(e:Heidi) and I went out to dinner at the Tokyo Shanghai Bistro yesterday. It was a nice outing to wipe out a bunch of disappointments and catch up. Thank you, Heidi! :)
The food was great, the service was courteous, the prices were very reasonable and the ambience was perfect. I would certainly recommend this place for a nice dinner.
A bunch of people asked me to describe the menu and since my head is filled with snot, aches and gloom today, I am taking the easy way out:
We ordered the Agedashi Tofu and the Yaki Nasu - an eggplant dish.
The Eggplant dish was very rich, coated in sesame oil and I think, some soy based sauce and slightly sweet but delicious.
The "deep fried" Agedashi tofu was very lightly fried. It looked to me like freshly made tofu so the deep frying didn't leave much of a crust. It had a very soft rather than chewy texture. I liked it with the sauce it was served with; Heidi, not so much. The tofu could have used a nice dash of pepper or red-chillie sauce on top.
We ordered vegetable egg rolls and the vegetable soup to go. I just had the soup for lunch - it was amazing. I am inspired to make it at home. Any food that makes me want to make it in my kitchen definitely makes the cut of "really delicious" in my kictionary. ;-)
We also ordered the Vegetable Mei Fun and Sesame Tofu - both of which were pretty good.
The Mei Fun was very noodle-heavy and could have been better with a few more vegetables - so I can't say it was entirely my kind of fun. Those who avoid veggies like the plague might have had a field day with this dish. We asked our waitress to make it spicy - but the spice was well below the mildest I have eaten. So I guess you could confidently spike that spice level up and still end up with a tolerable "American" spice level.
The Sesame Tofu was actually sweet but tasty - with a strong sesame flavour. It was served with broccoli and somewhat oily rice.
Overall, everything was a trifle too oily for comfort but fairly good with reasonable prices. Our waitress was very accomodating and pleasant. Since the Tokyo Shanghai Bistro is very roomy inside, it didn't seem crowded even if a constant stream of people came to check it out and have dinner. I would definitely go again to try other things on their gazillion-item menu. You should too. :)
Tinypliny's Journal
My Podcast Link
10/08/2009 13:37 #49965
The Tokyo Shanghai Bistro Menu, BuffaloCategory: eating out
10/04/2009 20:55 #49928
The Ultra-Veggie Upma and ChutneyCategory: eating in
I am determined to match all the glorious colours of the fall leaves in every dinner this month!
Vegetable Upma with Coconut-Coriander-Tamarind Chutney.
Here's to Fall!
Vegetable Upma with Coconut-Coriander-Tamarind Chutney.
Here's to Fall!
tinypliny - 10/05/09 17:35
HAHAHAH - it is. I love that the general mediocrity of the whole thing caught your attention. LOL
HAHAHAH - it is. I love that the general mediocrity of the whole thing caught your attention. LOL
empireoflight - 10/05/09 17:06
That is some nasty clip art
That is some nasty clip art
10/04/2009 13:38 #49925
Dried Chillies (For e:Himay)Category: eating in
I remembered this video when I read your message:
I don't buy Chili Flakes. I think the ones available here are wimpy and a BIG disgrace to all chillies across the planet. If you want the kick of Indian chillies for your seasoning, get a bag of dried ones from the Indian Store - Super Bazaar (Sheridian and Bailey).
Tear them apart with your hands and voila - you have some awesome chilli seasoning for peanut oil. You could also pop them in a pre-heated oven for a few minutes till they loose all moisture (Don't burn them, you won't be able to get rid of the insane burnt chillie incense from your flat in forever!) When they are dry, they become very brittle. You can either give them a very brief whizz in the blender/food processor or go the satisfying mortar and pestle way.
Bon chilli-flakit!!
I don't buy Chili Flakes. I think the ones available here are wimpy and a BIG disgrace to all chillies across the planet. If you want the kick of Indian chillies for your seasoning, get a bag of dried ones from the Indian Store - Super Bazaar (Sheridian and Bailey).
Tear them apart with your hands and voila - you have some awesome chilli seasoning for peanut oil. You could also pop them in a pre-heated oven for a few minutes till they loose all moisture (Don't burn them, you won't be able to get rid of the insane burnt chillie incense from your flat in forever!) When they are dry, they become very brittle. You can either give them a very brief whizz in the blender/food processor or go the satisfying mortar and pestle way.
Bon chilli-flakit!!
james - 10/04/09 21:20
I bought a big bag of chilies at Guerchio's. I just whirl them in my food processor and toss it into my cooking oil. Delicious!
I bought a big bag of chilies at Guerchio's. I just whirl them in my food processor and toss it into my cooking oil. Delicious!
himay - 10/04/09 13:46
Now that my apartment will be sub-tropically hovering around 70Ëš-72Ëš, I may consider snagging a plant or two. I already have hooks to dangle plants from...chilies would be an interesting sight, hanging from the ceiling.
Now that my apartment will be sub-tropically hovering around 70Ëš-72Ëš, I may consider snagging a plant or two. I already have hooks to dangle plants from...chilies would be an interesting sight, hanging from the ceiling.
10/02/2009 16:21 #49909
Before we got interrupted...Category: e:strip
by a rude network outage, I was going to post this poem. But now that the (E:strip) chat has revived, I guess the poem is somewhat out of context. Regardless, I seldom waste my poetic efforts at drama.
So endure, you must.
So, farewell then, (e:strip) chat.
So.
Farewell then
(E:strip) Chat
You were
a good
friend of mine
Figures. You
And I were
usually ignored
Except that
Unlike me you
don't go to grad school
(e:Jim) perhaps
realized this
and spoke
But mostly
it was
a lonely soak
The other woman
does have
more curves.
But then Keith's mom
thinks you
might revive again.
With apologies to EJ Thribb (17.5)
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
So endure, you must.
So, farewell then, (e:strip) chat.
So.
Farewell then
(E:strip) Chat
You were
a good
friend of mine
Figures. You
And I were
usually ignored
Except that
Unlike me you
don't go to grad school
(e:Jim) perhaps
realized this
and spoke
But mostly
it was
a lonely soak
The other woman
does have
more curves.
But then Keith's mom
thinks you
might revive again.
With apologies to EJ Thribb (17.5)
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
tinypliny - 10/02/09 22:13
Fine, how about a deal then? I totally disapprove of your not blogging for some random crazy bloke who didn't know how to appreciate your cake (blasphemy!). I read your blogs too (and rather like them!)
If you blog, I don't quit!
The future of the (e:strip) chat window in your hands now.
Heheheh *evil cackle*
Fine, how about a deal then? I totally disapprove of your not blogging for some random crazy bloke who didn't know how to appreciate your cake (blasphemy!). I read your blogs too (and rather like them!)
If you blog, I don't quit!
The future of the (e:strip) chat window in your hands now.
Heheheh *evil cackle*
hodown - 10/02/09 21:48
Wait you're quitting the chat? I disapprove. I read your chats.
Wait you're quitting the chat? I disapprove. I read your chats.
10/02/2009 00:01 #49900
Minty light piping hot supperCategory: eating in
Felt like a really light supper today and threw this together in 10 minutes. It's so simple, it takes almost zero effort.
1. Heat 1/2 tsp of peanut oil on high heat - 10 sec
2. Throw in some whole cumin and black peppercorns
3. Wait for the cumin to sizzle - 20 sec
4. Roughly chop red onions, toss in seasoned oil for 2 min
5. Chop green bell peppers, toss with onions for 2 min
6. Add a generous tablespoon of red chillie powder. Toss well.
7. Chop one big tomato, toss with the rest for 5 min
8. Add chopped fresh mint, cooked black-eyes peas/navy beans. Mix.
9. Squeeze half a sweet lime in and toss.
10. Serve and layer with hot tomato juice from the pan.
1. Heat 1/2 tsp of peanut oil on high heat - 10 sec
2. Throw in some whole cumin and black peppercorns
3. Wait for the cumin to sizzle - 20 sec
4. Roughly chop red onions, toss in seasoned oil for 2 min
5. Chop green bell peppers, toss with onions for 2 min
6. Add a generous tablespoon of red chillie powder. Toss well.
7. Chop one big tomato, toss with the rest for 5 min
8. Add chopped fresh mint, cooked black-eyes peas/navy beans. Mix.
9. Squeeze half a sweet lime in and toss.
10. Serve and layer with hot tomato juice from the pan.
ladycroft - 10/02/09 04:01
minus red hot pepper (it would do me serious damage) sounds great!
minus red hot pepper (it would do me serious damage) sounds great!
OMG thank god for this post! there website is down and I googled it and this came up!
I looked at some of the menu and saw stuff I liked. It If I ever went on dates might be a nice not pricey date place also, but also because they have a lot of variety.