Monday, May 12, 2014

japanese/sashimi: i recommend CAFE DE RIZ



CAFE DE RIZ
No. 34 Lane 78, AnHe Road, Sec. 1
台北市大安區安和路一段78巷34號
(02) 2755-6587

MRT: Xinyi/Anhe

website: Cafe De Riz's FB

hours: 11:30AM- 10PM

$$$ (about NT$800-NT$1200/person)

Kid friendliness: mostly raw sashimi available, though spotted one grilled salmon consommé rice option. no high chairs spotted

Visit reviewed: 3/5/2014



I never had a chance to try Nomura, a Taipei sushi bar that garnered fame while it was open. When it closed in March 2013 due to Chef Nomura leaving, the partners reinvented the space into Cafe de Riz. Instead of a typical sushi bar, the specialty was seafood donburis and consommés. Donburi is Japanese for rice bowl and Riz is French for rice, so Cafe de Riz is a restaurant for serious sashimi donburi lovers as the limited menu presents only a few options.


You can opt to sit at the counter for a prime spot to watch the sushi chefs, or if you have a bigger group at one of the tables. 




A glance at the menu shows three options for those wanting something hot and four for those wanting  sashimi donburis. Prices are on the higher side, especially for lunch, compared to other chirashi spots in Taipei, but then again you are getting whole pieces of nigiri sized sashimi rather than chopped up bits in a bowl. 




Cabbage served with a speck of yuzu pepper paste, to share with six people. It's pretty potent, but for six people, might need more than that.




We quizzed the waiter on the differences between the various menu options and had no idea about the sizes. I had previously spied uni on instagram at Cafe de Riz, so of course I asked which don would have it. The server said that the Fabulous Seafood Don would have uni while the Seafood Don did not. I thought if I was gonna splurge, I might as well go for it for an extra NT$300. 

At NT$1200, the Fabulous Seafood Don rivals the price of an omakase lunch at a number of sushi bars.  But instead of waiting for the chef to delicately present each piece of nigiri, you get to choose your own pace as you dig into the huge wooden bucket for sashimi treasures. 


I think those of us who ordered the Fabulous Seafood Don yelped in excitement when we saw the huge wooden bucket and how much stuff was inside.



It's a pretty massive bowl, and honestly, you could probably split this with another person. There's 2-3 pieces of most of the fish and a layer of rice underneath. 





I loved the delicate soy sauce "teapot" and the presentation of everything. 


Let's go fishing...

beautiful piece of tuna


salmon


ebi shrimp

Seafood Don (NT$900) - my friend who ordered this was happy with it. I should have taken a photo of the seafood don and fabulous seafood don side by side to show the size difference, but hers came a lot later and I already started mine.  


Salmon and Roe Don (NT$800)



Bubbles of salty fishy goodness



Salmon and Roe Consomme (NT$600) is interesting- you get a pot of hot broth to pour into your bowl to essentially make your own soupy rice. Even though the consommé sets got extra side dishes (one cold one and one hot), I didn't feel like it was as good a value as the sashimi dons. Especially if you compare the salmon ikura bowls.



Genmatcha tea comes with the set and at the end of the meal. If you want to upgrade to a different drink, then you can add the price difference.


Maru Waffle (NT$220) looked different than I expected (not waffle shaped at all), but was tasty with red bean mochi and banana flavors.



All in all, Cafe de Riz is a lovely addition to the amazing Japanese eats in Taipei. It brings fresh sashimi to a relaxed cafe environment, great for a family meal or business lunch. Second location just opened featuring more desserts.


Tuesday, May 06, 2014

where can you find cinco de mayo (aka mexican food) in taipei?



As I was munching on my carnitas nachos and fish tacos last night from Macho Tacos (Yay, Cinco de Mayo), I was thinking about how this meal would have not been possible ten years ago in Taipei.

Those of us who have been here long enough, know that we've had our ups and downs with Mexican food in Taipei, and can appreciate the options and type of stuff that's offered now compared to 5-10 years ago. Before, I would just shake my head and sigh at things like gross guacamole made with Taiwan avocados and count the days until a trip back to LA. Nowadays, I'm pretty happy with the carnitas and chimichanga options around town.  I can even find some supplies at the fancy supermarkets and corn tortillas (at Florida Bakery) to make enchiladas at home!


Just for fun, here's a rough list of the evolution of Mexican food and restaurants in Taipei (not a strict timeline but in the order that I discovered it). Not all of these are Mexican restaurants, but some are restaurants that featured dishes that I tried during the dearth of Mexican food in Taipei. There are a few more I have to try, like Libre and King Burrito, but I've linked to those that I've reviewed for info and addresses. As you can see from the number of places that opened and then closed, it's not easy to educate, market to and serve consistently good, affordable Mexican food to locals and picky expats in Asia.

  • Amigos (Taiwanese Mex)
  • Tequila Sunrise (Taiwanese Mex)
  • Chili's (American chain Tex Mex dishes)
  • TGIF (American chain Tex Mex dishes)
  • La Casita (Closed! Had good enchiladas)
  • Good Day
  • Jake's Country Kitchen
  • Bongos (Moved)
  • Eddy's Cantina- Danshui (Closed! Moved to Tianmu)
  • Mexico Sabroso (Is this place in Taoyuan still open?)
  • Yuma Southwestern Grill (Tex Mex/ Closed!)
  • El Gallo  (Closed!)
  • Oola Mexican (Closed! First to introduce Chipotlesque fast casual burritos to Taipei)
  • Macho Tacos - DaAn (Fresh mex. First to have baja style fish tacos, California fries and California burrito)
  • Taco Bar - Shida (Closed!)
  • Taco2Go
  • Macho Tacos- Shida (Fresh mex) 
  • Mayan Grill (Moved to Xinyi)
  • Cactus Mexican Restaurant (Closed!)
  • Eddy's Cantina Tianmu (possibly the only one to have Mexican owner/chef at helm)
  • Juanita (Fresh mex. Most blatantly inspired by Chipotle)
  • Barrito (Closed!)
  • Dos Chinos (Closed! Ultra popular made to order tacos until it closed)
  • Pig and Pepper (serves Cinco de Mayo specials annually in late April/early May)
  • Libre Burrito (a branch of a Japanese chain of California Mexican?)
  • King Burrito (Organic Mexican)
  • Churro K (serving lots of, yup, you guessed it, churros)
Seriously, I would have never believed you if you had told me when I first started this blog there would be so many places to get burrito bowls, soft tacos and a whole restaurant serving churros! Lol.


Wednesday, April 30, 2014

snapshot/japanese: i still recommend COLD UDON at FU YU WU


FU WU YU SANUKI UDON
富玉屋 讚歧烏龍麵 
No. 14, Lane 83, DaAn Rd, Sec. 1 
大安區大安路一段83巷14號 
(02)2778-5255

MRT: ZhongXiao/DunHua

$$ Cash only  (about NT$300+ per person)

Snapshot review: 4/3/2014
Previous review: 10/2012

After my first few visits to Fu Wu Yu Sanuki Udon, I ended up falling in love with a cold tomato udon that was their specialty there. It was a unique and refreshing bowl. Unfortunately it's gone missing from their menu for the past year or so, on my past few visits (maybe the original chef is gone, or maybe it's only available during the summer?).

So instead I've ended up getting another cold udon on their menu, the Tempura cold udon (NT$340) which comes with julienned cucumber, seaweed, bonito flakes, a soft boiled egg, crunchy tempura bits, dashi broth and two tempura fried shrimp and fishcake. The hot shrimps and fishcake make it more filling than the usual salad cold noodles, 

And though this is no longer part of a set (no appetizer, no dessert), you can add refills of the QQ udon noodles for free! 



Monday, April 28, 2014

japanese/sashimi: SUNFLOWER KAISEKI (SHAN HUA)



SUNFLOWER KAISEKI (SHAN HUA) 三花日式料理
No.9-2, Jianguo N. Rd., Sec. 2, 
台北市中山區建國北路二段9-2號
(02) 8978-5000

MRT: Nanjing East Road

website: Shan Hua's FB page

hours: 11:30AM- 2:30PM; dinner 5:30PM-9:30PM

kid friendliness:



The moment you step into Sunflower Kaiseki, there is a warm, golden glow. in the large dining space which uses mostly natural wood and golden accents in its interior. The restaurant used to be home to the shuttered Canoviano and has impressively high ceilings in the main dining area and open kitchen, with some private rooms on the second floor. Don't confuse this Shan Hua (opened in fall of 2013) with another Shan Hua Japanese restaurant in town, the other a sushi bar. 


Diners can sit at the sushi bar to observe the action or sit in one of the partitioned sections. 






Kaiseki style dining is almost like a ritual- with elaborate multi course meal that traditionally includes components of appetizer, sashimi, a simmered dish, a grilled dish and a steamed dish. It's a popular style of dining in Taipei as customers feel getting the "set course" is the best value. Sunflower Kaiseki is definitely on the pricier side- sets start from NT$1200 and go up to NT$3500- and portions are on the refined side. Unfortunately the menu was only in Chinese, so my hosts did the ordering, but the seven course menu changes seasonally to use the freshest ingredients.

Complimentary pickled cucumbers and radish


The first course was like a garden of delicate amuse bouches, almost too pretty to eat. 



Loved the sweet fresh crab meat with jellyfish underneath



This was sea cucumber, which I was reluctant to try since I don't usually like the soft jelly-like texture, but these surprised me with a crunchy snap that I enjoyed.


Sashimi course

Fried burdock gobo root chips



Fish bone crackers- I actually ate quite a few of these hone senbei waiting for our next course. Supposedly very good for you as they are high in calcium, and very crunchy and salty and addictive.




Tableside shabu shabu 



You know me, I wanted more than a few slices! But the slices I got were ultra tender, served a bit pink in the middle.



Sesame ice cream so nutty it almost tasted like peanut butter. Yum.


This kind of restaurant is great for people who are not creatures of habit. The menu and courses are varied and changing- even when you look at the various Chinese food blogs that have posted about Sunflower Kaiseki already, no two meals look exactly the same. You could experience and taste something new each visit. 

Monday, April 21, 2014

bakery/french: i recommend LALOS BAKERY



LALOS BAKERY
No. 91 AnHe Road, Sec. 1
台北市安和路一段91號
(02) 2755-5968

MRT: ZhongXiao/DunHua or XinYi/AnHe

Hours: 11AM -7PM

$-$$

Kid friendliness: lots of breads and sweets. small seating area

Visit reviewed: 1/2014 & 3/5/2014


What sets apart Lalos Bakery from all the corner shop bakeries you spot in Taipei? Award winning baker Frederic Lalos-  the youngest chef to have won the “Meilleur Ouvrier de France or M.O.F.” (Best French Baker) in 1997 and Baker of the Year in 2010. He's opened a number of bakeries in France, which supplies top restaurants in Paris, and now has two shops in Taipei.

If you try one bread from Lalos Bakery, get the honey lemon bread (NT$85) or the Miel Citron Confit. I fell in love with it at STAY and again when I picked it up from the new branch shop on Anhe Road. You don't even need jam with the pops of lemon peel flavor in the chewy honeyed bread. I love tearing apart and gnawing on the crust, which is crispy but not too hard.



There's a lot of tempting selection in the store, but after trying different types of breads, the honey lemon bread remains my favorite, while others weren't as memorable. 




The flaky and yummy Pain au Chocolat (NT$60) is another thing I would pick up again.



I wanted to love the caramel almond brioche rolls, but they were not sweet enough for my American tastebuds. Same with their baked apple tart that usually sits near the cash register. 





Always want to try some of their desserts, but always end up resisting. Anyone have a favorite they can recommend? 

OTHER LOCATION

Taipei 101 No. 45 ShiFu Rd, B1
台北市信義區市府路45號B1
(02) 8101-8355

:)