Just started reading Barbara Kafka's book on roasting. Pretty good so far. Will definitely try her high heat method in the future. I happened to roast a tri-tip today. I liked it a lot more than the one I just souvide. Though both turned out medium rare, but the fat had broken down better in the roasted one, making it far more juicy and tender.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Monday, March 23, 2015
Souvide Cooking Again!
I picked up some nicely priced tri-tip from SF Market and
decided to give it a go with my Souvide Supreme (SS). I chopped the tri-tip
into two roughly equal portions so they fit in 1-Quart vacuum bags. I made a
marinate – sesame oil, cilantro, green onion, garlic, ginger, shoaxing rice
wine, soy sauce, rice vinegar, and sugar. My goal was a ginger scallion
marinade that was pretty thick and chunky. I blended everything up in the food
processor, tasted it, and it turned out great! Dumped about 1/3rd in
each back and sealed them up in my foodsaver, reserving the last third for
drizzling later.
Unfortunately my foodsaver is having difficulty sealing well
when there are wet ingredients (even under gentle setting). After about an
hour, I took one of the bags out, popped it open, and transferred the tri-tip
to another back with some extra whole green onions and ginger slices. Most of
the chunky aspects of the marinade were still clinging to the meat and so I was
hoping it would seal this time. Wishful thinking… It sealed with 2 small
opening. So I stuck the 85% sealed bag in another bag, and tried again. This
time it finally managed to seal all the way, despite still pulling some of the
moisture from the inner bag. Now my test batch was ready to go, in the SS it
went.
Unfortunately after testing the water with my Thermapen, the water was
about 5 degrees lower than the setting once it finished heating up. So I
cranked it up 140 degrees and tested again. A perfect 135.
The game plan is to cook it for about 2 hours before I take it out of the bag. It ended up being about 2 and 2 1/2 hours.
Looked OK. Took it out of the bag (had an amazing smell of garlic and ginger).
Next step was to caramelize the meat under the broiler and then let it rest for a while.
End result- came out to be a solid medium. The meat itself was tender, not as flavorful as I would have liked, but for marinating for only 1 hr, it was great.
Saturday, March 21, 2015
Yang's Noodles
Synopsis: While I really wanted to love Yang’s based on its
collective reviews, my recent and past experiences have been ultimately
lackluster and disappointing.
The Location: Yang’s sits across from a couple of my go-to
dim sum restaurants on Stockton Blvd. For those who haven’t traveled down
Stockton, parts are nice, and other parts are not so nice… Granted, there are
often weathered homeless people with giant trash bags full of cans riding
around on bikes, panhandlers at some of the major intersections, and beggars
that troll the parking lots. Aside from
that, it’s a sort of safe but rundown street. The building that houses Yang’s is rather
non-descript. They recently remodeled the restaurant, but didn’t seem to do
much if anything to its façade. That’s OK though, I certainly am not going to
judge a restaurant based on its looks, especially if it’s on Stockton Blvd. What
was an ominous sign when I arrived today for lunch today (3/21/2015) was a dead
orange and white cat lying out in the middle of the parking lot. After I
parked, which do to the small number of available spaces happened to be eerily
close to the deceased Garfield, I did notice what I believe to be a young worker
at the restaurant coming out to clean it up. As I was entering the restaurant,
I saw him out of the corner of my eye lifting the cat up sans gloves or any
other plastic protection. Regardless, I refuse to let the memory of an
unfortunate fated feline spoil my lunch, so on I went. The inside of Yang’s,
which can be seen from any of the numerous of pictures, is bright and clean now
since the remodel. I noticed that they have newly printed menus since I was here
last (see Becca W’s photos), and new standard black t-shirts for all their
staff.
The Menu: Yang’s has an interesting but somewhat tight menu.
They have a number of exotic sounding appetizers, a handful of dry and wet noodle
offerings along with your standard chow mein and chow fun, a couple of
different dumplings and Taiwanese snack foods, and some standard Chinese mainstays
on the back. I noticed that it had been paired down a bit from when I was here
last, especially in the soup department. The main thing everyone seems to rave
about is their signature beef noodle soup. I heard a description of the “Da Lu
noodle soup” by one of the servers and was sold. Since it isn’t described on
the menu, the Da Lu noodle soup contains thinly sliced chicken breast, shiitake
mushrooms, wood ear mushrooms, bok choy, thinly sliced carrots, egg, and their
standard hand-cut noodles. With dumpling week on Serious Eats just finishing up,
I felt I had to choose an obligatory order of these little delights. Xiao Long
Bao (XLB), described on the menu as “juicy pork buns,” but are more commonly
known as soup dumplings, have long been lauded as one of the kings of this Chinese
staple. On previous visits, I have had their beef noodle soup (twice), there
noodles with ground pork and cucumber, and two varieties of their boiled
dumplings.
The Food: I can forgive almost any offense a restaurant
delivers, even a dead cat in the parking lot, if the food is good. Sadly, most
of what I have had at Yang’s is not worth the trip. Here is the breakdown:
Xiao Long Bao – What I was expecting and what I received
were markedly different. Everything I have read about XLBs told me to expect a
thin skinned, medium sized dumpling containing piping hot broth served with a
side of ginger and vinegar. I was told when I ordered these that they take
20-25 minutes to make. Fair enough, the king of dumplings needs some time and I’ll
have a giant bowl of soup to keep me company until he makes his grand entrance.
When the XLBs arrived, they looked the part, at least like all of the pictures
that I have seen. But I could tell something was wrong when I took one of the
dumplings up in my spoon, bit off the knot at the top, and was not treated to
any soupy steam or porky broth flowing out of it. Additionally, I noticed the
skin was rather thick for a dumpling, and had a somewhat sweet and doughy
texture, almost like a steamed BBQ pork bun. They reminded me of the Shanghai
dumplings that I have had previously at Happy Garden with a slightly different
filling. The dumplings were filled with a pork mixture generously mixed with
chive. Unfortunately, my first one was not an aberration; none of the dumplings
in the order contained any noticeable portion of broth. They didn’t taste bad,
they were just a very far cry from what I was expecting for my first taste of
Xiao Long Bao. I would rate them to be better than their boiled dumplings, but
nothing to make a special trip to try.
Noodles – This section covers the noodles in all of the
dishes that I have tried so far. They are thicker than chow mein noodles, but
not as broad as chow fun noodles. They are not uniform, and definitely have a
homemade appearance. However, they taste pasty. They are not mushy, but being relatively
thick, they have that certain slimy sheen, texture, and feeling of being
overcooked. This was the case with each
of the noodle dishes that I have tried here, in soup or with a meat sauce. I
was hoping that in my previous visits that I was just unlucky, or perhaps they
sat in the broth too long before I was able to get at them. But no, each time
they were the same as the last. Pasty.
Da Lu Noodle Soup – Probably the best thing I have eaten
here. Albeit for the noodles as mentioned earlier, the soup was pretty good and
chock full of chicken, bok choy, and mushrooms. If I came back, I would order
it again.
Beef Noodle Soup – This soup has good flavor, but it suffers
from two big flaws. First, the chunks of beef tend to be scraps interlaced with
thick layers of chewy fat, and second, the noodles as described above. I can
certainly understand using the lesser cuts of beef for stews- that’s what you
are supposed to do. Long cooking times means the intramuscular fat in these
cuts has a chance to break down and provide both depth to the broth and make
the meat extra tender (whereas leaner cuts will just seize up and be tough). I
don’t even mind untrimmed chucks of meat with a little fat on the outside,
provided the meat and fat have been cooked long enough that they just melt in
your mouth. What Yang’s serves you is scrap chunks of meat with huge quantities
of gristle and chewy fat. The first time I had this dish, it wasn’t that bad.
The third time I visited, I took a friend to try the restaurant, and by the
time we left I was just embarrassed I had recommended that we try the place. We
probably picked out ¼ of the volume of the soup each as inedible chunks of fat
with some vestiges of meat clinging within. Sure the soup was cheap, but come
on. I get rustic dishes. I heard British food critic Simon Majumdar say that “rustic”
tends to be another word for “lazy.” While I think the rustic nature of food
can add to its character, with this soup, I would agree with Simon. Someone in
the back picked up a box of the leftover cuts from a butcher and just heaved
them into a soup, forcing the diners to do the tedious work for themselves.
Minced Pork with Cucumber Over Noodles – Besides my consistent disappointment with
the quality of the noodles, this dish was alright. It consisted of a somewhat
scant amount of a minced pork ragu with matchsticks of cucumber as an
interesting addition over noodles.
Boiled Dumplings –
Another dish that I wanted to like, but was disappointed with what I was
served. These reminded me of the cheap dumpling orders I used to get in Houston’s
Chinatown while attending school. Thick skin, flavored ground meat fillings,
but ultimately very bland, even when dipped in their accompanying sauce. The
dumplings are not bad tasting, but extremely mediocre.
Prices: For Stockton Blvd., I think this place might have
higher prices than average. The prices of dishes have definitely been raised
since the remodel. But that being said,
the prices are reasonably low on the whole for being a restaurant in Sacramento.
Verdict: While disappointed in the quality of the Xiao Long
Baos and the beef noodle soup, the up side it that Yang’s has never given me
food poisoning. But its highs and lows collectively make it pretty unremarkable
among the vibrant Stockton Blvd. food scene.
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