Thursday, June 25, 2009

Finally: Ruth's Chris Amazing Steakhouse

I've been wanting to try the oh-so-amazing food from what's been voted as one of Toronto's best steakhouses for a long, long time, and finally had the chance to do so on the weekend of my convocation.

We were having trouble with ordering right from the beginning. Every item in the appetizer section looked delicious and not-to-be-missed. After scrutinizing every item, we finally decided to started off with the Oyster Rockefellers ($19.95) with 6 plump, cooked oysters topped with chunks of soft onions, finely chopped spinach, all mixed in with a creamy, but not heavy, hollandaise sauce. We practically licked the shells clean.

For entree, since we wanted a filet mignon and a new york strip, we decided to order a Porterhouse for two ($99.95) to get the best of both worlds. The massive piece of meat came as 8 mini steaks severed from the bone. The waiter placed a burning dinner plate sizzling with hot butter in front me, and served me a piece of steak from the tender, filet side and another firmer one from the strip side to sear on my plate.



Our first steak turned out too be medium cooked rather than the medium rare we asked for. The waiter returned it to the kitchen and brought out another one in less than 5 min because he "pulled some favours in the kitchen". Can't complain about the service......nor the food.

Steak was just how a great steak should taste like. No fancy flavours to dress it up, just pure juicy, tender, flavourful meat, lightly dressed with butter, satisfying our carniverous needs.


We had Potatoe Au Gratin and Sauteed Mushrooms ($8,95 ea.) as sides. The potatoes were tasty, probably because I'm a cheese fanatic, but the mushrooms really amazed me. Again, in this very simple and au naturel dish, you can really taste that distinctive mushroom flavour in these big, meaty caps.


Finally, to celebrate my WAAAY early birthday, we received a slice of dark chocolate cake topped with a lit candle. (Does making a wish on a super early birthday work as well??)


I love dark chocolate cake with raspberry sauce, and I probably could've ate the entire cake if it had been sitting in front of me. It was smooth, dense, but not sugary (like those cakes from supermarkets), and you can taste the cocoa with every bite. Writing this right now makes me want to run back and devour a piece.

Overall, it was superb food and great service, but too bad I'm still a poor student. The whole meal, with a bottle of wine that was around $47, rounded up to $210 not including tips. Thank fully I had the anniversary gift cards that I bought for half price.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Calgarylicious: Tommy Burger & Bar

This is a small bar & restaurant off of Macleod Trail in Calgary with several flat screen TVs above its stylish-lit bar to keep sports fans entertained. We arrived there famished, so we dove straight into the menu drooling over all the different burger options. They offer sandwiches and other fares too, but we came here to get a taste of their specialty gourmet burgers, which were about $12.75 each, topped with half a pickle and accompanied by a salad, soup, or generous serving of fries. Bun choices include multigrain and sesame.

You can create your own burger too for $10.50 with tomatoe, lettuce, red onions, chipotle ketchup and tommy burger sauce. Adding an extra topping brings the total to $11.50, and one more for $12.50....you get the idea. Toppings are categorized as dairy (camembert, blue cheese, swiss, etc.), Veggies (sprouts, avocado, etc), Meat (extra patty, bacon, etc).

My two topping customized burger came with a half inch thick patty topped with melted smoked Gouda and lots of sauteed mushrooms, sandwiched in a multigrain bun. Upon seeing the burger tower, my angry, growling stomach smiled.

Initially I couldn't taste anything other than the juicy patty because the chipotle ketchup (tasted like ketchup mixed with smoked bbq sauce) monopolized my tastebuds. After I scraped off a thick layer of the sauce, I could appreciate the slight hint of smoked gouda playing off of the meaty mushrooms, with the crunchy lettuce and tomato to add texture and a sense of freshness to the bite. The salad was served in a separate bowl in a very satisfying portion, considering it's only a side dish.
Edwin had the Tommy Burger with blue cheese, fried onions. and bacon. It had a much stronger taste than mine, half of it was because of the generous layer of blue cheese that was squeezed in there.
As with any burger joint, they also served milkshakes but we weren't in the mood for it at that time.
Overall, I felt that he burgers were slightly overpriced, but the ingredients were fresh, portions are generous and taste is acceptable. However, a much better deal can be found at Moose McGuire in the North end of the city, where the Coyote Burger, a delicious patty with Cheddar cheese and thick layer of guacamole, served with your choice of salad, fries, soup or rice for only $7.50. (I would've blogged about this but the camera was out of battery...).

Friday, June 12, 2009

Calgarylicious: Gaucho Brazillian BBQ - meat lovers' happy place

Had our new friend Ray not led us to this place, we would never have found this hidden jewel behind Best Western hotel on 3605 Manchester Rd SE off of Macleod Trail in Calgary.

The restaurant is small, but cozy and casual with handwritten chalk boards that explain to you how their Rodizio - their $35 ($28 for lunch) buffet works. The chef comes around with skewers of meat, and he won't stop until you flip your cow-shaped card from green to red.


They first start you off with a couple of delicious appetizers, including two flavours of fried manioc roots, which tasted like big, crispy fries with a more meaty, starchy filling.
There was also garlic bread and a very refreshing, tangy salsa of peppers, onions and olive oil. The buffet also includes the 4 appetizers offered on their menu: Fried jasmine rice, chunky potato salad with green beans and corn, tomato salad with a chunk of bamboo shoot, and braised beef with black beans, which I though was very flavourful and tender.
Regrettably, I ate two bowls worth of trailmix before coming to dinner so I couldn't participate in the all-you-can-eatathon, so I orderd the 1 grill item + 1 side combo ($13). I picked the rump steak, which turned out to be a little dry, with a generous serving of the potato salad. The side salad was sitting on a pool of dressing that was so acidic that it hurt my throat on the first bite.

For Rodizio, I snuck a few sampling bites of a couple of of the items (the ones I comment on), just out of curiosity. They had grilled banana, pineapple, lamb (very flavourful, very juicy), chicken wings, chicken heart (may sound gross to some, but it was actually the best tasting piece of meat among all others), pork, bbq ribs, sausages, and different cuts of beef that were juicy and tender.

Overall, this place is worth the visit for hungry carnivores who want to spoil their tastebuds with a diversed selection of well bbqed meats.

Goodness at home: The Non-Dieter's Mega Salad

President's Choice has been coming up with a lot of new products that are pretty great, one of which is this newly discovered crumbled Tomato and Basil Goat Cheese for $4.99. Equally exciting is the Kraft's Signature Roasted Pepper Salad Dressing ($3.29ish, tastes like an upgraded version of the Italian dressing but has the smoky taste of roasted peppers and is less acidic) and you've got the ingredients to an awesome salad. Best of all, the dressing is only 20 calories per tablespoon.

Armed with these two magical ingredients I've managed to fill myself up on some satisfying salads that dieters may find a little too caloric.



This was a deep bowl filled with baby romaine, diced apple, sliced roasted chicken from Costco (a huge one for $6.99, the white meat parts that are too dry go perfectly in salads and pastas), carrots, tomatoes, and quarter cup of oily, sugary trail mix with dried kiwi, papaya, strawberries, peanuts, almonds and walnuts. Complete it with a sprinkle of goat cheese and a dash of the Kraft dressing, and a salad better than any store-bought one is created in less than 5 min.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Calgalicious: Crave Cookies & Cakes Inc

Crave is a cute cupcake boutique in downtown Calgary on 1107 Kensington Road NW. Judging by the long lineup on a lazy Sunday afternoon when all other shops are either closed or deserted, this place probably fits into the landmark category.

Once you walk inside the brightly lit store, you will realize why it's called Crave.

The clusters of plump cupcakes topped with flawless twirls of colorful icing and delicate little sprinkles can draw the sweet tooth craving out of any one. I'm not a cupcake person, but I was like a restless monkey being teased by endless bunches of bananas outside my cage. Look at all the flavours!Luckily, in addition to the big cupcakes ($2.95 each, $16.95 for half a dozen), they also sell mini cupcakes for ($1.75 each or $16.95 for a dozen, which is what we got).

As you can see, they need to elevate the price because half the cost went into the labour and materials of the packaging. Oops, I mean, they are very attentive with the presentation. They even pack two big cupcakes in a whole casing with a bowtie.

I couldn't wait to dive into them right after walking out the store, and went on to try three flavours: Cravolicious (blue vanilla buttercream icing with chocolate sprinkles), Chocolate, and Red devil (red cupcake with cream cheese buttercream topping).

The cupcakes generally taste the same with two base variations: vanilla and chocolate. Not sure what the red one was, but it didn't have a distinctive taste. If you like extremely sugary, creamy icing that melts even when you just breathe on it, then you will fall in love with these cupcakes. I really enjoyed the cake part because it's very soft, moist, and barely sugary, which would pair perfectly with a touch of the icing. So personally, I thought the mini bites would've been an A+ if there were half the icing there just to flavour up the cakes. But then again, I'm not an icing cupcake person, so I'm sure those of you who are will find yourself a piece of heaven in these pretty little things.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Costco Cheeseburger Combo kicks McD's Big Mac's Butt

Costco's new meal deal: $5.99 Cheeseburger with lots of fries and a 20 oz drink beats McD's Big Mac Meal, or any other fast food combo by a long shot.

Unfortunately, I ate it all too fast before I could take a picture, half because I was starving and half because it was actually really delicious. Costco's famous thick cut, crispy fries are one of the best I've tried, because a) you can actually taste the potatoes and feel the texture and b) you can get a huge bowl for only $2.19, or something.

Now add a big, juicy burger to it and you've got a double bonus combo. Inside a pair of warm burger buns lies the standard tomatoe slice, lettuce leaf, a slice of processed cheese, and a half inch, 1/2 pound grilled Angus beef pattie that is meaty, juic juicy and completely satisfying. You can top it off with as much onion, relish, pickled radish, jalapeno, ketchup and mustard as you like at the self-serve station. Don't forget you also have the 20 oz soft drink to quench your thirst from downing all the fries and meat. Since it's also a self-serve station, you can always get more watered-down pop if needed.

Overall, if I were to get a fast-food combo, Costco would be the top choice any day.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Foodgasmic - Brie Apricot Cresent Rolls

Foodgasms - yes they exist and their frequency of occurrence depends on how high or low the standards of your taste buds are. Mine are medium so I'm lucky enough to be able to enjoy "mind-blastingly" good food once in awhile, and I've discovered one a few days ago that I'm gonna share with all you lucky people.

So Chef Aaron offered to make dinner and bought enough food to feed a small country...which was me. There was the risotto and roasted garlic and vegetables, and a beautiful red and green salad with strawberries, candied pecans, baby spinach and red peppers (I ruined the color theme by forcing diced mangoes in there). Of all his creations, I want to feature this tomato and cranberry goat cheese tower he designed, layered with baby spinach, coriander and chives with a splash of balsamic vinegar. I believe he purposely made it this high so that I can butcher it with my knife and make a complete cutting fail.

This crappy picture is not doing it justice but you get the idea. The acidity in the vinegar complemented the sweetness in the cranberry goat cheese really well, and the tomatoes met both of these flavours half way and the coriander adds a good zing to the whole taste.

However, the Foodgasmic part of the evening was the Brie Apricot Rolls. It was the simplest dish on the menu and it was so good I wish Wal-Mart sold second stomachs so I could keep stuffing my face with them.

It may look very ordinary, but imagine: a hot, buttery, slightly salty, crispy crust wrapped around a ball of warm, soft melted brie blended in with a touch of sweet apricot jam.........ahh....
He made 8 of those, and since he was allergic to cheese and could only risk eating one of them, I felt "obligated" to fulfill my duty, and downed three of those heavenly bites in one night.

Now here's the good part - The RECIPE

You only need these three ingredients: Pillsbury Crescents dough, Apricot Jam (1/2 the calorie, double the fruit, what can be better?), and a block of brie cheese.

1. Unroll the dough and split them into 8 portions
2. Put a block of cheese, about 2 cubic cms, in the middle of the dough
3. Add half a tablespoon of jam to each piece
4. Get creative and somehow wrap each one up so none of the fillings will leak out
5. Bake at 375 F for 10-15 min until golden brown.
6. Eat and go "mmmmmm".

Like any thing else that tastes superly good in life, this little thing is not easy on the calories for those of you who are counting. It's about 220 cals per piece but on the bright side, think about all the calcium and vitamins you are getting!

Anyways, they taste great fresh out of the oven. If you want to enjoy them for later, just rebake them in alittle bit in a toaster oven. If you don't have a toaster oven.....go get one! They are just about one of the most useful gadgets to have in the kitchen. I honestly think you can cook almost any dish with a microwave and a toaster oven.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Burrito Battle: Burrito Bandidos versus Chiptole Mexican Grill

I've tried both famous burrito places in downtown Toronto: Burrito Boys,which is now known as Burrito Bandidos (120 Peter St, and one on Huron St. at Bloor St, www. burritoboyz.ca) and Chiptole Mexican Grill (323 Yonge Street, at Dundas St under the AMC, http://www.chipotle.com/#/flash/food_menu). I'm going to refer to the first place as BB and the other as CMG.

I've only been newly introduced to CMG after catching Terminator at the AMC. I was starving, so grabbing a quick, giant burrito was definitely a great idea that made my tummy smile. Now about the place: everything is $7.52 including a cup that you can use to fill your own soft drink.


The items included burrito, fajitas, taco and burrito bowl (same fillings without the wrap), details on their website. Of course I went with the featured braised carnitas (long marinated, braised pork, shredded) with everything on it, which includes cilantro lime rice, mixed pinto and black beans, tomatoe salad, corn salad, lots of fresh lettuce, mild sauce (there's hot as another option) and cheese. Since guacamole costs extra (Booo!), I skipped it figuring there's enough going on in my burrito.


The ingredients were very fresh and there's definitely a lot there to save someone from starvation. I found the pork too heavily flavoured, every bite tasted like salt and cumin that I was patting myself on the back for being smart enough to ask for extra lettuce to neutralize the pork a little. Overall, the impression I got from this burrito was just big and fresh - you can taste the crispy lettuce, the crunchy corn and tomato, the cilantro-fragranced rice, the thoroughly stewed beans individually....which all went down nicely with the icy Coke I poured for myself.

Now onto BB. Ever since I tried my first burrito three months ago I've been addicted. I remember eating the best burrito in my life there after our Grad Ball party. The burritos there generally cost around $5.85 for small and $6.85 for large for chicken, steak, or chicken/steak mix, and $8.95 for halibut, which only comes in a large. Shrimp is also another option. No drinks included but you get salsa and guacamole and 4 different sauces: ranch, sour cream, hot, and their special burrito sauce.
I usually get the chicken/steak mix with everything on it, which includes Mexican rice, refried beans, lettuce, tomato, cheese, jalapenos, green peppers, green onions, and the aforementioned sauces and toppings. They give you everything in just the right amount so you end up with a giant burrito that has different mixtures of flavours in it, yet none of which is overpowering the other. I often wonder how they manage to even wrap up that much stuff so neatly. They give you generous portions of the meat filling, and it's always flavoured just right, although the steak is sliced too thin sometimes that you don't taste it among all the other ingredients.

The best part of it all is that they toast their burritos, so you end up with a crispy toasted wrap on the outside, and melted cheese that just brings all the warmed fillings together into a heavenly blend of flavours and textures that makes your taste buds sing Halleluah. I've also tried the one with pieces of fried halibut steak in the burrito. Some would say it's the best one on the menu and I won't argue because the fish is soft and juicy, and there's always lots of it.

Tip 1 : because the burrito is so big with so many ingredients, you will get different flavours if you bite onto the right side of your wrap than the left side, making this little meal-on-the-go that much more exciting. Tip 2: They open late on "clubbing nights", so Thursday to Satruday, and it gets packed late at night as this makes a great after-clubbing meal, so be ready to line up if you go at that time.

Overall, both burritos are great, but I'd have to crown BB as the winner for the toasting, the guacamole, and the perfectly flavoured fillings.

This is why I'm Fat - Part I

Kids, one piece of advice: eat up while you're young. I was helping out at the Engineering Alumni reunions this weekend, which was attended by many older alumni of graduating classes from 50's and 60's, and one going as far back as 1939. I guess your appetite shrinks significantly with age, in addition to shift of interest and values in life (networking as opposed to free food). Because at these reunions, there were WAY too much food left over. Had it been an undergraduate reunion, all this food would've disappeared within 30 min, if not less. However, at these reunions, tables of quality food were left untouched. As poor students, we could not bear to see the food go to waste like that, so we all packed up as much as we felt necessary to feed our starved, lazy friends.


I took enough sandwiches and fruits and veggies to have brunch, and fill up a couple of friends hungry from beach volleyball.

That was the stuff left from lunch. They had a reception for dinner during which plates after plates of cold cuts and crackers and bread were untouched. This one chef guy from the catering company actually took 3 full zip lock bags of salami, ham, and prosciutto to keep himself fed for the week.


I grabbed these modest bags of bread and meat to pass onto my guy friends who I know own an empty fridge and rely on Chinatown lunches and shawarmas to stay alive.......

I wonder how much food is wasted every day at these parties....too bad they can't be all collected and donated to food banks/people who need them because of hygiene issues.....

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Glutinous Rice Wraps - "Zong Zi" from T&T

Zong Zi is this Chinese food in which glutinous rice with stuffing is wrapped in leaves and steamed. It can be savoury with meat, mushrooms, egg yolk and other fillings, or sweet with red bean, purple rice, etc.

T & T, the Chinese supermarket (http://www.tnt-supermarket.com/en/) is selling them for the upcoming Dragonboat festivals. The regular ones are $2.49, 5% off for 3 or more, or 10% off for 8 or more. They have the big fancy ones with dried scallops and other seafoods for $3.99, 5.99 and 7.99, but I'm happy just sticking with the little cheap ones.

I bought 6, 3 meats and 3 vegetarians, but managed to pick the ugliest one to take an unwrapped picture of. In general, they were pretty delicious with plenty of filling, which justifies the slightly higher price in comparison to the other Zong Zi sold in the store.



This is the vegetarian one that had 3 whole chestnuts surrounded by diced shiitake mushrooms buried in the rice, which was flavoured by soya sauce. I think there was taro in it too, but there were so little of it that I barely tasted it.

I had another one with black sticky rice, red kidney beans and dried longan that I thought was a lot more exciting. But the red kidney beans were WAY too sweet, making the whole thing a little hard to swallow. The red bean with rice one was loaded with red beans and sweetened just right, but unfortunately that was the only ingredient in the whole wrap, making it less exciting than the other selections.


This is the Cantonese style one with salted egg yolk, three big chunks of lean pork meat surrounded by a layer of crushed mung beans. I really enjoyed this one as it wasn't too salty, and had lots of satisfying fillings. However, my less forunate friend who bought the same thing ate her entire wrap to find no egg yolk in it. So cross you fingers for a legit one when you go buy these things.

Overall, the wraps are a little pricey but they do come stuffed with quality ingredients inside. Since I'm a huge fan of sticky rice foods, I'll probably be living off of these convenient lunch options for awhile until they stop selling them.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Panago - Restaurant pizza for delivery!

I've always walked by Panago on 1 Gerrard St. (Bay and Gerrard) just like the 50,000 other pizza joints I see on the streets without thinking too much about it. But this one stormy night during exams, I was craving for pizza because my fridge was empty and wanted restaurant quality ones to be delivered right to my doorstep. Edwin's always been a huge advocate for Panago, so we decided to give this place a try.


We ordered Primo Veggie ($14.50 medium, left) with Pesto sauce, fire roasted tomatoes, baby spinach, red peppers, caramelized onions, roasted garlic and formmagio blend+mozarella on thin crust whole wheat (yes, I know it can't get an healthier than this), while Edwin had The Mediterranean ($13.75 Medium) with Fresh passata tomato sauce, beef, red onions, tomatoes, feta+mozarella on hand tossed crust. Every pizza comes with a free sauce/shaker, so we had Ranch sauce and chilli shaker. Delivery was $2. No price variations for different crusts.

The pizza came in 40min nice and warm. I had little expectation for the Mediterranean beucase the toppings didn't sound exciting. To my surprise, I liked it a lot more than the one I picked. The veggie one was loaded with toppings but didn't have much of a kick in flavours but thankfully I had my chilli shaker to spice things up with. On the other hand, the other pizza had chunks of oregano scented diced tomatoes that gave the pizza texture and sense of freshness, while the beef had a hint of cumin/chilli in it and was very juicy. The hand-tossed crust was soft on the inside and crispy on the edges - none of that cardboard Pizza Pizza uses for their creations.

Overall, it was the best take-out pizza experience I've had. If I were to order for delivery again, I'd definitely go with Panago.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Hornero - Wood burning oven baked pizzas

This is a spot I always see passing by Wellesley and Yonge on 528 Yonge St. (www.hornero.ca) Read a lot of good reviews for its pizzas so decided to come try it out. Although it was 7 on a Saturday night, the restaurant was quite empty. The place was quiet, clean and dimly lit, so it was a comfortable dining environment at least.


I had the #19 - asparagus, roasted red peppers, grilled eggplants pizza ($12). The crust was thin, toasted and crispy, topped with large pieces of fresh veggies which my Dad and I both thought were very delicious. However, there wasn't much taste in the pizza itself. There wasn't any sauce and the herbs didn't add enough flavouring.

This is the 10 oz New York Strip Loin Steak with Grilled Veggies ($16). Yes, what you see is all you get. The steak was very juicy and cooked medium rare just as we'd asked for, but again, no flavour. I have very sensitive taste buds and usually find things too salty, but these two dishes were light even for me.
My friend ordered seafood linguine with shrimps, mussels, and calamari ($15). There were 2 jumbo shrimps and 2 mussles in there, and the calamari pieces were mixed in a typical tomatoe sauce that actually was quite tasteful. However, if you have an above-average appetite, the portion will probably be too little to satisfy your hunger.


Overall, service was good - the waiter was very patient with my questions and tentative to our requests. The food tasted decent, but slightly over priced for their quality..except for the pizzas, maybe.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Home of HOT-Taste: More Korean!

I think I'm on a Korean addiction - I've had Korean food for 4 days in a row now, three of which consisted of pork bone soup (pbs) . Some people go for wine tasting, so I guess I can go around savouring PBS too.
This spot is a favourite among some of my friends who live near by on Bay st. Home of HOT-taste is located on 714 Yonge St., next to the Countryside Coffee. It's also a very popular spot among young Koreans, perhaps because of it's dim lights and loud atmosphere, and two big flat screens that air Korean music videos all day long. The boys can enjoy some firey dishes while drooling over Hyori-lee's booty-shaking.
The restaurant boasts its firey chicken dishes. While there are the standard tofu stews, soups, pork stir frys and bbq rib dishes with rice combos priced at 5.99-8.99 posted on the wall with pictures, its menus are filled with items such as "spicy firey chicken" or chicken wings for around $14.49 for a plate. The plain fried wings are popular as well.


Being on a PBS addiction, of course I had to go for the PBS ($6.99) because I found that every restaurant has their own unique broth. This one puts a lot of peppercorn and green onion in their soup and the pork is stewed just to the right tenderness that it falls apart as you bite down on it. I didn't find it overly spicy nor salty, and really liked the kimchi and potatoes in the soup.

Second dish was the rice cakes with fish cakes and onions. The rice cakes ($5.99) were chewy but not tough and the sauce was mildly spicy with a sweet undertone (makes me think they put a hint of ketchup in it). The fish cakes were just thin slices of standard fish cakes that were in the dish for a ride. The whole plate had the stir-fried-over-open-fire kind of taste to it that I really liked.

Finally, the most ordered dish in the restaurant. The famous spicy firey chicken with fried rice for $5.99. The chicken's not that spicy and very tender with a bbq taste to it. It's one of those "you might not love it but you definitely won't hate it" safe dishes. I didn't try the fried rice but it glistened under a layer of oil with some vegetable bits in it. Standard.

For sides, the restaurant gives lettuce salad with soya sauce and miso dressing, pickled turnips and kimchi upon request. Service was alright, but a little slow because there was one waiter runnin around 12 tables....(poor guy).

Overall, it's a good place for those of us who don't mind a loud environment with a cheap, filling and tasty meal, and/or for those who just want to sit googly eyed staring at Korean pop stars all day.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Demitre's Dessert

This is a very popular dessert chain around Toronto. After Nak Won korean food we headed up to Mississauga for some sweets at Demitre's. We went to the one in 90 Courtney Park, next to the AMC.
There was a big line up even though it was already 10:30, 1hr away from their closing time.

We waited eagerly for a seat while watching them cut the different cheesecakes, and popping out waffles with a mountain of ice cream on them, giant waffle cones and super delicious looking sundaes and shakes. The fudge cake was literally 30cms tall.....it was one gianormous beauty.

Deciding on what to order was hard..Diza and I debated between Banana Split, cake or crepes, and finally we settled on the crepe just like our other friends. The crepes are all $9.95, you can upgrade it to a Belgian waffle for extra 85 cents.

Karen and Brian had the One Bad Apple, which was crepe with white chocolate ice cream, spiced Apples with cinnamon and caramel drizzle. I'm a big apple fan so I thought theirs had great flavours blending together. The ice cream was very, very sweet though, it gets heavy after a couple more bites. But the apples and the cinnamon went very nicely with the crepes.

Hamid, being a chocolate fiend, ordered the one with the MOST chocolate in it. I don't remember the name, but it was bittersweet chocolate ice cream with brownie bits, dark and white chocolate bits. He loved it and inhaled that thing in about 20 seconds. Then he got too full and left it up to me.....as usual.... I liked the chocolatey-ness of it, but the chips kept on getting stuck in my teeth, which was annoying. Perhaps there was just too much chocolate stuff in there with no variance in texture, so it got very sweet and overwhelming quickly.
Diza and I shared The Last Straw, with fresh strawberries and honey vanilla ice cream and strawberry sauce drizzle. The strawberries were very fresh and sweet, so pairing them with the ice cream was just heavenly. The ice cream was not as sweet as the others, but you can definitly taste the honey. The texture is stickier and milkier than the usual ice cream you'd buy from grocery stores. Diza didn't even breathe. By teh time I took my second bite, she already killed off half of the crepe, mumbling "this is so amazing...omg...so good.." with her eyes bulging out as if she wished she had a second mouth to stuff this goodness in.

Overall, Demitre's a tasty place. THe desserts are certainly over priced, but I guess their justification is the monstrous size of them all. I'd say sharing a plate with a friend serves as good portion and budget control.

Nak Won Korean Table BBQ Restaurant

I had dinner with my best buds from Ottawa. We were originally going for a "REALLY REALLY great Persian Restaurant" at 5529 Yonge St.....the closest thing we found to that was a closed Persian grocery store. Thankfully, there were enough Korean restaurants in the area as back up.

It was very cold so we didn't want to wander far from where we were, so following the Chinese rule, I picked the place with the biggest crowd. This is Nak Won Table BBQ at 5594 Yonge St.


The place had a very impressive selection of side dishes. Everyone is greeted with a place of lettuce salad with a creamy sweet mayo dressing. Then there were the seaweed (a little too salty), honey coated potatoes (very, very delicious. We had to ask for refills twice before our food came), cellophane noodles, bean sprouts, marinated cucumbers, turnip strips, sliced fish cakes, kimchi (that's a given), and marinated beans. I could get full just eating the side dishes alone.

Diza wasn't particularly hungry so she wanted something small. But after we all ordered she still wasn't sure what she wanted, so out of pressure she got the spicy tofu stew ($6.99) under the waitress' recommendation. It came bubbling hot with chunks of tofu and the egg and shredded pork and onions. A very standard tofu stew that was quite spicy. She couldn't handle the spicyness so I actually had quite a bit of it. I found the taste to be more prominent once the dish cooled down.
Brian and Annie wanted the stone pot bibimbap ($7.99) because that's what they always get. There wasn't a lot of beef in it so without the hot sauce, there's not much taste in the dish itself. I found a huge piece of burnt rice at the bottom of her bowl at the end of meal and gasped as if I hit jackpot. Brian's eyes lit up when he saw me lift that crispy, golden piece of rice up...and of course I split it with him :)
Hamid was very specific in what he wanted. He wanted stir-fried noodles with beef/chicken and vegetables..the closest thing I could find was this stir-fried noodle with seafood and vegetables in spicy sauce ($12.99) under the Chinese dishes section for him. It was smothered in a sweet and sour-like sauce with a spicy kick to it, andwas definitely the most flavourful dish of the evening. The vegetables and seafood weren't very prominent in the dish, but there were a lot of onions that added some good flavours to the noodles. I managed to dig out a small shrimp, and Diza found a "very cute" baby squid that she demolished without blinking.

Finally, Karen and I ordered the pork bone soup. Although I just had pork bone soup ($6.99) from E-wang downtown the day before, I was craving for it again. Disappointingly, the pork bones weren't stewed for long enough so they weren't fall-off the bone tender and made the eating process even more time consuming. The broth was different as they put a lot of ginger in it. The potatoes weren't tender either and the flavours from the broth did not make its way into them.

Overall, the service was good and the prices are reasonable. I really enjoyed their side dishes, but main order wise, they still offered us a satisfying meal but there are certainly improvements that can be made.