tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21970333531432723852024-03-13T17:53:58.905-04:00The Tarnished LadleTim Botta's restaurant reviewsTim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.comBlogger50125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-39881305855691271992012-08-08T16:05:00.001-04:002012-08-08T16:05:28.884-04:00The Arugula Pergola, Part II often visit restaurants on the recommendation of friends or other food critics. In the case of the Arugula Pergola, however, I was compelled to visit because of a warning. I had been receiving a number of anonymous e-mails from close friends in the food community, who told me that although my wide-ranging exploration of the eatery world was commendable, there was one place I should never visit... the Arugula Pergola.
I was told that the building site on which the Perg' was erected had once been the scene of a grisly and brutal crime. This lovely stone-and-timber cuisinery was once a horrifying house of terror. Numerous ghost enthusiasts have told me that the...leftovers,if you will, of this crime's victims were still aromatic in this upscale venue. To enter the Arugula Pergola, I was assured, was to offer my mind as just one more sacrifice to the phantom maniac of Arugula Pergola.
Near the entrance of the restaurant, a woman in her early seventies wearing an orange vest was seated at a card table laid out with cheaply printed flyers and brochures. A banner hung on the table stating, "Beware the curse of the Arugula!" I walked swiftly past her, averting my eyes, though I did drop a few pieces of loose change into the slotted plastic lid on the can she shook like an Eliotian "dead geranium" in my face. The label on the can stated that the purpose was to raise funds for "future victims of the curse," and since I could not be completely sure I would not at some point need some assistance on that end, I let a few pennies plummet to the bottom of the can.
Walking in, I immediately felt a "cold spot." This may have been due to my poor sense of direction's leading me through the kitchen doors and into a walk-in freezer. Have you ever smelled a freezer full of freezer-burn vegetables? Yecch. Not a fan.
When I was rescued from the freezer, I made my way to the hostess station. I see that "hostess" calls up various opportunities for wordplay such as "ghostess" but I will not pursue them. I was led to my table beneath a wagon-wheel chandelier hung with fake cobwebs. The waitron when he finally arrived was dressed like some kind of old-west mortician. Clearly someone had decided to turn the upscale Pergola into some sort of sensationalistic ghost tour. I couldn't have been more disappointed.
"Would you care for any appetizers?" the waitron asked, rather pryingly, in my opinion. "We have a wonder panko-encrusted fried popsicle. It's hauntingly refreshing!" I ordered the popsicle and a glass of kiwi jelly and perused the menu. Apparently the Pergola had "gone electronic," because I was told there were no paper menu's (I know, there's an apostrophe there--I've gone into this ad nauseum)and I was to use the touch screen. I was happily "pinching" the icons (a gesture which makes people look like some annoying combination of magician and symphony conductor) when...
The power went out.
[TO BE CONTINUED]Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-87974813172316516672012-07-18T14:53:00.002-04:002012-07-18T15:06:31.942-04:00Student Driver PizzaA combination driving school/pizza delivery service is one of those high-concept restaurant ideas that can either be ludicrous or laudable. In the case of "Student Driver Pizza," the pendulum is fortunately stuck at fantastic.<br />
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I recently ordered a large pizza, anchovies only, no cheese, from "Student Driver Pizza," and I was pleasantly surprised. First, by the website. While the site did feature grainy black-and-white footage of the aftermaths of auto accidents, it was otherwise user-friendly and fun. Easy to navigate, the site allowed me to order the pizza within seconds, without any tiresome "logging in" or "registering."<br />
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I must admit that the pizza took quite a while to arrive. In fact, when the pizza arrived, I was no longer hungry, having availed myself of whatever leftovers I could assemble into an omelet. I wasn't upset, though--not a bit! Safety first is my motto, in food safety and in driving safety. These are <b>student drivers</b>, remember! They're supposed to drive slow. Slowly.<br />
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The delivery person arrived at the door with a beefy older man in a short-sleeved shirt in tow. He must have been the driving instructor/supervisor. He shepherded the delivery person through the entire process of unzipping the thermal pouch (more important than ever when the driver is a student!), handing me the receipt and pen (which the supervisor kindly uncapped for me--marvelous!) and processing my credit card. The instructor even had his own credit-card machine so he could stop the transaction instantly if the worker made a mistake! The whole operation took only a few minutes, and compared to the six-hour wait I had patiently endured, the time flew by like mere seconds.<br />
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How was the pizza? Well, I must say that I was heartened that "Student Driver Pizza" did not succumb to the temptation of shaping the pizzas like road signs: Stop signs, Yield signs, Merge, Railroad Crossing, and the like. Well, it was shaped like a Railroad Crossing sign, but that was unavoidable in a pizza.<br />
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The pizza tasted wonderful, with a piquant surface of anchovies laid down like hot, salty tar on the concrete-crunchy crust. Amazing! Call me a fan. I not only like them, but I "like" them (you Facebook fanatics will know of what I'm talking about. Of? About? Hmm).<br />
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Overall, then, if you are patient enough to wait for a long delivery time, I believe you will love Student Driver Pizza. What a fabulous service the owners are providing for the youth of today, lending them both employment and needed, practical instruction in the art and craft of operating a motor vehicle. A glance at the company website shows that a new restaurant concept is in the works--Community Service Driving School Pizza, which apparently will combine punitive, community-service style driving lessons with pizza delivery. I for one can't wait!<br />
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For their anchovies, and for their vision, I give Student Driver Pizza--five Green Lights!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-79565378136505409902011-05-20T12:32:00.000-04:002011-05-20T12:32:54.971-04:00Steven Elliot on "Fox and Friends" Discussing the Rare Burger Ban<a href="http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/fox-friends/index.html#/v/951246444001/rare-burgers-on-endangered-list/?playlist_id=86912"> Watch </a>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-63872560585674816602011-05-19T15:54:00.000-04:002011-05-20T12:34:44.321-04:00"North Carolina's Rare Burger Ban Makes Red Meat Illegal (VIDEO)"<a href="http://weirdnews.aol.com/2011/05/17/north-carolina-rare-burger-ban_n_861306.html"> This article </a> on the North Carolina rare burger ban features Steven Elliot's thoughts on the subject.Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-90153600480953817182011-05-19T15:19:00.000-04:002011-05-19T21:29:43.252-04:00"One Rare, Fined"My essay <a href="http://www.rareburger.com/tim-botta.html">"One Rare, Fined"</a> appears at Steven Elliot's <a href="http://www.rareburger.com/"> Rare Burger </a>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-31261388962303455942010-10-01T21:53:00.000-04:002010-10-01T22:25:53.272-04:00Objets CachésThere's nothing puzzling about why Objets Cachés has become one of the hottest restaurants in the region. I dined there last evening and found it a wonderful combination of diabolical puzzles and delicious fare.<br /><br />When you walk into Objets Cachés, you realize the restaurant is well-furnished and entirely empty of guests. Doors open onto a balcony, and a fresh breeze blows in. The furnishings are formal yet home-like. It's seemingly a place that would attract a large post-church crowd. The sandstone fireplace has no fire in it, but it charms nonetheless.<br /><br />The host greets you and hands you a piece of parchment. You look down at it, expecting perhaps a menu or wine list. Instead you see a list of objects:<br /><br />Conch shell, transistor radio, bubble, armadillo, hot-air balloon, ghost, clock, razor, basket, rose, wagon wheel, tongs, extension cord, flame, rug, newspaper, witch, glue pot, shoes, brick, whale, hog, tape dispenser, star, bar of soap, crown, heart, goose, diploma, castle, aardvark, vinyl record, plow, and rabbit.<br /><br />Huh?<br /><br />"This way, please," the host says, leading you past the dark paneling and into a dining room.<br /><br />The dining room is a jumble of clutter. You can't even make your way to your table. It's as though one of those hoarders on television had decided to open up a restaurant.<br /><br />"Is this your first time at Objets?" the host asks. When you state that it is, the host tells you: "Before you are allowed to dine, you must find all the hidden objects on that list. They're all hidden somewhere in the dining room. As you find each one, it will disappear. For example, over there is the bar of soap!" The host points to a bar of soap that has been cunningly camouflaged in the ceiling. A fiery red line races across the phrase "bar of soap" on the parchment and the soap itself vanishes. "When you've found everything, you will be allowed to eat."<br /><br />Now I understand the sign above the entrance to Objets Cachés: HE WHO DOES NOT SOLVE, DOES NOT EAT.<br /><br />He handed the parchment to me and vanished like the bar of soap. I got down to the job of finding these objects, because I was truly hungry. My stomach was growling and I felt light-headed.<br /><br />I pored over the jumble of objects, looking for an armadillo, tape dispenser, hot-air balloon. Try as I might, I was able only to spy those objects which were not on the list: a toy truck, a pack of cards, an oil well, shaving cream, a fence, a croquet mallet, a fish...these popped out at me, but none of them were on the list of hidden objects, and thus none of them were bringing me any closer to my meal. I mumbled the names of objects over and over as my bleary gaze moved around the room, up and down, across and over, the things all blurring together, merging, fading, sharpening tantalizingly into a shape that quickly turned out to be a mirage. No, that isn't an armadillo--it's a roll of aluminum foil! Foiled again!<br /><br />Suddenly, an owl descended from the ceiling. Its eyes were glowing a bright burnt orange. I looked on the list but saw no owl. "Where on earth is the hog?" The owl perched on the back of a hog. Was this owl my helper?<br /><br />The host chuckled as he stepped into the dining room. "I see you've found the owl...when you get truly desperate, ask him for a hint."<br /><br />I became more and more drawn into the game. It was like a case of tunnel vision. The entire universe had shrunken into this game of hidden objects. It became a mania for me. I must find the wagon wheel!<br /><br />More time passed, and I was no closer to my goal. The owl could only do so much. Finally, at the point of giving up, I began to catch on...the objects were not placed logically around the room. The whale may not be in an ocean, but instead may be on top of a globe. The hog needn't be in a pen. Once I comprehended this concept, the game became much easier.<br /><br />It may have been five or six hours later that I finally sat down to my meal. Thankfully, I was able to solve the puzzle before I collapsed of hunger.<br /><br />For my entree, I chose the sand dabs--they were excellent! In fact, I'm still spitting grains of sand from my tongue even now! The wine was outstanding--I don't usually enjoy Wine Floats, but for some reason the scoop of pistachio ice cream floating in Cabernet was marvelous! For dessert, I barely tolerated the Unflavored Custard--I don't recommend it!<br /><br />Overall, my dining experience at Objets Cachés was pleasing, but I perhaps would have enjoyed a less challenging puzzle as an obstacle to satisfying my hunger. Also, I was unimpressed with the dessert.<br /><br />And so, I give Objets Cachés a not entirely enthusiastic Four Armadillos!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-52719980154075802292010-09-24T19:39:00.000-04:002010-09-24T20:47:30.887-04:00Return to the Tarnished LadleAfter posting my review of the abomination that is the Tarnished Ladle, I received an email from the owner. I have received his permission to reproduce this communication here:<br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I've read your review of my place, and I have to admit it--buddy, I just don't get it. Did you go to the real Tarnished Ladle, or did you get disorientated somewhere along the way and wind up at Bowl of Glop or something? I mean, your article has little or no relation to my eatery and what we do here. Your article is comical at best, and somewhat insane. But I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt, and invite you back. I want to show you what the Tarnished Ladle is really about--not the fantasy story that you wrote. So here's what I'm going to do. You come down to the Tarnished Ladle, any day, any time, and I will personally greet you at the door and show you what we do here on a daily basis. I will personally be your host, maitre d', waiter, waitron, server, chef, and dishwasher! And I think you're going to be pleasantly surprised!<br /><br /><span style="font-family:georgia;">I'm sure as you read this e-mail you had the same reaction I did. This communication is nothing more than a thinly veiled (I'm talking see-through) threat. Obviously, the owner--or CEO as he styles himself--of the Tarnished Ladle had a problem with me posting a truthful, accurate review of his establishment. And now he's "inviting" me back. Yeah, he's inviting me back all right. Greet me at the door? That sounds terrifying. Terrifying and menacing. But as always, I will take the supreme risk for you, my readers. And so, here is my full report concerning the RETURN TO THE TARNISHED LADLE.<br /><br />As I pulled my car into the scant parking lot of the Tarnished Ladle, I noticed a beefy guy standing by some traffic cones and a velvet rope. The guy was wearing a weird chauffeur's outfit that didn't fit him in the least and seemed to be made of black vinyl. "Hey!" he bellowed at me. "Hey hey hey hey hey!" Terror gripped my brain as I sat there idling, looking through the windshield at this behemoth as he approached.<br /><br />"Are you the food journalist?" he asked. I nodded. He signaled me to get out of my vehicle. I did so. "Didn't I tell you in my e-mail you were getting full service today? That means...valet parking!" This man, obviously the owner of the Tarnished Ladle, plopped into the driver's seat of my car and pulled it into a parking space stenciled CUSTOMER OF THE CENTURY...AND BEYOND!<br /><br />The owner locked my car door and led me to the entrance of the Tarnished Ladle. "Now do you get that kind of service at Pork Belleez? I think not." The air in the parking lot was palpable with terror and menace. I was aware at every moment that what seemed to be a friendly conciliatory gesture on the part of the owner may have been nothing more than a crude set-up. What would happen to me once I stepped into the lobby of the Tarnished Ladle? Terrifying fantasies oppressed my inner eye as I followed the owner to the hostess station.<br /><br />"What was all that horse hockey about a wax dummy? My hosts and hostesses are lively, vibrant professionals!" The owner jumped behind the lectern. He made a big show of looking over a seating chart then looked up at me as though I had startled him. With false alacrity, he said, "Will you be dining alone, sir? Or have you company?"<br /><br />It's always weird when a Bluto clone like the owner is polite. I mean, I appreciate it, but it's always unexpected. "I'll be dining alone," I muttered bitterly. "We dine alone as we later die alone. It's just a question of one letter's difference," I said.<br /><br />The owner pounded the lectern, guffawing. "Where do you get these gags, Las Vegas? You should put some of that humor in your articles, buddy. Here, walk this way," he said, speaking that last phrase with the kindness people throw into a factual statement when they feel pleased by you because you made them laugh. Shaking his head, the owner walked into the dining room. Amazingly, though not surprisingly, the dining room had completely changed since my last visit.<br /><br />It was exquisite.<br /><br />I can't explain to you how a sordid, shabby, moth-eaten type of diner suddenly becomes transformed into a sparkling, atmospheric, sophisticated eatery. But this transformation happened...seemingly overnight. And I cannot explain it!<br /><br />Almost like a character in some medieval folk tale, the dining room of the Tarnished Ladle went from horrible to wonderful as though with the stroke of a magic basting bulb.<br /><br />The tablecloths, which before were mildewed and put iron bands of terror around the soul, were now bright and laundered, like laundry in some television commercial. The horrid fluorescent lighting had been replaced with jazzy ceramic fixtures, orange-spotted cylinders that created a warm ambiance in the room.<br /><br />"So what do you think?" the owner said. "Cool, huh?"<br /><br />It was certainly a change from my last visit. But this may have simply been a cosmetic operation. Maybe the essence of the Tarnished Ladle was still the same. The only way that I would know would be to taste the food.<br /><br />"Your server will be right with you," the owner stated. He spread his hands out as though balancing and spun around. "I'll be taking care of you this evening," the owner said. "What would you like to drink?"<br /><br />I asked to see the wine list. The owner said, "Let me call in the Wine Cryer."<br /><br />Huh?<br /><br />A man dressed in a tricorne hat with a large lavender artificial feather stuck into it, a coat, and tights, stepped into the room and began shouting out the names of wines from a scroll he'd unrolled. Just to stop him, I chose one of the first wines on the list, an introverted Cabernet.<br /><br />The wine was palatable--potable? I was a bit disturbed when the Wine Cryer informed me that it was available in both Regular and Diet, but I soldiered on and drank it...again, as I remind you, for you!<br /><br />Instead of the clear broth I had last visit, this time I had the Cool Whip soup in a cantaloupe bowl. Fantastic! The owner wasn't kidding--the Tarnished Ladle maybe wasn't as tarnished as it first appeared. It was as though a tarnished ladle had itself been dipped into that liquid they used to advertise on UHF television during the daytime...way back when...when I used to sit spellbound by the antics of the Galloping Gourmet. Rubber chickens are falling from the ceiling!<br /><br />Suddenly, the image of a rubber chicken dropping onto a stove snapped me back to reality. Fear seized my mind in its grip. This had to be an illusion! Nobody could makeover a dump like the Tarnished Ladle in that short a time. Who knows what sort of trickery was working behind the scenes to make the Ladle appear to be an acceptable, even excellent dining establishment.<br /><br />"This can't be real," I murmured to myself, slapping the table over and over. "This just can't be real!" I jumped back from the table. Out-of-tune trumpets shrilled as the room spun and purple polka-dots whirled through the air, ending in a plummeting black-out.<br /><br />* * * * *<br /><br />When I awoke, I looked around me to see that the Tarnished Ladle was once again Tarnished. Perhaps it had only been an illusion, perhaps it had been real but temporary, but the eatery was no longer the Polished Ladle. I creakily rose to my feet. The dining room was empty, and the owner was nowhere to be seen. The eerie aria of the ceramic doll began once more. I had to get out of here. Disoriented, I tried to remember how to get back to the lobby. I took what I thought was the exit, but found myself in a corridor bound on one end by a pair of swinging doors into the kitchen, on the other by a unisex restroom. I made my way through the kitchen--deserted as it happened--and left through the back exit. In the humid, chilly stench of the dumpster area, I stood with pounding heart, wondering what had happened. I knew that I must document everything that happened that night...<br /><br />Well, there you have it. Through some kind of mind control trickery, the owner was able to make me think the Tarnished Ladle was shining like gold. If I were to rate the illusion, I would give it five stars. But since I know now that what I took to be a polished ladle was nothing but a cruel illusion, I must give the Tarnished Ladle a disillusioned...zero cantaloupe bowls.<br /><br /><br /></span><br /><br /></span>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-40695731273511475122010-09-09T15:45:00.001-04:002010-09-09T15:47:56.941-04:00Restaurant to parents...<a href="http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39075518/">"No screaming kids allowed!"</a>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-52821875459724506682010-09-05T20:58:00.000-04:002010-09-05T21:25:36.896-04:00The Tarnished LadleAlthough I was warned repeatedly by various folks not to even consider stepping into the Tarnished Ladle, I had lunch there yesterday afternoon. The Tarnished Ladle rests on a street among depressing furniture stores, cheerful mortuaries, and terrifying ice-cream parlors. The Tarnished Ladle's exterior is old brick and features an electric sign with an animated ladle swinging stutteringly from a 90 degree angle on the right to 180 degrees south and back again, with pulsing permutations in between. I stared at the ladle for a number of hours and then awoke with a start as several patrons brushed past me and through the glass door into the Ladle's lobby, a shoebox-shaped room, poorly ventilated. I remembered my friends' warnings about the eatery, but I decided that they were alarmists and that for the sake of my readership I would press on. I noted the sanitation rating--a disturbing D--and walked into the Ladle.<br /><br />The host stood at a decrepit particle-board lectern. Dressed in a tattered suit of black crepe, he smiled like a wax figure at my arrival. I realized that this would be my last chance to leave the Ladle, but I know that you are counting on me to give you an honest and accurate review of the restaurants in the area...and you need me to eat even at the horrifying places.<br /><br />The funereal old-fashioned soap opera sound of an electric organ throbbed as I followed the host into the dining room. The host found me a seat next to a niche in which stood a very creepy ceramic figurine of some 18th century French person. <br /><br />"Could you do something about creepy doll?" I asked the host. He smiled and pulled down a convenient black shade that completely covered the niche. "Your server will be with you shortly," he said, and tiptoed away.<br /><br />I rubbed my fingers over the stiffened, mildewed surface of the velvet tablecloth. Disgusting! <br /><br />My server arrived.<br /><br />"Evening, sir. I'm Oliver and I will be taking care of you today." As always, that phrase gave me the creeps. Why didn't I listen to my friends? Did I really owe it to my readers to dine in such a horrible eatery? I'd soon find out...<br /><br />Oliver handed me a menu that looked like it had been rescued from a fire. As it crumbled, I searched it for the safest item available. "I'll have the broth," I ordered. "The clear broth. Just hot water," I said, adding a safe temperature to my order.<br /><br />"And to drink?"<br /><br />I requested the wine list and decided on a cobwebby Chardonnay.<br /><br />The server stepped away. Someone was singing an aria, unaccompanied. The sound was coming from the wall. I put my ear against the shade covering the niche and the singing grew louder. The creepy figurine was singing!<br /><br />I didn't dare raise the shade. My sanity could not abide the sight of a ceramic doll vocalizing. When my server reappeared with my glass of wine, I ordered him to somehow stop the figurine from its eerie crooning.<br /><br />"It feeds on your annoyance, Sir," he said. "Just ignore it and it will fade away. I promise you."<br /><br />To put the sound of the figurine's singing out of my mind, I concentrated on the taste of the wine. I put the smudged, chipped glass to my mouth and tasted something that I would happily splash on a salad. It was positively balsamic!<br /><br />Thankfully, the figurine had stopped singing and I waited for my broth to arrive. The terrible sanitation rating was still worrying me, but I hoped that the boiled water would somehow be OK to imbibe. How wrong I was!<br /><br />The broth was tepid and was served in a bowl on the bottom of which was still stuck a sticker stating "Not for Food Use." A bullion cube still in its wrapper floated among little surface-tension puddles of grease on the broth.<br /><br />And for you, dear Reader, I drank a spoonful--one!--of this dreadful broth.<br /><br />In a similar vein of self-sacrifice, I went on to order dessert--a Salted Ice Cube with Piece of String...yes, I ordered dessert and got a magic trick! <br /><br />As I lifted the ice cube to my mouth with the string (attached to the cube by the encrusted salt) I thought of all that I have done for my readers over the years. Do they at all appreciate what I go through for them? <br /><br />I popsicled the salty, frozen cube until all that was left was the string, which I laid carefully next to my soup spoon.<br /><br />I hope that you will be good to me. After all I've done for you...! Eating at places like the Tarnished Ladle, an eatery that I give One Salted Ice Cube!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-51902606542327471542010-08-26T21:00:00.000-04:002010-08-26T21:32:49.066-04:00Diner's RemorseTonight I ate at Diner's Remorse...and yes...I regret it. I ate something I shouldn't have...and now I'm paying the check.<br /><br />What is it about the alluring menu at Diner's Remorse that makes the bitterest pile of ashes look like the sweetest dessert? Their menu designers are geniuses! Evil geniuses, but geniuses nonetheless. Because I ordered...and ordered...and now I am suffering the consequences.<br /><br />I wish I could have back all the wasted time, money, and energy, that I spent tonight at Diner's Remorse. But I never will get them back. And now I am left alone in this bleak diner...contemplating the waste...the utter, irrevocable waste.<br /><br />The waitron was so beguiling. "You have to try our three-tier cocoa salad torte." And like a fool, I ordered the torte. And now the flames of regret lick mockingly at my ankles. <br /><br />Because the glamourous glossy photography of the menu was just an illusion...as the ashes of stark reality clump in my stomach, the realization hits me. I want my money back! I want my time back! I want my energy back!<br /><br />The waitron cackles. All of those things I want back have been greedily absorbed into the infinite maw of Diner's Remorse...and here I sit, depleted. <br /><br />There are no other diners. I am alone. I chased the illusion of the candied poppering pears...and now the walls of the pit rise around me.<br /><br />Ah, yes, I am paying the piper now. A flickering black-and-white television braced against the wall is playing that old TV commercial: "I Can't Believe I Ate the Whole Thing." That is the only thing that TV ever plays in here.<br /><br />I thought that the Artichoke Fries would make me happy. <br /><br />They didn't.<br /><br />And so...I signed away...everything! for what turns out to be a pile of charred charcoal. Or, in other words, charred coal or charcoal. I poke around in the ashes. I try to derive sustenance from the aroma of the smouldering embers. But there is no hope in that. <br /><br />The waitron lied. It's that simple. The waitron told me that the Mint Gelatin Skins were Incredible. And I believed the waitron. And I know the waitron is laughing up its sleeves. <br /><br />What is the decor like in this place? Bleak of course. Tired and wilted and clammy. The linens are clammy. I don't like this place. Fluorescent light like soiled laundry. The stainless steel is stained. <br /><br />I'm going to leave soon.<br /><br />And so, as I cover the remains of my meal with the funeral pall of my napkin, I can only warn you away from this place. But I know you will never believe me. You see only the sizzle...not the stake! <br /><br />I would give this place zero stars if I could. But the code of the Restaurant Critic does not allow for that. Perhaps I will give it five stars...so that you will think the place overrated...and thus avoid it!<br /><br />And so, consumed with remorse, I give Diner's Remorse five heaps of ashes.Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-71303266046580452012010-08-19T18:45:00.000-04:002010-08-19T19:23:08.385-04:00Panica: The Anxiety-Attack PlaceSo the other day I decided to have lunch at Panica, the Anxiety-Attack Place. It's a theme restaurant, and in this case the theme is panic attacks. Interesting, huh? You have to go to a place like Panica in the proper state of mind. I mean, you have to be feeling pretty vulnerable and washed-out and on the verge of a panic attack to even begin to appreciate this eatery. And so I waited till I was tipping over into an anxiety attack before I made my way to Panica.<br /><br />The exterior of the place is meant to induce panic in you from the beginning. If you're looking for a cozy place to dine, Panica is not it. The entrance is imposing and brutal, with gigantic oppressive columns and a blunt stairway. The heart starts rabbiting from the moment you view the building.<br /><br />Inside, everything is conceived to make you jittery. The music is terrible synthesizer-based "new wave" music from the last century. The treble is turned way up and everything sounds tinny and distorted. The music has that annoying "energetic" sound that I despise. I wanted to find the nearest exit, but I had to dine there...so you wouldn't have to. Unless, of course, you're looking for an anxiety-attack theme restaurant, which, judging by how crowded the dining room was (of course!), many others apparently are.<br /><br />The host at his lectern was commited to making you feel nervous. In a fascinating twist, the host was not high-strung and impatient. In fact, his ability to give you a case of the nerves was based on how plodding, molasses slow he was in everything he said and did. In fact, he didn't even acknowledge me for around one to two hours. I stood in the lobby of Panica, feeling more and more clammy by the minute, pummeled by the awful keyboards and drum machines and hyperactive vocals. I walked over to him after the second hour and asked for a table. "I'm sorry, but...well, let me go in the back and see if anything's available." He worked kinks out of his neck as he loped back to the kitchen.<br /><br />Another hour passed. A trap-door of panic opened up. And somehow I suppose the host was able to detect that, because he re-appeared at the moment my anxiety attack was revving up.<br /><br />"This way, sir," he said. I followed him through the press of a dazed, stupefied crowd. My table was full of stains and made me fear some food-borne illness would waft up into my system from its surface. I asked him to clean the table, but somehow the anxiety had lowered the volume and projection of my voice until it became so weak that the host could not hear me. "Your server will be back later tonight. Give him at least three or four hours."<br /><br />When the server finally arrived, I was wringing my hands, passing my hand across my brow, and unconsciously tearing the cloth napkins into shreds. Fears of imminent madness or sudden death pierced my mind. The waiter arrived.<br /><br />"Would you like a large coffee with a shot of adrenaline?" the server asked.<br /><br />The waitron left for the coffee and I perused the menu. The print was extremely small, and it was difficult to read with the hysterical eyestrain I was presently suffering from. The descriptions of the dishes made no sense and confused me. Try as I might, the words wouldn't connect. When the server returned, around an hour later, I was weak with hunger and anxiety.<br /><br />"Anything look good?" the server said.<br /><br />"What would you suggest?" I asked. Again, my voice was extremely weak and the waitron couldn't hear me. I raised my voice...which took great effort. "What's good?"<br /><br />The server said, "You'll love the bottomless bowl of creamed corn."<br /><br />Bottomless. As in...bottomless pit. The panic escalated when I heard the word bottomless and thought of what it meant...THE ABYSS.<br /><br />The creamed corn was flavorful, not too salty or runny, and had some exceedingly large kernels, which I thought was a generous touch on the part of the chef. I usually enjoy my creamed corn hot instead of tepid, but otherwise the dish was excellent.<br /><br />The panic subsiding, I asked for the dessert menu. "Ah," said the waitron, "you've ridden out another panic attack! Now you get your prize!"<br /><br />The Panic-Lover's Blondie was crisp and tangy. By the time I finished it, the anxiety attack had been replaced by a feeling of calm and relief...just the sort of mood to accompany an excellent fried dessert.<br /><br />Overall, Panica delivers what it promises--adventurous cuisine in a nerve-shattering ambience. If you like a little anxiety with your creamed corn, Panica is the place for you. And so, I hyperventilatingly award Panica Five Brown Paper Bags!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-70770326142620832652010-07-28T11:58:00.000-04:002010-07-28T12:12:19.380-04:00Early Food Writing (1979): Description of a giant hamburger from "The Adventures of Buzzie and Poindexter"I recently came across a notebook containing "The Adventures of Buzzie and Poindexter," a work of fiction which I wrote when I was 13 years old. Here's an excerpt, a description of a giant hamburger:<br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I stood in awe of the burger's great height: 20,000 feet! And oh, the tons of American cheese gently dripping from the sides like moss on a tree, gently strewn by gentle hands, like tinsel, or garland draping the yuletide fir! And the sesame seeds! Sprinkled like golden tears of joy, round and crisp, yet ovoid and soft! Filled with a soft greasy yet light fluid, covered with a shell as strong as it is weak! Yes, the sesame seed is a seed of contradictions! Sprinkled gaily, as if by a sprite tossing rose petals in an enchanted forest, on a lightly toasted yet crunchy and satisfied bun! Strong and husky, but still giving way to the long, loving, firm, never failing teeth of yours and my mouth! And, oh, the pickles! Yecch! But, ah, there is the lettuce! Crisp, clean, cool, wet, strong lettue! And the two all-beef, <em>all</em> beef, mind you, patties. Yummy pieces of dead cow!</span>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-44000177305781612472010-07-25T20:28:00.000-04:002010-07-25T21:37:21.040-04:00The Game Show DinerAs theme restaurants go, The Game Show Diner is one of my all-time favorites. Imagine...a 1970's game show set. The marquee bulbs. The 1974 colors. The sparkly sculptures, smooth abstract shapes. Yes--that's the decor of the Game Show Diner. What could be better?<br /><br />The other day, I had lunch at the Game Show Diner, and I was impressed--as usual. The host, of course, is dressed like a host. A game show host, that is, one from the early seventies. (Early? Mid? Is 1974 mid? How does that work?) Anyway, walk up to the host lectern and see a man in a crazy, wide-lapel suit covered in criss-crosses. The tie is gigantic, as large as a human being made of cloth. The hairstyle is longish--how strange the way hair has changed since then...much more restrained.<br /><br />When you walk into the Game Show Diner, you immediately hear the theme song. It's maddeningly repetitive. You hear the wah-wah, the ostinato, the brass section. The host says, "What do you do for a living? Tell us a little bit about...you!" and extends the magic-wand-like Bob Barker microphone to you. <br /><br />The host brings you to your seat...a game-show-contestant desk...your name appears on a light panel in front of the desk, and lights up as you approach. You sit down and the host says, "Your celebrity will be right with you. Good luck."<br /><br />Normally, if your host told you "good luck" at a restaurant you'd be terrified, but it's the Game Show Diner, so you understand. <br /><br />A moment later, your celebrity indeed is with you. <br /><br />Now if you'll recall, the celebrities on game shows in the 1970's were allowed to dress down, a little more loose and with-it than the hosts, and so you're not surprised to see your celebrity wearing a sport coat. The host comes back and stands at the celebrity's side.<br /><br />"Name a beverage," your host states.<br /><br />"Uh," you rack your brain, looking for a beverage to match the one in your server's mind. "I'd like a glass of wine..."<br /><br />The server turns his pad around--on it is written: Wine. The happy theme song starts playing. The horns, the wah-wah. "Great!" the host states. "Just fantastic."<br /><br />"OK, next..." the host says. "Name an entree."<br /><br />Again, it takes a bit of ESP to win this game...What is your server thinking? <br /><br />"Chicken a la King!" you shout. The server turns around his pad. "Corn Dogs Florentine."<br /><br />A horrible buzzer grates in your ears. The host says, "Aw whoa! So close! Wow! Sorry!"<br /><br />Unfortunately, you don't get another choice, so there's no entree for you tonight. Next you need to guess the dessert the server is thinking of. <br /><br />"Apple pie," you say. <br /><br />The server flips his pad and you see he's written "Melted Milk Balls with Lettuce Wedge."<br /><br />The buzzer again. Audience sounds of disappointment with a little booing.<br /><br />The host says, "So sorry, my friend. But you do have that fantastic glass of Boone's Farm!"<br /><br />"That's fine, that's OK," you assure the host. "I didn't come here with any food, and I won't leave here with any food."<br /><br />Which other eatery gives you this kind of suspense and excitement? And so I am happy to award the wonderful game show diner a full Five Consolation Prizes!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-54684846452500949462010-07-18T17:46:00.000-04:002010-07-20T12:20:21.283-04:00Drawings at Baja Burrito<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpRCT-jCjHUMa_3UOF2tRrwvcC3A78gPwPTPbZrYyCc6hlauAHOt86LCbC86NBmcB5FAdLuf84p4nWw8z42YKgxfo4W5v-MM4d6O4EFvqi50XjLJlTHL8MVO4ROPIa1UQWHvpcbxz2F2Q/s1600/kitteh.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpRCT-jCjHUMa_3UOF2tRrwvcC3A78gPwPTPbZrYyCc6hlauAHOt86LCbC86NBmcB5FAdLuf84p4nWw8z42YKgxfo4W5v-MM4d6O4EFvqi50XjLJlTHL8MVO4ROPIa1UQWHvpcbxz2F2Q/s400/kitteh.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5495365635512459890" /></a><br />You can see six drawings by me at <a href="http://www.bajaburrito.net/index.html">Baja Burrito</a> in Mission ValleyTim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-31760619319227821872010-07-14T19:28:00.000-04:002010-07-14T19:51:19.650-04:00Fishsticks-on-a-Stick Au Go-GoToday I did something I had never done before in my career as a food critic. Today I walked out of a restaurant before I ordered.<br /><br />Walking out before you order violates the food critic's code, I know. How can I possibly review an eatery if I haven't tasted the food? But today I walked out of Fishsticks-on-a-Stick Au Go-Go.<br /><br />First let me state that the decor at Fishsticks is marvelous. You really do feel like you're in a swinging discotheque that happens to serve fishsticks. If fishsticks had been provided on Sunset Strip in the late 1960's, maybe things would have turned out differently for the counter culture. <br /><br />That being said, the decor is no excuse for what I found there. Go-go cages with animatronics robots can't cancel out what's deeply wrong with Fishsticks. In all good conscience, I had to walk out. And it wasn't just my conscience bothering me--the whole concept of Fishsticks made me want to crawl under a rock in embarrassment. <br /><br />The reason I walked out before I ordered anything from this living exercise in nostalgia and seafood is that I literally couldn't order anything from their menu without turning red in the face.<br /><br />You see, Fishsticks is one of those places that thinks it's cute to give their menu items names that you couldn't possibly order without cringing and wanting the earth to swallow you up. <br /><br />It's one thing for International House of Pancakes to offer something called Rooty Tooty Fresh and Fruity. I would be physically incapable of speaking that phrase aloud. I can barely write it. But it's just one item on the menu, and I suppose one could always abbreviate it to Fresh and Fruity. Or point. <br /><br />And it's another thing for bars to offer drinks with suggestive names. That seems appropriate in a bar atmosphere.<br /><br />But it's something else for a restaurant to only offer menu items that have names no one could possibly ever want to speak. And offer those of us with shame no alternatives.<br /><br />Again and again, I searched the menu in vain for something I could say aloud. Why on earth would they call the Caesar Salad-flavored fishstick "I Have Weird Thoughts about Mucilage"? Giving a name like that to a salad shows nothing but a kind of snickering contempt for the patron. And why take an open-faced beef sandwich-flavored fishstick and call it a "Simply Super Idea"? And is it really necessary to call a radish-flavored fishstick "The Wink Factory"? <br /><br />I will say the waitrons were incredible, bearing up under the burden of hearing patrons jump through the degrading hoops the restaurant chain has set up for them. But the courage and determination of the waitrons, just like the clever decor, was not enough to keep me in my seat once I'd seen the eatery's abysmal menu.<br /><br />I hope that the Fishsticks corporation will rethink this naming strategy. Are you really trying to humiliate us? Why else give your food, which one would hope you are proud of and which some day, if you drop this silliness, I may indeed taste, these ridiculous, anti-human names?<br /><br />And so, sadly, I give Fishsticks-on-a-Stick Au Go-Go a mortified Zero Stars.Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-30903607658098136712010-07-11T23:25:00.000-04:002010-07-11T23:26:44.079-04:00Anthony Bourdain reads a poemAnthony Bourdain reads Daniel Halpern's <a href="http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/21500">"How to Eat Alone"</a>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-29068827610289385812010-07-03T01:09:00.001-04:002010-07-03T01:42:03.516-04:00Insomnia WafflesWhen it's late at night..after midnight..and you can't sleep for whatever reason - whether you're worried sick about some loss you fear is impending or else annoyed by some noisy person downstairs - well, you might want to go over to Insomnia Waffles to while the time away till dawn. It's past one am and I can't sleep so here I am at Insomnia. I've set up my laptop on the counter here so I can transmit my wi-fi review to you live from the waffle shop. So with my waffle wi-fi working, I send you my thoughts about Insomnia Waffles, my favorite waffle shop in town. First off, let me say that Insomnia Waffles is the <span style="font-style:italic;">non-scary</span> version of an all-nite waffle place. I really dig and appreciate and admire any place that is the non-scary version of something that people usually think of as scary and to-be-avoided. So for somebody to take the waffle shop concept and transmute it into a diner-friendly place is almost miraculous to my eye. <br /><br />Insomnia is also great because it doesn't try to help you sleep. I think that a restaurant that tried to put you to sleep wouldn't actually be worth much. If you walked in here and they were playing lullabies over the sound system and serving you glasses of warm milk--well, that might put you to sleep but what would you do then? Spend the night in a waffle shop? I think not.<br /><br />So Insomnia Waffles does the best thing, the best response to insomnia, it just doesn't acknowledge it or try to treat it. Insomnia Waffles tells you--ok, you can't sleep, let's just make the best of it. So they do serve coffee. They don't serve warm milk. And, of course, gloriously, they do serve waffles.<br /><br />In keeping with the non-scary mode, this is a waffle place that actually has more the ambiance of a coffee shop, complete with mood lighting and great background music--right now they're playing Manhattan Transfer's "Spies in the Night." It's the cool phone-call part right now--"The winds are calm in the channel" and so forth. So while this driving tune plays, I'm sitting here looking over the non-laminated menu.<br /><br />Laminated menu's. Don't they kind of scare you? Because really they're made for easy clean-up, which is always the sign of some creepy institutional ware. I mean, why on earth would you need to clean a menu with a sponge? It's too disgusting to think about. <br /><br />But Insomnia Waffles, of course, has no laminated menu's. (I've already noted elsewhere that I realize there is no apostrophe in menus but I think it looks goofy without it so I use it anyway. Critic's prerogative.) The menu's are on a nicely browned parchment with cool early-70's inspirational-pamphlet calligraphy and ink-brush drawings of egrets. That's the kind of menu I like. So you can see it's just one more way that Insomnia Waffles departs from the scary waffle shop concept.<br /><br />Now there are many choices with a waffle. You can have a round waffle. A square waffle. A triangular waffle. I'm particularly fond of the rhomboid waffle. And once you've chosen the shape, next on the decision agenda is how large the indentions or "wafflings" should be. Now, I'm not a fan of those waffles with only one or two gigantic indentations. I like the standard waffle grid or checkerboard pattern, though I know some disagree. <br /><br />OK. My server has just appeared (I mean that literally--one minute they're not there and then they suddenly materialize). I will stop typing for a moment then report back.<br /><br />OK. I just ordered the Powerhouse Waffle. This is one of those menu items that gains you a special engraving on a plaque if you eat it. Normally I don't go in for such sensationalistic food stunts, but in this case--well, it's a waffle! What do you expect me to do?!<br /><br />Of course I'm also having the coffee. Coffee and waffles. That's what Jarmusch should have called that movie. It would have been an infinitely better film had it been about coffee and waffles rather than coffee and cigarettes. I mean, really. And the checkerboard table would have gone so much better with checkerboard waffles than with cylindrical cigarettes. I mean, it isn't that hard of a decision, people! And I'm a food critic not some famous motion-picture director! <br /><br />Let me say something about syrup. Now I have been accused by various persons of drenching my waffles in syrup. Well, as a diner, I fully indulge my instincts, and I have a strong instinct for hot, sweet syrup, and I indulge that to the fullest! I also put a couple butter pats on each waffle before I ladle the hot honey-like syrup on. I like butter pats that have little images carved onto them (I don't know if <span style="font-style:italic;">carved </span>is the right word exactly--I'm a food critic, not some self-conscious pedant! Who cares!). I like famous faces on my butter pats. Especially cartoon characters from the 1930s. And that's exactly what Insomnia Waffles does--they have people (characters) like Mutt and Jeff molded into their butter discs. Isn't that phenomenal? You can watch Mutt's face interestingly morph under the cascade of ladled hot syrup. Delish!<br /><br />The coffee at Insomnia Waffles is incredible. It isn't typical waffle coffee. It's really great cafe coffee. So again it's the non-scary version of a waffle shop and that's why I keep coming back here! Again and again. Especially when I can't sleep (which is probably the point). Like tonight. <br /><br />The service is serviceable. Nobody has ever disappointed me here. And what's especially appreciated is--the waitrons don't try to make you go to sleep! Wouldn't it be annoying if your server kept saying, "You look exhausted. Time to hit the hay!" I mean, I would not want to be served by that person. <br /><br />Overall, then, Insomnia Waffles is the perfect spot to dine at when sleep is elusive. You can use the wi-fi and enjoy the waff-fi, as you sip the rich roast. The roast has an incredible gravy! The coffee is good too. <br /><br />And so, although I wish I could sleep, although I wish I didn't worry so much which keeps me from sleeping and sends me off to Insomnia Waffles in the middle of the night--I still enthusastically--in a sleepy nocturnal way--award Insomnia Waffles Five Winks!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-6512541836355679102010-06-22T20:02:00.000-04:002010-06-22T20:40:01.502-04:00Oulipo's Snack BarToday I had lunch at Oulipo's snack bar. A fabulous location, fantastic waitrons, astounding food--that's why I'm mad about Oulipo's! <br /><br />Oulipo's surroundings? Simply amazing. Brilliant wall art (mostly oil paintings) charms you. Catchy music (classic rock hits mostly--Styx, Pink Floyd, Boston, and so on) wows. Waitrons and patrons? All cool folks. <br /><br />I sit down in a comfy booth. My waitron displays Oulipo's voluminous food list. What looks good? All of it! In a quandary, I finally pick Oulipo's Lipogram Crust with squash filling. And to drink? Glug a mug of Squirt, straight up. Cool!<br /><br />An Oulipo waitron is not your typical waitron. Quick, watchful, mindful, thoughtful--all you want in a waitron! My tip is always grand--not A grand, mind you, but grand. My waitron fills and fills again my Squirt mug without fail. And without my having to flap my hands! Oulipo uniforms? Stunning. Classic, classy, chic duds--not clinging or form-fitting but not baggy. Just right. <br /><br />My Lipogram Crust is also just right. Crunchy and savory, this crust falls apart in your mouth. <span style="font-style:italic;">What </span>bliss! <br /><br />And so, looking back fondly, I found Oulipo's--as always--an out-of-sight dining spot. Oulipo's looks good. Oulipo's waitrons show us what waiting is all about. And Oulipo's food? Astronomically outstanding!<br /><br />That's why I am awarding Oulipo's Snack Bar an avid four stars. No... I award Oulipo's Six Stars!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-89435962708086814742010-06-13T09:13:00.000-04:002010-06-13T09:39:44.142-04:00WabaThe other day I had lunch with Jacques Wool at Waba, a restaurant I highly recommend. Let's start with the menu. I like the menu there because although I had been to Waba a few times before, I have no idea what most of the dishes are. So I appreciate the menus, which are presented flat on the counter for easy perusal. You don't have to crane your neck gawking at a menu board full of items you don't understand. You can stand relaxedly at the counter and look down at the menu. And the menu has photographs of the dishes. This is helpful for those who don't have an encyclopedic knowledge of Korean cuisine, and I count myself among that group. Also helpful are the little hot-pepper icons. Whoever started this hot-pepper icon craze was a genius. As you know, I love hot, spicy food (when it's flavorful heat, not just some chemical burn). I want the hottest thing on the menu, sir! And I can find that hottest item by looking for the hot-pepper icon. And Waba uses this fantastic feature on their menu. They even have double hot-peppers! Of course, my eye was immediately magnetized to those items. And I zeroed in on the Dduk Bok Ki. Now, though I am multi-lingual (to say the least, though my Guugu Yimidhirr is a bit shaky), I haven't the least idea how to pronounce "Dduk Bok Ki." I just can't do it. I could try to fake it, but that would be ridiculous, I would end up just embarrassing myself and others. So I love the menu at Waba because you can just point to things. But I truly want to learn, and so I just come out and say it: "How do you pronounce that?" And the person at the counter will pronounce it for you. Isn't that great? Now I have a pretty good idea how to pronounce Dduk Bok Ki. And I feel better about everything as a result. So I'm standing up there pointing and asking, and I realize that I'm not just ordering food, but I'm learning. I am a lifelong learner, as all food critics (or any critics, really) must be. <br /><br />Jacques Wool ordered the Mandu. These are dumplings or pot-stickers. Whoever came up with the name Pot Sticker? It's mildly embarrassing. I mean, what is that supposed to mean? They stick to the pot? The pot hasn't been sufficiently greased and therefore things are sticking to it? That's like calling an omelet a pan-sticker. Nobody would ever call it that. It's a chummy, overly familiar and faintly disrespectful way to speak of a dish. And that dish looked good! I was covetously eying Jacques' Mandu the entire time, hoping for some kind of diversion to happen out on Hillsborough Street (great new modernistic aluminum fixtures, by the way!) so I could reach out and take one...with my fork!<br /><br />OK, here's the next thing about Waba. They offer you forks or chopsticks. This is a controversial topic. I know people who think it's unbelievably gauche to eat with a fork in a place that offers chopsticks. Well, let me tell you--<span style="font-style:italic;">there are things that I like to do with my food when I'm eating it that I don't know how to do with chopsticks. </span> I like to move my food around, let it drag through the hot sauce, swirl it...things I don't think I can do with chopsticks. Anyway, I guess I just like the pure sensation of <span style="font-style:italic;">spearing </span> my food, instead of just gently cradling it between two distancing pieces of wood. Call me a vulgarian! But it isn't because I can't use them. No, I've been trained in their use. I know how to do it. And I have eaten with them plenty of times. Anyway, Waba gives you that choice, and I'm grateful for it. <br /><br />Well, the Dduk Bok Ki was fabulous. I loved the hot sauce, it definitely merited two hot (hott?) peppers. The fish,sliced into thin strips, was very tasty. The rice dumplings held my attention throughout the meal, and chewing them added suspense to the conversation as Jacques waited for my responses.<br /><br />Overall, Waba is a reliable, enjoyable dining experience. I'm looking forward to trying every single item on their horizontal menu. It's a great place to meet and hold an intelligent conversation--something about the airiness and calm atmosphere seems to lend itself to this. And so I enthusiastically award Waba a full FIVE DUMPLINGS!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-40820503781900625882010-06-01T22:45:00.000-04:002010-06-01T23:24:55.825-04:00Zoë's KitchenThis afternoon, Jacques Wool and I had lunch at the wonderful Zoë's Kitchen. Located in the Shops at Oberlin Court, a center full of interesting places underneath apartments, Zoë's is an awesome dining experience. Jacques pulled into the ample parking lot and we walked over to the restaurant. When we stepped inside, I became disoriented--which is no fault of the restaurant, I was merely preoccupied with some thought I was exploring and expressing. What else is new. I think I was looking for a hostess station, but Jacques gently guided me to the front counter. There is no hostess station. For ZK is a fast casual restaurant, and you needn't worry about a hostess when it's fast casual. I don't know if I've told you this before, but I love fast casual. To me, it's the best of both worlds. It has that relaxed fast food or quick serve feeling, but with the quality food of a sit-down restaurant...along with all the ambiance. We walked up to face the menu board. I could tell immediately that the eatery had on offer the types of items that I am currently looking for in my quest for better eating habits. I will not sacrifice flavor, however, and there's no need to at Zoë's place.<br /><br />Let me tell you about the interior. Have you ever been to a library built in the 1970's? Have you ever been in a school built in the 1970's when the "open classroom" model was in vogue? Well, then you have a pretty good idea of what ZK looks like, because it's fabulous. The restaurant has these terrific 1970's colors. I mean, I'm talking seventies orange. Colors like that. And it also features a charming "high-tech" look. You know I love the exposed pipes of "high tech" and ZK has them to spare. And these pipes are huge! It's delightful to dine while glancing up at these giant orange pipes. I mean, from a design point of view it's matchless. It's like eating in some great university student center, or a restaurant in a really with-it art museum. I love it!<br /><br />Speaking of art, ZK does feature some brilliant art. What they have is some astounding naive art lining the walls--with sophisticated portraits above the naive art. What a mixture! I immediately wanted to find out how to offer my drawings to be displayed there. You know you're in a good restaurant when you wish your art were hanging there. I mean, seriously.<br /><br />OK, here's their system. Once you've ordered from the friendly, helpful cashier, they hand you one of those tiny flagpoles with your order number on it. And listen to this--Jacques and I ordered separately and yet we got the same flag! Isn't that efficient? We walked over next to the drink station. You won't believe this, but they actually have Coke Zero on tap there. I mean, I have never EVER seen a drink station where they had Coke Zero. I mean, they always have Diet Coke but never the Zero. Coke Zero is mystifyingly great to me--I mean, it tastes EXACTLY LIKE COKE. I don't know how they do it. I mean, there is no other diet item on the planet Earth that somehow replicates in perfect measure the thing it's meant to calorie-lessly clone. I mean, I can't think of anything--can you? Coke Zero? I think they ought to call it Coke Everything! Because it's even better than Coca-Cola. Because it has no calories, no caffeine I don't think. I mean it has nothing but flavor. And they have it there! They also have three urns of iced tea.<br /><br />I really chuckled when I saw the sign stuck magnetically to the sweet tea urn. "Sweet Tea served with Southern Hospitality." Isn't that great? Because it's self-serve, which means ZK is such a tremendous place even when you're serving yourself it's in a gracious style full of southern hospitality. I mean, eateries don't get better than that!<br /><br />So Jacques grabbed an iced tea and I my Coke Zero and we sat down--among the many choices--at a table near the window but not too close that the hot sun would bother us. In a few moments, a server brought my salad. Now, pay attention here, because it's fast casual--but with table service!! Isn't that great? This is part of what I mean by the best of both worlds. Now, remember, it isn't fast food--far from it. Which means, you have to wait a little longer than you do in some place where they're just grabbing a burger from a heated chute for you. Since Jacques didn't have a side salad with his entree--I believe he had the Mediterranean Tuna Pita, though I'm not sure because I was so caught up in my meal, which I will be describing for you--he graciously suggested that I tuck into my side salad. It was great! I can still taste the olives. And the pita. And the red onions. It was just right, and then we were served our main meals.<br /><br />I made a great decision, because I ordered the Veggie Pita Pizza. This was astonishingly good. The spinach was full of flavor, and the pizza had just enough tomato sauce. The pizza had a nearly-stuffed quality while retaining a crispy crunchy crust, really terrific. I enjoyed it a great deal. I enjoyed it immensely. And I can't wait to go back there.<br /><br />In fact, I haven't been this enthusiastic about a dining establishment in a long time. The menu seemed to offer so many healthful, flavor-filled favorites that I think I'd like to eat there every single day until eternity, sampling one dish after another. <br /><br />Remembering that he had left his Panama Hat at Fosters at our last luncheon meeting, Jacques wisely brought a less costly chapeau with him to Zoë's Kitchen. But the service is so great there, I assume that if he had forgotten this hat as well, the servers would have made sure to secure it until it could be safely retrieved. <br /><br />Again, the service was amazing. Table service! As we ate, a server came and took our plates out of the way. I love that in a fast casual restaurant. It really helps out the conversation when you aren't distracted by plates you've eaten from. Take them away! And they did--without our asking.<br /><br />It was very easy to hold a conversation in ZK. I mean, it wasn't noisy, I don't even recall if there was music playing or not--always a good sign. I mean, I think there might have been, but I can't attest to it. Which means it probably was, but wasn't in the least bit distracting. <br /><br />I really regret not having ordered dessert. The entrees were so good that I truly believe that the desserts are probably fantastic there, and I know that the next time I'm there I'm going to order a dessert.<br /><br />I also want to mention the wondrous Greek salad dressing--a wine vinaigrette--that awaits you on each table. Isn't that amazing--they already put out the salad dressing for you, and it's a great signature dressing--it had a faint taste of mango, but I don't really know what they put in it aside from awesome. I poured it on my side salad and was very pleased with the result. <br /><br />I have seen the future of the restaurant industry, and its name is Zoë's Kitchen! Go there--try it--you will thank yourself later--actually, you will thank ME, since I'm the one who suggested it. I give it an enthusiastic FIVE OLIVES!!!!!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-16912455734183190952010-05-21T20:08:00.000-04:002010-05-21T20:40:50.909-04:00The Chicken Steak-Fried Chicken XL at Wag Nabbit'sIf as Ernest Hemingway once averred, morality is what you feel good after and immorality is what you feel bad after, then the steak-fried Chicken Steak-Fried Chicken XL at Wag Nabbit's is immoral--because after eating this entree I felt very bad indeed. The thing is still squatting in my guts like a granite curling stone. And I still can't tell you whether it was beef or chicken. The title completely disoriented me. I think it's a steak-fried chicken-steak, or a chicken-fried steak-fried steak-chicken, but I can't tell you. All I know about this aporia on a platter is that I'm still suffering from ingesting it. When I close my eyes I see it spinning eternally on some weird potter's wheel. <br /><br />Wag Nabbit's is one of those plastic, Stepford Dives-type places that have absolutely no character. I guess they tried to lend the place some character by making a dish that was completely inedible. Well, if that's their idea of character, then I'll take bland soullessness, because I don't like to feel the way I'm feeling right now.<br /><br />I don't suppose you know what it's like to have this kind of meal taking up residence in your stomach. No, you don't have to eat at places like Wag Nabbit's--because you aren't a food critic! There. I've said it. Because you're not a food critic, you get to choose the places you want to eat it. You don't have to go somewhere because it's on your list of places you haven't reviewed yet. Oh, no, you've got it easy. You can eat at the same place every single day of the week if you want. Imagine if I did that. I mean, really. Imagine it. Close your eyes and in as much sensory detail as you can, picture and imagine me, your food critic, eating at the same restaurant every day for a single week. I mean, picture me wearing different outfits, and visiting the restaurant under varied weather conditions. Are you picturing it? Are you smelling the smells, hearing the background music? Well, that will never happen. Push that vision away! That's right, erase it, because I have to eat somewhere different on a daily basis. Because if I turned in the same review seven times in a row, even if it was different each time, why my public would be outraged! They would turn into the torch-and-pitchfork mob that hunted Frankenstein's monster. I'm serious (I always am).<br /><br />If this is a rant, so be it. Wag Nabbit's, or Dag Dabbit's, or Wascally Wabbit, or whatever the heck it's called, it just isn't the kind of place I would ever set foot in were I not a food critic. I mean, you may not believe this, but at one time I was a very cool and with-it individual. My favorite Velvet Underground LP was the Couch Album, for goodness' sake. And now here I am eating some darn chicken-fried steak-chicken-fried steak steak thing at Dang Dabbit's suburban hellhole. You like I like this place? You think I like the music they play in here? This isn't music, I know what music is. This is the kind of music they play as soundtrack to the horrifying rituals of the spiritually embalmed. <br /><br />I'm not sure how long I can continue to review places like this. I mean, do people who dine at Dab Diggety or whatever even read my reviews? They just eat there because it's attached to the mall, don't they? I mean, if they'd made a left turn they'd be at Dippin Dots instead, wouldn't they?<br /><br />OK. I've vented. I feel better. The indigestion is settling. I'm going to finish my review and take a nap. The Steak-Fried Chicken XL wasn't really all that bad. Not really. I give up. I give it five stars...Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-5637219006177521322010-05-14T20:52:00.000-04:002010-05-14T21:26:17.212-04:00Flannel's Cafe'According to a recent New York Times article, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/09/weekinreview/09aoscott.html">"Gen X [is Having] a Midlife Crisis"</a>. Well, you wouldn't know it at Flannel's Cafe', because in this midtown eatery, Generation X it still in its grungy, nihilistic, slacker prime. <br /><br />Yes, it was inevitable. If most theme restaurants have a sixties/seventies ambiance, why not a theme restaurant for the "Nevermind" generation? Yes, I know "why not"--but let that pass, because Flannel's Cafe' is where X marks the spot for flavor.<br /><br />I like Flannel's because it just has that friendly, unassuming vibe that we associate with the post-boomer generation. Walk in and be pummeled by the music to dine by: Nirvana's "Scentless Apprentice" from a Peavey amp suspended above the hostess station.<br /><br />Do you remember all those articles in Time magazine in the 1990's about how Gen X types were sullen wage slaves? Well, the help here at Flannel's lives up to that stereotype, but in an amusing, ironic (of course) way. So it isn't offensive at all. In fact, it's kind of sweet, bathing you in nostalgia for a time when people were deeply shocked to see a cash-register operator wearing a nose ring.<br /><br />The bare bones atmosphere of Flannel's won't win any interior design awards. Exposed beams and wiring, with glaring lamps (and blaring amps) and uncomfortable seating, drop you down a time warp into the psychological darkness of the grunge decade.<br /><br />As befitting a "Hard Rock Cafe" knockoff, Flannel's features goofy rock star memorabilia on the walls, items such as Kurt Cobain's death certificate that couldn't be more obvious and unimaginative. <br /><br />As for the food, it's excellent, and I think if Flannel's dropped the 1990's nostalgia trappings, they might have a decent little "hole"-in-the-wall. I had the orange roughy with a lime smoothie, because I believe in taking the roughy with the smoothie.<br /><br />Overall, I had a wonderful experience at Flannel's. This trip down memory lane made me pine for the days of that surprisingly light-hearted decade. If you're looking for a similar experience, be sure to pop into Flannel's Cafe'. I'm happy to give Flannel's Cafe' Five Smoothies!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-32319440476316250652010-05-12T15:48:00.000-04:002010-05-12T15:52:42.004-04:00In Food Critic News.....<a href="http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/05/05/467277/ncsu-grad-wins-beard-writing-award.html#ixzz0nkLf9dTl">"Raleigh native Rachel Wharton won the nation's highest honor in food journalism, a James Beard Foundation award."</a><br /></br><br /></br><br /></br>Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-70452745020208783262010-05-07T22:28:00.000-04:002010-05-07T23:01:32.069-04:00Restaurant Review: Fosters American GrilleAs I was walking through the parking lot, my cell phone vibrated. A message from Jacques Wool. He'd left behind his panama hat--would I go back and retrieve it from the restaurant? But of course! As I walked back to Fosters, I pictured going back to the table and grabbing the hat from the chair Jacques had sat in. I stepped back into Fosters. I was about to tell the friendly and helpful hostess that I had returned to pick up my friend's hat, but before the words escaped my lips I saw that Jacques' panama hat had been thoughtfully placed on one of the stands in the entry. <br /><br />That impressed me. Then again, a number of things impressed me about the restaurant. I liked the bright, airy dining room. The decor was appealing--I enjoyed the amber spheres enclosed in wrought iron bands that hung from the ceiling. A pleasant, talkative din filled the dining room, though Jacques did mention a more sound-absorbing floor material would help us hear each other--then again, you may not be as soft-spoken as Jacques and I. I didn't notice any music playing, if there was any, and there certainly was not a television in sight. Fosters would be an ideal place to discuss Wallace Stevens...and his world. <br /><br />The server was great--attentive but not intrusive. My iced tea glass kept being refilled as though by magic! And that's the way it ought to be. The menu featured a great range of items at different price points, all the way from BBQ pizza to scallops. Jacques enjoyed his Buffalo Shrimp Po Boy. I couldn't resist snapping up one of his French Fried Potatoes sprinkled with sea salt--excellent! I like my French Fries to taste like...potatoes, for that's what they are. <br /><br />I had the fantastic Four Cheese Pesto pizza. The crust was just crunchy enough and the Feta cheese was terrific. I think next time I'll ask for extra cilantro--though I understand why they may have gone easy on it--cilantro does have a way of taking over a pizza...though I like it when that happens.<br /><br />I absolutely will be going back to this restaurant. I like how a menu with more reasonable prices exists in a restaurant with such a pleasant atmosphere and outstanding food. And so, I am happy to report that I give Fosters--five cilantro leaves!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2197033353143272385.post-92169659009788893642010-05-03T21:23:00.000-04:002010-05-03T21:32:19.314-04:00Special Report: The Ivory Satin Cake at Sleepy Chapel Sandwich ShoppeI had a very disturbing and upsetting experience the other week at Sleepy Chapel Sandwich Shoppe, an experience I must share with you. As you know, for me, the Sleepy Chapel is already a place that carries an atmosphere of anxiety, so having this event occur there merely doubles how much of an ordeal this experience was for me. <br /><br />After my typical Sleepy Sandwich meal, the Calamari Po Boy, I decided to throw caution to the winds and order dessert. The dessert itself was fabulous, but I rue the day that I ever ordered the Ivory Satin Cake, because doing so flung me into an entangling Kafkaesque nightmare from which I still have not recovered. <br /><br />Just picture all those computer wires beneath your desk that you could never dream of untangling, and that is the sort of maddening, devilishly frustrating bureaucratic terror trap I have been cast into.<br /><br />Now, at this point you're thinking to yourself (probably), "He got into some Kafkaesque nightmare because he ordered Ivory Satin Cake?" I know--sounds crazy. But hang on, because you're going to be shocked.<br /><br />The cake was great. I jokingly said to the server, "You know, I would love the recipe!" The server, whose eyes were glazed, and whose head was lolling on his neck, slurred, "Sure, thing. I'll paper-clip it to the check." I shook my head sternly. "No, man," continued the disoriented waitron, "We do it all the time."<br /><br />Imagine my shock when in the mail today I received a bill from Sleepy Chapel. A bill for the amount of $500! What?! I thought to myself, "They're billing me $500--for what?" Luckily it was an itemized bill...and guess what I was being charged for? You got it. Five hundred bucks for the recipe for Ivory Satin Cake.<br /><br />I was floored. I was flabbergasted. I was flummoxed. I immediately got on the phone and spoke to a manager.<br /><br />I was told that the Sleepy Chapel Sandwich Shoppe charges a recipe fee! I tried to explain to the manager that I had been only kidding, and that I would never have asked for the recipe had I known that I would be charged anything at all, much less five hundred dollars.<br /><br />I'm sharing this tale with you so that you may learn from my experience. Don't even joke about wanting a dessert recipe from Sleepy Chapel...because the joke will be on you!<br /><br />Caveat Emptor!Tim Bottahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07286307944258546230noreply@blogger.com0