Showing posts sorted by relevance for query frozen yogurt. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query frozen yogurt. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

2nd Annual 2009 Best of Taipei Restaurants Readers' Favorites Poll



It'a that time of year again! I had a lot of fun finding out what your favorite eats in Taipei were last year and I'm hoping more readers will share this year. Copy and paste the area below, fill in the ones you want to vote for and paste in the comments section.

I've added a few fun categories that I hope you guys will participate in... I know some of you are visitors, so you can share what you miss when you're not here!

VOTING

Voting will be open from November 24th - December 26th. There must be a minimum of 5 categories filled out (with different restaurants) in order for the vote to be counted. For example, you cannot fill out the same restaurant in 3 categories and nothing else. But if you really love that restaurant, vote for it in the applicable 3 categories and fill out 4 other categories, then it will count.

I changed it from "best" to "favorite" because some people told me it was too much pressure to declare something the "best" when they hadn't eaten everything. It's okay if you haven't tried everywhere in Taipei! No one has. It does not have to be a restaurant I've reviewed. So just vote for your favorites!

You don't have to have a google account to vote. Just pick the "name" or "anonymous" option and put in your first name or initials if you don't want to put in your name.

Also feel free to campaign for your restaurant or favorite eatery on Facebook, Twitter or your website with a link to this page. But only votes on this post will count.

I will tabulate and announce the winners by January 15th, 2010 (fingers crossed!).

2nd ANNUAL HungryInTaipei.com's
2009 BEST OF TAIPEI RESTAURANTS READERS' CHOICE AWARDS

Favorite Restaurant in Taipei
Favorite New Restaurant in 2009
Favorite Cheap Eats
Favorite Special Occasion Restaurant
Favorite Restaurant in a Hotel

Favorite Western Breakfast/Brunch
Favorite Chinese Breakfast
Favorite Late-Night Bites
Favorite Kid Friendly/Family Restaurant
Favorite Romantic Restaurant
Favorite Buffet
Favorite Night Market
Favorite Restaurant to take Tourist Friends
Favorite Unexpected Find in Taipei
Favorite Place to Meet for Drinks
Favorite Delivery
Favorite Food Court
Favorite Fast Food

Favorite Taiwanese Restaurant
Favorite Chinese Restaurant
Favorite Japanese Restaurant
Favorite Sushi/Sashimi
Favorite French Restaurant
Favorite Italian Restaurant
Favorite Indian Restaurant
Favorite Mexican/TexMex/Spanish Restaurant
Favorite Thai Restaurant
Favorite Vietnamese/Southeast Asian Restaurant
Favorite Korean Restaurant
Favorite American/Western Restaurant

Best Ramen
Best Beef Noodle Soup
Best Xiao Long Bao
Best Dim Sum
Best Hamburger
Best Hot Pot
Best Pizza
Best Steak
Best Vegetarian
Best Afternoon Tea
Best Desserts
Best Ice Cream
Best Frozen Yogurt
Best Shaved Ice
Best Coffee/Tea shop
Best Bakery- Breads
Best Bakery- Cakes

Favorite Food I Miss When I'm Away From Taipei
Favorite Food That Needs to Be Brought To Taipei
Favorite Restaurant that Needs to Open a Branch in Taipei

Tuesday, March 01, 2016

news: RESTAURANT ROUNDUP WINTER 2016


Oh my poor blog. I've neglected you for over a month, but it doesn't mean I haven't been thinking about you. I've just been traveling (LA, SF, Vegas, Hong Kong, Guam) and away from my computer. I can blog from my phone, but it just takes longer. Not to mention I have been busy with the very important exploration of recipes for my new slow cooker, watching the last season of American Idol, new episodes of the Good Wife, Scandal, Grey's, Younger, and getting some sleep.

So how to ease back into it? I want to post pictures of the new winter menu at RAW, dishes from Mume's one year birthday dinner, long due photos of Achoi, or about new spots in Taipei to get steak frites, chicken and waffles, deep dish pizza, and cheesy fried squid korean rice cakes. There have a been a slew of new-ish burger, steak and fusion cafes the past few months. Or updated pictures from the night markets, some posts which need updates badly. And SO MANY SUSHI BARS to write about. Or a food court round up. My indecision results in procrastination which leads to over a month of staring at the Hello Kitty Shabu post. Sigh Sigh Sigh. This is when I have at least 100 places in my drafts folder, some places that sadly closed since my last restaurant round up. Ok let's start with that.. and then see if we can get the motivation back.

NEW AND NOTABLE- WINTER 2016

Uncle's Taiwan
Le Blanc
Revel Eatery and Juice Bar
Morton's Steakhouse
Ramen Hero (and all the restaurants at Breeze Xinyi)
Paradise Dynasty
Dim Dim Sum
Breeze Nanjing
Moustache Cafe
Jamba Juice
Llao Llao frozen yogurt
Origines
Hello Kitty Shabu
Yum Yum Cafe
Ebisoba Ramen
Zorro Steak
TK Steak at Hotel Proverbs
Beer and Cheese (moved to a new location on Keelung)
Habibi Macaron
Love at First Bite
Big Boyz Pizza
Alexander's Steakhouse
Purplehood
Fly's Kitchen
Wayo
Cova
Triple A Burger
Hai De Lao
Garrett Popcorn
Quelques Patisserie
O Rose Ice Cream
Purebread Bakery
VVG Hideaway
C25 Plus
Palsaik Korean BBQ
Baptong Korean


CLOSED (I know there's more than this.. I'll add to it when I remember)

California Pizza Kitchen (which turned to Sonoma which also ended up closing). Now there's a huge Anzu tonkatsu in that space
Les Bebes Cafe
EIEIO Gastropub
Brklyn
Juice 8
Woogo Juice (original location closed, but other branches popped up at Citylink mall and other malls)
Quiznos on Fuxing
added 3/19/2016
Swensens
Juicy Diary
Tartine 




Friday, March 14, 2008

dessert/bakery: i strongly recommend cake donuts at COSTCO



COSTCO
No. 268 Jiu Zong, Sec 1
Nei-Hu, Taipei
(02) 8791-0110

website: costco.com

hours: 10:00 am - 9:30 pm

$

Visit reviewed: 3/13/2008

Who would have thought the perfect American style cake donut would be at Costco? I spotted it on my trip today and couldn't resist- after all- you get 8 for NT$119 which is basically the price of 4 Mr. Donut donuts.

The tray comes with half chocolate donuts and half plain (4 each)- they are a good size with vanilla frosting.

I practically inhaled mine- it was moist, sweet and dangerous! It's so simple, yet so satisfying especially in contrast to the dry bricks of cake-style donuts that I've had at Mr. Donut or Dunkin Donuts. It was dense, but not heavy.



I don't know if it's a staple like their muffins, croissants, cheesecakes, or seasonal like their pumpkin pies, but I was happy to find it! I totally love their cheesecake and birthday cakes too. They also have freshly made cream puffs and cookies, which I haven't tried here, not to mention their churros and frozen yogurt in the food court.

Oh, and good beef hotdogs (not like the nasty hot dogs at Ikea).

I also spotted some ice cream sandwiches today there, I guess, an organic brand called Julie's. I didn't feel like paying a premium NT$300 plus for 12 ice cream sandwiches so I bought the blackberry sorbet bars which I haven't tried yet.

If only they made lemon meringue pies, then Costco would be even more awesome.

What's your favorite thing from Costco or what do you wish Costco Taipei would import in?

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

CLOSED snapshot/dessert: i still strongly recommend YOFROYO




One way to beat the heat is with some frozen yogurt. Yofroyo seems to still be going strong and added specialty flavors, acai berry and lychee tart to the line up.

Spotted some new locations, including at Q Square & Ximending, and heard the tiny one in Gongguan closed awhile back.

This is combo #1 with original tart, though I tend to favor the green tea/red bean combo too.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

taiwanese: 21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition!



Where does the time go? I have lots I want to share about new places to drool over, but I can't seem to put it all together. It doesn't help with the days of grey, pouring rain alternated with the cooler fall weather that's too nice to stay indoors. I've finished reading Crazy Rich Asians months ago in LA and wrapped up my binge marathons of Orange Is the New Black, Newsroom and Homeland, so I'm forced to stop procrastinating and finish up my myriad of half finished blog posts.

I thought in honor of the shout out on Buzzfeed's 28 Reasons to Love Taipei last month, I'd make a list all about FOOD, since you know I'm obsessed with food. Thanks to Buzzfeed and Kevin Tang for highlighting Taipei and the many reasons to love it- the weird (yes, the city of themed restaurants, and no, I've yet to go to Modern Toilet or the Ninja restaurant or Barbie cafe) and the wonderful (clubbing, shopping, cafe-ing, karaoke singing, eating).

So for fun, here's my own list just for food- 21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition! If it's your first time checking out my blog, hope this list helps inspire your next trip to Taipei or if you live here already, to seek out something new.

21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition!

1. Mango shaved ice

Mango shaved ice was invented in Taipei in the 1990s and since then copied around the world. Tourists flock to Ice Monster for avalanches of juicy, sweet mango atop ice, even after its move from its original home on Yong Kang St. If you don't want to wait in line, also check out Mango Cha Cha, Smoothie House or your favorite night market for this summer must eat.


2. Taiwanese shaved ice and snowflake ice

I love the blanket of sticky condensed milk over crushed ice and freshly made rice balls and red bean (my favorite is at Tai Yi Milk King), but there's no shortage of toppings for Taiwanese shaved ice. One version that is becoming trendy in the US is snowflake ice or snow cream which has a fluffier, creamier, melt-in-your-mouth texture and is being served up with flavors and toppings similar to frozen yogurt- said to have originated from the night market vendor in Shilin. A must in Taipei's humidity and heat. 

  



3. Din Tai Fung

I've come to appreciate Din Tai Fung after taking friend after friend when they were in town to visit. It's consistently delicious, quick and efficient, and you just can't beat their paper thin skin on each juicy, hot dumpling. Of course there are many other great xiao long bao places in Taipei (such as hole in the wall Little Shanghai or trendier San Yuan), but classic Din Tai Fung is the one the tourists will wait in lines to go to.


4. Carb-ilicious and soy milk Taiwanese breakfasts

The perfect place to go for an early breakfast when you are getting over jetlag- with hot or cold soy milk, sweet or salty, and fried and baked dough combinations of you tiao, sao bing or fan tuan to fill you up for the rest of the day. Look for Yong He Dou Jiang signs around town, or the basket of fried "oil sticks" out front. The previously only-famous-with-locals spot, Fu Hang, had lines snaking around the stairs and out the front entrance on my last visit there (after I mentioned it to CNN.com and it was included on its list of 40 Taiwanese Must Eats). Doh! I'm keeping all my favorites a secret from now on!



5. Ridiculously sweet fruits

Mango, guava, wax apples, pineapple- the fruits here are so sweet, you have to wonder if it's natural!

6. Ice cream wraps AKA bin chi ling run bing

This might change your life like it did mine. Essentially an ice cream burrito, there's ice cream, peanut brittle shavings and cilantro (which is optional but recommended) wrapped up in a crepe-thin flour wrapper. Salty, sweet and usually only NT$40 or a buck and some change. It's like a treasure hunt finding it- X marks the spot with the huge block of peanut brittle at the night market stands- I've had great ones at Ximending (in front of the movie theater) or Lehua or Longshan night market.

  

7. Night markets!

Taiwan night markets are late night adventures- eating, shopping, people watching, eating, bargaining, eating. Some of my best memories of my first Taiwan summer after 17 years away are from discovering hot 5NT shui jian baos and shaved ice at Shilin Night market for the first time. It's an culinary experience so unique that it's even being recreated in LA to overwhelming crowds (or so I hear). Try everything at least once, even things that look (or smell) indimidating- you might be surprised what your favorites are.


 


8. Chinese sausage in sticky rice buns AKA da chang bao xiao chang

One of my personal night market must eats- grilled sweet Taiwanese sausage stuffed in a grilled sticky rice sausage, cut in half to act as a bun, topped with some pickled or fresh veggies. Some vendors will also offer options for condiments, spicy sauces or different flavored sausages. The sticky rice gets a slight carmelized crispy skin from the being grilled and the veggies give it a nice crunch- put all together, it's SO good hot off the grill. You might even spot street vendors outside various clubs or KTVs late at night (kind of like the hot dog vendors at the Rose Bowl or Hollywood Bowl after concerst).



9. Fresh bread and bakeries EVERYWHERE

While cute doesn't always mean tasty, you can't help but to admire the adorable confections that sit next to the not-as-photogenic-but-delicious mentaiko breads, squid ink bread, garlic bread, cheese bread or pineapple buns. I don't know how all the locals stay so thin with the temptations of freshly baked bread on practically every street corner. Whether you pick bread from Taiwanese style, Japanese style or French style bakery, it's going to be fresh.



10. Baos and buns
Baos and buns for less than US$1. Yes please.




11. Spicy mala hotpot

While not for everyone, this red blood broth complete with tofu and cubes of silky, tofu-like blood inside is addictive. Hotpot in Taipei is a DIY affair with plates of raw meat to cook and fishcake to scoop out. Spicy mala hotpot so good that I even crave it during the summer. My favorite part is dipping the crispy you tiao dunk it in the spicy side just for a few seconds to soak up the broth and flavor, but taking it out and eating it before it gets soggy.



12. Gua bao
Pork belly, crushed peanuts, cilantro in a clam shell bun. Don't mess with the classic Taiwanese street snack.

 

13. Amazingly fresh and affordable sashimi

You wouldn't think that sashimi would be a must eat in Taipei, but some of the best sashimi experiences I've EVER had are in Taipei, and not at prices that would cost a week's worth of pay. I actually didn't learn to enjoy raw fish/sashimi until I was in my mid 20s and I think part of the reason is because there's so much more variety and freshness to the sashimi in Taiwan.



14. Dessert tofu AKA dou hua

Silky, sweet and topped with peanuts, minature tapioca balls or mung beans, a bowl of dou hua tofu is a refreshing Taiwanese dessert that can be eaten hot or icy cold. I love getting it from Xiao Nan Men, which also serves red bean soup and aiyu bing, a lemon jelly type dessert, all for under US$2.

 

15. Pan fried dumplings AKA guo tie

Nothing beats homemade potstickers fried up by my dad, but since he's in LA and I'm not, I've found some good substitutes until he visits. The perfect pan fried dumplings have a crispy crunchy base and right pork/veggie combination inside. The overpriced and bad gyozas in LA have made me appreciate how magical the chefs are here when frying up their potstickers. Check out the chain Ba Fang Yun Ji for ultra cheap and tasty guo tie (10 will set you back NT$50 or US$1.50), with options like curry or kimchi flavors besides the traditional pork/cabbage and pork/chives options. Even better are the ones from this hidden hole in the wall in Ximending.



16.  Beijing roast duck


Having visited Beijing recently and been disappointed at the portions and prices of Beijing Roast duck there, I have to say that this is a reason that I do love Taipei. Full platters of meat and crispy skin to share with a table full of friends or family- the ducks here are plump and the portions are generous.



17. Taipei Food courts

While you won't find Hot Dog on a Stick or Panda Express (haha!) at any of the food courts in Taipei, there's no shortage of things of places to choose from. A typical make up of a Taipei mall food courts will include Korean, Omelette rice, Ramen, Pho or Southeast Asian, American fast food (McD/Burger King or Subway), Italian (Taiwanese version of pasta), sizzling steak plates, sometimes Indian, teppanyaki, conveyor belt sushi, tonkatsu, dessert, tea shop and lots of Chinese/Taiwanese options which offer dishes cheaper and tastier than the average Chinese restaurant in the states. Check out the mega Breeze food court at Taipei Main Station which has a section of shops selling just beef noodle soups to choose from.



18.  Beef noodle soup AKA niu rou mian

Speaking of beef noodle soup, this is another reason to love Taipei. Hot, savory broth, tender pieces of beef and tendon, and a bowl full of chewy noodles- it's the dish that has its own annual Beef Noodle Festival. Whether you eat it at your fave neighborhood joint or one of the award winning places (many which I still have to try), 



19. Stinky tofu AKA chou do fu

Not going to be on everyone's list to love Taipei, but it's on mine. You can smell the it before you can see it, but the fermented tofu really does taste better than it smells (most of the time). Served hot with pickled, spicy cabbage and sometimes stuffed with garlic, it's a bite to remember. At the very least you'll have some good laughs over seeing tourist friends' reactions to the smell for the first time.





20. Bubble/boba tea shops

I love that you can get a cup of boba milk tea (aka zhen zhu nai cha) in Taipei for around US$1.50, half the usual price in the states. And Taipei shops offer up more than just tapioca milk tea- there's fruity drinks, jelly drinks, slushy drinks, and options like mini boba, pudding, passion fruit, grass jelly, green tea, as well as asking you to choose what level of sweetness and ice you want with each order. Chun Shui Tang, the inventor of bubble tea, has over 80 drinks on its menu and serves its drinks in huge jug-like glasses. I personally love the shops like Genki Q Nai (which recently was renamed) or the more well known Chen Shan Ding in Gongguan, use fresh milk and boba boiled in brown sugar so that each chewy ball has a carmelized sweet taste- try it once with less ice, no sugar, all milk.



21. Ah Chung rice noodle soup

Deceptively simple looking, this little bowl packs a lot of flavor with stewed silky rice noodles, a thick broth, intestines and cilantro- add your own mix of vinegar, chili or sesame oil. A bowl of noodles that's almost too hot to hold and you gotta eat it standing up in the middle of an alley in Ximending (unless you go to the sit down location near ZhongXiao Sogo). 


This list could go up to 100 reasons, but putting this list together (and digging out all the matching photos)  already took a lot longer than I anticipated! Haha. So it's a good place to start from if you're visiting Taipei or looking for a list of must eats. Did I leave off your favorite food reason to love Taipei? Share it in the comments!

Sunday, September 05, 2010

news: CLOSED restaurant updates & A8 Shin Kong Mituskoshi revamp



Walked around the A8 Xinyi Shin Kong Mitsukoshi food court today for the first time since its revamp in July. It's a bit fancier now, with a glossier look and some new additions- Subway, Hielo frozen yogurt, Richard Blanc bakery, Coldstone ice cream and what seems to be new sushi and teppanyaki places. Also an interesting addition- a pizza place called Skinny Taj Pizza with some traditional pizzas as well as some fusion. Noticeably gone is Good Day, which seemed a little lost previously on the opposite side of the food court near all the Japanese snacks. But now the food court extends and circles around the whole B2 floor. When I get back from LA, I'll explore it some more and do a full post.

After catching GOING THE DISTANCE last night, I thought I'd wander over for crepes at Suzette forgetting that NYNY is pretty much emptied out and being redone (rumor has it- for a new H&M in Taipei?!?). So the whole row of Starbucks, Mister Donut, McDonalds and around the corner, Suzette, are all gone (not to mention the NYNY food court). The website hasn't been updated, so don't know if it's moved elsewhere or if it's gone for good. Does anyone know?

What else has closed this year?
-Citizen Cain which is now a place called Cubano, which I heard has quite good Cuban sandwiches!
-La Casita
-California Grill at the Dun Hua location
-Famous Larry's NY Pizza
-Blue Spice Thai (we barely knew you!)

Any other updates that I should add to this list?

There's quite a bit of change in the 101/Taipei City Hall MRT area- the addition of the Taipei City Hall bus station center and addition/extension of the MRT station there has another food court-looking space to explore. Later this year (or next?) will also add the Le Meridien and W Hotel to this busy Taipei area. Looking forward to seeing what restaurants open up in those hotels.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

western/dessert: i recommend MOM's PIES



MOM'S AMERICAN STYLE HOMEMADE PIES
75 Neihu Road, Section 2
Neihu District
(02) 8797-1716

Various delivery locations around Taipei
Mr. Hsu 0935-504-554
Ms. Wu 0922-091-113
Mr. Hsieh 0922-324-060
Mr. Huang 0931-311-215

website: imomi.com.tw Chinese and English (worked for me in Taipei, but not in LA)

hours: check website for hours/locations

$

Kid friendliness: some flavors might be too dense for kids, but what kid doesn't love pie?

Visit reviewed: 6/19/2009



Taipei is a city full of desserts- you can easily find cake-by-the-slice in every coffee shop or bakery; fruit topped shaved ice or scoops of ice cream for the summer days; colorful macarons and delicate napoleons, and now even frozen yogurt.

But pie?

Pie seems to be an elusive Bigfoot in the world of Taipei desserts. Look long enough, and you'll find it offered on the menu of a few American places like Jake's Country Cafe, ACC, or the Diner, or your best bet for pumpkin pie around Thanksgiving time- Costco, or randomly in the basement of Sogo at a little shop called Rose Pie.

When I was craving a slice of lemon meringue pie a few years ago, I started searching for pie places in Taipei, and started hearing about Mom's Pies. It sounded so mysterious. It was sold off a truck? Would it taste American style homemade like its name promised? Most importantly, was it good?

So when I was having lunch with a friend at Happy Korean and spotted a woman at the table next to us with a bag that said Mom's Pies, I quizzed her about where she got it. She said it was just right around the corner of the restaurant, on the sidewalk across the street from AIT, and kindly gave me her flier.



So my friend and I paid the bill, hurried outside and sure enough, a woman with a table full of pies was on the street corner. We'd found Bigfoot! I'd heard about it for so long, it was weird to finally see it in person. Although some people would think twice about buying a pie from the street, this made sense to me since Taipei is a city where you could buy practically anything from a street vendor, before LA was the city where you could buy almost anything off a truck.

But instead of a truck, Mom's Pies has been driving a van and selling it around different spots in town from Tuesday to Friday- the updated weekly schedule can be found on their website, though it is only in Chinese. You can also call for free delivery if you order more than 2 pies.



I spotted lots of flavors- pumpkin, chocolate, peach, cream cheese, cherry cream cheese, blueberry cream cheese, and chocolate cream cheese, and I know they have some more interesting flavors like red bean, taro, green tea cheesecake, purple yam and oatmeal (?!?!).

But still no lemon meringue. :(

The slice of pecan pie(NT$45) was full of large pecans and had a good sweet, sticky filling and the crust was flaky. A whole pie of the same flavor is NT$300 with 8 slices.



I've had their cheesecakes after finding them this day- coincidentally, someone gave a relative of mine a pie of different slices (NT$360) and their cheesecakes are dense and a bit heavy. They are so thick that you could pick up the whole thing by the slice and it would be a solid piece. The red bean and green bean flavors also kind of weirded me out (not really American homestyle), but I want to try the peach and apple in the future.

Where have you spotted Mom's Pies and did you give it a try? What's your favorite flavor?

Friday, January 18, 2008

not Taipei part ONE: BIG TOMY's, SOUPLANTATION, RED ROCK CASINO and SIN BALA



hi everyone!

Sorry for the long blogging vacation. Actually my three plus year old Powerbook G4 decided to crash over the holidays.

Luckily, it was before the Applecare insurance expires mid January.

Unluckily, Apple Stores/Genius Bars don't do data recovery.

So luckily, the nice people at Computech SOS were able to recover pretty much all my data from my failing hard drive, replace it and move all the old stuff to the new drive. There are still some kinks I'm working out (they didn't restore my address book, so I have to do an "add email" to all my emails) and I had to do a software update to fix the iTunes and Quicktime before I could open it.

But I was definitely very SAD for a few weeks before I knew for sure whether or not they could recover all my photos and videos (apparently 35 gigs worth!)- so this is my warning to you- back up your data!!! Whether it's to an external hard drive or to CD/DVD or somewhere else online, it's totally better than the last resort of paying hundreds or thousands of dollars of having an expert do it for you!

Anyways, as always, I have been eating lots of great food over here. Some highlights:

Gyros and chili cheese fries from BIG TOMY's- YUM! Although I like the gyros from The Great Greek better (on Olympic and Bundy), you can't beat the chili cheese fries here. It's open 24 hours and there is Orange Bang to wash it down with. Three things that pretty much don't exist in Taipei.



SOUPLANTATION offers an all you can eat variety of soups, salads, pasta and breads/muffins, as well as a frozen yogurt machine and fruit. It's not the most gourmet thing in the world, but it's comfort food and the price is right, seeing that most salads these days are $6-$15 and soups are at least $3-6 a bowl. Personally, my favorites are the chinese chicken salad, the chili, the clam chowder and the chicken noodle soup. Plus gotta get the blueberry muffins, cornbread and a bit of froyo, but avoid the pastas- always seem very bland.



After overloading on food in Vegas, we had a simple brunch before we headed back to LA. An off the strip hotel, the cafe at RED ROCK CASINO offered a variety of breakfast and lunch options. My strawberry waffle didn't disappoint (at about $8) with a light crispy texture, lots of sliced strawberries, and sauce or maple syrup to drizzle on it. I also thought their Griddle breakfast (at about $10) was a great deal with 3 eggs, hashbrowns, sausages and ham steak. BTW- pretty packed for an off the strip casino (about a 20-30 minute wait for Sunday brunch) and looks like a glitzy strip hotel, but off on its own with an in-house bowling alley and movie theater.



Lastly, haven't had Chinese food in awhile and ended up at SIN BALA, a shaved ice/Taiwanese food cafe in Arcadia. Their specialty seems to be chinese sausages, but I ended up getting a Squid Potage vermicelli soup and sharing a shaved ice with my family. Personally, I don't love the black sugar syrup on the shaved ice (about $4) (it's got a strong flavor, almost gingery to me) (just pour on the condensed milk please!) but you can request it without it the next time. Five toppings are included and piled underneath the shaved ice- this time we got red bean, rice mochi balls, ai-yu and boba along with the condensed milk. It was not the best shaved ice I've ever had, but passable. They also have other small eats like oyster omelet (also vegetarian style with mushroom), wonton noodle soup, and scallion pancake. I also thought the service was pretty nice and friendly.




BIG TOMY's
11289 W Pico Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90064
(310) 479-0601

SOUPLANTATION
21309 Hawthorne Blvd
Torrance, CA 90503
(310) 540-4998
and other locations

Grand Cafe at
RED ROCK CASINO
11011 W. Charleston Blvd.
Las Vegas, NV 89135
(702) 797.7777

SIN BALA
651 W Duarte Rd. Ste F
Arcadia, CA 91007
(626) 446-0886

:)