Doesn't TaZte Like Chicken

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Location: 562 Beatty Street, Vancouver BC (604 879 7119)   Chambar on Urbanspoon
Chambar Belgian Restaurant

Author: My Husband

It was one of those blissful weekends of meeting up with friends, hanging out, and eating some really great food. No chores to do, no work to catch up on, no bank/doctor/dentist/[insert boring task] appointments to keep – like I said, blissful… Saturday morning, Christina and I went to Spa Utopia with her friend L and we all got all de-stressed and ‘relaxed up’ for the weekend ahead. :-) That was followed up by H’s BBQ Saturday evening, dim sum with the parents Sunday morning, and dinner with a long-lost friend on Sunday evening.

Save for a chance encounter in Singapore in 2003, I haven’t seen VC in over 10 years. We were pals at University, but he returned to HK after completing his studies and we gradually lost contact over the years. But friendship never really ends does it? It might take a breather and be placed on hold, but it’s always there, waiting for the right trigger to come along and jumpstart it. For VC and I, that trigger was Facebook. Say what you might about Facebook, but it really is a fantastic tool for getting back in touch with long-lost friends. And when we found out through Facebook that VC was going to be in town for a visit, we rustled up some of the old gang from school and agreed to meet up at Chambar to reminisce about days gone by…

I haven’t been to Chambar in over a year, so I was quite curious to see if the room had changed. Impressions upon walking into the restaurant were good. The same airy, but atmospheric space, greeted us. The exposed beams, the naked brick walls, the lighting design, and the height of the ceiling made the room both spacious and cozy at the same time; it felt like the right kind of place for a group of old friends to share an evening.

Baby Octopus

Christina started with “La Tapas de Poule” – a baby octopus salad. The octopus meat was tender, with just enough firmness to give it a satisfying chew, but not chewy enough to make the process tedious. The salsa and lime juice provided the acidity that was needed in a dish like this, and some slivers of romaine gave it a nice textural contrast. Taste wise, it was one of those “good, not great” dishes.

Bison carpaccio

I had the bison carpaccio. Dressed in olive oil and accompanied with some sweet beets, it was very tasty. I am growing to like bison more and more. For all its “exotic” qualities, I find it to be as tender and as flavourful as regular beef, and it has more of the good stuff (omega-3 fatty acids, iron, antioxidents) and less of the bad (saturated fats). Sounds like a winner to me. The potato chips that accompany the bison make the dish quite novel; that said, the chips were quite effective in delivering the salt and texture contrast for the meat.

Beef Bourguignon

Christina then followed up with the Beef Bourguignon – a nicely cooked slab of ribeye in a red wine sauce. Regular readers will know that Christina likes her steak, so it was no surprise that she thoroughly enjoyed this. I thought it was very well prepared, but I didn’t find it any better or worse than steak in establishments of a similar calibre.

Tajine

Tajine

Cous cous

I chose the lamb tajine for my main. I don’t see the connection between tajine and Belgian cusine, but I will say that the chefs at Chambar cook a really mean tajine. They weren’t shy about being generous as well – there was a lot of meat on the lamb shank. The cinnamon came through clearly, and the sweetness of the sauce, as well as the figs, gave the dish a distinctly middle eastern taste profile. I think it is a very successful dish. The tajine came with a bowl of cous cous that looked very pretty, but tasted quite bland. However, I tasted the cous cous as an afterthought, and I suspect that the explosion of flavours that was the tajine probably masked the seasoning of the cous cous.

Belgian fries

And of course, at a Belgian restaurant, how could we not order the frites? They were every bit as good as they look.

Warm brie

By the time we finished our mains and the fries, Christina and I were quite full. However, there was an item on the dessert menu that intrigued us. Not quite a cheese course, but not quite a dessert either – it was a “Brie chaud aux fraises” or a warm brie with strawberries. We ordered it to share and we both ended up liking it. The soft, almost runny, brie complemented the sweet/tart strawberries very well, with the short crust providing a nice interplay of textures.

Even though it was a Sunday, the restaurant was hopping. There was a fair amount of high-spirited buzz and chatter in the room, and that was very much aligned with the mood at our table: old friends catching up, new friendships starting, food and drinks being enjoyed, and much laughter punctuating the conversation. The food was great, the atmosphere couldn’t be better, but a bunch of friends getting together and shooting the breeze – that’s what made the evening.

So to my old friend VC, and my new friend MM, let’s not wait another 5 years to catch up again… Let’s hook up in HK next year?

Location: Thai Son Vietnamese   Thai Son Vietnamese (Richmond) on Urbanspoon
2215-4653 Garden City Rd, Richmond
Tel: (604) 278-6436

Similar to Lao Shang Dong Homemade Noodle House, Thai Son restaurant is another eatery that is always packed with eaters. Following our habits, we dropped by the busy restaurant after we saw it being busy every time we passed by. As we were guided to our table, we noticed almost everyone was enjoying either a bowl of pho noodles or a rice dish. Again, experience tells us that the noodles and the rice are probably the specialties of the house and indeed, they are. There are many selections of pho noodles on the menu. Each selection has the same beef broth and noodles, but a different combination of beef items. There beef balls, cooked and uncooked beef slices, beef tendons, tripe and beef flank to choose from. My husband always choose the combination that has all beef items:

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We always get one large bowl of noodles to share. My husband prefers eating the noodles mixed with a generous scope of chili, which is conveniently available in a container on every table. I prefer to drink the soup as is and taste every drop of pure goodness.

Being a lover of fried food, I always ordered the spring rolls:

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Besides pho, the rice dishes at Tai Son are also very tasty. The rice dishes are served with two pieces of either grilled chicken or beef, which are deliciously flavoured with lemon grass. But to me, the most interesting item served in the rice dish is the small pile of shredded pork. This little pile of meat is packed with amazing flavour. Of course, a big scoop of msg probably helped creating all that wonderful flavour too. But hey, what’s the fun in life if you can’t be bad to yourself once in awhile?

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On the last page of the menu there is a list of hot and cold drinks. Many drinks are made of fruit juices and sodas, but my only choice is the iced cold coffee served with a thick spoonful of sweet condense milk.

Having been to other Vietnamese restaurants in Asia, we know that there are Vietnamese restaurants out there which make a better bowl of pho than Thai Son. However, Thai Son remains one of our favourite Vietnamese restaurants. Perhaps it is the familiarity or the convenience of the location, but when we get off work late and are too hungry to cook dinner, we always find ourselves there slurping down a hot and tasty bowl of pho.

Location: Blackberry Bistro Restaurant   Blackberry Bistro on Urbanspoon
6011 Dyke Road
Richmond, BC
604-272-5755

http://blackberrybistro.soojerky.com/

If Ben didn’t mentioned in his food blog Chowtimes, I would have never found out about Blackberry Bistro.

We started with the Roti Canai, a type of flaky Malaysia flat bread that melts in the mouth. I always order roti when I see it on the menu; Blackberry Bistro has made the best roti that I have tried outside of Southeast Asia:

roti
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Along with the roti, we also tried the satay. Like the roti, the satay was a pleasant surprise. The menu has chicken, pork and beef satay but we ordered only chicken since that’s the meat that can’t be badly cooked. I found out later that the pork is the best choice.

satay

The laksa was a disappointment. Laksa is rice noodles served in a coconut broth. This special noodle soup is originated from Malaysia and there are many ways to make it. My husband and I are used to the Singapore style, which is designated by a rich coconut flavour. We feel that the Blackberry version tastes somewhat bland:

Laksa

We saw a lot of customers order Hainanese chicken rice, one of the most popular Singaporean dishes. The chicken is first boiled in a stock pot filled with water. After the chicken has been cooked, the water, which now has become a chicken broth, is used to cook the rice. I took a quick glance at the chicken rice sitting on the table next to ours and I saw a few pieces of chopped boneless white breasts with a large scoop of rice. Again, I’m probably too used to the Singaporean style, in which the chicken is bone in and usually there are pieces from the thighs and breasts. The chicken rice with only white meat just doesn’t appeal to me much.

The Southeast Asian dishes at Blackberry Bistro are not cooked exactly the way like those in Singapore, but I would definitely go back and order their roti and satay again.

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