Saturday, April 30, 2011

Crescent Moon Bakery

We left Friday night on a mission: finding a place to have dinner that none of us has tried before.  A seemingly easy task for four people, but all proposals that we could think of had been tried by at least one of us.  We opted to drive down Central Ave to find a place.  On our way to a Thai place, we saw the Crescent Moon Bakery, an Afghani restaurant on 2339 Central Ave NE.

The multiple neon signs on the window were somewhat at odds.  One advertised the best pizza next to another one that read frozen pizza.  Anyway, after seeing the pictures on the entrance de decided to give it a try.

Not sure of what to order, we chose the sampler platter for four.  I should say the picture below is very misleading.  This was a HUGE platter.  The four of us ate to our heart's content and still took a to-go box that could have fed another two.

In addition to the food on that platter, the meal came with a salad and some pitas.  $60 bought us the meal for four and four bottles of water (no liquor, wine or beer).  Overall a great meal.  My favorite part was the roasted goat stew on the white bowl.  It was tender and juicy.  The lamb sausage (hiding behind the gyro meat at three o'clock on the platter), was nicely cooked, showing just a smidgen of pink in the center. 


We left with two gyro calzones to go (dinner tonight) and the desire to come back to try their award wining ethnic pizza, the house specialty, with Eggplant, Mushrooms, and Black Olives.

Update (May 15): Just yesterday we tried their signature eggplant pizza.  It was barely OK, sot as good as their more traditional middle-eastern food.  It was light (thin crust, no meat and not as much cheese as you usually see in American pizzas), but still not deserving of the Best Ethnic Pizza award it received.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Rachel's... eternally closed no more

Four years ago, when Punch open on Hennepin Ave, it did so next to another restaurant that was also about to open, Rachel's.  The awning has been there since, across from Kramarczuk's, on 222 Hennepin Ave, having us wonder if it was ever going to open (some saying it was open all along but for private events only).

Well, no more...  Rachel's is now open to the public.  The place has somewhat odd decor and a temporary menu (which we were told will soon see additional items, not different ones).  A few Phoenicians made our way to try it and were pleasantly surprised by the friendly staff, quality of the food and low prices.
The menu contains a few appetizers including Monte Carlo wings (both restaurants have the same owner) which we ordered and enjoyed.  We also learned from the waitress that the seasoning on the wings at Monte Carlo tripled over the years as people asked for a stronger flavor.  At Rachel's yo get the original recipe.  

Below appetizers you can find a list of burgers (including one with green olives) a few sandwiches and a short list of entrees.  At our table we ordered a french dip, a turkey burger, some steamed mussels and  a roasted veggie sandwich with brie.  All came promptly and were delicious.  The turkey burger was juicy  with a nice dark bun.  The mussels were plump and tender and were served with fries and toast.  

The roasted veggie sandwich with brie (a baguette really), which I ordered, was in my opinion the best thing at the table.  It was truly loaded with veggies, has the right amount of brie and came in a nice crusty bread.  In short here we have another jewel opening within walking distance from the Phoenix.  Our little corner of the world is getting more and more interesting.  I look forward to see how the menu will expand and evolve.      
Update (May 7): Last night we returned to try the recommended egg salad sandwich.  We were told the salad is made to order and includes no less than 5 eggs per sandwich, so to avoid a protein overdose we opted to share one.  We also opted to try the one with sliced pimento olives.  Definitely a good idea, because the egg salad, while not bad, it is a pretty plain one.  The olives gave the sandwich a good kick.

Cafe Lurcat: Terrific as always

Sunday was winding down and we weren't quite ready for the weekend to be over.  The thought of ending the day with a hastily prepared dinner in front of the TV was just not cutting it.  We worked the phones and text messages and soon enough we found an accomplice.  A few clicks away we also have a reservation at Cafe Lurcat.  A safe bet.


As we waited for our accomplice, Patty Mayonnaise, Sharon and I shared a treat from the raw menu.  The hamachi with noodles and jalapenos looked great on the menu and didn't disappoint when it arrived to the table.  A good pairing to the Sauvignon Blanc we were drinking.


With three at the table, we split their signature salad (an award wining one no less), the apple, cheese and chive salad (pictured at right).  The first time I saw it a few days before, it rocked my salad world.  Salads don't usually look like that.  Apples and Manchego cheese cut up in shoestrings form with a light dressing and some chives.  Beautiful and refreshing with the cheese and the apples complementing each other like an acid and a base.   Great combination.

The rest of the meal was just as good.  Judge for yourself:

House Made Udon Noodles with Chinese Barbecue Chicken and Caramelized  Orange Sauce

Sautee Sea Scallops with Han Hocks and Swiss Chard

And of course their French Fries - Some of the best in town not to take anything away from the fries at 112 Eatery

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Masu, The New Kid on the Block

The new kid on the block in Northeast is Masu Sushi and Robata.  How about that... Japanese no more than a few blocks from our bat cave.  The place is nicely decorated with an industrial interior (making it a tad loud due to the hard concrete surfaces) and plenty of colorful Japanese touches to get yo in the mood for sushi.  Particularly interesting is the wall at the end of the dining room entirely covered with the eyes of a Geisha.  Nice touch...

Masu Maki Roll - The house specialty
The place was packed for a Wednesday, but since they opened less than a week ago, it is expected (and I am sure hoped by the owners).  We had a reservation for 6 and ended up having 11 people, but still were able to seat without much of a wait.  The menu has a variety of sushi, small dishes and noodles.  Most of us ordered sushi to start and then some noodles.
The sushi rolls were good, although they were not entirely what I was expecting.  The house specialty and namesake (pictured above), has all its seafood cooked.  The shrimp tempura style, and the salmon very rare but definitely not raw.

Spicy Arctic Char Roll
The Spicy Arctic Char Roll was good, but it had so much cilantro that it was pretty much all yo could taste.  One of the things I like about sushi is that with the fish being raw and the few ingredients usually part of the dish, you have nowhere to hide bad quality ingredients and as a result you get some of the best seafood available.  This might have been the case last night, but the fresh seafood flavor was amiss.    

Pork Belly Ramen
Having recently returned from Tokyo and having enjoyed some great ramen noodles there, we put them to the test.  I ordered the Pork Belly Ramen and Sharon ordered the Tonkatsu Curry Ramen.  OK, perhaps it was not fair to Masu... still, they did not fair too bad.  The pork belly was very nicely cooked.  Fork tender and flavorful.  The poached egg was a vice touch, although I prefer having a soft-boiled egg as we did in Shinjuku.   Overall a very successful dish.

Tunkatsu Curry Ramen
Sharon's Tonkatsu Curry Ramen was also good also not quite as impressive.  The curry, usually the star of a dish with its pungent flavor, was rather mild, but the coating was crispy and the noodles and broth were appropriate.

Overall my review may come across as lukewarm, but I was pleasantly surprised with the place.  Service was very good (even for a new place that is usually trying to come to terms with their initial success), the portions were large enough, the prices appropriate and the decor inviting.  It is not their fault that they caught us just a few weeks from a terrific culinary adventure in Japan.  Being as close as it is to home it could easily become a regular hangout for us. 

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Trail Mix 25K Race Report

Terrific race!  I was close to missing it due to an ankle injury, but thanks to Bridget's very poor advice, I run it anyway and had a blast.  Thanks, Bridget.

I run it with my New Balance 800, my only pair of trail shoes.  Needless to say, given the snow, rain and mud everywhere, mine no longer look as clean as the picture.  I really love these shoes.  They are probably the primary reason why I run trail races, to use them more often ;-)

As I am lining up behind the start line and just about 15 seconds before the gun, I see a back of a head I recognize.  Is that Tim?  As I get closer i see that not only it is Tim, but he is with Liz, Rob and Mel, a subset of the Phoenix running club.  The gun goes off and we start running.  I run with them for about a quarter of a mile and then take off.  I see them only once after that as we are running in opposite direction (as the course requires) as I am getting almost to the finish line.

Anyway, no more than a mile into the race, my ankle started bothering me.  I pushed through and the pain never elevated from that.  A day later, I feel great.  I sure feel the hills in my muscles, but my ankle seems to have survived he race.

The course is a series of loops in Hyland Park.  25K requires two loops, those attempting 50k will need to do four.  Anyway, great race.  The terrain has lots of hills and because of the rain the previous day, plenty of mud.  I think that made it more fun.  3/4 into tehrace I was even considering signing up for the 50K (~31 miles) next year.  By the end I was wondering if I could handle another two laps.  Maybe taking it easier.  A lot easier.  Something to think about.

Official time is not yet posted, but my Garmin 205 showed 2:29:04 or 9:36 per mile.  I was quite pleased with that given the elevation changes visible on the uploaded route.

 

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Change of Heart

Before finally deciding to drop off the race, I call Bridget.  Bridget is an Ironman finisher, as tough as runners come.  She is the person I can count on when I need bad advice ;-)

It takes me under five minutes on the phone to decide that the pain in my ankle is no reason to stay away from the trail.  "Just pop a dozen ibuprofens and take it easy on the run" is her advice.  Pretty much what I wanted to hear.  So while I will pass on the ibuprofen overdose, I think I will attempt the Trail Mix 25K after all.  

No sooner than I make that choice, the weather forecast starts turning south.  33 degrees (feels like 25), windy (up to 21 mph) and snow showers.  Too late now, the decision has been made.  I will hit the trail in less than 3 1/2 hours.

Third Friday Already?

After a couple of misses, we make it again to a Third Friday Happy Hour at the Phoenix.  Our contribution is Beef Tenderloin Crostinis with Caramelized Onions and Preserved Lemon-Green Olive Mayonnaise.  The snow-flake looking stuff on them was Maldon Salt, probably the most beautiful salt out there.  I am not a big fan of beef, but they came out pretty good.  

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Convenient Aster

Just a block down the street from home is Aster Cafe.  This place was a little deli that didn't ever seem to be open.  Indeed it was, there were just no people inside.  Ever.  The outside had a patio that was never used, because they didn't serve out there.  You had to go inside, order their pretty mediocre food and take it outside yourself.

Luckily for us, last May, Aster reopened with little changes to the beautiful inside.  That said, there is a world of difference between the old and the new Aster.  For starters, the new place has live music.  Pictured below are Patty and the Buttons, who play there most Sundays from 11 AM to 2 PM as brunch is being served.


To add to the entertainment you can always find a couple willing to dance the Lindy Hop as you have brunch.  Sometimes it is not just a couple, but instead the dance floor is pretty crowded.  The music doesn't stop after Sunday.  They have blues, jazz, acoustic and others Thursday through Sunday at night.

Being as close to home as it is, it has become a convenient and very satisfying stop for us.  The food has also improved significantly (something deserving of much praise giving the limiting kitchen they have with no fryer, griddle or grill, but basically just a small stove and an oven.  The menu is short but includes salads, appetizers, flatbread pizzas and sandwiches.  Pictured at left is a smoked trout baguette with a tangy aioli served with a side salad.  A favorite of mine.  The chorizo flatbread and the artichoke and brie baguette are also excellent choices.

Last Sunday we went there to meet Ana, a friend of Patti Mayonnaise who was visiting from Texas.  We got to seat right at front to enjoy the music and dancing while having brunch.

Left to right, Patti M, Ana and Sharon 

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Preserved Lemon & Green Olive Mayonnaise


An original recipe from our home not even based on any other recipe.  This came as an evolution from a preserved mayo we have been making for some time for our tapas parties.  I have to say, this one came out pretty good with fairly little effort for a mayonnaise made by hand.  Very much worth trying.  Here is teh recipe anyway.

Ingredients
1 egg yolk
1/2 cup good extra virgin olive oil
3 large green olives (any kind you like), minced
1/4 preserve lemon peel, minced
1-1/2 tsp lemon juice
1 pinch Kosher salt or to taste

Instructions
In a bowl, beat the egg yolk with a whisk as you add the oil very slowly (barely a drizzle).  When all the oil has been added, add the remaining ingredients and mix well.  If the result is too think (mine usually is), add a little water and mix well (no more than 1/2 tsp at a time).  You are done.  It is really that simple.

This mayo goes great with smoked fish or chicken.  Anything that would be complemented by the lemony taste.  The better the olive oil, the more you will taste it in the end result.  You can really adjust the quantities as you wish.  You can't go wrong with something this simple.

DNS @ TM25K

OK, so I may have pushed my increasingly old body a tad too much in the process of achieving not one, not two but three PRs in the last four weeks.  As a result, a problem with my right ankle is making it likely I will be a Do Not Show (DNS) at the Trail Mix 25K next Sunday.

I was really looking forward to that run, but I am less than three weeks from the Eau Claire Marathon and attempting this Sunday's run would probably guarantee I will be a DNS in Eau Claire.

What can I say?  Disappointed!

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Runs4Food Personals

            You, late teens, petite, with a brunette pony-tail, black 
            tights and a green hoodie.  Me early forties, with a tattoo 
            on the left calve, black short and a sleeveless white shirt.
            We passed each other several times running around Lake  
            Calhoun.  I just wanted to say thanks.  You helped me 
            reach a new PR.
            
Yep that's right...  Just a week after reaching a PR on the 23 mile distance and three weeks after smashing my 1/2 Marathon PR, I have a new one to add to the books.  This time is on the 12 mile distance.  The time was 1:40:11 or 8:21 per mile.  That is well over 5 minutes faster than my previous 12 mile record.  I am definitely on a roll.

Since I did 23 last week and I have a race next week (Trail Mix 25k) and a marathon in just three weeks (Eau Claire) , I was just trying to run the 12 that my training schedule called for at an easy pace (about 9:20).  I was well on track when I reached Lake Calhoun and say a runner cross in front of me at a good pace.  I decided to push a little and pass her.  It was easy enough, but a couple of minutes later, she zoomed pass me.  I pressed again and a few minutes later I had caught up to her and passed her again only to see her zoom pass me once again.

This time it was a challenge.  I frantically searched on my iPod for a power song and once I found it (San Francisco Bay Blues from Eric Clapton's Unplugged) I managed to pass her once and for all.  for the rest of the loop (about 1-1/2 or 2 more miles), she kept close, but never managed to pass me again.

Then I took off to go back home and decided to keep pressing to make a good time.  The result was another awesome PR.  Thanks, stranger.  I hope you are happy with you time too.

Over the miles, I have learned who and how to pass another runner.  So nine times out of ten times, when I pass, is like the kiss of death.  You will have little chances of taking the lead again.  That is good because there is nothing worse that pressing to pass somebody to end up eating their dust just a few minutes later.

Here is the trick to avoid that situation.  As you see your target, get close and follow for a good quarter of a mile.  Asses the situation.  How is the current pace?  Comfortable?  Expect that once you pass, the other runner might press a little harder and try to pass you.  Could you increase the pace and maintain it for a good mile? If the answer is yes, pass.

You can expect to be passed again.  No worries.  Repeat the steps above.  Whatever you do, do not pass again immediately.  Follow, keep a close distance for a quarter of a mile and then pass again.  The best thing that can happen is that you two keep passing each other and pushing to get great times.  If that is the case, when you finally split, protocol requires you take a minute to thank the other runner.  

Sunday, April 3, 2011

New Ways to Read Runs4Food

Blogger.com has released some new ways to look at blogs and Runs4Food looks better than ever through some of them.  Check 'em out with these links:


All I Know About Running I Learned From Yoga

I have been regularly attending a yoga session almost every Saturday morning for almost two years.  Please understand I am not the yoga type.  I started only because it was available in my building and I thought it would help with flexibility and, with that, my running.  Much to my surprise, I really learned to enjoy it to the point that I could feel the impact after a recent trip to Japan that made me miss three consecutive sessions.


Just yesterday my schedule called for a 23 mile run. That is my usual last long run before a marathon and the Eau Claire Marathon is coming up on May 1.  I particularly enjoy this one because it has been my first outdoor run of the 2011 spring (I don't count the Tokyo Marathon, since, while it was outside, it was not at home).

I will admit that the weather was a tad colder than spring calls for, but I had a great run.  I have been missing my usual Hennepin to Lake and around Calhoun Lake.  23 miles allowed called for four loops, so I got plenty of that.  More so, I got a significant PR for that distance.  I finished in 3:25:18 (9:03 per mile), a 9'54" faster that my previous PR.  Yep, an improvement close to ten minutes.

As I was running and missing my yoga session (forecast called for rain on Sunday, so I had to switch the day for my long run) I was thinking of parallels between yoga and running.  This is what I came up with:
  • Relax your shoulders, maintain a straight spine. Running for three or four hours requires paying attention to form.  Eliminating tension from shoulders and neck can allow you to keep going longer.  Open your chest.  I twist and stretch it every so often (without missing a running step) to compensate for the pounding and compacting I subject my spine as I run.  
  • Keep breathing.  And do so at the same rhythm.  I take inhale once for every two steps and do the same for exhales.  I do the same for mile one and for mile 26 or a marathon.  If I feel I can't keep the rhythm, I know I need to slow down a bit.  I never understood somebody who is huffing and puffing on mile 10 of 26.2.  How do they make it to the end?
  • Keep your eyes in your head.  Regardless of how bad the moment is, keep your eyes in your head, maintain a relaxed expression.  Frowning and tensing doesn't help make things better.  What  helps me get through the tough spots is something I read on runner's world from an ultra-marathoner: it can't get worse all the time, at some point things pick up again.  Knowing that if I keep going things will get better helps me remain relaxed.    
  • Enjoy every mile (in yoga every pose).  Now and then during yoga there is a pose that your body is not meant to do.  Similarly, running you will find a hill or a windy section of the road, or simply a time you are just exhausted.  Every mile is part of the same run just like every pose is part of the same yoga session.  Enjoy and embrace every one of them if you want to enjoy running.  There are too many hills in life to hate them.
  • Start early in the morning.  That way the good feeling you get from the long run lasts all day.
  • And last... relax and enjoy.  Even if you don't feel like getting started, do you best to take pleasure on your long run from the start.  You could be sitting on the couch watching TV and chose to be running instead. There must be a reason.  That said, there is nothing wrong with being happy when the whole thing is over.   

Mushroom Pate at Home

So sharon goes to the store and buys some assorted mushrooms with no specific plan to use them.  I not knowingly, with a plan for a recipe from Fine Cooking also buy some mushrooms and after deciding not to cook that recipe we find ourselves with way too many mushrooms and plans for eating out the rest of the week.  These mushrooms will not last long and it would be a shame to see them go to waste.     

A quick search online results in a Wild Mushroom Pate from Emeril Lagasse that seems easy enough and will make them last.  The recipe below is adapted from that one to fit our taste and available ingredients.  The only change I'd made is halve it (unless you have a ton of mushrooms available as well), or you will end up with a little too much (of a delicious) pate.  BTW, I don;t wash or even brush my mushrooms, but feel free to do so if you want.

Wild Mushroom Pate

3 tablespoons goat butter (regular buter will do just fine)
1/2 cup chopped shallots
3 tsp minced garlic
8 oz crimini mushrooms, coarsely chopped  
8 oz white button mushrooms, coarsely chopped  
4 oz shiitake mushrooms, stems trimmed and coarsely chopped  
1 tsp dry thyme (1-1/2 fresh is probably better, just didn't have it)
1/2 cup of dry wine
4 tsp chopped parsley
1-1/2 tsp truffle oil
4 oz room-temperate sheep feta cheese (can use cream cheese as the original recipe calls but won't be as good)
4 oz room-temperate goat cheese
salt and pepper to taste

Sautee shallots and garlic in the butter until soft and fragrant.  Add mushrooms, thyme, salt and pepper and cook until wilted and reduced in size by half.  I may have added a little bit of olive oil at some point.  Really, who remembers...  You can keep cooking until most of the liquid they release has evaporated.  Add wine and again cook until evaporated.  Add parsley and truffle oil and cook for another minute.

Transfer to a food processor and process with cheeses until well combined.  Adjust salt an pepper and then cover and refrigerate until set for 3 or 4 hours.  Really, do your best to not eat it right there as it is, it won't be easy.  

Redeemed Oceanaire

Perhaps bad luck, but Sharon and I never seemed to had had a good meal at Oceanaire.  This is particularly strange, because we are seafood lovers and people really talk well of this place.  And it is not for lack of trying.  We have been there probably three or four times prior to our last visit, including a cooking class organized by Kitchen Window.

We had tickets to see Riverdance as their more recent tour brought them to downtown Minneapolis (a show, by the way that I enjoyed far more the first time and somewhat bored me this last time), and looking for a place to have dinner we decided to give Oceanaire a last shot before writing it off forever.

 Our reservation gave us just one hour to eat before we had to leave for the show.  We ordered some very good oysters (for which outside of freshens I will give no credit to any restaurant, since all you have to do is shuck them) and then shared a tuna tartar that I felt was very good.

For the main course, I ordered seared tuna with a piece of foie gras and a port reduction.  Foie gras is in my opinion a way to cheat on a dish.  How can it not be great with foie gras!?!  That said, the tuna was nicely cooked.  I thought it was unnecessarily large, but rather complain of an expensive meal being too big than too small.  The sauce was good but a little oily.

Sharon ordered the best dish of the evening.  A piece of halibut crusted with sesame seeds over a soft, velvety sauce.

The meal was not bad and the service was pretty good.  Still, when the bill came (just over $200 with tax and tip), you can't shake the feeling that we've had much better meals (including dessert and port) for the same money.  Alma is a good local example of a place that offers consistently great meals at the same or a lower cost.

So while the quality of the meal was enough to redeem Oceanaire from our past experiences, I think we will still be writing if off from our list of places to go to based on the cost/value proposition.  There are too many great places in Minneapolis to keep giving this place an opportunity to do better.  I hate avoiding a seafood restaurant that is so close to home, but this is just not worth it.

Got Lucky!

Barely a week after our return from Tokyo we run the second of five events part of the Team Ortho Monster Series, the Get Lucky 21K (really a half marathon).  It was a cold morning which is good for running.  In fact it was so good that I ended up finishing with a PR.  That's right, I beat my best half marathon time by nearly four minutes!

I have run exactly 13.1 miles nine times (7 of them were official races, the other two training runs).  My finish time at the Get Lucky was 1:48:18.  My previous best time was 1:51:56 (or 3'39" slower) on a training run.  My half marathon race PR prior to that was 1:53:33 at the 2010 Big Woods Run Half Marathon giving me an improvement of 5'16"!!


Perhaps radiation leaking from our recent visit to Japan is to be blamed (you know, superhero style, as in the effect radiation had on Dr Bruce Banner or Peter Parker), not that I'd like to make light of the tragedy still developing and that is affecting the beautiful people of Japan, a population that doesn't need any radiation to be superheroes.  They are proving so on the way they are handling themselves during these events.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Shaken up in Japan

Yes, we were there during the earthquake and I have already told the story a million times, so I could not leave my blog readers (all four of them) out of the loop.  I will however get to that later.  I'd like to think that the good parts of the trip should outshine this horrible tragedy (if not in importance at least on leaving a positive impression).   Having finally found the time to write about our trip to Japan, the first thing that came to mind was our breakfast the first morning there.

We got there late the previous day and our host (my brother-in-law) had an oyster party going on.  The next morning we wanted to start our culinary experience with a bang.  We headed out to find a noodle shop an instead ended up having some rice with beef and green onions.  With a breakfast like that, the trip seemed to be off to a good start.

Out of all the things we ate, the most surprising one (not the one we liked the most, but the most surprising) was deep-fried seaweed.  It came to the table looking like a chunk of coal.  It had the airy consistency of a dense foam, but the flavor was something between the flavor of the sea and the flavor of something fried.  Delicious, interesting and very unexpected.  The perfect started for one of our best meals while in Tokyo.

The restaurant in question was in Roppongi, a very commercial, trendy and popular area downtown Tokyo (and conveniently a few blocks from our home there).

The interesting thing about this place was that they cooked their food in hay.  This produces a big, hot flame that dies in under a minute.  The result is deliciously charred food that is nice a rare on the inside.

Furthermore, the outside has some of the pieces of burnt hay that flew up with the flame, and did have a flavor that reminded you of fresh hay.

Pictured on the left was a great piece of bonito we had at that place.  You can see the effect of the fast flame on that beautifully cooked piece of fish.

This dish is also an example of the type of presentation you learn to expect at just about any restaurant in Japan: impeccable, attractive and incredibly appealing.
After a few appetizers, we entered the soup course.    A table-top burner is placed in the center of our table under a bowl of chicken stock.  Cut up chicken is added along with many veggies.  When you are full and can't thin of anything else, the waitstaff brings rice to the table and adds it to the remaining stock.  It's possible not everybody eats as much as we did, but then again, we were on vacation on our first trip to Japan.
Another excellent meal came a few days later at another restaurant within walking distance.  That was a night for Shabu-Shabu.  Shabu-Shabu is a Japanese dish of thin slices of meat and vegetables cooked at the table in a simmering pot of broth or water, then dipped into any of various sauces.  The name is onomatopoeic of the movement and sound the meat makes while dipped in the broth.

Our friend Emi invited us to come along to Shinjuku for lunch.  This is a large entertainment, business and shopping area where she lives and works.  She took us to a Ramen Shop where we had pork pot stickers and shared three different bowls of ramen noodles.  This is truly addictive and delicious in so many ways.  Served with the soup is a not quite hard boiled egg that had been cooked to perfection to maintain a soft center.  What a surprise!
Sushi consistently had great quality, presentation and surprisingly low prices (compared with our expectations, anyway).  Toro (tuna) is available three ways based on the fat content.  Pictured at right are fatty tune (bottom right) and a medium fat (center bottom).  I found medium fat to have the perfect balance of softness and tuna flavor.  The sweet shrimp (top center) was also a crowd pleaser.

We also had kobe beef served sushi-style.  A few times even saw horse meat available the same way, although with all the seafood options available, we mostly stuck to fish (pictured at the right is tuna with seaweed rolled in green onions).  We will remember those breakfasts for a long, long time.


The day after the Tokyo Marathon (the primary reason for our visit), we went to the Asakusa,  the center of Tokyo's Shitamachi and one of the city's few districts that have preserved a certain atmosphere of the old Tokyo.  We were cold and were looking for refuge from the rain and snow and found a noodle shop on the second floor of a building
The udon noodles with tempura shrimp we ordered were the perfect, comforting meal for a cold day.  The broth brought just enough saltiness to the dish to counteract the usually (to my palate anyway) bland tempura. This soul-warming dish gave us energy to keep walking for a few more hours until we just had it with the cold and just went home.
 In Kyoto, after visiting the imperial palace and the surrounding park, we headed out to dinner to a place that had primarily skewers and grilled/fried food.  We were the first customers and got to sit at the bar by the cooks and talk to them (or attempt to anyway).  Pictured are deep-fried chicken.  Delicious but probably as unhealthy as they sound.
We ate tapas-style mostly picking items from the appetizer menu.  There was no fish available on the menu, but we had chicken livers on a skewer, grilled mushrooms and (pictured) chicken thigh meat with union shoots.  The dishes just kept on coming as we took pictures, drank beer and sake and ate to attempt to keep up.
Just about everything on the menu was grilled in a tiny hibachi-style grill.  This place, the chef told us, usually fills up later where the locals come after work and have drinks and order some apps to go along with them.  The grilled ball of rice was an item we HAD to try.  A crispy, salty (from soy sauce) exterior and a soft center made it fun to eat.
Also in Kyoto, back from the Inari temple, we were looking for a place to have lunch.  A freshly made, still-warm rice cracker served to buy as a bit of time as we selected an eatery.  From the many restaurants we saw among knife and chopsticks shops, there was one that keep appealing to us because of an old, wiry japanese woman grilling eel right outside the door.

We also liked the place because it had Japanese-style sitting (on the floor with a low table in between us).  It took us several attempts to get the eel, but it was worth the effort.  So much so that we ended up having it twice.  Barbecued eel is probably the one dish that most differs from the one you can get in the US.
On our train ride to Hiroshima, we noticed the little boxes of food that just about every passenger had and started to eat as soon as the train started moving, so on the ride back we got one to see what the rave was about.  The cold lunch box was definitely not the best meal we had, but was fun to try and kept us busy for a portion of the four hour train ride.

Our last full day in Tokyo we went to Ginza, a big, upscale shopping and business district that we had to visit before leaving.
To the northwest, there is a series of restaurants below an elevated railroad track with the look of the old Tokyo.  We stopped for a bite and ordered the item pictured at the left without knowing what it was.  It was the size of a small cantaloup and had fish and veggies mixed and deep-fried together.  Interesting, but basically fried food...

We decided to follow that by a more elegant (i.e. less fried) meal.  We chose the top of a large department store right at the main Ginza crossing.  we has a tasting menu that satisfied our appetite and left the impression we were looking for our last day in Japan.  The picture at left was our favorite dish, tender pork with veggies (so much so that we ordered it twice).

On our way down from that restaurant (12th floor), we started to feel the ground shaking and our building swaying.  The earthquake lasted for about 90 seconds and it caught us (of all places) in the glass and pottery area of the store.  Inventory crashed around us as we tried to keep our feet on the ground.  A second aftershock got us just a few floors below.

As we got to the street, we saw large numbers of people outside.  The Tokyo Metro was closed, taxi lines were endless and busses where packed, so we opted to walk back home using a subway map as a guide.  We weren't alone, half of tokyo walked home that day.  Most impressive was the calm and composure seen on every face we saw during that 90 minute long walk.  Without a doubt, these are remarkable people.

When we finally got home we were glued to the TV.  Slowly, those that had planned to come for dinner started to trickle in (all walked).  Emi had offered to cook our last dinner in Japan.  We were happy to learn that she did her shopping before the earthquake hit.

Emi (pictured at left proudly showing us a knife she had just bought) and a friend cooked for us one of the best meals we had during our trip (quite the challenge as the pictures and descriptions above probably suggest).  The meal had multiple courses served family-style at the same time (outside of tapas, probably the best way to eat).
There was a seaweed salad with lotus flower root, a heavenly rice also with some seaweed and little pieces of pork (ham?).  One of my favorite dishes that evening was a fish that was vey quickly marinated in soy sauce and ginger and then sauteed on a pan (pictured).  The soy sauce gives it the great color you see in the picture.
Another dish that I still remember was w=some thinly sliced pork that Emi cooked simply under a broiler.  The pork had been marinated in miso and a sediment that remains after sake is made.  The exterior was caramelized and a little crispy (particularly where the fat was).  The interior was juicy and tender.  A terrific meal to end a great trip. 
Now, I could not end this post without taking some time to thank our host.  Edu, my brother-in-law and friend, was a great host.  As much as we didn't want to impose during our visit, he made sure we never left the door without some advice on where to go and what to see.  He opened his house and his heart and guaranteed we had a superb time.  Edu introduced us to his friends and spent a great deal of his free time showing us around Tokyo or helping us plan our trips to other areas of Japan.  Bro, thanks for making us feel at home and welcome.  Mi casa es su casa anytime you decide to come by Minneapolis or wherever we happen to be.  I hope it won't be long.