Oh! Taisho, New York City

The strip of St. Marks Place between 3rd and 2nd Avenue has become a little Tokyo, crowded with Izakaya bars and Asian eateries.  Oh! Taisho and its sister bar, Yakitori Taisho three doors down, were two of the first Japanese restaurants on this strip.  Both places have huge menus of Yakitori, Robata, rice balls, Ramen, and sauteed noodle dishes, almost all of which are excellent – the pork belly skewer and the El Hira (skate wing) are must orders, and both places serve huge pitchers of Kirin and Sapporo draft beer. These are pretty much perfect joints to spend an evening hanging out, drinking and sampling a wide range of small plates of food.

Takoyaki at Oh! Taisho

Takoyaki at Oh! Taisho

The Dumplings:  Oh! Taisho serves shrimp shumai, gyoza, chikuwa with cheese and takoyaki.  I have been on a takoyaki kick lately. These dumplings have a unique texture; a soft, doughy pancake like outer wrapper within which is nestled a slightly chewy nugget of octopus tentacle.

Takoyaki –  Like delicate kelp fronds waving in warm ocean currents, the strands of slivered bonito that adorn these dumplings should wave and undulate in the convection currents of heat that waft off freshly cooked takoyaki.  Because the shaved bonito flakes used by Oh! Taisho are heavier wide Chow Fun size sheets rather than long slivers, the bonito on the takoyaki served on our recent visit to Oh! Taisho did not wave to use in welcome.  These takoyaki also didn’t come drizzled with tangy Japanese mayo, but instead were served with a side of mayo.  While not hitting all the marks for the perfect plate of takoyaki, they were nevertheless delicious with the sweet tang of the Worcestershire sauce and the brininess of the bonito flakes. Continue reading

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Pitaya, Manhattan Valley, New York City

Pitaya is a fairly new Japanese restaurant that is drumming up foot traffic via the all-you-can-eat sushi special and frequent half-price sushi nights.  After a horrifying gastrointestinal experience a couple of years ago that I blame on an all-you-can-eat joint on 72nd street, I have stayed away from sushi places running these specials.  But some friends have tried Pitaya with no ill effects, so I gave it a shot.   Pitaya serves Asian Fusion entres, sushi and a few robata skewers.  The sushi was pretty low quality and/or poorly prepared, I had a fish scales with two pieces, a bone in another piece and two other pieces were weirdly chewy.  The shishito skewer (grilled Japanese peppers) was quite good,  while the shiitake skewer was three large pieces of shiitake mushroom that perhaps had been waved near a grill.  Thankfully the gyoza were quite good.

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Pork Gyoza at Pitaya

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Murasaki Sake Bar, Chicago, Il

murasakiMurasaki is a intimate sake bar on Chicago’s Gold Coast and after this trip is our favorite Chicago cocktail bar.  The bar has a wide range of Sake, Shochu and Japanese whiskeys and a small menu of Japanese bar snacks, including edamame gyoza and takoyaki.  The bartenders are really friendly and walked us through the drinks menu and made some excellent suggestions for whiskey and Shochu.  The bar is relatively low, so at the bar you sit on comfy chairs rather than bar stools. The flat screen TV above the bar plays classic samurai movies; Rashoman was playing the night I was there and it turns out one of the regulars brings in classic samurai DVDs for the bar to play. There are also two private karaoke rooms for rent.

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Pierogi Heaven, Chicago Ill

pierogi_heavenHistorically Chicago was home to large populations of immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe; in 1900 77% of the population was either first or second generation immigrants, with Germans, Irish, Poles, Swedes and Czechs making up nearly two-thirds of the foreign-born population.  Recent Census data shows that Polish Americans now make up 6.7% of Chicago’s population, that is, roughly 182,000 residents.  As you can image a Google search for “Best Polish Restaurant in Chicago” pulls up a bunch of top five or top ten lists and Pierogi Heaven makes the cut on a lot of them.

Pierogi Heaven is a small, no frills cafeteria style joint where one guy serves up pierogi from a steam counter and another guy works a grill cooking Polish sausage. The food is served on cafeteria trays and plastic plates with plastic forks.  They seem to do a fast enough pace of business, certainly at lunch, that the pierogi in the steamer pans are fresh and still glistening.

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Potato and Cheese pierogi topped with onions and bacon

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Banh Mi Strong – Fundraiser

The guys at Banh Mi Saigon have launched a GoFundMe.com crowd sourced fundraiser to help rebuild their business after it was destroyed in a huge fire that wiped out the entire strip mall they were in.  As first time business owners it doesn’t look like they got good advice on their insurance policy – the policy is not going to make a dent in the rebuilding costs.  Banh Mi Saigon served some of the best food in the Pioneer Valley and the guys who ran it had created a really friendly, welcoming atmosphere.

So readers please think about contributing to their fundraiser – click through here.

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Grilled Pork Banh Mi at Banh Mi Saigon

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Wow Bao, Chicago, Ill

wow_bao_signBased on its signage alone I had really wanted to like Wow Bao, but it really wasn’t that great, just basically meh.  Wow Bao is a local Chicago Asian fast food chain with four locations and a food truck, and a location in Baltimore at Oriole Park.  They sell, well of course, Bao, which are Chinese steamed buns, and pot stickers. For Bao you have the choice of teriyaki chicken, spicy kung pao chicken, whole wheat with edamame (these are vegan), thai curry chicken, spicy mongolian beef, BBQ pork, coconut custard and chocolate.  The pot stickers come stuffed with green vegetable (egg is used in the wrapper so these are only vegetarian) or pork and cabbage. Below is the promotional video for Wow Bao.

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Very sad news, Banh Mi Saigon destroyed in a fire

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Vegan Pho

In very sad news, Banh Mi Saigon in Hadley MA and the rest of the strip mall it is part of, were destroyed last night in a huge fire.  Banh Mi Saigon doesn’t sell dumplings but it is the best Vietnamese restaurant in the Pioneer Valley and one of the overall best restaurants in the Valley.  In the roughly 18 months it had been in business, the two young brothers who ran this little lunch counter joint had built a loyal following by serving excellent Banh Mi, Pho, Bun and rice plates.  They served a completely vegan Pho that was outstanding, even as a meat eater I thought this was a great Pho, you didn’t miss the meat at all.  They also served some of the best Vietnamese BBQ Pork and Spring Rolls I’ve had anywhere and their fried tofu Banh Mi was outstanding.

And the hits keep coming with this fire, another great local restaurant, Mi Tierra, was also destroyed.  We at Dumpling Hunter are sending our best wishes and hoping that all the affected businesses can rebuild.

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Grilled Pork Banh Mi

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Sun Chan, Manhattan, NY

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Pork Gyoza at Sun Chan

Sun Chan is a great little Izakaya stye Japanese restaurant on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.  Izakaya are essentially Japanese pubs that sell small plates of food, often Yakitori, Robata, Katsu, Ochazuke and Yakisoba, to go along with a night of drinking.  Sake, Shochu, and beer are usually available for the drinking component of the night.  Sun Chan serves a great Kimchi Buta (stir fried kimchi, scallions and pork belly),  really good grilled rice balls stuffed with cod roe and some excellent meat skewers; the duck, the salmon with scallion and the pork belly are my favorite skewers. Continue reading

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Left over Dumplings – Southern Style

Dumpling_sauceA friend of the blog from down South sent me some photos and this meal plan, not quite a recipe, for using left-over dumplings. “Dumplings in a tomato/roasted garlic sauce with cherry tomatoes, okra and mozzarella – a sort of Chinese/Italian/Southern thing going on.” The overall review of the dumplings from the local take-out joint was “… the dumpling dough was a little thick and chewy.”  But the final dish made with left-overs was reported to be quite good.

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Oldboy (U.S.) Dumpling Eating Promotion

The South Korean film Oldboy is one of my favorite movies and I have some misgivings about the Hollywood remake, you should all see the original.  But as dumplings play a key plot point in the film and the PR campaign for the new release involves eating dumplings, I feel obliged to report the following,

“For a chance to win the actual hammer used by Josh Brolin’s character in the film, tweet @FilmDistrict a photo of a dumpling at your favorite local dumpling spot with the hashtag #eattheclues. The contest ends on October 20th and a randomly chosen winner will be selected the following day on October 21st.”

Some back ground on Oldboy…. After a night of drinking businessman Oh Dae-su (played by the amazing Choi Min-sik) is kidnapped and held in a privately run prison for 15 years.  He is then just as mysteriously released, given a sharp looking suit and a cell phone; the first call he receives on the phone tells him that he has five days to discover why he was held captive or his daughter will be killed.  Throughout his captivity Oh Dae-su was fed Chinese dumplings delivered from the same restaurant each day, so he goes on a dumpling hunting mission to track down that restaurant and follow the delivery guy back to the prison. You don’t want to know about the hammer.

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Oldboy hunting dumplings

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