Showing posts tagged restaurants

Waste Brings Restaurant Owner’s Frown on Diners

Don’t consider dining at the Wafu eaterie in Australia if you can’t eat all of your meal, it’s likely you will be asked to stay away in future.

Diners are asked to be mindful of the amount of food they order and to order just the right amount “in harmony with your appetite.”

The Wafu’s website implores diners to waste nothing and to even contemplate sharing meals!

The under-current of this approach is ‘Japanese cuisine’ ‘guilt free’, or to put it another way: “Wafu is not just a restaurant, it is an extension of Yukako’s personal ethos toward nourishment and sustenance. Wafu is the expression of an ethical and spiritual commitment to food.”

"mitsuwa japanese" "japanese food" "new jersey" nj by plate of the day


Restaurant Deck Ovens

The Italian Meal

The significance of food in Italian traditions cannot be over-stated. The meal time in Italy is the time to unwind with family and friends and not just a time to eat. Accordingly Italian meals last longer than in other countries and can sometimes go on for a number of hours.

A traditional Italian meal has four courses; primo, secondo, contorno, digestivo, translating as first course, second course, side dish and digestive. In more ceremonial situations, for example a wedding (or Easter or Christmas) meals will be made of up to nine courses. Shorter meals are of course taken, pizza baked in a traditional wood burning pizza oven being one example.

A normal Italian evening out with friends begins with what is called an aperitivo. This is a light alcoholic drink such as Vermouth, Campari or Prosecco wine, or possibly a non-alcoholic fruit juice. This is often taken at a separate bar with friends, before going on to the meal. Italian meals are served in a number of courses with each type of food served separately. Thus an Italian meal is really quite different from the equivalent in other countries.

At the restaurant one commonly would start with the antipasto (literally translating as “before the meal”) which could be either a hot or a cold appetizer.

The first course (the primo) usually contains something hot such as soup, risotto or pasta.

The main plate of an Italian meal is the secondo (second course). This is typically a cooked meat such as chicken or pork. Veal too is common.

The contorno is typically a side salad or a side of grilled vegetables to accompany the second course.

The secondo is followed by formaggio e frutta (cheese and fruits). Many local cheeses would be eaten with fruits of all kinds. The dolce course would follow bringing with it cakes and cookies.

And, of course as Italy is celebrated for a choice of diverse varieties of coffee, which is enjoyed after the food before the round of liqueurs.

Let’s Not Forget Pizza

One dish Italy is celebrated for is pizza. Pizza is enjoyed worldwide and now has a vast range of sizes and flavor toppings. Known at one time as the ‘Neapolitan pie with tomato’ it wasn’t until 1889 that cheese was added to the pizza by chef Raffaele Esposito. It was firstly created in honor of the Queen Consort of Italy and represented the colors of the Italian flag with its green herbs, red tomato sauce and white mozzarella cheese.

Pasta

Another food class Italy is famed for is pasta. Pasta is a general term for a range of foods that are made out of dough made from wheat and water and occasionally including vegetable extracts and eggs. There are hundreds of different types of pasta, due to the texture, shape and size. Consequently pasta can be used in scores of different ways. Some common forms are spaghetti (thin sticks), lasagne (sheets), macaroni (small tubes) and fusilli (small swirls of pasta).

Let’s Not Forget Wine

Wine of course plays an essential role in Italian culture and the Italian economy. Italy is famed for its wine and produces and exports more wine than anywhere else in the world. Vino cotto is a form of wine produced in central Italy, made for private use and not for sale commercially. The wine is heated in a copper vessel until the volume is condensed to around half. This wine is left to age for a few years, each year a little more wine is added to make up for evaporation.

Tomato Linguine with Sausage-Mash by simps

Commercial Pizza Oven

Cheers! Dubai’s Population Can Take Cuisine Containing Alcohol

Dubai newspaper ‘The National’ reports that the Dubai State has lifted a ban on food preparation with alcohol on the proviso that this kind of food is clearly marked.

Dubai is reversing the 2003 law that bans cuisine preparation with alcohol because the majority Islamic inhabitants could not recognize whether food included alcohol. Although implementation of the law was announced on Sunday, the decision has since been reversed. Cooking containing alcohol could be served if was distinct from from other food and clearly labeled.

Awadhi was quoted as saying “We have found violations where hotels are not clearly stating alcohol content in their food.” Awadhi also stated that alcohol should be handled like other “non-halal products” such as pork.

Dubai Creek by ajnabeee


Ref: Wood burning pizza ovens

Lunch On Us

Would free like a feast on the house? It’s simple: just get the better of one of the dinner eating challenges mentioned on the couponsherpa.com website and you’ll get your meal for free. You ought be a meat fan though - the challenges are almost all meat based and vary from eating monster burgers to enormous pizzas and steaks. You might imagine yourself as the equivalent of a black hole, but are you also fast eater? These meals are against the clock: if you don’t beat the clock, you pay-up.

Stir Fried Chicken Salad by Sunshine Hanan

Suppliers of Countertop Ovens