Sunday, November 30, 2008

Quick updates: 2 closings, 3 openings

CLOSED: Ariana Afghan, a halal market formerly on 42-49 Main Street in downtown Flushing. I used to take folks there on my Flushing Noshwalk. Similar Afghan and Persian products can be found at Al-Aziz Grocery at 43-29 Main Street, across from the Queens Botanical Garden. Although I don't have the exact address, there is an Afghan Market further south on Main Street near 73rd Street in the mostly Orthodox Jewish and Israeli area of Kew Gardens Hills. I take people there when I lead a tour there (which I don't do often, because it's mostly a custom tour destination).

CLOSED: Hemsin Turkish Restaurant, formerly at 39-17 Queens Boulevard in Sunnyside. I used to direct people there when MOMA was temporarily located in Long Island City. Another Turkish restaurant temporarily replaced it but couldn't make a go of it. I will probably revised my Noshwalk to include Turkish Grill at 42-03 Queens Boulevard.

OPEN: Euro Shop Meat Market at 42-07 Queens Boulevard. a few doors down from Turkish Grill This newish market is, to my knowledge, the only dedicated Hungarian market in Queens. (Hungarian Meat Market continues to operate on 2nd Avenue in Yorkville, Manhattan.) The young couple who own it promise to offer home made goulash and stuffed cabbage as the weather gets cold. When I led my Sunnyside Noshwalk this fall, we bought some delicious walnut filled pastries.

OPEN: Java Village, a new Indonesian place at 86-10 Justice Street in Elmhurst, which has a growing Indonesian community (and an Indonesian Cultural Center). I got a delicious, spicy kale dish and also an Indonesian coffee soda.

OPEN: Mo Gridder's, a barbecue place at 603 Crescent Street in Belmont. The owner has another place in Hunts Point but I think he was brilliant to move here - to capture hungry Fordham students, employees from nearby St. Barnabas Hospital and locals who want an alternative to Italian goodies! I've added it to my tour: We get a platter of spicy chicken wings!

SOON TO OPEN (or already open!): AYADA, a new Thai place on Woodside Avenue between 77th and 78th Streets. On my Elmhurst tour, we had a wonderful encounter with the folks who run Ally's Grocery at 76-13 Woodside Avenue. It's a Thai grocery that has many ready-to-eat Thai dishes, or some that need to be heated up. Well, I guess they decided it was time to "go for it" and open a restaurant. It was still in the works when I led my tour in mid-November...

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Wonderful food books

I usually write about places I visit, but I'm lucky to have received quite a few great free food books because of my newsletter, Noshnews. Note that I didn't say cookbooks, because the best of these are food compendia. Here are quick reviews of three recent favorites, all published by Robert Rose, based in Toronto.

My newest favorite is "The Science of Good Food" by David Joachim and Andrew Schloss, which calls itself the "ultimate reference on how cooking works." What I love about it is, well, everything. The layout is gorgeous, they use a nice heavy shiny paper stock, the photos are colorful and clear, and the language is utterly user-friendly, especially helpful for those of us who are not scientists.

For instance, the entry on "flavor" describes what it is, what it does nad how it works, discussing how our mouth recognizes the five tastes - sweet, salty, sour, bitter and savory. There are fun "fast facts" (dogs have 100 times more odor receptors per squre centimeter of olfactory membrane than humans; fish can smell in water, etc.).

There are also quite a few recipes. (They're printed in red in the index for quick reference.) I haven't tried any, but here's a tempting one: Absinthe suissesse, a beverage combining absinthe or pernod: almond syrup, creme de menthe liquere and a few other ingredints. It sounds positively sinful - but isn't that what absinthe is about?

The book also answered a few questions I'd been wondering about: What are capers (see "Flowers")? What is quinoa really: a grain or a sprout? Answer: It's listed under grains but described as a member of the spinach family.

There are extensive sections on herbs, cookware, cheese, chocolate and just about any major category you can think of related to cooking and categories of food.

My next new favorite book, though it's a second edition (I never saw the first) - is "The Spice and Herb Bible" (2nd edition) by Ian Hemphill. It answers just about every question I've had about spice and herbs and introduced to me to many more. Also - lots of photos and great recipes!

The book has extensive sections on chilies (including ratings on their heat levels) and peppers, and in some instances lists the names of some herbs or spices in other languages. One of my favorite features is the listing of the names of herbs or spices in other lanauges. You can read the names of Mustard, for instance, in Arabic, Cantonese, Mandarin, Czech, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Indian, Indonesian, Italian, japanese, Malay, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Sri Lankan, Swedish, Thai, Turkish and Vietnamese.

Finally, as a soup lover I was delighted to receive "300 Sensational Soups" by Carla Snyder and Meredith Deeds. I thought I was creative in developing my own soups, but these two chefs have assembled a wonderful collections of cold soups and hot soups, vegetable and other soups, fruit soups and some nut soups (although they're missing the pisatchio soup that I found in a Persian cookbook). As you might imagine, my favorite chapter is called "The World of Soups" and focuses on ethnic soups.

Yum.