy like a large wad of hardened chewing gum, perhaps too long under the heat lamps/broiler.  My curry chicken was boring in comparison with the other dishes.  The desert was a pumpkin pudding, nicely garnished with blueberries and strawberries, but that couldn’t negate the long wait.  An apology was all we got for waiting.

We walked back on Richmond St. and noticed all the new construction going up, perhaps a much needed revitalization.  As for Mengrai, I still think other restaurants, such as Linda’s is more accessible, and tastier.  However, the food is better and decor worse than Bangkok Garden, from another relative perspective.  So if you want to dine at Mengrai, make sure to ask if there’s a big party occurring at the same time.  And oh, ask NOT to sit by the window.

October 11, 2008

Culinarium CSA Week 2

Filed under: Foodicus and I — Tags: , , — fongga @ 08:53 am

1 qt white shelling bean- shelled out to ~1 cups worth.
3 lb. sack cooking onions- bag of small to medium sized onions 1-3″ dia.
2 pc. Yellow pepper- got three little units
2 pc. Head Lettuce – red stemmed leafy vegetable.  looked a bit like dandelion.
1 pc. Pie pumpkin
2 pc. Delicata squash- green and yellow striped squash
1 qt russet potato- 4 large longish units,
1 bunch turnip- looked good but greens were not edible looking
1 bunch carrot- huge carrots, felt like bugs bunny sized
1 pc. Red cabbage  – this was substituted with regular cabbage I believe

This week’s bounty was friggin heavy, and looked quite plentiful in the box.  I decided to use the usual purple box, instead of the multiple soft bags I had last week.  The walk back to the car seemed longer than I would have guessed (I really need to start hitting the gym more often).  I looked up recipes for the turnip greens, and I supposedly could eat them, but the blotchy yellow and poor finish ultimately changed my mind.  I used to eat beets and toss the tops, and then I saw an episode of Chef at Home, and blammo I was cooking up the tops and now I don’t really enjoy the beets as much anymore.  Go figure.

I also looked up the carrot tops and they are edible too, though in small portions.  I took a bite out of some and the herby taste wasn’t too appealing.  however, I’ll see about storing some in the fridge, since I do end up buying bunches of carrots, tops and all and I’m often looking for some parsley to finish off some dishes.  The majority of the cuttings went to the composter, both my pop’s worms, and my naturemill unit.  I’ll post something about the naturemill unit once we resolved the problems, or I’ll leave the story hanging….especially if I forget to post the followup.

October 17 update-  So we ate the delicata squash, which was excellent, simply washed diced and roasted in the oven.  It certainly did taste more like sweet potato than a squash.  I washed and cut up the russet potatoes to learn that the core was rotted out.  Not sure how that happens, but the outside looked good but the inside was hollow and brown.  There didn’t seem to be any bore marks from the outside.  I forgot to take a picture so no image posted.  The peppers went into M’s shrimp couscous.  The white beans were boiled in salted water and tossed into my servings of couscous.  It was excellent.  It had the texture and taste of hard boiled egg yolks.  The carrots were surprisingly soft, despite it’s size and Flour loved to munch on a piece.

October 10, 2008

Culinarium CSA week 1

Filed under: Foodicus and I — Tags: , , — fongga @ 19:00 pm

I went into Culinarium and had several minutes to spare, so I browsed about and picked up a couple of extra items.  Finally I found the braids of garlic that I’ve been wanting to pick up.  I would recommend locally grown braids since they held up to 11 months last year.  The usual garlic I buy that comes in the 3 or 5 pack normally starts to sprout before I actually finish eating them.  Unfortunately I have this tendency to pick out the center core (cursed Christine Cushing episode where she mentioned the bitter core and of course now I have to take them out)  I think I liked that show more than the current at home variety.  anyway, also picked up more corn, which was really nice, several of them had little catepillars hiding in the ends.  I think this was the first time I came across these little creatures.  Creeped me out while I was prepping them, but I suppose that’s life.  I had cut some corn into a pasta sauce and it was still crunchy 6 hours later in the slow cooker, which was excellent.  I think that made up for the crawly surprise.

I also picked up a box of Margaret’s Crips, a cracker that’s similar to Raincoast Crisps.  It was quite good, and worthy of a buy for those who likes a crispy light snack.

1 qt black shelling beans
2 pc. Heirloom tomato
3 pc. Yellow pepper
1 bunch green onion
1 qt tomatillo
1 qt. Huckleberries
6 oz. Baby cut salad greens – ‘wildfire’
1 pc. Pie pumpkin
3 pc. Sweet corn
1 lrg./2-3 sml Head garlic

This was the first shipment of groceries, and it was quite good.  The more unusual ingredients were the huckleberry and tomatillos.  I made a huckleberry and strawberry pie which was quite yummy.  I found it a nice contrast against the regular blueberry, with a slight bitter finish and berry texture, even after a long bake.  I think this is a berry that I’ll have to keep an eye open for in the future, though this is the first time I’ve ever seen them.  I used the tomatillos, 4 units were damaged, in a lamb vindaloo and it was quite tasty, though I had to offset them with a bit of sugar.  The tomatoes were good, though one piece was over-ripe and had broken open during transport home.  The salad greens were quite tasty, the corn was sweet, and my sister took the black turtle shelling beans and the pumpkin.  Overall I thought the new ingredients were good, but I think perceived value was medium from the initial take home, but increased with the consumption.

Culinarium CSA Test

Filed under: Foodicus and I — Tags: , , — fongga @ 09:22 am

So I went through the entire summer without getting the chance to enjoy the summer farmer markets.  With some longing, i started looking into organic CSA programs that might be available around the Toronto area, without me having to drive 30min plus one way to get my groceries.  I found two, one was organized through a Jewish community church program, Torat Hateva, in partnership with Harvest share.  this of course led me to Plan B organics, but alas this is the end of the CSA program as we enter winter, and they will not be starting signup for 2009 till Feb 2009.

In any case, I was walking towards Il Gelatiere Artgianale Ltd. on Mt. Pleasant Rd and noticed a company, Culinarium,  offering a meat share and csa share program.  Anyway, the meat share program was too big, as I don’t have enough space to store 100lbs of organic, free range, meats, though the average per pound price was really good sitting at ~$8/lb.  Anyway, if you have a freezer and you like beef, make sure to check the meat share program out.

Anyway, they were still accepting stragglers for the 2008 season, which surprisingly will run till Dec. and so I signed up.  I worked out the costs and it’s approximately $33/week of vegetables and so I’m going to document each weeks shipments so that I don’t forget next spring, when I need to decide on the CSA for 2009.

Blog at WordPress.com.