Tampilkan postingan dengan label farmers market. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label farmers market. Tampilkan semua postingan

FERRY BUILDING, SAN FRANCISCO

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 24 Juli 2011

Miette Bakery, Ferry Building, San Francisco.

In the Ferry Building in San Francisco resided the object of our desire.

Bebe's 8th birthday was coming up during our trip to San Francisco.   I have cousins living in California and the girls have not met them before.  This was a trip both for having the girls meet their relatives and for Bebe's 8th bday.

The Ferry Building Marketplace is a foodie's paradise.  Inside you will find artisanal cheeses, cured meats, handmade crafts, pastries, breads and confections galore. Sur la Table is also located in the Ferry Building.   I lingered in the Scharffen Berger and Recchiuti Confections shops and later was gifted some chocolates and confections from my cousin Sylvia.  Thanks Sylvia!  You're so sweet!  :)

I'll post my Recchiuti and Miette goodies in separate posts as they seem to have survived the plane trip back to Vancouver and deserve better photography with my hefty Nikon than the crappy point and shoot I was carrying on the trip.



We had burgers and fries from Gott's Roadside and I thorougly enjoyed my Bacon Cheeseburger (I didn't eat my bun, though was tempted because it was like challah).  The fries were really good too and we tried the garlic fries, sweet potato fries and regular fries.  The garlic and sweet potato fries (served with housemade ranch dip) were my favourites and the chocolate milkshake Bebe had ordered tasted like rich chocolate ice cream.  I shudder to think of the calories we ingested at this establishment.

The Miette Old Fashioned Chocolate Cake which you see in the slideshow is the object of Bebe's desire.  We chose to come back for it closer to her bday for pickup and you will hear that story along with seeing the rest of my Miette purchases shortly.

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GRANVILLE ISLAND MARKET FOOD COURT

Diposting oleh good reading on Sabtu, 02 Juli 2011

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Steamed Fresh Veggies from Fraser Valley Juice and Salad, in the Public Market in Granville Island



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I wish I had been given some more of the Creamy Garlic Sauce for the veggies.  I had to ration it out for all the veggies I had.  The portion size was good, and the veggies were tender.  Not much to look at though, is it?  The sauce was yummy on the sweet potatoes and kobacha squash especially...my favourites.   Would have been nice if there were more variety in the veggies in my bowl.   Rating:  4/6


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Spanakopita from Phoenix Fast Food, in the Public Market.  Bebe loves spanakopita and she ate the other half before I could take a pic of it.  She liked it very much.  The layers were flaky and the filling was tasty.  Good for fast food.
Rating:  5/6

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Pick up some local berries and you are set for dessert!

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Granville Island Public Market

Phoenix Fast Food on Urbanspoon


Fraser Valley Juice and Salad on Urbanspoon
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KITS FARMERS MARKET & STREET FOOD: La Boheme Creperie and Roaming Dragon

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 05 Juni 2011

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A view of the Kits Farmers’ Market on a Sunny Sunday from across the Kitsilano grass field.



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Crowded with tons of people, strollers and dogs, the Kitsilano Farmer’s Market is a bustling hive of activity for locals on a Sunday morning.

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Most of the local produce at this time of the year consisted of tomatoes, peppers, and some veggies but local fruit have not really come in yet.

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There are herbs in pots to buy as well as tomato plants and other veggies.

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We tried our hand at making maple taffy.  Be forewarned though that the taffy is extremely drippy and sticky to eat.  We should have gotten a cone instead.

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These local tomatoes looked gorgeous so we bought a bunch.  Unfortunately, when we ate them at home, the skins were really hard and chewy.  I think this is because it’s not tomato season.

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We picked up some locally grown GaiLan and had that for dinner.  It was fresh, tender and yummy.

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Here’s the huge jug of apple juice we purchased.  We had to lug it around, so my advice is to buy this last before you leave!

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The Roaming Dragon Street Food Truck resides at the entrance to the Kits Farmers Market.  We ordered most of our lunch from the truck.
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Korean Shortrib taco and Chinese Pork Belly Slider (any 2 items for $10)
$6 for one dish; $10 for two dishes and $15 for 3 dishes.  We ended up getting 3 different items in the end.
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Vietnamese sub.  This sandwich was by far the most disappointing.  I was looking forward to the pickly vinegary punch of the fresh veggies, but was sorely disappointed that the veggies didn’t have any pickle flavour at all.  The veggies were fresh and abundant but that was about it.  The meat was not typical of the Vietnamese subs you can get in local Vietnamese restaurants, so that too was disappointing.  No pate flavour,  no thinly sliced jalapenos for heat.  This was so blah it was like eating a regular sub sandwich.   This is fusion at its worst.  They need to kick this one up a lot.

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Chinese Pork Belly Slider:  The highlight and best of the bunch was the Chinese pork belly slider.  It’s served on a steamed white bun (mantou) that you can purchase easily in any Asian freezer section.  It’s split and served open-faced with a huge hunk of pork belly slathered with this sweet hoisin sauce.  I think they need to work on the sauce.  It lacks depth.  It’s too much like bottled hoisin sauce.  Maybe it IS bottled hoisin sauce.  I don’t know.  Rating:  5/6

Korean Shortrib Taco:  The Korean taco was a mess to eat.  It was okay but fell apart very easily.  I can’t distinguish anything Korean about it though so perhaps though it’s good, it needs some tweaking.   There was something that resembled pulled pork, but there wasn’t a Korean flavour there to be had.  Coupled with the soft taco shell, my tastebuds were confused.   Rating:  4.5/6

Considering that it’s street food, it sure beats plain ol’ hot dogs any day.  However, I think Roaming Dragon can raise the bar now that they’ve established themselves.  They should tweak their sauces and work on the veggies…perhaps employing pickled veggies  (pickled daikon and carrot work wonders) and fresh jalapenos to pack more flavour punch.

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La Boheme Creperie.  Cute pink hand-painted truck.  Buckwheat crepes with savoury or sweet fillings.

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The lineups were crazy long for both La Boheme and Roaming Dragon.  It’s best to split your party up and line up with everyone’s order for your party.   Multi-task. 

I ordered the Ham and Cheese crepe for Bebe.  I waited a mighty long time with a silly woman in front of me holding on to her dog’s leash.  It was no small dog and the leash was held long.

***Look away...here comes a RANT!  Begin rant:   Having had several dogs in my lifetime and recently a family dog that recently passed (rest her little doggie soul) I feel that I can safely rant about dog owners in Vancouver (and elsewhere!) who have no common sense in packed crowds holding on to their dogs’ leashes.  Rein it in!  Hold your dog close!  It’ll get stepped on and it’ll get tangled up among people.  It’s low to the ground and it’s in fact not an appropriate place for your dog.  Leash it up on a sunny patch of grass to a nice shady tree trunk and allow it to wait in peace as you purchase your goodies.  The Kitsilano grass field was nearby,there were tons of trees and I don’t know what possessed her to drag her dog through a crowd packed like sardines.   Don’t make it walk on the hot asphalt dodging swinging grocery bags, enduring the relentless heat and being tantalized by the street food!  Crazy owners.  The small consolation is that she had her dog on a leash.  Poor thing.  It looked hot.  Anyway, this woman and her dog took up about 7 square feet of space in the lineup.  It looked so ridiculous.  It was so crowded at the market that there was barely room to move, yet there was this huge space created around her by the way she held on to her dog leash.  It’s not considerate to the people in the crowd or to the dog.     ...end RANT***

After a seeming eternity, it was finally my turn and I received my order.  By the time I reached the front, I noticed that the buckwheat crepes are not actually made to order per se.  In fact, the crepes are pre-made and folded in quarters. They’re stacked and sit nearby awaiting fillings.   When an order comes up, it’s unfolded and warmed up on a crepe pan with some butter and then the fillings are piled on to heat up.  I was kind of disappointed by this, but at the same time kind of understanding of the fact that the line-ups would be even more huge if they didn’t make these crepes ahead of time.  Oh well, can’t have it all I suppose.  They had a great selection of fillings and if I were ordering for myself instead of the kids, I would have had something with veggies and cheese like the L'Artiche (artichokes, bechamel, cheese, black olives, herbs).  I think I may have rated it higher than them too because I like buckwheat everything whereas my kids like refined flour crepes.

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Ham and Cheese Buckwheat crepe.  $7.00     Rating: 4/6

Lots of melted cheese and ham.  The crepe was on the dry side.  I don’t know if that’s because the crepe is pre-made or if that’s the nature of their buckwheat crepes.  The girls didn’t eat the crepe near the edges but ended up scarfing the filling mostly. 

Take your food, meander to a patch of soft green grass near some trees on the grass field behind the market and eat your goodies.  There's not much in the way of seating within the market and it's too congested to enjoy your meal anyway.  Looking out towards the field at the girls' softball team playing in the distance under sunny blue skies, it was quite a feel good Vancouver day.

There were other food trucks around, a local bakery making artisanal breads, a local chocolate artisan, pastries and other yummy baked goods that really tempted me…you get the drift.  There was even a bike clinic. Cool.  Definitely, this is something we’ll have to do again, but closer to local berry and fruit season!
Roaming Dragon Food Truck on Urbanspoon

La Bohème Crêperie on Urbanspoon
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LEE’S DONUTS, GRANVILLE ISLAND MARKET

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 29 Mei 2011

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Lee’s Donut holes, glazed.  6/6

Who hasn’t had a Lee’s Donut?

If you haven’t been to Granville Island, and you haven’t peered through the market windows to watch the freshly made doughnuts coming out of the hot fat being dipped into their glazes; if you haven’t smelled the sweet, yeasty hot doughnuts coming fresh from the kitchen and you haven’t been tempted to buy every single different kind of doughnut in the display, then I feel a little sorry for you.

You must go.

Go see. 

Watch the doughnut man craft the doughnuts through the glass window and see him handily dip those piping hot rings of heavenly sweet fried goodness into the huge vats of sticky glaze.    You’ll salivate.    You’ll succumb, and rightfully so.



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Then head on over to the fresh fruit displays, brimming with tropical and local fruit piled into carefully stacked pyramids.  Taste the samples and spend $30 on a few boxes of vibrant berries and verdant veggies.  Sticker shock doesn’t seem to immediately come into play when the produce look so good.

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We watched these street performers for a while and sent the kiddies with some good hard cash to pay them.  I like how they made snide comments about how even unemployed children are coming up to pay for the performance while adults are stealthily stealing away without as much as a tip! heehee

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Yes, those are real flames shooting out of her sneakers!  If that’s not worth at least 5 bucks, I don’t know what is.

Lee's Donuts on Urbanspoon
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