August, 2011


18
Aug 11

Peking Gourmet Inn

 

I’d heard about Peking Gourmet Inn from Allie B, a member of the extended Smart Kitchen Community. She insisted that if I was passing through the Washington DC Metropolitan area I had to stop in at Peking Gourmet Inn, meet her friend Lily and try their Peking Duck and Jo Yien Shrimp. I mentally pictured some hole in the wall but when asked so emphatically I try to comply. Peking Gourmet Inn was filed away for later action.

Checking my stored food notes for Washington DC, when planning my route, Peking Gourmet Inn and Allie B’s recommendation came up. I scheduled Peking Gourmet Inn for the Washington DC leg of the Summer Food Drive 2011. I was excited because as the third stop of the day, the sampling requirements sounded pretty light (a bit of duck and some shrimp, nice), I even thought I was sandbagging it since my friend Mr. DZ would be joining me and assisting in the tasting duties.

Exterior of Peking Gourmet Inn

hmm Maybe It is Still a "Hole in the Wall"

My first surprise was on the phone call to ascertain if they served Peking Duck and Jo Yien Shrimp every day and/or if had to be ordered in advance. Peking Gourmet Inn has Peking Duck every day. There is no need to order ahead. As I learned later they go through 200 to 250 Peking Ducks a day, and more than 300 on a typical weekend day. The second surprise was that I might need a reservation. Maybe I should bring a sport coat, so as not to embarrass Allie B. Learning is part of the fun of exploring.

An Interior Shot of Peking Gourmet Inn & Staff

Elegant, Classy & Classic

Upon entering my second surprise was confirmed. A sport coat, though not required, would not be out of place here. Also my third and fourth surprises kicked in, the size and style of the place. Peking Gourmet Inn can seat 260 people and they are open every day of the year except Thanksgiving. I guess even Peking Gourmet Inn has trouble competing with roasted Turkey and family fights.

As for style, Peking Gourmet Inn does not have a sleek, new, modern build-out or grunge-techno flair. They have something that to me is even better a well-maintained, graceful, classic interior that is almost like retreating in time to a by-gone era. The service level and hospitality were also of another era. Entering those big wooden doors, I felt a time shift. (If you have read any of my other posts, you may know I have a weakness for history, well executed. If you don’t share it please bare with me as I gush. Take it all with a grain of coarse sea salt, in a Tiffany Dish served by a liveried footmen).

The bar at Peking Gourmet Inn

A Stand at the "No-Stools" Bar was Welcome after 400 miles

After 400 miles, a drink sounded good. There is a bar at Peking Gourmet but it is “standing room only,” not because of the crowds (at 05:47 the place was 95% empty) but because there are no chairs or stools. After a drink, we were assured the crowds would come and that we should get to our table to start the show. We ordered as per Allie B’s instructions, 2 dishes for 2 husky people and waited.

Julienne Cucumbers & Sliced Scallions that Show Attention to Preparation Detail

First to arrive were the fixings for the Peking Duck. I was taken with the attention and focus lavished on the just the fixings, sliced scallions (called spring onions) and julienned cucumbers. Smart Kitchen is an online culinary school and we can appreciate how much work and supervision and management goes into serving such cleanly cut and presented sides 200 or 300 times a day. They are doing something right here I thought, as I tabulated (300 ducks by $39 each less the wholesale cost of duck). Also for much of the year, though I don’t think it applied to our visit, Peking Gourmet Inn grows their own spring onions in, I believe, nearby Purcellville, VA.

Carved & "De-Fatted" Tableside

Very quickly afterwards the Peking Duck arrived and was efficiently, and artfully, carved into serviceable slices of duck meat and duck skin. Notice, the crispy tasty duck skin is de-fatted by scraping the flat of the knife across each piece before it comes off the bird.

Peking Duck ready for use at Peking Gourmet Inn

Carved Duck & Skin Ready for Use

Peking Duck is “Pancakef-ified,” that is, served with the aforementioned fixings and the secret prize served in the silver covered Grab Bag: the little Chinese pancakes or tortillas. Alone each items is good but they rise in my estimation when working together to reach culinary heights. The problem is that making a “perfectly edible” burrito with the tools and skills available to hand is difficult for the untrained. Luckily, we were assisted by Poon and soon found out he had a master’s way with the rolling spoons. The results were fabulous, juicy duck and crunchy duck skin with the desired, rich hints of fat, counter balanced by the savory, mild or salty tastes of the other ingredients all contending on the canvas of the Chinese style pancake. Food Network’s Duff Goldman, from Ace of Cakes, concurs by the way. The Peking Duck from Peking Gourmet Inn is his favorite holiday food (apparently their is a local tradition of eating out at Peking Gourmet Inn for Christmas).

All the Skin, Scallions, Cucumber, Duck Sauce, and Duck "Pancake-ified"

As we were getting the hang of the “pancaking” process the Jeo Yan Shrimp arrived.

Jo-Yien Shrimp

The Jeo-Yan Shrimp is very lightly and expertly fried, battered jumbo shrimp, spiced with a hard to identify, secret-mixture that is a bit picante and a bit savory. It is in the category of curiously good, the kind of foods you love to keep eating under the guise of trying to figure it out.At this point, we had ordered the recommended items and enjoyed them a lot, that is until Lily stopped by our table to say hello. She is a very gracious host and sharp eyed restauranteur. She is known to be tight lipped about their recipes but did hint that part of the shrimps’ success came from using very hot oil.

As we were speaking another dish arrived, courtesy of Lily. It was the Szechuan Beef Proper, named because it is reportedly the proper “authentic” version of Szechuan Beef.

If this is the "Proper" way to have Szechuan Beef, Count Me INN!

 

Though, I never have, I understand that people fight about sweet tastes and meat. Some won’t touch it, others will but only under duress and the rest can head right for it. As for me, I’ll eat and enjoy a good Duck L’Orange or a Lemon Chicken, I might even head right for it, but sweet meats are not among my “Last-Meal” choices.  The Szechuan Beef Proper might be able to satisfy most of the consuming public because while it has some sweetness, it also has some savory and it is hard to determine exactly whether the overall effect is sweet or savory. No one will argue that it is not crunch or chewy. In the end, I can only say that after sufficient Peking Duck and a few servings of Jeo-Yan Shrimp, we managed to put a bit of a dent into the unexpected (Thank You Lily) Szechuan Beef Proper. It is also another dish where I could not tell exactly what is in it. I did guess correctly that they use Flank Steak, Carrots and Sesame Seeds but that is not much of a coup. The menu credits celery as well but that doesn’t get us all the way there. Maybe go in and try to figure them out yourselves.

Happy Cooking

P Chef

Smart Kitchen

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@SmartKitchen1
Peking Gourmet Inn on Urbanspoon

 

 

 

 


18
Aug 11

See Food @ Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Inn

 

Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Inn bills itself as the place “Where the Watermen Gather,” and thank gosh for that.

Even the Camera Thought it was Humid in Maryland

Seafood, especially crabs, doesn’t get much fresher.

The dock at Jimmy Cantler's Riverside Inn

From the Boats to the Kitchen to the Table

Cantler’s has gotten some favorable press including a pick by CNN as one of America’s Seafood Dives but it still feels like an undiscovered secret and the perfect way to kick off my 19th cross country jaunt. To get there is a bit of a haul, including a fairly long 10 MPH road where the locals wave you down if you’re doing 20 MPH on the way to the coastal Shangrila. Tantalizing glimpses of water & boats are sprinkled along the way to tease those with seafood hunger.

But the wait and effort is worth it. It is homey and quaint, while still being professionally competent. You get the feeling that they know there stuff as you pull into the parking lot. By they way don’t miss the entrance (like I did)because you are transfixed on the idyllic view. The entrance is in the middle of the building under the blue Riverside Inn triangle shaped sign, even if you come by boat, as many do.

The View from Jimmy Cantler's Riverview Inn

It is a Fabulous View!

On a mild summer day nothing beats sitting on Cantler’s view porch enjoying the yachts & riverfront mansions, the very friendly staff and customers (see video for the friendly Doug, Larry & Cindy) amid the tap-tap-tap of “crab-a-tarians” while a good water breeze keeps the heat at “bay” (almost a pun but Cantler’s is on a river). I can imagine you thinking about adult beverages and have to admit that if you add a beer and idle hours to the mix, which I did not because of the driving, you’d have my version trumped.

It was a hard temptation to resist with the family dining company of the aforementioned trio and Matt & Lauren, my table mates. Let me just say this, I plan to return with plenty of time and a designated driver for the ambiance alone and to get a “Crack” (that was a pun) at those crabs, on which skilled Maryland natives Doug and Larry, and Ohio transplant Cindy demonstrated their stellar de-construction techniques.

To the uninitiated, or the unpracticed, hard (soft are those caught Moulting, the link is to Youtube) Maryland Blue Crabs are not a fast food but a fun one. Matt & Lauren’s leisurely, hour and a half “crab picking” over the Blue Crabs seasoned with Cajun Dust and steamed to a red perfection made me jealous. I wish I had had Mrs. P Chef, the little P Chef’s (in tolerant and patient moods) and some more time with me.

Against the backdrop of polite but earnest hammering by everyone, including kids as young as 7, it sounded like a mini-construction site if you focused on it, I opted out of the $27.95 all you can eat crab (and corn) deal with the 2 hour time limit because I was pressed and only a few hundred miles into my 4,300 mile trip. My meal was the faster crab dishes and great nonetheless.

Jimmy Cantler's Maryland Crab Soup

The Maryland Crab Soup was Strangely Right on a Hot Day

I started with Maryland Crab Soup, which was like a deep hearty minestrone with the slightest bite. Light and “gardeny” (I’m coining that one), it was the perfect crab item to open with even on a summer’s day.

a plate of cherry stone clams

A Dozen Cherry Stones with Drawn Butter, Lemon & Cajun Dust

A dozen Cherry Stone clams followed, which were shared around the family style picnic bench, as ice-breakers, with Matt & Lauren on their day off. They were served with a wedge of lemon, butter on one side and Cajun Dust on the other: a winning combination in my opinion.

Soft Shell Crab Sandwich without the bread

You Can Order the Soft Shelled Crab Sandwich without the Bread

The Piece de la (No) Resistance was the the soft shelled crab, actually a moulting blue crab. Blue crabs moult to grow from May through September, and if you are interested in how crabbers capture the she-grabs & jimmy peelers Bluecrab.info explains it. Jimmy Cantler’s soft shell crab had a unique fattier (not greasy) fry taste that complemented the crab and crowned the meal. I do have to say I was not crazy about the hush puppies at Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Inn.

Before I knew it the food was gone and the road was calling. I said good bye to my new friends and hit the “clean-up” station on my way back to the SmartKitchenmobile and the next stop.

P Chef

Smart Kitchen

“The Smartest Way to Learn to Cook™”

Smart Kitchen on Facebook

@SmartKitchen1

 

.Cantler's Riverside Inn on Urbanspoon


8
Aug 11

Summer Food Drive (E-W) 2011 Part 2

19 Smart Kitchen Stops & 4,243 Miles

 

It is hard to imagine that it is almost time to start the second, return leg, of the Summer Food Drive 2011, but it is. There is consequently a lot of pressure to wrap up Smart Kitchen’s Lesson 7 and get to power blogging on the stops still remaining from The Summer Food Drive,  Part 1. And there are some good ones.

We will get to them, perhaps on the road or back in the dessert. The plan as it currently stands is outlined below.  Let us know if you have any favorites or thoughts on the stops.

 

Stop 1 – Mile Marker 237.2 – Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Cafe

Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Café is supposed to have unbeatable, Chesapeake Bay seafood. People from the desert should not pass up opportunities for fresh seafood.

Jimmy Cantler’s Riverside Café: 458 Forest Beach Road, Annapolis, MD 21409 (410) 757-1311

Stop 2 – Mile Marker 271.9 – Good Stuff Eatery

Good Stuff Eatery is a restaurant by Spike Mendelsohn, (and his mother Cathy) who became a chef at age 13, eventually attended the Culinary Institute of America, where he won the Francis Roth award. He has worked in the kitchens of Chef Gerard Boyer at the famous Restaurant Les Crayeres in Reims, France, Thomas Keller at Bouchon in Napa Valley, the Maccioni Family at Le Cirque, and Chef Michael Huynh at Mai House in Tribeca, which won two stars from the New York Times only a few months after it opened and was named one of the 10 best restaurants of 2008 by the New York Times. Spike was also a Top Chef Contestant and part of the subject matter of one of our blog post about Learning to Cook Remotely.

Good Stuff Eatery: 303 Pennsylvania Ave S.E., Washington, D.C. 20003 (202) 543 8222

Stop 3 – Mile Marker 281.7 – Peking Gourmet

Peking Gourmet has a reputation for its Peking Duck and Jeo Yan Shrimp. This visit is on the Summer Food Drive because of a recommendation by Smart Kitchen friend AllieB.

Peking Gourmet: 6029 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041 (703) 671 8088

Stop 4 – Mile Marker 392.7 – Q by Tuffy Stone

Q  is the BBQ restaurant opened by BBQ champ George Tuffy Stone.

Q Barbeque: 2077 Walmart Way, Modlothian, VA 23113 (804) 897 9007

Stop 5 – Mile Marker 604.7 – JS Pulliam BBQ

JS Pulliam BBQ known as a regional favorite and for hot dogs, BBQ and nostalgia.

 

JS Pulliam: 4538 Old Walkertown Rd, Winston-Salem, NC 27105 (336) 767-2211

 

Stop 6 – Mile Marker 711.7 – The Pit

The Pit is known for whole hog & pit cooked BBQ. It has a reputation as one of the best Carolina BBQ joints.

The Pit: 328 West Davie Street, Raleigh, NC (919) 890 4500

Stop 7 – Mile Marker 712.1 – Clyde Cooper’s BBQ

Clyde Cooper’s BBQ has been serving slow cooked Carolina BBQ (Pork Shoulder & Hams) since 1938. I ate there once with Mrs. P Chef, before blogging and want to refresh my opinion.

 

Clyde Cooper’s Barbeque: 109 E Davie St. Raleigh, NC 919 832 7614 (919) 832-7614

 

Stop 8 – Mile Marker 793.5 – B’s BBQ

B’s BBQ is reportedly such a good Eastern Carolina BBQ that B’s in Greenville sells out early every day. I’m pulling an overnight between Clyde’s and B’s to get there early and make sure I’m not skunked by the local demand chomping down the supply. B’s BBQ is on the NC BBQ Society’s BBQ trail but has no phone, yet alone a web site.

B’s Barbeque: 751 B’s Barbecue Rd Greenville, NC27834 (252) 758-7126

B’s Barbeque on the NCBBQSociety Web Site

Stop 9 – Mile Marker 807 – The Skylight Inn

The Skylight Inn is Pete Jones’ Eastern NC BBQ Joint established in 1947. Whole hogs are cooked over wood coals for 16 hours. There is no website and a report that the new owners are not slinging the Q as Pete would have, but we like to see for ourselves. And the building looks pretty cool.

The Skylight Inn: 1501 S. Lee Street, Ayden NC (252) 746-4113

The Skylight Inn on the North Carolina BBQ Society Web Site.

Stop 10 – Mile Marker 845.9 – Wilber’s BBQ

Wilber’s has been cooking Pork Shoulders and Whole Hogs since 1962 and Hill’s BBQ was on the same site before Wilber and his partner bought the place back then.

Wilber’s Barbeque: 4172 U.S. 70, Goldsboro, NC 27534 (919) 778-5218

 

Stop 11 – Mile Marker 854.2 – Grady’s BBQ

Grady’s BBQ has been doing Eastern NC style Whole Hog BBQ since 1986. Fans say it is one of the best in the state. They do have a phone but no web site.

Grady’s Barbeque: 3096 Arrington Bridge Road, Dudley NC (919) 735 7243

Grady’s on the North Carolina BBQ Society Web Site.

 

Stop 12 – Mile Marker 1036.2 – Scott’s BBQ

Scott’s BBQ is a pit cooked South Carolina BBQ joint with a stellar reputation. It was feeling like a long leg from North Carolina to I-10 in Florida, so a visit to Scott’s was in order.

Scott’s Barbeque: 2734 Hemingway Highway, Hemingway, SC  (843) 558 0134

 

Stop 13 – Mile Marker 2472.2 – Alpha Bakery

Alpha Bakery is supposed to make one of the best Vietnamese Banh Mi sandwiches in Texas. Did you do a double take? I did when I first heard that but surprisingly Texas has one of the largest Vietnamese communities in the U.S. I have been curious about this community and their Asian food in Texas for a long time. It is in the Hong Kong Mall, ground zero for Asian food in Houston, so I will seek out some Pho, Crayfish etc.

Alpha Bakery: 11209 Bellaire Blvd  Houston 77072 (281) 988 5222

 

Stop 14 – Mile Marker 2565.2 – Martin’s Place

Martin’s Place has been in the same family since 1925 & is an official Texas Historical Landmark. Martin’s Place also had a great picture in Saveur’s Recent BBQ Issue. I just had to see it for myself and see if the barbeque was as ordinary as Robb Walsh, formerly a restaurant reviewer at the Houston Press, and author of the Legends of Texas Barbecue an interesting read on BBQ, says it is.

Martin’s Place: 3403 S College Ave, Bryan, TX 77801-3308 (979) 822-2031

 

Stop 15 – Mile Marker 2767.8 – Taylor Café

Taylor Café is around the corner from the famous Luis Mueller Barbeque restaurant, but I have been to a Luis Mueller location outside of Dallas and can skip it this time. I’m excited to have some of Vencil Mares fabulous Turkey Sausage and smoky Brisket at Taylor Café instead. I couldn’t find a reliable source on the web for their hours (they have no website) but phoned and spoke with Scott over there. He assured me they would be open at 8 AM for me the day I pass through from New Jersey.

Quick to smell out an opportunity, Scott managed to wrangle a promise out of me. I promised to make the attempt to get him a Stone Pony shirt (2X because things are bigger in Texas). Apparently, Scott is a Bruce Springsteen fan.

Taylor Café: 101 N. Main St. Taylor, TX  (512) 352 8475

No Web Site

Stop 16 – Mile Marker 2798 – Snow’s BBQ

Snow’s BBQ is on a number of lists including Texas Monthly’s as the best BBQ in Texas. Before the BBQarratzi mention that they are only open on Saturdays, I know. I also know I am passing by on a Wednesday. It will be a “one that got away visit.” In three years of doing Summer Food Drives, Mrs. P Chef has never scheduled a convenient start date that puts me in Texas on a Friday (I could wait around a day) or Saturday. Mt. Zion BBQ also in Texas is in the same slot and got away last year.

Snow’s BBQ:  516 Main Street Lexington, TX 78947

 

Stop 17 – Mile Marker 2924 – Magnolia Pancake Haus

Someplace in my notes I once wrote down that a good place to eat in Texas was the Magnolia Pancake Haus. I don’t remember why, or what was supposed to be so good, but I figure I should trust my past self and honor the old note. Maybe my current self will learn something new.  The way my day is scheduled, I will have to push it to make it there by the time they close at 2 PM.  Okay now I peeked at the web menu. My past self may have been doing my current self a solid. : )

Magnolia Pancake Haus: 606 Embassy Oaks, San Antonio, TX 78216 (210) 496-0828

 

Stop 18 – Mile Market 3092 – King Ranch

King Ranch is only the quintessential Texas Ranch, by itself as big as the state of Rhode Island. Ford made its top of the line pick-up trim a Kings Ranch edition. The SmartKitchenMobile is a Ford pick-up, so that is enough for me.  Add in the nostalgia, western history, beef innovations like the Santa Gertrudis breed and I’m in for an extra 4 hours or more of driving.

 

King Ranch: 405 North 6th Street, Kingsville. Texas 78363 (361) 595 -1881

 

Stop 19 – Mile Marker 4243 – Smart Kitchen

1151 miles and 18 hours or more of drive time left from King Ranch to the Smart Kitchen, The Smartest Way to Learn to Cook,™ and the little P Chef’s birthdays.  That is some time to digest and contemplate.

WWW.SMARTKITCHEN.COM,  Scottsdale, Az