(cross posted on Smorgasblog partner Thrown for a Loop)
Adjusting to life outside of law school is a trying experience. Mainly, this is because the yearlong dichotomy between working and going out gets thrown completely out of whack when the work portion of the week recedes into a neat little 40-hour box. You simply can’t party for the rest of it.
That doesn’t mean you can’t try.
After about a week of trying to balance working and going out in equal measure (about 7 hours per day on each, natch) it starts to wear you down. Where do you go when you’re worn down and can’t make it to the next bar? A diner.
For a few months, I’ve been hearing very nice things about Eleven City Diner, a new supposedly-authentic New York style diner/deli in Chicago’s South Loop. This post was going to be a review of the food we had there on Saturday, but the food, although good, was not as memorable as the highest waiter of all time.
With his hat pulled down to shield his eyes and five days of stubble on his face serving as a testament to his scatterbrained nature, our waiter stood behind the counter where we sat, staring at the soda fountain. Then he went to the touch-screen order-entry device and stared at it for a few minutes. He paced towards us, so we perked up, ready to order and very badly in need of some water. He looked at the people sitting next to us, got distracted by something in the distance above us – my guess is the ceiling fan – then went back to the other side of the counter.
After about 10 more minutes of aimless wandering, he came over to take our order. Our orders were simple. My lunch companion and I were both getting Reubens and soups; one chicken and one matzo ball. The matzo ball order was accepted without trouble, but our space-cadet waiter stumbled on the concept of chicken soup.
“So… you mean you just want, like, the broth?”
“No, I’d like chicken soup.”
“Because all the soup has chicken broth in it… the chicken noodle, the matzo ball, the, ummmm, kreplach…”
“Which one of those soups has the word ‘chicken’ in the name?”
“Whaaaaa?”
…and so on. Eventually, we were able to convey our uncomplicated desires for simple food, and he went on his way, having written nothing down.
Then he came back.
“Ummmm, what did you order again?”
This time, we knew to be very specific about the type of soup we wanted. He hovered around the touch screen for a while, then had a very, very hard time entering in two sandwiches, two soups and two drinks into a machine he supposedly uses all day.
After a wait far briefer than the time it took to get his attention after we sat down, one Reuben arrived, accompanied by a corned beef sandwich. No soup. The chef, who brought it out, was a little stunned by how wrong the order was, apologized and brought back the corned beef. We had to ask him for utensils, since the waiter never brought those either.
The chef spoke to our waiter and then went back to the kitchen. The waiter came to us and had the gall to ask, “what was wrong with the order?”
How about, “it was wrong!” How about, of the four items you punched into the computer, straight off the menu without modifications, you had a 25% success rate in terms of getting us what we wanted. How about, I know the tiles on the wall are interesting to stare at, but we’re hungover and hungry and why don’t you just contemplate the mysteries of the universe at home instead of when your paying customers want their damn Reubens?
Soon, our food came out, but the soup arrived at the same time as the replacement Reuben, which is very, very bad diner/deli style. How do you decide which one gets cold while you eat the other?
All told, the Reuben, despite the inauthentic mass of cheese on top, was darn good.
*
*I ate the pickle before photographing the sandwich.
What was the only time he behaved like an attentive waiter? When the check arrived. Tried as I did to wait for him to get distracted by a drizzle of chocolate syrup on the counter or a bicycle going down the street outside, he focused with laser-like intensity on the check. What reason would I possibly have for stiffing him?
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06Jun
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05Jun
Today’s Haiku:
Lowfat cottage cheese,
your expire date is May.
But that was last year.
Today’s Lunch spot: Java Green for salads, rice bowls, and other veggie stuff. 15 million online reviews can’t be wrong.
Today’s recipe: Lowfat Chinese Eggplant – Really, it can be done. I wouldn’t kid about this.
1 large Eggplant
1 bunch Scallions, sliced
2 Tbsp Hot Szechuan sauce
2 Tbsp teriyaki sauce
1/4 c Cold water
Peel the eggplant and cut into 2-inch thick wedges. Saute in water (or broth if you have the urge) in a non stick pan, turning to cook the wedges evenly for about 3-5 minutes per side, or until they’re tender. Add the scallions. Mix the sauces and water and pour into the pan. Stir, munch. -
02Jun
I went to Andale last night, following a powerful craving for margaritas and the sage advice of the Going Out Gurus. (Also because Cafe Atlantico was closed for the evening. Come back, beloved Cafe Atlantico, provider of delicious conch fritters and famed tequila concoctions, come back!) I’d always meant to go to go Andale, and now I have, and can’t I just discuss my fabulous new sparkly flip-flops or tell funny stories about my dog instead? No? FOOD blog, you say? Fine.
Andale (“Let’s go!” in Spanish) is just okay. I don’t mean “okay” in that well-yesterday-I-dined-at-the-French-Laundry,-where-did-YOU-eat? way; this is coming from a girl who loves the whole spectrum of dining establishments. And Andale, in my opinion, is overrated. The hostess wouldn’t smile or make eye contact, but the waiter was efficient and friendly and knowledgeable, and made lots of recommendations, which we followed. The appetizers were scrumptious (we had the queso fundito con chorizo and totopas con Mariscos…hot little tortillas topped with crabmeat, shrimp, Manchego, and avocado salsa) as were the sides (mashed sweet potatoes, roasted corn puree). But the entrees didn’t live up to the rest of the meal. The pan-seared grouper fillet (with a sauce of toasted pumpkin seeds, garlic, sour cream and serrano chiles) was very nice, but the grilled pork porterhouse chop (in a red mole sauce of Ancho chiles, garlic, Mexican cinnamon and cloves) was dry. The one saving grace that guarantees I will be back? The margaritas are sublime. I had the Blue Agave, and a had a generous sip of the Slow Matador, with raspberry puree…a delicious if slightly disturbing mental image, considering the name and all.
I wonder if they serve huge bowls of mashed sweet potatoes at the bar…. -
02Jun
Thursday night found me with shrimp to use up and a craving for Jaleo-style garlic shrimp. Unfortunately, no one bought me the Jose Andres cookbook for Christmas, despite all my not-so-subtle hints. Instead, I decided to improvise, and came up with this pseudo-Spanish meal:
Garlic Shrimp:
Some shrimp, peeled and deveined
half a lemon
red pepper flakes
a couple crushed garlic cloves
olive oil
cilantro, chopped.
a bit of red onion, chopped
salt and pepper
Sautee red onion, then garlic, in olive oil. Squeeze lemon over shrimp. Toss with salt, pepper and red pepper flakes. Add shrimp – cook until opaque. Add a bit of cilantro, and you’re done.
Paprika-scented potatoes
Red potatoes, cut into small pieces
Olive oil
salt and pepper
paprika (I used Hungarian sweet, b/c it’s what I had)
Smoked garlic (Not sure how hard this is to find – I found it in the big market when visiting Philadelphia).
cilantro, chopped (just a bit).
Toss potatoes with other ingredients, and just a light coating of olive oil. Bake at 400 for about 50 minutes or so.
Spinach and mushrooms in sherry vinegar
Note: What I’d hoped to make was a spinach sautee with pine nuts, as I’d had at Jaleo recentlyr, but I couldn’t find my pine nuts. I improvised with the vinegar, but it was a bit stronger than I’d hoped. Perhaps a bit less (didn’t measure) and some brown sugar?
Some baby spinach
some red onion, chopped
a clove or two of garlic, minced
some mushrooms, chopped
sherry vinegar
Sautee onion for 10-15 min on low, to let out some of the sugars, add garlic, then mushrooms, then spinach. Add a drizzle of sherry vinegar to finish. -
02Jun
Southwest Virginia may not be on you list of must-make weekend trips – yet. But I hope to correct that oversight. Not only is this 5 hr drive worth making for the authentic bluegrass music, but there is some interesting food to try too.
The capital of funky SW VA is Floyd. This small rural town was a mecca of communes and hippies back in the 70’s, and guess what- they’re still there, just older and unreformed (thank goodness). So are the local farmers and proud rednecks. All happily living side by side. This makes for a fun culture which all come together every Friday night at the famous Floyd Country Store This place is not exactly undiscovered, there was a Washington Post article on it not that long ago. The point is that bluegrass and mountain music are alive and well. If you liked Oh Brother Where Art Thou, this is the place.
Anyway enough about the music; where to eat in Floyd is the question. The best Natural Food store in the area is Harvest Moon, a wonderful shop, and above it on the second floor is Over the Moon Bakery and Coffee Shop – a lovely combo café and high-class crafts gallery (it’s that kind of town).
Another cool café is Café Sol – again sharing space with a wonderful imported batik clothing store, Wintersun , and also a small theater also called Café Sol which offers world music. And finally, Black Water Café – above a combo music and bookstore, Notebooks. Not bad – three cool cafés in a town of 431! That’s right, population 431 in 2004.
Older, odder, and even cooler is Oddfella’s Cantina, the original hippy restaurant. Local artists on the wall, natch. This is a full service restaurant with waiters and some great eclectic dining. The accent is on organic local ingredients and they are serious about it, served in recipes with a Tex-Mex /SE Asian slant. Always plenty of veg options. Open for lunch Wed – Sat, Sun brunch is also fine and there is often live music on Thursday or Friday.
Two places for old, authentic country cooking are The Pine Tavern and the Blue Ridge Restaurant. Blue Ridge has a full menu breakfast, lunch and dinner with real home made biscuits, mashed potatoes, sausage gravy, country ham, and homemade pie. The Pine Tavern serves big family-style meals. That’s 2 or 3 meats with sides with big bowls that everyone helps themselves from. Two or three meats means fried chicken, country ham and roast beef with sides – ready? Mashed potatoes, dumplings, green beans, pinto beans, cole slaw, fruit cobbler and home made biscuits. You get all of it. For $12 with three meats, $11 for 2.
The best of these incredibly reasonable family style country restaurants is not in Floyd but about 1/2 hr away. Its called The Homeplace and is definitely, absolutely worth the trip. Catawba, Virginia.
To wash it all down, you can complete your weekend with two good wineries, Chateau Morrisette which has a full, upscale restaurant and Villa Appalachia, which specializes in Italian style wines and is a fun visit too.
There are B and B’s in the area too and did I mention that you are smack on the Blue Ridge Parkway for hiking, biking and camping?
This guest blog is by reformed New Yorker MHF, to whom we really should just give an account. -
01Jun
Last weekend a friend and I decided to try Caribbean Breeze’s new brunch buffet offering. This was my first time at the restaurant. The restaurant is a relatively new Nuevo Latino restaurant with a nice stylish décor in Ballston. Service was good, but bordered on being too attentive at times.
I avoided standard brunch offerings like bacon, sausage, roast beef sliced to order, an omelet station, and scoops of scrambled eggs. I did not try the waffles, although the chocolate sauce, strawberries, and whipped cream looked inviting.
I instead concentrated mostly on the Latin-themed dishes. My favorite items were the chicken empanadas, and I am an empanada fanatic. My friend tried –and enjoyed- a different chicken empanada, which included tomato. The black beans, and the pork tamales were also good. The paella was good, although it did not contain seafood. The potatoes were tasty and flavored with a tomato-based sauce. The salmon was good, although the accompanying pine nut and red pepper salsa was too thin. The teeny portions of creme brulee, rice pudding, and chocolate cake were all surprisingly good, and you can serve yourself as many portions as you need. The creme brulee was flavored with gran marnier.
I was impressed with the brunch, even at $20 per person. Brunch is on Sundays from 10:30am to 3pm. I have not tried their lunch or dinner offerings, so can not vouch for them.
Caribbean Breeze
4100 N. Fairfax Drive, (at Randolph St.)
Arlington, VA 22203 USA
Telephone. 703-812-7997 -
01Jun
Today’s Haiku:
One hundred-ten cals
can’t make up for the limp taste
of a skim latte
Today’s Lunch spot:
Asylum on Sats and Sundays only for Ova, Lacto, Vegan-friendly stuff. If there’s nothing in it, it must be good for you
Today’s recipe: Chilled Strawberry Soup
ZAF is on a cold soup kick, so everyone’s just gonna have to deal with it.
1 quart strawberries, stem tops removed
12 ounces fat-free vanilla yogurt
A pinch of ginger
Juice of 1 orange
4-6 mint leaves
Place ingredients in blender and puree until smooth. Chill and serve with a small dollop of yogurt and a mint sprig as garnish. Feeling un-diet-y? Add a shot of Grand Marnier or sweet champagne.
