Showing posts with label risotto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risotto. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Vita Bella Ristorante



Restaurant: Vita Bella Ristorante

Cuisine: Italian/West Coast
Last visited: February 4, 09
Area: Burnaby, BC
4544 Hastings Street
Price Range: $20-30


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

Food: 4.5
Service: 4.5

Ambiance: 3.5

Overall: 4

Additional comments:

  • Specializes in Italian cuisine with West Coast flare
  • Italian husband and wife operation - Chef Leonardo Moschetti
  • Local BC seafood
  • Extensive wine list – Italian/BC wines
  • Friendly, family owned service
  • Attracts locals/neighbourhood/ages 45+
  • Affordable/casual fine dining
  • Spacious/comfortable
  • Old Italian tradition music
  • $9.98 Take-out pasta specials
  • $25 3 course menu (Sun-Thurs)
  • Vegetarian/Gluten free options
  • Charges $1 for hot water
  • Minimum $15/person
  • May be surcharge for split orders
  • Dinner only – from 5pm
  • Closed Tuesday
  • Dine in/Take out
  • Cash/Visa/MC/Debit


**Recommendation: Linguine Fumante, Zampina (more so because you can’t get it anywhere else)


Vita Bella Italian Ristorante has been around for 4 years and they specialize in Italian cuisine with West Coast flare. However taking a look at their menu I thought the items were on the whole Italian with minor West Coast influences in a couple of their sauces such as orange cranberry compote and cranberry vinaigrette.


Chef Leonardo Moschetti (husband/owner/chef) is born and trained in Bari Italy (Southern Italy) and continued his training in Vancouver (hence the West Coast flare). For me the food was more Northern Italian with Southern influences. Everything was homemade but also quite hearty and rich which is not common of Southern Italian cooking. The food was really good however it left me quite thirsty because of the richness and saltiness.


It was actually really nice because near closing time he actually came out of the kitchen to meet and greet every table for that evening. It was such a nice touch and it made the experience so much warmer. Vita Bella Ristorante serve great food at reasonable portions and prices compared to downtown. It’s family owned affordable fine dining.


On this occasion I was joined by fashion blogger Nicole. We were supposed to come here a month ago, but realized it was closed on Tuesday so ended up at El Inka Deli instead. We ordered a whole crap load of food and ended up finishing everything. We shocked the staff and even ourselves…we were even contemplating another dessert but my tights were starting to dig…


On the table:


Complimentary Freshly Baked Foccacia 4/6

  • With balsamic vinegar and extra virgin olive oil
  • They serve it complimentary, but it's also an appetizer for $3
  • The Foccacia was served warm and it was lightly toasted and quite fluffy with lots of flavour from fresh basil, black pepper, oregano and a little bit of melted butter. The bread is good.
  • The olive oil they served it with was not good – 1/6. It looked rich and flavourful, but it wasn’t at all – they need a better quality/brand.

**Veal & Beef Sausage "Zampina" 4/6

  • House made, grilled atop tomato caper Bruschetta $20
  • The zampina sausage is supposed to be one of their specialties. It’s a homemade traditional Southern Italian sausage. This is the only Italian restaurant I’ve ever seen it serve at, so I would recommend trying it because it is authentic.
  • The zampina is made with minced veal, beef and some chopped sun dried tomatoes and some dried herbs. I felt like there were some jarred pimento peppers or pecorino in there too. It’s very slightly spicy and tastes mainly like minced beef.
  • It actually reminded us of those Chinese sausages – it was a bit dry in texture and the meats were really lean so it wasn’t a juicy type of sausage. I actually liked eating the sausage by itself rather than with the Bruschetta.
  • The Bruschetta was loaded with toppings such as tomatoes, capers, red onion, basil and green onion. It ended up making the bread soggy and a crostini mght have been better.
  • There was a strong smoked salmon taste and I think they put little pieces in it and it wasn’t necessary. There were too many flavours going on and the smoked salmon taste was a bit overpowering and it took over the sausage. It was a bit salty too because there were so many big capers in it.
  • The focaccia was also burnt and I could taste the bitterness.
  • I could have used more balsamic reduction, they used it for décor, but the sweetness and tang made the dish better.


Gnudi 3/6

  • House made ricotta cheese gnudi tossed with roasted peppers, butter and fresh sage $20
  • I asked to order it as an appetizer and it was $12 which is a bit steep for the 4 we got. I think $10 would have been more reasonable, but it was a special request so I didn’t really mind.
  • As an appetizer 3/6 as a main 2/6 because it would be too rich and I’d get sick of it before I’d finish it.
  • Gnudi is basically a big version of gnocchi. They’re very fresh, handmade and were almost like ricotta stuffed ravioli.
  • It’s really soft, almost like pizza dough or very soft bread stick. It’s very creamy and there’s a lot of ricotta stuffing so it’s very rich, filling and hearty.
  • They served it with a sage butter sauce but all I could taste was melted butter. They needed more sage, I couldn't see or taste any.
  • They serve it with pepperonatta which are sweet red pimento peppers cooked in olive oil, garlic and butter. I needed way more of this though because there wasn’t enough for the 4 pieces. The tangy sweetness helped to break up the creamy gnudi and gave it more flavour.
  • I’ve had something similar at Lupo Resaurant + Vinoteca: The Ricotta Gnocchi – they’re not really comparable though.

**Linguine Fumante 6/6

  • House smoked duck breast, sun dried tomatoes, assorted mushrooms in Grand Marnier demi-glaze cream sauce, drizzled with truffle oil $18
  • Ding! Ding! Ding! This is the one. This was the star of the night and this is the one I would recommend and come back for myself.
  • The duck is a star anise hickory smoked locally grown Fraser Valley heritage duck. It almost tasted like ham or bacon! It looks like the only give you a little, but it’s actually a lot when you start eating it.
  • The duck skin tastes like those skins on European wieners – they almost snap back. I liked it!
  • Since it’s smoked it’s not as juicy or sweet as duck can be. It was still good though.
  • The sauce was a rich duck demi-glaze and it was delicious! It tasted like duck gravy drippings with a red wine reduction and then cream. I couldn’t tell it was Grand Marnier. It was so creamy and rich in flavour I loved it. It was surprisingly thick and sticky, very well reduced, so it stuck to the pasta very well.
  • The pasta was cooked perfectly al dente! People may think it’s undercooked, but it’s not! If you go to Italy they cook their pastas for 6-7min not 8-9min.
  • The dish was delicious overall. I could smell the truffle oil and they used more than I thought they would! It was delicious with lots of juicy strips of mushrooms and sundried tomatoes. The sun dried tomatoes should be cut a bit thinner though because at times they were overpowering and very salty and tangy. A little goes a long way…

BC Golden Trout 4.5/6

  • Rolled in mascarpone cheese and toasted almonds, in lemon cream sauce $21
  • All seafood entrées served with risotto and seasonal vegetables. All seafood is from local BC waters.
  • This was another rich and hearty entrée. It was even richer than the ricotta gnudi and that says a lot! The richness came from the sauce and the mascarpone cheese stuffing.
  • It was a big piece of boneless trout with the skin on so there was a lot of flavour. However the skin wasn’t crispy which really bothered me because it was a bit slimy and didn’t go with the texture of the creamy stuffing.

  • There is so much stuffing in this trout and it was almost pure mascarpone cheese! It was so rich and thick and it was actually hard to swallow, but it was really good! It had a lemon flavour and was ultra creamy…it was almost like eating a fluffy lemony melted cream cheese with salmon.

  • The toasted almonds were ground up in the mascarpone cheese stuffing but I couldn’t taste them at all. They were the size of rice so it came off as uncooked rice or even fish bones. I think they should crust the trout with slivered almonds, or instead of almonds use pine nuts in the stuffing. It would have been a better match as the nuttiness was masked by Mascarpone.
  • The lemon cream sauce was almost like a béarnaise sauce or a hollandaise sauce. It was really thick and rich and I could definitely taste the fresh lemon in this as well. It was quite tangy, almost like it had sour cream. As good as it was, I think a lighter sauce might have been nice since the mascarpone stuffing was so thick and rich already. To put it into perspective, after the mascarpone stuffing the buttery lemon cream sauce comes off as light!
  • The veggies were tender and grilled with a little olive oil. They actually had a smokey flavour to them as well.


Saffron Risotto 4/6

  • It could have been creamier, but the flavour was there. This was a super cheesy risotto with lots of parmesan cheese. It was actually stringy instead of creamy and came off as sticky rice or even mac and cheese. It was still really good though. I like the texture of the saffron risotto at Lupo Resaurant + Vinoteca better, but the flavour of this one was stronger.


Dessert

House Special Tiramisu 2.5/6

  • Traditional Italian cheesecake made with savoiardi biscuits soaked in our secret mixture of espresso and liqueurs, layered with creamy mascarpone filling and dusted with pure Dutch cocoa $8
  • The piece was fair but for $8 I think it’s a bit steep. It was worth $6-7 for me.
  • It was obviously premade and sitting in the fridge…which isn’t the part that bothers me. But if you’re going to do this then you have to dust the cocoa powder on last minute before serving otherwise it actually looks like it’s been sitting in the fridge! That bothers me.

  • I couldn’t taste the Rum or the espresso. Real tiramisu should use espresso and not a mixture of espresso and liquors – it came across as sweet syrup, so it wasn’t a “sophisticated” Tiramisu – although not bad either.
  • The Mascarpone was creamy but not thick enough and it came across as whipped cream almost. They also didn't use enough and the middle layer was too thin.
  • The Savoiardi biscuits were soaked quite nicely and it was a very moist Tiramisu, but I really missed the richness of the Mascarpone – which is weird because they used so much of it for the BC Golden Trout.

Vita Bella Ristorante on Urbanspoon

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Lupo Restaurant + Vinoteca




Restaurant: Lupo Restaurant + Vinoteca

Cuisine: Italian/Pacific Northwest/Casual fine dining
Last visited: January 16, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Yaletown/Downtown)
869 Hamilton Street
Price Range: $20-30 (for entrée)


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

Food: 3.5
Service: 5

Ambiance: 4

Overall: 4

Additional comments:

  • Located in historical Victorian house
  • Executive chef Julio Gonzalez Perini
  • Italian chef
  • Specializes in Italian
  • Italian with West Coast influence
  • Extensive wine list
  • Casual fine dining
  • Clean menu, nice selection
  • Home made desserts
  • Great presentation on the whole
  • Very friendly service
  • Cozy, intimate atmosphere
  • Great for parties, private rooms available
  • Dinner from 5pm
  • 5-6:15pm 3 course set menus $28/$38 available

**Recommendation: Hard to say – I liked parts of each dish. Ideally it would be braised pork cheeks on soft mascarpone polenta…which is a combination of 2 entrees. I’ll have to recommend the braised beef short ribs, and the lamb shank ossobucco is popular too. I’m very curious about the chicken; it’s supposed to be amazing. For dessert: Panettone Bread Pudding, Tiramisu


Lupo Restaurant + Vinoteca recently reopened. The restaurant was originally Villa Del Lupo Restaurant but they went through some new owner and also had to reinvent themselves. Rather than catering to the $50+ clientele they are targeting to a $30-40 crowd and hoping for a more casual atmosphere. As much as they’re trying to revamp themselves it still feels intimate, cozy and slightly pretentious, although the service is not at all. Good thing! It’s almost impossible to leave this “cozy/intimate” atmosphere because the restaurant is in a historical Victorian house from 1905. I felt like I was walking into someone’s house for dinner, it reminds me of Mis Trucos on Davie, but more upscale.


It’s supposed to be serving traditional Italian food (what I was told), but the menu looks more West Coast Italian to me. The main ingredient in each dish is Italian, but there’s still some creativity and small global influences to it. I was more impressed with the service and presentation than I was with the food. The food was good, but it sounded better and I don’t think any of it reached its full potential. Everything was missing a note and parts of every dish had something going for it, but no dish on the whole was outstanding - it was quite good though. I would come again, but I also wouldn’t chose to come again.


My dessert post


On the table:


Ricotta Gnocchi 4/6

  • Braised pork cheeks and porcini mushroom “sugo” $14/19 (14 appetizer size, but quite big)
  • The pork cheeks were the tenderest meat out of lamb shank ossobucco and braised beef short ribs. It was really juicy tender and soft which just a thin layer of fat around the edges. Even as an appetizer it came with 2 cheeks which was a great surprise.
  • The sauce was “sugo” almost like a ragout made with stewed tomatoes and mushrooms. The sauce was very simple in flavour and tasted mainly like tomatoes so it was quite tangy and one dimensional in flavour. I wanted to taste some red wine and some meaty flavour like beef stock.
  • The mushrooms were very slippery and very soft. I didn’t feel like the mushroom flavour cooked into the sauce though.
  • The gnocchi wasn’t a traditional gnocchi. The concept was there and I was really excited about it, but it sounds better than it was. I couldn’t taste the potato, and if I paid close attention I could taste the ricotta, but if I didn’t I could have forgotten it was in there. The ricotta made the texture a little more mushy and soft than typical gnocchi is. They also put some minced flat leaf Italian parsley and minced carrot into the ricotta potato mixture. It was quite flavourful, but I didn’t warm up to the texture.
  • This may be getting a bit picky, but the gnocchi was inconsistent in terms of size. They were very oddly shaped and it might be because the ricotta made for an overly soft dough.
  • They were also missing the fork indents so it’s didn’t pick the sauce up as well as it could have.

Risotto 3/6

  • Seasonal wild mushrooms and garlic confit $16/20
  • The biggest issue with this was the size and plating. The ricotta gnocchi as an appetizer looked the same size and was probably more filling than the mushroom risotto as a main dish size.
  • It was served on a plate and I think it should have been served in a deeper dish. I wasn’t too impressed with the plating which is unfortunate because everything else was plated well.
  • This wasn’t my dish, but I did get to try it. Based on my sample I wasn’t too impressed. I’d be really disappointed if I ordered it because at $20 it was really small and I’d still be hungry. Not just me too, anyone would.
  • The price comes from the fact that this dish is loaded with mushrooms. The mushrooms are great, juicy and plentiful, but the rice is still hard. The texture could have been creamier and I felt like it was rushed.
  • It also needed some truffle oil, which would have enhanced everything.

Lamb Shank Ossobucco 3.5/6

  • Lamb shank ossobucco with lemon saffron risotto $20
  • This has been an item on the menu for 20+ years. It’s the only item that has carried on from the old menu and it’s one of their most popular entrees.
  • The presentation is lovely with mini scoops of zucchini and carrots – talk about fine details to plating.
  • The lamb was coated with a simple tangy tomato sauce and it was tender but it could have been tenderer. It wasn’t falling off the bone and it still required some kni fe and fork action. The lamb also had a slight gamey taste at the end, it’s wasn’t too strong, but I’m really sensitive to that taste and I could taste it.
  • The lemon saffron risotto was creamy but the rice was still hard again. It tasted like exactly what it sounds like so the recipe was quite simple. It was tangy and I could taste both ingredients, but not much of anything else. I could have used more parmesan cheese to give it more flavour. It maybe could have used some peas too, to give it some texture.

**Braised Beef Short Ribs 4/6

  • Braised beef short ribs with soft mascarpone polenta $24
  • It was really good, but could have been better. The au jus was the problem for me.
  • The braised beef was boneless and very lean with little bits of juicy fat around the edges. It wasn’t chewy either.
  • The meat was very tender but not necessarily juicy (except for the fatty parts) because there weren’t many spices or seasonings if any.
  • The braised beef had more fat than the pork cheeks yet the pork cheeks were most tender out of the 3 meat entrees. The braised beef still shred away with a fork, but still not as easily as the pork cheek.
  • The mascarpone polenta had a great texture and I loved the ultra creaminess. It’s creamier than the risotto. The problem was I couldn’t taste the mascarpone – even keeping in mind mascarpone has a very mild flavour. It was almost like mashed potatoes, but less starchy and it has a mealy (like polenta is) in texture. I really liked it though – just missing the cheese factor.

  • The gravy they served it with also wasn’t very reduced. It was actually very salty and tasted like over salted beef au jus. At first I did not like the runny texture of the gravy, however with the polenta as the starch it worked well. If you let the polenta absorb the au jus then the mascarpone flavour completely disappears even more than it did before. The sauce was very overpowering and didn’t enhance the dish.
  • On top of the short rib was a crispy piece of pancetta. I think it’s deep fried, but I didn’t like it. It was salty, and it looks nice, but it has the texture of egg shells.
  • If the gravy is going to be like this then they need to serve it in a deeper dish so that the polenta can absorb the sauce. They should have served it like my Roasted Duck Leg at The Irish Heather.
  • Again it had nice presentation, but hard for me to capture.

I didn't forget the dessert...yes there is always room...;)

Lupo on Urbanspoon

Friday, January 1, 2010

My Holiday Dinners and Feasts



Happy New Year!

So due to sleeping in and it being a holiday I didn't really update the blog this morning. I didn't know what to post and I wanted it to be a little different. So if you've been following my tweets I've had 8 or 9 Christmas dinners this year. Unfortunately I didn't get pics of all of them, but I did get a few. Just wanted to show you what I've been eating.

Some of the holiday meals were home cooked and some were dine outs. I don't review anything that is homemade by friends or family...because I still want to be invited for dinners! =p But to satisfy your curiosity everything was delicious and I'm so lucky to have friends and family who can cook.


Vancouver Food Blogger dinner at The Irish Heather...review posted tomorrow!
Duck leg with Mushroom & Foie Gras Jus

Christmas dinner with my best friend. We love cooking, we love eating, we love food! The dips we made for our crab cakes. 1) Pesto Cream sauce 2) Sweet Thai Chili with Edamame 3) Curry Pineapple Chutney with Coconut

The crab cakes we made. The only ingredient we prepared was crab meat...everything else was rummage around my kitchen and work with what we have.

1) Crab cake 1: Tropical East! Coconut Curry crab cake crusted with cashews, coconut, and coconut rice crackers. Served with curry pineapple chutney.

2) Crab cake 2: Asian style! Sweet Thai Chili crab cake crusted with peanuts and honey glazed sesame cashews. Topped with Sweet Thai Chili edamame beans.

3) Crab cake 3: Mediterranean style! Pesto and caper crab cakes with Pesto cream sauce.



Dessert after crab cakes was Egg Nog Cupcakes!...and Mochis! You can eat those whenever!


Christmas Eve dinner at Kirin - Peking Duck.
My appetizer. My own creation: Christmas all wrapped up! It was shredded turkey, stuffing, cranberries, mushrooms, purple potatoes wrapped up in filo. Served on home made cranberry sauce.

My friend's drunken risotto made with 2 bottles of Merlot! It also had Italian sausage, onions and spinach. Yum!

Sweet potato mash with toasted marshmallow bake..this was out "vegetable" dish.

Christmas dinner potluck with 6 friends. Sweet potato mash with toasted marshmallow bake, mac n' cheese 1, mac n' cheese with bacon 2, drunken risotto, and honey Dijon glazed ham.

Dessert from Kreation Artisan Cake Bakery

My New Year's Eve 2009 dinner at The Marriott hotel in Vancouver. Charred asparagus with papaya vinaigrette, steamed veggies, roast beef, roast chicken breast, wild mushroom and pearl onion ragout, ravioli with olives, artichokes, baby shrimp and radicchio, roast potatoes etc. etc.

Friday, November 6, 2009

G-MEN Ramen Shop - Review 2



Restaurant: G-MEN Ramen Shop - Review 2
Cuisine: Japanese/Ramen
Last dined: October 30, 09
Area: Richmond
#1101-3778 Sexsmith Road
Price Range: $10-20

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

Food: 5
Service: 2
Ambiance: 3
Overall: 5
Additional comments:
  • Specializes in big bowls of authentic Japanese ramen noodles
  • Serves mini donburis and gyozas as appetizers
  • Can't select richness of brother/fattiness of BBQ pork
  • Small/limited menu
  • Not homemade noodles
  • Started by owners of Gyoza King Chicco Cafe & Naan Chu,
  • Japanese servers, Japanese chefs, popular to Japanese diners
  • Closed on Tuesday and Wednesday
  • Line-ups, whole party must be in attendance in order to be seated
  • Busy/crowded all the time
  • Extra charge for green tea
  • Free parking
**Recommendation: Tonkotsu Miso Ramen (only served at dinner), Wasabi Nori Ontama Mini Don, half cooked free-range egg (Ajitama), Special ToriGara Shoyu Ramen

This was my second time at G-Men Ramen shop and this time I came for lunch. It was more busy this time and they changed the wait system. It's now basically self-service and you write your name on the clip board hanging outside the door and wait until your name is called. This place is getting ever so popular and if you're not there earlier you can guarantee a 15-20min wait. It's fine for small groups and don't expect to stay long because there's a constant line-up at the door. Nonetheless the food was once again worth the wait, and I'll still go back.

To see my G-Men Ramen Shop - Review #1
To see my G-Men Ramen Shop - Review #3

On the table:
  • Mentai Mayo Mini Don 4/6
    • Salted cod roe with mayo on rice $4.50
    • Their mini dons are mini, but they're still very filling as an appetizer. I really like these. One of the few items where the dish looked better than the picture. I like their wasabi nori mini don better, but this one is still very good.
    • This one is perhaps more traditional Japanese than the other one.
    • The orange ball you see is the salted cod roe. It's almost like masago, but even smaller and the texture isn't crunchy. It's more soft and bitty and the flavour is more mild than masago - it's not as salty or strong.
    • It was quite rich and creamy and the mayo they use is a Japanese mayo mixed with something else which I'm not sure of. Japanese mayo is made with apple cider and it's a lot more flavourful than American mayo. It's not as oil based too. I'm not sure what they mix it with here, but whatever it is, it works.
    • They give you a lot and you mix all the ingredients together before you eat it.
    • I loved the texture of this dish. The seaweed melts down from the hot Japanese rice and the mayo makes it all creamy. It can be thought of as the Japanese version of risotto...almost. The rice is nice and sticky and there's a few salty flavours going on which makes the dish delicious! It's not fishy tasting either. It's simple and so good.
    • Not how it was served, but someone started on it already =/
  • **Special ToriGara Shoyu Ramen 5.5/6
    • Authentic light "torigara" chicken soup thin noodle seasoned with housemade shoyu flavour, topped with BBQ pork, half ajitama (egg), yuzu (citrus Japanese fruit similar to tangerine), seaweed, black wood ear mushroom and green onion. $8.50
    • This is pretty delicious! This is a soy based soup and it's sweeter and more flavourful than the other ramen bowl they offer at lunch - the ToriGara Shio Ramen. Unlike Kintaro's you can't select the richness of your broth, or the fattiness of your BBQ pork; but I think this Shoyu broth in particular tastes better than Kintaro's.
    • The broth is a dark colour and it's more like pork/beef broth. It made the ToriGara Shio Ramen taste like chicken broth.
    • The free range egg is AMAZING and completes this dish! It's half cooked and it takes a true chef to make it this perfectly.
    • I love the textures of all the toppings here and they give you a decent amount.
  • Special ToriGara Shio Ramen 3.5/6
    • Authentic light "torigara" chicken soup thin noodle seasoned with shio (salt) flavour, topped with BBQ pork, half ajitama (egg), yuzu (citrus Japanese fruit similar to tangerine), seaweed, black wood ear mushroom and green onion. $8.50
    • This was the other option for a ramen and soup bowl at lunch. I was able to compare the broths side by side and the colour and taste is quite different.
    • This one was definitely saltier and lighter in colour. It wasn't sweet and the flavour was more one dimensional. It wasn't bland, but just not as rich or strong as the Shoyo ramen bowl. Neither of the broths were oily but this one was clearer and more light.
    • I liked adding the minced garlic condiment to the Shio ramen bowl. I didn't need it for the Shoyu ramen bowl because it would have been overpowering and you would have lost the natural flavour of their homemade broth. However for the Shio ramen it added another layer of flavour as well as a little garlic spice that helped enhance the soup base.

G-Men Ramen on Urbanspoon