Saturday, June 30, 2012

The taco truck that grew roots

La Michoacana
Iowa City

tripe (left)  and tongue (right)... with cilantro and lime
My favorite (ok, the only) taco truck in Iowa City recently put down roots.  I ventured over to see if the food was just as good and it was!  The restaurant is attached to a meat market and serves a wider variety of dishes since they have more than 10 sq. ft of kitchen to work with.  I approve

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Savory Croissants- as euro as eating dinner at 10

La Mie Bakery
Des Moines


It was a tough choice between ham/cheese and spinach/feta but you see ham won out.  Excellent croissant with a crispy, buttery crunch to the outside.  I should've waited and heated it up at home but my self-control wasn't equal to the task . . .

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Sweet Time Travel

Wilton Candy Kitchen
Wilton, IA

lime soda with sprinkles and a cherry

backroom stuffed with cool memorabilia
old-fashioned wi-fi


Recently unearthed these pics and remembered we hit this place on the way back from Flav's Fried Chicken.  Wilton Candy Kitchen is an awesome flashback to the era where the soda fountain was the place to be (that's how it seems in the movies but it's a bit before my time so I couldn't actually say).  Painstakingly preserved, it's been around since 1860 and run by the same family since 1910.  Go while you can... the current owners told me none of their children want to take over running the place.

You cannot buy a vowel

Strudlhaus pastry stand
Des Moines Farmers´ Market
South side of Court Ave. west of 4th st.

my sweet bounty
Pastries on the right
 I posted last week about the Strudlhaus sausage stand at the market.  Today I had the chance to try some of the goodies at the adjoining pastry counter.  Despite growing up in Iowa I hadn´t been exposed to dutch letters until moving to Des Moines (maybe because Des Moines is closer to Pella, the main dutch colony in these parts). They´re quite tasty: flaky, S-shaped, and stuffed with almond paste.  I wasn´t up for a whole one today so I got a piece (calle it a Dutch punctuation mark) and this other pastry which they couldn´t name but I know I love from experience.

Not your average pops

Fresh Market Stand, Farmers´ Market
3rd St at Court Ave. (NW corner), Des Moines



All of my savory treats got me thirsty.  I was thinking I´d get a wheat grass shot from Fresh but thought better of that when I saw they were selling wheat grass popsicles!  It´s actually wheatgrass mixed with agave-sweetened lemonade.  And only $1.  Awesome and refreshing!

Papillon Bosnian Food Stand

Des Moines Farmers' Market, across from Java Joe's

L to R: zeljanica (spinach pita) and sarma (stuffed cabbage rolls)
My technique for eating zeljanica to go (patent pending).  It lasted me about a block

I got out of the house bright and early to beat the crowds/heat to the market and hit up a longtime favorite of mine: Papillon, run by the folks who cook at Euro Café in Urbandale and a soon-to-open outpost in the 700 Locust Food Court (!!).  On tap for today, two of my Saturday breakfast favorites: sarma (cabbage stuffed with ground beef and rice; served with bread and ajvar (red pepper sauce) in a pepper/tomato broth) and zeljanica (spinach pita with cottage and mozzarella cheese).  Delicious and filling!

Mobile Urban BBQ




ribs, mac and cheese, and collard greens
Phat Daddyz BBQ
Fridays and Saturdays at  2500 MLK Drive, Des Moines

There are two things I've been hunting in Des Moines like Ahab's white whale: a bbq truck and an African restaurant (that'll be a future post).  So coming across not one but both of these on the same block definitely merited a sketchy u-turn on MLK.  Phat Daddyz operates out of a winnebago and serves a variety of sandwiches, along with combos that feature ribs, catfish, and "hindquarters" (animal unspecified).  I got the ribs as you can see.  The sauce was a little on the sweet side for my taste ( I prefer a more vinegary, NC-style sauce) but the meat was great.  Tons of meat and came off the bone cleanly without a knife.  Collards and mac were solid too.  Big thumbs up!

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Kabab House Stand- Farmers' Market

veggie samosa with green peas and potato
The Kabab House (actual restaurant located on Ashworth in West Des Moines) was out at the market and I got to sample some of their tasty wares.  For those who don't know, a samosa is a type of savory turnover shaped like a lumpy pyramid and stuffed with ground meat and/or vegetables.  This particular one was quite tasty, especially the green jalapeño salsa they had with it (not pictured b-c the whole thing looked a little unappetizing given the poor light).

Lovely day for a sausage at the market

faces obscured to protect the hungry.  The owner´s bakery serving dutch letters is right next door.  We´ll leave that for a future post (can´t wait!)

#7- beef and pork with jalapeño, white pepper and spices (+ kraut)

all dressed up and only one place to go!
StrudlHaus German Sausage Stand- Des Moines farmers' market.  South side of Court Ave west of 4th St.  For more information visit the strudlhaus website

Michael Leo is an Austrian living in Iowa, so he knows his sausage and was looking for a butcher to supply him with the authentic goods.  His country's consulate referred him to another Austrian in Oklahoma certified by their government in Austrian sausage-making.  His business sells sausages and is also a bakery so you know the buns are top notch too.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Welcome! Jeopardy! viewers!

Greetings to those of you who have reached out or found this URL.  You'll see that this is a pretty modest undertaking but I hope you still enjoy perusing around some.  A note about the state of the site and how it works selecting your fun anecdotes on Jeopardy!  I auditioned in spring of last year and had to come with 5 "fun facts/stories" ready to share.  My blog was in a "dormant" phase then but I needed something to talk about so I put it down... Lo and behold, 9  months later it ends up on the air and is revived from its slumber.  So here it is:

Elvirita Cemitas Poblanas

mid-chow (i'm amazed I stopped long enough to take this). Also note the papalo


Boyle Heights, Los Angeles

Another LA discovery courtesy of an in-the-know local (sort of.  My friend from home read about this place in Johnathan Gold's famous street eats column in LA Weekly.  His New Yorker profile is recommended reading)  A cemita is a sandwich associated with Puebla, Mexico, containing pork, papalo (herb), avocado, and grated queso fresco.  It was great.

Late Night Korean at Hodori

L: spicy tofu;   R: clear noodles with beef
assortment of panchan
Koreatown, Los Angeles

So happy to have landed here one night (guided by a local).  Korean food has a wonderful tradition of serving a lot of side dishes (panchan) with meals.  Here we have kim chi- spicy pickled cabbage, national food of Korea, and forever tainted by its association with the ONE Jeopardy! question I really wish I could have back.  Anyway, to the right of that you have some pickled sprouts- they do seem to like their pickling over there.  Works for me...

Berlin Currywurst

to-go box
  

Stumbled across this place completely randomly on my way to the movies with a friend before flying out. Currywurst is common German street food, served with a spicy ketchup and dusted with curry.  No American-style bun in sight.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

"No, boyyyyyyyyyy!" Flav's Fried Chicken: Gone but not Forgotten

Musician, reality TV star, restauranteur (?)
strategic location much?   You can also tell the building used to be a Long John Silver´s


It's been said it's better to burn out than to fade away.  I count myself among the fortunate few able to try FFC during its brief run last year (I think it stayed open a month or two).  Apparently Flav had long dreamed of opening a fast food chain, and the partners he found to make that a reality convinced him to build the first outpost in their hometown of Clinton, Iowa.  I've never really spent much time in Clinton so I will just say it's not the first place in Iowa you'd think of when launching a new restaurant chain and leave it at that.  A group of us piled in a van and made the 1:30 pilgrimage from Iowa City to FFC.  You could sense even then that all was not well: collard greens as a side- unavailable. Credit card machine- not working. There was a sign hung up behind the counter that was soaked in grease:



 The food was fine for fast food chicken.





some random dude blocking my shot of the graffiti on the walls:

Fusion Cuisine in Disguise


 Prasek´s Smokehouse, Hillje, TX


What the Texans refer to as ¨kolaches¨ are one of my favorite treats when I happen to find myself down around those parts.  There were a lot of Czech/Polish immigrants in Texas back in the day, and they brought their foods with them, like the koláč, traditionally a sweet pastry.  History may never know who first thought to put savory fillings in a kolache, but he or she blessed future generations with this awesome treat.  I was thrilled to find a Czech bakery back in Iowa but they only made traditional sweet kolaches and not their modern, salty Texan descendants.

Tacos Villanueva





eaten off the trunk of my car... like on The Wire
Des Moines- NE 14th, across from Fazoli´s



Among DM taco trucks, Villanueva reigns supreme.  They have another truck on E. Grand between 15th and 16th and both are awesome, authentic mexican food.  Tacos served with fresh cilantro, onions, lemon, and a grilled pepper on the side.  Lately they´ve started toasting the tortillas a little so they have a great crunch to the outside.


The Veeg Shall Inherit the Earth

Left: spicy seitan   Right: tofu skin, spicy seaweed, mung bean noodle
Everlasting Life Café
Washington, DC

Dejected at not being able to go to my old fave Fish in the Hood, I decided to indulge my girlfriend and go somewhere vegan.  That´s how I choose to remember it although the truth is probably that we stumbled onto this place.  It was a revelation, especially the tofu skin and the mung bean noodles.

Lucky Dragon

Vietnamese iced coffee
caption
the design aesthetic is . . . not understated, let's say

Gone but not forgotten, Lucky Dragon was a local gem serving up Vietnamese/asian food on the 2nd Avenue corridor.  Much more authentic than the other Vietnamese spot everyone raves about.  The pic is of a banh mi, a Franco-Vietnamese fusion on a bun.  Take a french baguette and paté, mix with pickled vegetables and Vietnamese style pork, and voilá.

tacos la michoacana- Waterloo/ Iowa City

tacos de lengua
A few years ago Iowa City got its first taco truck, which was based out of a restaurant in Waterloo and would come down by the waterfront Hy Vee Thursday-Sunday.  Excellent food and everyone I took loved it.  They've gone indoors now and operate out of a Mexican meat market on the west side.  Can't wait to go and check out the new digs.

Saraj

burek-  meat in a pastry
Sampler: chicken, cevapi (sausage), and lepina (bosnian flatbread)
Link

This spot is definitely a local favorite of mine.  Excellent food and massive portions.  Bosnian food is similar to other mediterranean cuisines in its use of yogurt, sausage, lamb, and flatbread.

Harry Singh's- Minneapolis

This is roti, a Caribbean-Indian fusion.  It's sauce, meat, and vegetables in a flatbread, but it's too sloppy to be self-contained so you can't pick it up and eat it like a burrito (not this one, at least).

A tasty trip down " el camino de los recuerdos" (memory lane)






author and friends (including the paella maker) many moons ago in front of a giant paella pan that is used to make a village-sized portion at festivals.  Faces obscured to protect the young and foolish.

Simply put, one of my favorite dishes in the world from the year I spent in Spain before college.  There are different styles by town/region but the basic template is saffron rice, vegetables, and proteins: in this case chicken, string beans, tomatoes (fresh from the vine), seafood and peppers, cooked to a delicious crisp.   I had the great pleasure to stop and visit an old friend on a road trip and the amazing meal he made me filled me up wonderfully and took me back . . .