Tag: lobster

Bringing Catalan Cuisine to Houston: A Promising Start

Tuna, with green onions.

Tuna, with green onions.

The time I spent in the Arzak kitchen was brief but rewarding, and several dining tours of Spain – including days and nights in Barcelona, Girona, and Donostia –  instilled in me a passion for Basque and Catalan cuisine. So I was excited when I heard that a chef from Catalonia was going to be in charge of a new kitchen in Houston, BCN Taste & Tradition.

Angela and I were invited to a preview dinner at BCN last night, and it was a great beginning: excellent beef tartare, ahi tuna, a rib eye with foie gras, and, of course, jamón Ibérico. BCN opens to the public on Saturday, September 20, and I will definitely schedule a return visit(s). Service was outstanding, the dining room and bar area are understated and unique for Houston (one can easily imagine being in an elegant, comfortable European restaurant when dining at BCN), and the menu is a showcase of Spanish deliciousness.

Lobster, deconstructed.

Lobster, deconstructed.

That jamón that we love so much.

That jamón that we love so much.

Rib eye, with foie that could have used a bit more sear.

Rib eye, with foie that could have used a bit more sear.

 

 

Snapshots of Dining With Dean in Hong Kong and Macau

Life can at times seem to be one long meal … which is not a bad way to think about the journey we all take. Meals and conversations form a long road, a connected series of days and nights and tables and bottles and sensual memories that one can return to again and again.

I spent a month in 2013 with Dean Cox, one of my closest friends, in Hong Kong. I have known him a long time, and never tire of his company. (I am missing him now, because we have not been together in the same place since March of 2013.) We have shared meals in Paris and the Loire Valley, Hong Kong and Macau, New York and Basel, and Stockholm and Huntsville and Birmingham. It’s been a great journey thus far, and it continues.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Plate of the Day (Think Malaysian lobster)

Houston’s Chinatown, and the street signs are in Chinese (not sure if it’s Mandarin or Cantonese … ). Everywhere you look there are restaurants, and bars, and massage parlors and places for a foot massage. Last night we bypassed the massages and went straight for the food.

Chris, Anna and I ventured out to try Mamak Malaysian, and we were impressed. It’s BYOB, so we started with a bottle of Prosecco, followed by a Gewürztraminer. Appetizers of taro-enrobed fried shrimp and a roti, the latter of which is worth a repeat order.

Next came a curry soup, for my money the best dish of the night. Rich, coconut-milk broth, fish skin, tofu, scallions, and very good noodles, noodles that maintained their firmness until the bowl was empty. And it was a large bowl, ample for three people to share. We also had nasi lemak, which is the national dish of Malaysia. Small fish – very small, think infant anchovies – peanuts, fresh cucumber slices, other assorted vegetables, all surrounding a mound of rice.

We then decided to share a main course (see photo below), the restaurant’s “famous” lobster. It’s actually two lobsters, barbecued with shrimp paste rubbed on the shell, with peppers, both hot and mild. And for $25, it’s a bargain. It will also have you making a trip to the lavatory to wash your hands mid-meal. The meat was tender, and briny, and fresh, and the lobsters came to the table too hot to handle … we were forced to wait a few minutes before we could pick up the claws and knuckles and crack them, releasing the sweet meat. It was worth the wait. There’s a reason it is Mamak’s “famous” dish.

Anna takes the claw in hands.

Anna takes the claw in hands.

Two lobster, slathered in shrimp-paste sauce.

Two lobsters, bathed in a shrimp-paste sauce.

Sai Kung: A seafood-lover’s paradise

Dean and I took a trip, seafood on our minds. We left Kowloon on a train, then transferred to a little bus, which took us up and down some hills and around some bends before reaching our destination: Sai Kung, a small city/large town on the sea less than an hour from central Hong Kong on the other side of a peak.

It was a Saturday afternoon, and the boardwalk was crowded with families and couples, many of them with dogs in tow … dogs on leads and dogs in arms and dogs in baby strollers. It’s been a long time since I have seen so many dogs in one place.

Out for a stroll

Out for a stroll

Dogs have a good life in Sai Kung. (Photo by Dean Cox)

Dogs have a good life in Sai Kung. (Photo by Dean Cox)

We walked along the boardwalk, and soon came to the first seafood palace. One side of the restaurant was nothing but tanks of seawater, alive with crustaceans and fish and bivalves and almost anything one could desire when it comes to seafood. I mean anything and everything. There were razor clams and mantis shrimp and horseshoe crab and three or four types of eel and whelks and clams and mussels and scallops and on and on. The water was pristine, the fishmongers were respectful of their wares.

Hungry for eel? Get to Sai Kung.

Hungry for eel? Get to Sai Kung.

Clean tanks, housing anything a seafood lover desires.

Clean tanks, housing anything a seafood lover desires.

Fresh, alive, swimming or just hanging around.

Fresh, alive, swimming or just hanging around.

Razor clams from Chinese waters.

Razor clams from Chinese waters.

Scallop with roe, ready for your tongue.

Scallop with roe, ready for your tongue.

Dean and I walked from restaurant to restaurant along the promenade, returning to the first one, Tung Kee, because the woman who spoke with us about the seafood on offer there was friendly and helpful and obviously loved her job. We chose a table at the front of the outdoor dining area, which afforded us a perfect view of the passersby.

A waterfront menu.

A waterfront menu.

The menu was exhaustive, and in addition to the seafood there were dumplings and rice and pork and duck and vegetables. We decided on Tasting Menu 2, for two people, and ordered some Erdinger Dunkel. What followed was – and I say this with no exaggeration – the third best seafood meal I have ever experienced (the first two being at Le Bernardin).

We started with some very good fried squid; crispy, with a nice ratio of tentacles to body. Next came mantis prawn with amazing seared garlic and peppers. Dean loved the garlic mixture, and it was perfect with the prawns, which were fried with their shells on, so we had scissors with which to cut away the shells so that we could get to the white, tender meat. A sauce of ginger and soy turned the meat a wonderful golden color, and I could have easily eaten five more of those aggressive and mighty shellfish.

Squid, fried as I like it.

Squid, fried as I like it.

Mantis prawn, shell on, scissors at the ready.

Mantis prawn, shell on, scissors at the ready.

Lobster enters table right. Lobster with onions and a “cheese sauce”. When I saw it on the menu I thought “Cheese and lobster … not so sure.” But the sauce grew on me, even though it was not appealing to the eye. The plate was full of wheat noodles, and the lobster, pieces separated but still in its cracked shell, was everything lobster should be: tasting of a clean sea, firm meat, not chewy. The sauce reminded me of a thin roux … there seemed to be cornstarch in it, and I must say that while I prefer my lobster poached in butter, or simply steamed, the flavor of this dish seemed appropriate for the locale. Dean and I extracted every piece of meat from the shell, and another lobster was not out of the question. It was that good.

Lobster and "cheese sauce" surprises.

Lobster and “cheese sauce” surprises.

There were still two plates to come on the menu: vegetables and fried rice. I wish they had come before or with the lobster, but each was in its own right satisfying. Stir-fried bok choy was our vegetable, and though it was overcooked – I like mine with a bit of crispness intact – it offered a good taste component to close the meal. As for the fried rice, I concentrated on the baby shrimp and pieces of pork that were cooked in it. In fact, I liked them so much that I was tempted to order a bowl of them, pork and shrimp for the ride back to Kowloon.

The promenade was beginning to grow quieter, lunch hours over. We paid our bill and started walking along the water, eyeing a dock jutting out perhaps 300 feet over the water. We then noticed people lined up at the railing along the edge of the promenade, looking down toward the water. When we managed to get a view we saw a dozen or so small boats – skiffs really – full of seafood for sale. Much like the restaurants, each boat was equipped with an aeration system that kept the crustaceans and fish and razor clams alive in clean water, until a customer gave the order and either a fish was stunned with a blow to the head and then gutted or a bunch of clams were put into a bag. A net on a long pole was raised to the waiting customer above, into which he deposited his payment. The fisherman then delivered the goods and turned his attention to the next client.

Shucking the wares.

Shucking the wares.

His own floating seafood store.

His own floating seafood store.

Watching the ships come in.

Watching the ships come in.

Crab for sale.

Crab for sale.

I’ve been to a lot of fish markets, and I’ve lived in Savannah, and I’ve spent time in the north of Spain, and I’ve fished in Florida and Alaska, but nowhere have I seen so much seafood in such beautiful condition, in such diversity. Swimming one minute, then on your plate not long afterward. That’s the way to eat it.

© 2024 Mise en Place

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑