Thursday, February 01, 2007

North Side Dining

Tonight I went out for drinks and dinner with a rep from the Hime restaurant in the Marina. Though they have an interesting cocktail menu (bigger than what's online), we stuck with sake. We started with a sampler of 3 nama (unpasteurized) sakes not normally on the menu. The first one, Harushika, was our favorite, being smooth, round, and only slightly fruity.

After that , we compared the ginjo and daiginjo versions of the same sake- Wakatake. Ginjo sake has its rice polished to a certain percent, and daiginjo is further polished. The ginjo had the rice (an almost gamy, slightly overripe flavor that's usually present in sake but not my favorite flavor in the world) ever present in the taste, whereas the daiginjo opened with a fruity floral taste then followed with the rice flavor.

After that, we tried two junmai sakes: the very dry Otokoyama which was only outstanding for its dryness, and the Akitabare which was bold but didn't make a strong impression. Our server recommended we move from Daiginjos down to junmais since the palate gets tired, but I found that's not really true for me. The junmais just seem so bold as to be boring.

Anyway, they offer over 30 sakes total, with several seasonal or rotating off the menu.

The food we had was creative and pretty darn tasty. They asked me a ton of questions about what I do and don't eat since I'm a vegetarian- is fish broth okay? how about eggs? and so on. I was worried that they really didn't have anything vegetarian on the menu and were desperate. However, they brought us so much food we couldn't eat it all, from a mushroom salad to asparagus wrapped in something fried that tasted like peas altogether, to fried tofu topped with yuzu sauce, to tempura served as vegetable popsicles on long wooden skewers, which was a great touch. With the effort and presentation on the veggie stuff, I'd bet the fish is good too if you're into that sort of thing.

Afterwards we went for a cocktail at Mercury Appetizer Bar a good walk up the street. We had a dessert there, which was a chocolate and butterscotch pudding combo where the butterscotch is made from real scotch.

WAIT A MINUTE, YOU CAN MAKE BUTTERSCOTCH FROM SCOTCH? How did I not know this?

Anyway, I had their Green-tea'ni that is only vodka mixed with Zen Green Tea liqueur. At first I hated the drink, then liked it by the end, but maybe my taste buds were tired like the waiter said they would be earlier in the night. We also tried the Chai Iced Tea that has Phillips Union Vanilla Vodka (yuck) with Voyant Chai Liqueur (yum!) and iced tea and cream. It was really a drink built around the flavors of the Voyant, but I really like those flavors so I was all for it. Worth checking out.

Then I stumbled to the bus stop and took the 49 all the way home. One hour later I'm still a little tipsy. Occupational hazard, I guess.

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Monday, November 27, 2006

Tasty Dranks Out on the Town

While I was out "researching" a couple of weeks ago, I had some tasty cocktails I thought I'd tell y'all about.

First up was the Americano served at Americano. Rumor has it this bar is super yuppified at happy hour, but I was there on a day when they were covering the patio for winter so it was nice and empty. The drink menu looks pretty good altogether, but I had this rocks drink at the start of a long night out. The Americano is Campari with chai-infused sweet vermouth with soda water and a slice of orange. It was dry and refreshing, and the Campari gave it that depth I'm always looking for in cocktails.

Then I had the Earl Gray Boxcar at the restaurant Bong Su. The cocktail menu there features only six drinks, but I'd been wanting to try this one for a while. It has tea-infused rum, apricot liqueur, pineapple juice, and bitters; served up. It's a pretty amazing drink. The fruits in the drink are too fruity-sweet on their own and the tea and bitters are too sharp-dry on their own, so they go to war in your mouth. It's fun to taste the drink go from sweet to tart to a bone dry finish that makes you want to chase it with a soda after every sip. But then you go back for more. By the end of the drink though, the battlefield that was my mouth felt like it was ripped embedded with shrapnel and I was so ready to move on to something less... challenging. Recommended!

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