LA has the most interesting restaurants — it's too bad I don't get out that way very often.
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Having recently returned from the ASM (American Society for Microbiology) General Meeting held in Philadelphia, I'm convinced that it should be held there every year--or, at least, it should be the permanent East Coast venue.
When I go to a meeting, I want several things:
Stuff to do. Restaurants…
Don't get me wrong, I like to eat out. And what parent of many doesn't like the idea of food they don't have to cook and dishes they don't have to wash. At times restaurants and bakeries even may provide more energy efficiency than home cooking, especially in small households - one industrial…
Since the beginning of March, I've been putting in a lot of time at a part-time job. I needed to get out of the house a lot more than I had been, and a friend needed people for his smoothie cart business. It's not rocket science, but it's not all that bad a way to kill time while making a little…
Rod Dreher has an interesting post (building on a NYTimes article) about the glories of the art of confiture and why the obsessive creation of food-as-art is worth doing:
When I went to Paris a year ago with my niece Hannah, I brought back some confiture by Christine Ferber. She makes some of the…
At first you look at those wiggling tentacles and think gross! Then well, when you think about it, many predators eat their prey sometimes wiggling, sometimes alive, sometimes barely dead.
Looks a bit like Gagh; best when it still moves ;-).
Most predators, on the other hand, don't have access to a fully-stocked kitchen, or even just some plain ol' fire.
Although an Animal-Planet "Iron Chef"-style competition between, say a croc and a lion would be interesting: "The secret ingredient--wildebeest!"
Although an Animal-Planet "Iron Chef"-style competition between, say a croc and a lion would be interesting: "The secret ingredient--wildebeest!"
Croc: Damn, I'm getting dried out every time I get near the fire.
Lion: Ouch! I guess I wasn't supposed to actually touch the flame.
Both: Screw this, let's eat those tasty monkeys standing right near us with cameras. Ummmm...fresh human!
I've had the crickets at Typhoon, they aren't that bad but nothing to seek out once they novelty of eating bugs at a restaurant wears off. After the first 10 or so I had enough but they give you a whole friggin plate full of them! I few large draft beers help.
As for live seafood, dozens of the finer sushi bars in LA will serve extra-extra-fresh shrimp or certain fish, if you are into that. They taste just like the fully dead ones, so it is really all about the wiggling sensation in your mouth. For me it isn't worth the extra money just to induce a gag reflex.
I'm normally not a pedant, but it's san nakji. In Korean, nakji means 'octopus'. Different romanization rules could result in a spelling of nagji or nagchi, or some variation thereof, but there's certainly no 'k' on the end of it. I realize you got it from the referenced site, but since you're such a cephalopod lover I thought you ought to know the proper term.
And on that note, the Korean word for 'squid' is ojingo (stress on the 'jing'). Squid jerky is a great snack!
I suppose decapitation clears away ethical worries over eating live cephalopd.
To correct the pedant, ojingo (I would actually write o-jing-uh) is stressed on the first syllable.
I myself had san nakji once, and there was no decapitation involved, killing being achieved by boiling (in broth). I could only manage to eat the tentacles, though.
I'm not sure I'm up for live animal foods. But the spicy ramen soup at one of the other places sounds fun.