Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Charlie’s Restaurant & Bar



Restaurant: Charlie’s Restaurant & Bar

Cuisine: Pizza/Mediterranean/Italian
Last visited: March 9, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Yaletown/Downtown)
1265 Hamilton Street
Price Range
:
$20-30

1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 3.5
Service: n/a
(Media dinner)
Ambiance: 5
Overall: 3.5
(food is on generally good, but not worth it)
Additional comments:

  • Chef Brian Ritchot
  • Chef from Montreal, one from Spain
  • DJ’s/live music on weekends
  • Contemporary, sleek, posh atmosphere
  • Great for groups
  • Specializes in gourmet pizzas
  • Mediterranean/Italian options
  • Longue like atmosphere
  • One large projection screen TV
  • Open late
  • Pizzas available for take out
  • Dinner service only

**Recommendation: Short Rib Pizza, prosciutto di Parma 18 Month, Duck Pizza, Banoffee Pie


I was invited to a media dinner at Charlie’s Restaurant & Bar so the food served this evening was complimentary. However there were no expectations from Charlie’s Restaurant & Bar and the review represents my true and honest opinions.

Overall the evening was very pleasant and the food was good. However if I were to imagine myself as a regular diner I would probably think great atmosphere, good food, but over priced. It’s “Yaletown Pizza”. Better than Opus Bar pizza for sure. Nothing tasted bad, but when you’re paying for it you get more critical. There are things in the recipe or cooking method that could be improved. I would have liked to see smaller sized pizzas at a reasonable price…which they may consider. I just don’t want to share 1 14 inch pizza if I’m having dinner with one other person…and if we order more we’re looking at a steep bill with lots of leftovers.

They offer pastas and a couple mains but their focus is pizza. I liked the thin crust and made in house aspects but it was at times inconsistent and some were crispier than others. I'm not being too picky either - it was a significant difference. However the pizza crust has a slight garlic powder flavour which is great! Also there’s decent leopparding on the bottom of all the crusts – sign of pizza crust cooked properly.

Soggier crust on 1st pizza.

Crisp crust on last pizza!


I attended the evening with Victoria from Victoria’s Food Secrets. 9 courses later and we still had room for one more dessert…so we just reached for the unfinished dessert down the table. ;)

Oh and no – that is not Charlie and the owner’s name is not Charlie…Charlie is a fictional character the restaurant and food is inspired by.


The dessert portion of dinner at Charlie's Restaurant + Bar.


On the table:

House Marinated Olives 4/6

  • Citrus & fresh herbs $6
  • Olives are olives and there were a variety which I liked.
  • I like olives so I liked them. The marinade was good, but also standard.

Grappa Cured Salmon 3.5/6

  • Cream fraiche, cucumber, mint, salmon roe and lemon zest $15
  • Very fresh and big piece of salmon. Quite a simple dish that sounds more interesting. A sharing appy.
  • I liked the levels of saltiness from this – the salty bite of salmon roe, fresh sea salt on top of the salmon and then the fresh caper berry. The cream fraiche helped to balance and round out the flavours.
  • The cucumber, mint and lemon zest was more for décor and not enough to actually add to the dish.
  • Not sure how much this appy suits the restaurant, but it’s still good.

Prosciutto di Parma 18 Month 5.5/6

  • With pea mousse, snow pea tendrils, a poached egg, two crostini, and drizzled with extra virgin olive oil.
  • Not on current menu, but will be added at end of month. Price TBC. I would hope $12-14.
  • Great combo of flavours and loved the plating. Prosciutto roses!
  • I loved the pea mousse. Its very light and fluffy. I recommended them to add Mascarpone to the mousse to give it creaminess and richness. Drool.
  • I could taste some tuffle oil on the prosciutto – great touch!
  • The poached egg could have been even softer and there were fresh green peas underneath it all. Loved the textures of it altogether.
  • It definitely needs a few more crostini for the portion.

Meatball Pizza 2/6

  • Spicy tomato sugo, pork meatballs, fontina, smoked speck and fresh oregano $23
  • It was good, but for $23 I wouldn’t order it. It’s a bit too basic for me anyways so I wouldn’t have ordered it on a regular basis.
  • The best part was the Fontina, except it made the pizza extra greasy which eventually made the thin crust a bit soggy.
  • It was homemade Italian Sausage meatballs. They were ok but a bit dry and not a highlight. The pizza also wasn’t spicy to me and there wasn’t much oregano. Maybe they should shred them up and spread them around.

Smoked Salmon Pizza 3/6

  • Salsa verde, house-smoked salmon, red onion, capers, arugula preserve, lemon and goat cheese $25
  • Lots of stuff going on here, but I did like it.
  • I liked the big pieces of salmon and there was a decent amount of creamy goat cheese crumbles…a little goes a long way.
  • It was salty, slightly peppery and the salsa verde got nicely baked in the oven so it gave off a nutty flavour and crispy texture. It was quite a herby salsa.
  • It was almost like an arugula salad tossed on top so it was quite fresh tasting – the heaviness comes from the goat’s cheese. Some could like this idea and others might find the salad messy and distracting. I liked it.

Roast Potatoes – Side 3.5/6

  • The potatoes were very flavourful, fluffy and buttery but the skins were not crispy enough.

  • If we stopped here I would have been slightly underwhelmed...until...

Short Rib Pizza 5.5/6

  • Tomato sugo, braised short ribs, caramelized onion, mozzarella, horseradish cream and green onions $25
  • This was my favourite of the night!
  • Lots of short rib, but it was a bit dry. I like how I can see it but this method dried out the meat during baking.
  • The beef could have been more marinated to compensate for the drying out. There’s definitely some dried herb they cooked it with so there's still some flavour.
  • I loved the fresh spicy horseradish cream! It’s spicy, but it tastes like they made it milder so it wouldn’t be overpowering. it also added some sauce/juice to the meat.

Duck Pizza 4/6

  • Porcini sauce, smoked duck, roast portabellini mushrooms, tallegio, radicchio and truffle oil $25
  • This had so much potential and it was very good but I was very bothered by the duck part…which is the main part. It had almost completely dried out during baking and it came off as roast beef. Since it was thin slices of duck it really came off as roast beef.
  • You can see how the duck meat is dry and wrinkly. So it was good, but disappointing in that one aspect.
  • I liked the mushroom flavour throughout though. Nice layers of mushroom flavour including the big slices of juicy Potabellini and truffle oil which I could taste.
  • It was a bit on the salty side and I would have liked more shredded cabbage for more of a crunch.

Drinks


Keep in mind I’m not much of a drinker – watch this video to see why.


Champers Thyme 2/6

  • Apple, cucumber, thyme smashed with agave syrup, Henrick’s, Prosecco crown $11
  • A sparking cocktail to start the night. Couldn’t taste much apple, but cucumber and thyme stood out. Refreshing, but quite bitter (from Thyme) and tart.

Cocktail 1265 2.5/6

  • Blood orange, grapefruit, juniper berries, pine nuts, basil, grapefruit bitters, Vodka $10
  • I thought I would like this more than I did. Pretty strong drink. The pine nuts are pureed it so it has a very subtle nutty flavour. Bold, citrusy and slightly sweet, actually quite bitter.

Devil 4/6

  • Sliced fennel, cloves, cherry syrup, Cazadores Reposado tequila, cherry bitters and ginger beer $11
  • I don’t like Tequila, and this was the best drink. It’s surprisingly sweet because of the cherries and it just worked very well. It has a warm spice and slight licorice taste.

The dessert portion of dinner.


Charlie's Restaurant and Bar on Urbanspoon

Sunday, February 14, 2010

CHAU Kitchen & Bar


Restaurant: CHAU Kitchen & Bar

Cuisine: Vietnamese/Fusion/Asian

Last visited: January 25, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Robson Street/West End/Downtown)

1500 Robson Street
Range: $20-30


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!


Food: 3.5 (based on few items I tried)

Service: 4

Ambiance: 4

Overall: 3.5

Additional comments:

  • Vietnamese Fusion tapas
  • Contemporary/casual fine dining
  • The Vietnamese version of Hapa Izakaya
  • Vietnamese owned
  • Vietnamese chefs
  • Attracts Westerners/locals primarily 30-40+
  • Quite healthy
  • Moderately priced
  • Lunch plates $10-13 until 5pm daily
  • Lunch and dinner
  • Open 7 days
  • Serves alcohol/cocktails/wine
  • Mon-Sat 11am-10pm
  • Sunday 11:30-9:30pm
  • Charge for tea
  • Free parking at rear

**Recommendation: Artichoke Tea (I don't feel like I tried their best dishes so I feel like there could be better stuff on the menu that I haven’t tried)


CHAU Kitchen & Bar serves Vietnamese fusion tapas and is pretty much the only expensive Vietnamese restaurant in Vancouver. It’s not fine dining, but it is casual fine dining. The menu offers about 20 Vietnamese tapas with a contemporary twist and although it seems like “white people making Vietnamese food” it isn’t. The chefs and owners are actually Vietnamese so the quality and style of the food is quite good although I prefer Kingyo (Japanese Izakaya) to this. They are different, but I find that I get more value at Japanese Izakaya. It’s hard justifying expensive Vietnamese food because it’s known for “cheap eats” and there are so many in Vancouver.


I came here after dinner #1 at Sushi Garden so I can’t say I was too hungry to eat again…but obviously I still did. I was with my Vietnamese friend and it’s even hard for her to justify pricey Vietnamese food. While the food was good (ambiance and service are better) the tapas are pretty basic and not creative enough to justify the price. I just didn’t see value with some of the dishes. Oh and as a side note, CHAU is pronounced “Cho” almost like “Joe”, and not “Chow” like many people think it is.


On the table:

**Artichoke Tea 5/6

  • Steeped from dried artichokes, sweetened with sugarcane and topped with gogi berries. Caffeine free. $3
  • They charge $1 for regular Jasmine tea, but I decided to get the Artichoke tea.
  • I really liked this! It’s very natural and naturally sweetened and as sweet as Chamomile is.
  • In addition to the sugar cane there’s dragon’s eye (fruit) and gogi berries which enhances the delicate sweetness and leaves a honey and floral flavour.
  • Artichoke tea is also very good for you and helps cleans e your liver too.

Buddha Bowl 3.5/6

  • In a mushroom, lychee and date stock served with tofu, rice noodles and seasonal vegetables $7/$11
  • We ordered the bigger size because the server said it’s almost triple everything more worth it. It was a pretty decent portion and definitely big for a tapa.
  • This was basically a vegetarian version of pho. It seemed like a recipe from Martha Stewart. It was quite westernized and very healthy looking and tasting. The noodles are fresh and not dried which is great.
  • There was a mound of fresh veggies like raw shredded cabbage, green onions, carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, vegetarian ham, eggplant, lotus root, mushrooms, deep fried tofu, dried tofu skins, snow peas, and honey dates.
  • There was no lychee in it; they actually meant “longan” which is dragon’s eye fruit. It has a florally sweet flavour and is quite refreshing.
  • The veggies were all blanched in the soup before being served so they were all quite bland on their own. They didn’t absorb any flavours and could have been tenderer, but I guess they assume it will cook in the hot soup anyways.
  • The broth didn’t taste vegetarian to me. It tastes like a sweetened chicken broth with a light onion and garlic flavour. It probably is vegetarian but tastes like it's from a can, that's partly why I though ti was chicken. It’s more sweet than savoury and there’s a pink tint which is probably from the ingredients.
  • There is very minimal fish sauce but it comes through when you squeeze the lime into the soup. I like my broth more savoury and it’s the most important part of pho so I wish they did a better job with it...by the way doesn't fish sauce make it non-vegetarian?!
  • I appreciate the variety of ingredients, but it was also something I could easily make at home. The honey dates and longan/Dragon's Eye are actually more Chinese and they come dried in packages at the Chinese supermarket. (The Dragon's Eye could have been frozen/fresh.)

Rice Paper Rolls 3/6

  • Green leaf lettuce, cucumber, vermicelli, herbs and a crispy egg noodle centre. Choice of chicken, prawn, pork and mint, tofu, or vegetarian ham $6.50
  • We ordered it with prawns and they really spread them out so I couldn’t taste them. They used too much lettuce and not enough other ingredients and they were just really tiny in general.
  • This was the “fancy” version of Vietnamese salad rolls. It wasn’t even fancy as much as it was a cute idea.
  • They were pretty small and I actually like the regular Vietnamese ones better.
  • The “fusion” part was adding the crispy egg noodle centre which is actually just a crispy layered wafer that looks like a Pocky stick. It wasn’t sweet, but more neutral like a cracker. It added a nice crunch, and was good, but the concept was a bit junior for a restaurant lik e this.
  • They serve it with a sauce that tastes like a mix of sweet and sour plum sauce, fish sauce, and that orange Vietnamese vinaigrette that’s usually served with deep fried spring rolls. I which it was nuttier tasting.

Crispy Pork and Prawn Wontons 2.5/6

  • $6
  • These were just your standard deep fried wontons, except I couldn’t taste or see any prawns. I would have appreciated a bit more stuffing.
  • They were deep fried well though, very crispy and golden on the outside and the pork meat was still juicy. Again it wasn't that impressive for a gourmet Vietnamese tapas place, but I didn't really expect them to be either.
  • The pork was well marinated though and I could taste garli c and onions.
  • They serve them with sweet Thai chili sauce but it’s more sweet than spicy.
  • I don’t think it’s worth the price because there were only 4 and it’s the easiest thing an Asian restaurant can make and serve.

Dessert

**Deep Fried Banana 5/6

  • Served with lychee ice cream (I’m not sure of the price, but I’m guessing $6-8)
  • The banana was served in a doughnut like batter. It wa s covered with sugar, and then covered with syrup before serving. It was a bit too sweet since the banana is already sweet. I also wish the batter stayed attac hed to the banana but I guess it was too heavy.

  • The banana was warm and creamy and I liked how they garnished it with chopped mint because it brightens up this rather heavy dessert.
  • The lychee ice cream was the best part. There are actually pieces of real lychee in it and it went so well with the banana fritter and mint. All the flavours went together so well.

Vietnamese Pancake 3/6

  • A fried Vietnamese pancake served with caramel and lychee ice cream (I’m not sure of the price, but I’m guessing $6-8)
  • It was one fried pancake made out of Vietnamese flour – seemed like potato or rice flour to me. It’s thin and crispy and glutinous in texture.
  • It was swimming in a caramel sauce that was much too sweet and they put too much on.
  • Again the ice cream was the best! It has the real lychee bits in it and with the pancake it gave it a nice florally flavour.

Chau Kitchen & Bar on Urbanspoon

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Goldfish Pacific Kitchen






Restaurant: Goldfish Pacific Kitchen - Restaurant Review
Cuisine: West Coast/Pacific Rim/Fusion
Last dined: December 8, 09

Area: Vancouver (Yaletown/Downtown)
1118 Mainland Street
Price Range
: $20-30


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 3.5 (Based on lunch)
Service: 3
Ambiance: 5.5
Overall: 3.5
Additional comments:

  • Located in Yaletown
  • Mostly Asian chefs/cooks – Chef William Tse (previous sous chef of Joe Fortes and Chop House)
  • Asian fusion/Asian inspired menu
  • Focus on seafood
  • Sophisticated and creative food
  • Extensive Wine Bar
  • Contemporary, trendy & “Yaletown” atmosphere & décor
  • Quite a large dinner menu
  • Dining Room/Lounge/Patio
  • Covered sun room with lounge couches
  • Great for appies/drinks/late night
  • M-F 11am-4pm “$10 Gold Plates”
  • M-F 4pm-6pm Happy Hour – appies and drinks

**Recommendation: Chicken satays, tuna tartare, short rib sliders, bacon fried rice (very popular but I haven’t tried), Trio of West Coast Sushi Pizza, Shiitake mushroom meatloaf

I posted my resstaurant review for Goldfish’s Happy Hour yesterday so this review focuses on the lunch I had there. For more details on the restaurant and overall review please see my post from yesterday: http://tinyurl.com/yfqzr6l

I came for a late lunch at 3pm and it was almost empty. Therefore I think the food I had was actually probably better because they could take the time to prepare it and do it well. It’s not always the case, but just my thoughts…


On the table:

  • Flash Seared Ahi Tuna Sandwich 2.5/6
    • Sweet onion marmalade, mustard greens $14


    • I love ahi tuna and when I see it on the menu I’m likely to order it. There was nothing really wrong with this one, but I expected more from it. The ahi tuna was slices of ahi tuna rather than an ahi tuna filet. I felt like they used their tuna tataki appetizer and made it into a sandwich by serving it on toasted white bread. There wasn’t that many pieces of tuna, but just enough slices to cover the bottom layer of bread. I think it could have used more ponzu sauce. It was more sweet than tangy because of the marmalade.
    • The sweet onion marmalade was basically a red onion relish – it was tangy, sweet and savoury and went well with the tuna, however there was a little too much of it and not enough tuna.
    • I wish they used better sandwich bread – they either used Wonder Bread white bread or the white bread from T&T Supermarket. I think they used a combo of butter and garlic aioli before toasting it. It was nice and crispy, but boring at the same time.


    • It came with fries which were I think are hand-cut. They were quite starchy but were really good with the garlic ginger aioli. The aioli is made in house and you can really taste the ginger – it’s so aromatic. It came with ketchup too – I really think they should start making their own ketchup. The new restaurant Society also in Yaletown does and it’s great. I really like the sauces at Goldfish so I think they should really make their own.

  • **Shiitake Mushroom Meatloaf 4/6

    • Tomato Hoisin jam, confit of whole shallots, roasted garlic jus $10
    • This is their Tuesday Gold Plate – basically the Goldfish lunch special of the day for $10
    • It was a bit small, but that was somewhat expected. It was only $10 anyways.
    • The meatloaf was actually really good. It was made of pork, shiitake, white pieces of bread (not crumbs), onions, garlic, Hoisin sauce, and some other spices. It was really tender, soft and moist. It was almost like bread pudding, but in a good way. There was a decent amount of pork pieces, almost chunks and I was surprised they didn’t use ground pork. This made it more gourmet and I appreciated that. I loved the addition of shiitake mushrooms. It absorbed so many juices they were all plump and juicy and gave the meatloaf a whole other level of sweetness and moistness.

    • The meatloaf was baked and maybe even pan-fried to the point where the glaze became charred. I liked it though. I was scared it was going to be dry, but it wasn't. It had a crispy crust and was very well marinated and coated with a deep and rich tomato Hoisin jam. The Hoisin jam tasted like it was made with a cranberry jam. It was sweet, tangy, savoury and tart. I would have appreciated more roasted garlic jus though. There wasn’t enough sauce for both the meat and the rice.
    • I didn’t like the rice, it was really dry and needed sauce. The whole shallots were amazing though. They were really really soft and basically melted in your mouth.

  • **Trio of West Coast Sushi Pizza 3.5/6
    • Hokkaido scallop, salmon, albacore tuna, wasabi tobiko $10

    • This is their Thursday Gold Plate. I actually tried it on September 10 when I went for happy hour – but I’m including it in this review because it’s a main dish.When I ordered it they had it as a special, so you would choose 1 of the 3. Now they offer it as a sampler. I tried the salmon and the albacore tuna pizza. Those were the 2 the waitress recommended so I just went with that.
    • This was a sushi rice patty pan-fried until crispy and topped with chopped sashimi. I liked the salmon better than the tuna, but both were good.To make it better they should marinated them in a little bit of ponzu or something. Give it more flavour becuase they don't have too much going on. It's a very simple recipe.
    • It’s not too greasy and the patty is nice and thin so you really taste a nice ratio of ingredients. The fry the rice up very nicely to the point where it’s a bit charred so it’s all nutty and crispy on the outside, but still soft on the inside. They drizzled a teriyaki citrus glaze or reduction before serving it. The wasabi tobiko tastes like regular tobiko to me – I missed that spiciness.


    • I liked it better than the sushi pizza I had at Sushi Sky. I liked the rice patty here better, but I liked the addition of avocado at Sushi Sky. Ideally I would want to have a drizzle of teriyaki glaze and wasabi mayo. They use Teriyaki glaze at Goldfish and Japanese mayo at Sushi Sky, but it’s not wasabi mayo. To see my review: http://tinyurl.com/yefvj9r

Goldfish Pacific Kitchen on Urbanspoon