July 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

Behold the power of Adsense!





  • Twitter Updates

      follow me on Twitter

    Flickr Photos


    • www.flickr.com
      This is a Flickr badge showing items in a set called Our Favorites. Make your own badge here.

    « February 2005 | Main | April 2005 »

    2 posts from March 2005

    Sunday, 06 March 2005

    Well Ba Le

    244_4416_2

    Sandwiches. Much like Haikus anyone can produce one but most turn out bland, boring, and adhering rigidly to syllabic meter. Not a perfect metaphor, but you get where I’m going.

    Sandwiches are a food that seems to fall easily into a repetitive rut, with many restaurants offering small variations on generally well established models.

    But I like change. I crave fresh, interesting things. I need delicious and unique stuff to come layered between various breads or bread products.

    This is why I am in a new, almost sexual, love affair with a little Vietnamese diner called Ba Le.

    I don’t know the history of the French colonialism in Viet Nam. I’m sure it was messy and unpleasant for the most part, all around. However, I will be eternally thankful for the strange fusion that resulted when amazingly tasty Asian fillings assimilated a sweet, freshly baked Franco-exterior and dressed up with a little European sauce.

    244_4430_r1_1

    So…good…ungh… (insert drool here).

    This is the deal. They bake little sandwich-size baguettes on site. They cut it open and scoop out a little of the soft airy interior. Then they spread on some rich, homemade, French-style mayonnaise – the kind with a deep pearl color and actual flavor.

    Then comes any of a variety of stuffings: bright pink pickled-pork, seasoned shredded tofu, Asian style bar-b-que pork, moist pulled chicken and more stuff with names that I don’t understand. 

    Then the toppings – marinated strips of daikon and carrot, a spear of cucumber, a few small slices of jalapeno, and finish it up with a sprinkle of green onion and a healthy dose of aromatic cilantro sprigs.

    It begs to be eaten. “Please, please,” it screams.

    I like to add a little extra spice, some of the vibrant red chili sauce and then kind of a tangy-sweet twist with a squeeze of hoi sin.

    244_4431_1

     

     



    Then after you’re done, if you're feeling a little adventurous, you’ve got to try a Che (which probably, in the real spelling, has several accent marks that I can’t duplicate).  It’s a dessert that’s either a sweet rice or tapioca base, usually with coconut milk and then other stuff ranging from banana and jell-o to seaweed and mung bean.  The black-eyed pea one is my favorite so far.

     

    Che_composite

    244_4437_4 (Seaweed and Mung Bean)

    Alright so I’ve pimped Ba Le enough for now. They have lots of other great eats- soups and noodles and such, but those aren’t sandwiches now are they?Finger_food_2

    -L. Pants

    Tuesday, 01 March 2005

    The language of TERROR!

    So we bought this awesome learn-Italian-at-home-in-4,700-simple-steps program called Rosetta Stone. It’s really cool – it’s a direct pictures-to-Italian way of learning, totally cutting out the English middleman. However, I do think the program has a morbid streak, because here is what I know how to say so far:
    The baby is under the airplane.
    Woman, in the car!
    Next time I see an airplane on top of a baby, I am totally telling some woman to get in the car. That should help. Then, I'll be the hero.
    I’ll be fluent any day now. -Girlie

    We're proud to be a...


    • Read our writeup!

    Blog powered by TypePad
    Member since 02/2005