Saturday, June 7, 2008

My Humble Home 7 ($$$$)

My Humble Home.

My Humble Home, is a very over priced restaurant in the Sky Ave. of the Oriental Plaza. It is known for its Chinese fusion cuisine and modern image. On this occasion Kris and I chose My Humble Home out of convenience, our apartment in Beijing it located directly above the restaurant.

MHH has an extensive menu and wine list. There are three set menus and also an al a carte menu. We ordered beef tri-tip salad, seafood soup cooked inside a coconut, fried rice, and Chinese pork belly. I was not able to take any pictures inside the restaurant because I got in trouble taking this picture of the salad.

The best part of the meal was the soup: a crab broth, with chunks of crab, lobster, clams, sea sponge and vegetables. It came out inside of a peeled coconut piping hot. It was delicious. The broth was very flavorful, and all the sea food was fresh and tender, it had just a hint of coconut flavor but nothing too milky.

The pork belly was very rich. Traditionally Chinese means very fatty to retain the most flavor. It was delicious but way too much for two people, the dish would have been better divided between six people. The fried rice was too oily and the oil and the wok was too hot when the rice was added. It had a distinctive burnt sesame seed oil taste. The only redeeming quality was that it had pine nuts in it.

For taste I give HMM a 7. It was ok, definitely was not worth the cost.

For service I have to give HMM a 4, for some reason it took forever to get the check and we had to ask more than a few times. It seems that more important people who were ordering more came in right when we wanted to leave and for some reason everyone just stopped and stared at the new dinner party.

Overall I give My Humble Home a 7 out of 10. In this instance the soup saved the day.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

South Silk Road, Beijing 10 ($$)

What can I say about restaurants in China? The first thing everyone should know is that the restaurants you go to while on a tour are not very good. In fact they may be terrible. And the restaurants that are available if you go out on your own can be excellent. This should be obvious, but isn’t always because many times the restaurants that they take you to on tour are in fact famous, and can be pretty good. But you’re not Chinese and you don’t speak the language so they make you the dishes that Americans usually expect from their limited experience from home and they give you the poorest quality because you won’t notice the difference. There are no greater critics than the Chinese when it comes to food. Restaurants want to please the locals first, who have a much greater chance of becoming loyal customers.

The first restaurant of not is South Silk Road located in Houhai. All the food cooked here is from the Yunnan region or is influenced by the spices of this region. The Yunnan region is in the south of china located along the ocean and largely tropical. Food from this region tends to be very spicy and uses many more herbs not found in other Chinese dishes.

This being our third anniversary Kris and I went all out on dinner and ordered Rice cooked inside a bamboo pole, a roast quail, fried rice cake with roasted sesame seed butter and honey, and a banana wrapped tilapia.

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To say the least, all the food was amazing! This lighting in the restaurant was very poor but even in my badly taken photos of the evening you can see the color and the spice incorporated into everything. The Tilapia was a little spicy and we ended up pushing most of the herbs and pepper to the side, but its juices were so good. It was so moist and had such a cool burn to the spice. The rice cake was such a treat, the interpretation in the menu was very bad so we took and chance when we ordered it. The rice cake was warm and crunchy on the outside and so soft and sweet inside, then you get to the sesame seed butter filling and it just pops with warmth in your mouth. It doesn’t really need the honey that it comes with but even the honey has a floral taste to it. The quail was very gamy and tough, the toughness did not allow the flavor to penetrate very far into the meat so I was rather disappointed in the quail. But it was likely caught wild and I do support free range. The last little fun treat was the bamboo rice. Kris did not like this dish very much due to the very nutty flavor. It almost had a cashew and snap peas flavor to it. It was mixed with some kind of nut or bean and some green onion. This mixture is dry when it is poured into the bamboo pole and then capped with water. To cook it the whole thing is put directly into the fire. When the green bamboo slips the rice is cooked and ready.

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Over all I give South Silk Road a 10

Price $$ for two people

For taste 10

For atmosphere 10

For service a 9. Service in china is very different than in America, bordering on servitude rather than service. In China you do not leave a tip, good service is simply part of the job if you want to keep your job. In a city of 13 million the competition for jobs is huge; and every establishment can hire huge amounts of employees because they can pay their works so little; this mean there is often one employee for every customer sometimes two or three and they all wait upon you hand and foot. This often feels uncomfortable it you are not used to someone hovering over you wail you decide what to order, but you never have to wait for the check or hail someone for a refill. There is always someone there waiting to help you before you ask. In comparison to many places that I have eaten Silk Road surpasses any American restaurants but did not do as well compared to restaurants here.