Archive for ‘ Wining & Dining

My favorite new veggie! 27 March 2008 at 7:32 pm by Jason 330 views

Do you know what this is?

Kale!

This, my friends, is Kale. Kale is a very scary looking and sounding green vegetable, but I’m dreadfully attached to it now. While it’s not that popular now, most people in their 80s are probably quite familiar with it, as it was a staple during World War II.

Kale was included in the Dig for Victory campaign as a vegetable that was easy to grow and provided important nutrients to supplement meagre diets during rationing.

Amazingly it looks like it’s trying to make a comeback in Britain, so I want to see it make a come back here in the US as well! I think with the current lack of vegetables in our diet, Americans need to start eating something like this… I mean, check it out:

It retains the rich mixture of vitamins, minerals and anti-oxidants that made it a vital ingredient in keeping the nation healthy in troubled times.

There is a growing body of evidence showing those raised on a wartime diet, where many fatty and sugary foods were either unavailable or rationed, were considerably healthier and fitter than their modern-day counterparts.

“What vitamins and minerals does Kale contain,” you’re asking yourself… I can tell. So, let’s find out, shall we? Here is the nutrition for one cup of chopped Kale (according to Fitday):

Calories – 33.5
Total Fat – 0.5g
Cholesterol 0mg
Sodium 28.81mg
Potassium – 299.49mg
Total Carbohydrate – 6.71g
Dietary Fiber – 1.34g
Protein – 2.21g
Vitamin A – 119 %
Vitamin C – 134 %
Calcium – 9 %
Iron – 6 %
Vitamin E – 1 %
Thiamin – 4 %
Riboflavin – 4 %
Niacin – 3 %
Folate – 5 %
Vitamin B-5 – 1 %
Vitamin B-6 – 9 %
Phosphorus – 4 %
Magnesium – 6 %
Zinc – 2 %
Copper – 10 %

Is that not incredible? It also contains so much Vitamin K it’s scary! This is one of the best veggies on the planet and amazingly almost no one I’ve talked to around here knows what it is. Kale tastes similar to cabbage… more like “greens” such as mustard or collard, just more earthy. One of my favorite ways to serve it is sautéed in Olive Oil (about 3 tablespoons per bunch of Kale… dash with salt and pepper, cook for about 4 minutes) and paired with chicken.

If you see it in your local grocery store, pick it up… give it a chance! Let’s bring back Kale!!



+ Tim’s Wood Oven Pizza – D+ By Jason 28 February 2008 at 4:42 pm 1,703 views 1 Comment

Tim’s Wood Oven Pizza is a restaurant located at the Eagle Run shopping center (129th & Maple) in Omaha. Jessica and I went there last night, and since it was someplace we hadn’t tried we thought we would give it a shot.

We started off with a couple of drinks. Jess had a “Cherry Cheesecake Martini” and I had a “Navaltini”. The restaurant uses UV Vodka and is quite proud of it, but perhaps they’re a bit too proud. Not only do they have the branding on multiple things, but the entire drink menu comes from the UV site. Would you like to know what’s in the drinks we had? Just go here: UV Recipes. For the martinis you should expect to pay $4.50 a piece (although it isn’t listed anywhere), which is about average for a martini, but they’re not serving “top shelf” vodka (no offense to UV, but a bottle costs about $9 – $10 compared to Gray Goose at $25 – $30) so that is kind of a steep markup.

Next up we ordered appetizers. There were quite a few things on the menu to choose from, so we decided on the Sampler. For about $10 this came with:

2 pieces of Garlic Cheese bread
4 Mozzerella Sticks
4 Wings (BBQ or Hot)
4 Chicken Strips

The garlic bread was pretty sub-par… it was a very soggy piece of Texas toast, and wasn’t really all that flavorful. Jessica didn’t eat more than a bite (and that’s usually her favorite item). The Mozzerella sticks were your standard-type Mozzerella stick, nothing to write home about (and definately not fresh-made). The same could be said about chicken strips. They were just your basic fried chicken strip… no real stand-out flavor to speak of other than chicken and a basic batter (not breading). Now, Jessica loved the wings… she couldn’t get enough of them. They were crispy and had a great BBQ flavor… very nice. Of course, your mileage may vary… to quote another review:

The waitress wasn’t too friendly and didn’t even really apologize when we sent our wings back because they weren’t cooked. (nothing gets you in the mood to eat more than under cooked chicken!)

We didn’t have this issue (the wings were fully cooked), but it is kind of upsetting to see that something like that made it out of the kitchen. Next we ordered our main dishes. Jessica got her “standard” pizza (pepperoni, green pepper, and pineapple) and I ordered the Portobello Chicken Pasta. There was about a 15 minute wait between ordering and getting our food and with how busy it was that day, that was pretty nice. Of course, that was unfortunately where the “nice” ended and the “sad” began. We’ll start with the pizza.

The pizza cost about $11 and was approx 10-11 inches… not a bad size for two people. Our issues didn’t come from the size, but rather, everything else. For one, they claim that they use “hand-stretched” pizza crust… and I don’t believe it. Here is what a pizza crust that has been hand-made looks like:

Good Pizza

Here is what the crust of the pizza we ate looked like (this is just an example… this isn’t their pizza):

Bad Pizza

See all those holes? That tells me this is a frozen crust… the pizza at Tim’s had these nice, evenly spaced holes all along their crust. Not a good sign. It wouldn’t be a major deal breaker if the crust actually tasted good, but it didn’t. It was very dense, and aside from the taste it gets from the Wood Oven, it was very bland. I can get a hand made pizza from Whole Foods (where they also use a nice wood oven) and it tastes 100 times better than this, and the 16inch, 3 topping pizza I get there costs about the same. Speaking of toppings… we had a total of 6 standard size pepperonis on our pizza… just 6. We counted… maybe they just had a shortage that day. I can tell you they didn’t have a shortage of canned pineapple, because there was more than I could stand on the pizza. I actually resorted to picking them off, but the juice had saturated the cheese to the point where I just couldn’t eat it. The green peppers were nice and fresh and had a nice even amount on there. I can’t complain about the peppers… in fact, they were perfect. The sauce used on the pizza was your standard fare, not really all that sweet or salty, just kind of “there”… same can be said about the cheese, nothing special or different. Thus ends our pizza tale (we ended up only eating about a quarter of the pie each)… on to the pasta!

The pasta I ordered was the Chicken Portobello (ringing in at about $10), which was supposed to be a dish of chicken, pasta, alfredo sauce, portobellos, and artichokes covered with mozzerella. What we got was a bowl of pasta (not quite al dente, more on the soggy side… it would more often than not break when I tried to put it on my fork) covered with what we believe to be canned Portobello Alfredo sauce. Once again, we can’t prove it’s not home made, but our opinion is that it came from a can/jar. There were no large pieces of mushroom, instead it was just little diced soggy mushroom bits… basically what you’d expect from this:

Bertolli!

In fact, this is exactly what it tasted like (it says “Restaurant Quality”, maybe they mean it!). The chicken wasn’t layered on top, so it was pretty soggy, and didn’t appear to have been grilled. In taste and appearence it resembled this:

Tyson Chicken

Now, don’t get me wrong… products similar to Bertolli and Tyson have their place, but that place shouldn’t be a restaurant. The rest of the dish was the same… dried parsley on top, standard cheese, and canned artichokes (which was confirmed in another review).

We didn’t get any desert, and our bill came to the astounding $42.01 for two people. I have to give the restaurant a D+, the wait staff wasn’t that bad, and the atmosphere was decent, but the rest was just miserable. Perhaps we’ll try eating there again in the future, but I don’t see it happening any time soon.



+ Simply Asia By Jason 20 January 2007 at 1:36 pm 163 views No Comments

I thought I’d start semi-reviewing food on here, since I’ve been trying a lot of different things lately. I figured I’d start things off with something I’ve been eating for the past 3 weeks or so.

A few weeks back while doing some shopping for quick lunches I could eat in the office, I stumbled across the Simply Asia brand of Asian cuisine. A quick check of the nutrition facts told me that this would be a fair thing to try, and it looked much better than the standard “soup in a can” that I’d been eating. Let me say, looks did not decieve this time… this food was amazing! There are more varieties than I can name, but my favorite thing they make are their rice noodle soup bowls… for around just 275 calories, it fills me up for most of the day. Simply Asia makes more than just soup, they also have noodle bowls and boxes that, in my opinion, are better than some of the asian restaurants in my area.

The only negative thing about their products are the amount of sodium, but that seems standard when it comes to soup or other asian noodle meals. If you’re watching your salt intake, this is not for you… otherwise I say “Dig in”! :D



+ Ice Wine By Jason 05 March 2006 at 9:40 pm 184 views No Comments

Today Jess and I tried a bottle of Jackson-Triggs Proprietors’ Reserve 2004 Vidal Icewine (it’s her birthday in two days, and I decided to let her have some of her gifts early). Wow, just wow. It was the best tasting wine I’ve ever had. Sweet and fruity, with a very slight burn. A lot of flavor.

Unfortunately it isn’t cheap. A 187mL bottle (which is about half a can of soda) costs a good $20.00. :pinch: Yeah, it ain’t cheap, but if you ever have a chance to try some, I definitely suggest that you do.

For those wondering what ice wine is, here’s a nice definition for you:

Ice wine is a type of dessert wine produced from grapes that have been naturally frozen on the vine. The sugars and other dissolved solids do not freeze, but the water does, so the result is an unusually concentrated, often very sweet wine.

So, are there any good wines that you enjoy? Or is there a good place to come by Ice Wine, as it’s hard to find here. Feel free to comment! :)



+ Recipe: Real Men Drink Pink Martini By Jason 14 January 2006 at 10:17 pm 1,159 views No Comments

This recipe is very tasty, very strong, but unfortunately is very pink. Remember when ordering this, like the name says, real men drink pink!

First, here’s a list of the ingredients you will need (for those who don’t know how much an oz is, it’s1/8 cup):

Real Men Drink Pink Martini
1 handful of ice
1 drip of Dry Vermouth (just enough to wet the glass)
1 drip of Triple Sec (just enough to wet the glass)
2 oz Hangar One Vodka
3 oz Minute Maid Cherry Limade

Okay… time to mix!

Step 1. Get out your martini shaker (we likes our drinks shaken, not stirred… like Bond, James Bond) .

Step 2. Place ice, Vodka, Dry Vermouth, and Triple Sec in the shaker, shake for about 10 seconds.

Step 3. Place the Cherry Limade into the shaker, and shake until nice and icy (about a minute).

Step 4. Strain drink into the glass of your choice (I like a martini glass, myself) and drink and be merry!!

Remember to drink responsibly and visit often for more drink recipes!