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ylkim30

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Posts posted by ylkim30

  1. I have never been to a traditional, old-school Asian restaurant before. What type of food do they serve there?

    I have been to many traditional, old-school Korean, Chinese, Taiwanese, Japanese, and Thai restaurants, and never get food with rancid oil doused with msg.

    I have been to many bad, Americanized Chinese, Korean, and Thai restaurants and chain pan-Asian restaurants catering to a fast-food audience that use bad oil and excessive msg, but I would not call them traditional or old school. It's unfortunate that folks who never had good Chinese, Korean, or Thai food think that is what people frown those countries eat, and use those bad examples as the measure of the quality of those cuisines.

  2. Kogiya is the best bet, but it's merely passable. The marinated meats are really too sweet, but that's true of most bbq in the area. There isn't great korean bbq in the dmv. Among Koreans, we like Nakwon. But only for samggypseol. (That's where I go with my embassy friends and other out of towners with traditional Korean palates ... not necessarily the place to go if you have an Americanized palate)

    --- 

    To Sok Jip (Escoffier)
    Nak Won (Escoffier)

  3. The lurkers are telling me the cool kids like nak won for samgypseol. It's good, though banchan is only so-so. But, that's true of all the bbq places.

    In terms of "authentic" flavors, you're looking at To Sok Jip and Blue Sands. To Sok Jip may be too authentic for most, Blue Sands is certainly so. Caveat emptor, but I love both.

    A friend likes Mr. Tofu. I have to try it -- his mother in law gave the banchan her seal of approval. In a similar vein, Lighthouse is solid, but I have an americanized palate, so ymmv. A real Korean (much more so than me) claims To Soc Chon is ok for soups.

    Personally, Annandale could use a Ponderosa Grill. Nothing is more Korean than meatballs and cole slaw in a taco shell.

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  4. I had a completely different experience about a month or two ago. I thought the portions were rather large, and I was stuffed. Granted, the menu looks markedly different from the one they had when I went there, so they might have made some adjustments to pricing and portion size since I went, but I couldn't imagine being more full after finishing my meal. I think my dining companion and I spent around $100 -- though we didn't get drinks.

  5. I've found at Rasika that ordering curries that sound similar to what you can get at other Indian restaurants resulted in getting fairly ordinary curries. Since then, I've only ordered the more interesting sounding dishes that I wouldn't find elsewhere, and those have been exceptional every time I've been there.

    Agreed. The biryani is pedestrian, but the palak chaat and black cod are outstanding. It's better to get their more "chef-y" dishes, and leave the classics for other places.

  6. To be honest, Bordeaux pricing is totally fucking weird and out of whack. You can buy a perfectly aged 70s left bank claret for under $100 induction, but if you want to buy a recent release that will take 20 years to resolve, it's $500 or higher.

    Bordeaux pricing is so driven by prestige purchasers, many whom buy the wine for investment purposes and bragging rights. I'm pretty certain most Bordeaux that gets bought now won't ever be drunk.

    Agree with Riesling pricing, though. The production is small, so pricing will continue to increase. But, I don't see it ever rising to Monrachet levels. Too many people knock Riesling, so I don't think jj prum will ever be at $500 bottle.

    Then again. I never imagined seeing Schaefer hitting $50 and Egon Muller kabinetts hitting $100.

  7. Unfortunately, I think the pricing is the new normal. I remember getting jj prum ws spatlese for $25 ... I think the secrets out and we are never going to see that level of pricing again. The dry Riesling are pretty much in line with Austrian and Alsace at this point, and the sweeties are going to be $30 - $40 from now on, and will keep going higher.

  8. I heart the pea soup at Le Diplomate. Last time I was there, I ordered the soup with a friend, and we were raving about it for the entire meal. When's the last time that has happened...two grown men waxing elegiac about pea soup?

    I remember it having a citric element to gift it lift and brightness. Maybe lemon? Complemented the crab perfectly, tying all the elements of the soup together, and made it so different from your typical dense, traditional pea soup.

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