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| A fire above Osteria Otto has displaced six residents |
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| The restaurant was destroyed |
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| A fire above Osteria Otto has displaced six residents |
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| The restaurant was destroyed |
| Magnolias in various stages of blooming |
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| Taiwan style noodle soup at BBT Cafe |
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| Large portions are served at Bun Cha Ca Hoang Yen |
When my friend AY calls and says we should meet up for lunch, it means a culinary adventure for me.
He's a walking guide book to food in Vancouver, but not the Michelin Guide restaurants. AY is a bona fide lover of street eats and will go to great distances to find where good food is and then share his discoveries with other foodies... like myself.
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| The restaurant is know for its Bun Rieu |
Diners slowly trickled out and finally we got a table right by the window.
Bun Cha Ca Hoang Yen used to be located a few blocks further south, but moved here almost four years ago. It is known for its crab vermicelli as well as homemade fish balls, so we ordered both with rice noodles and a dish of salt and pepper chicken wings.
Not long after two giant bowls arrived, along with a plate heaped with raw bean sprouts, lime wedges and fresh basil leaves.
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| Fish cakes and vermicelli in a clear broth with dill |
Meanwhile Bun Cha Ca Dac Biet ($18.95) is fish cakes with rice noodles in soup, featuring a clear broth, with not only fish balls, but also sliced fish cakes, Chinese celery, tomato wedges, lots of dill, and spring onions. The fish balls are not a round ball per se, but somewhat springy in texture.
This dish is the lighter of the two, but both are substantial in terms of portion.
The chicken wings, or Canh Ga Rang Muoi ($17.95), need to be dipped in the lemony pepper sauce to give them flavour, otherwise on their own they were bland, as the batter didn't have much taste.
| Chicken wings dipped in a lemony pepper sauce |
Needless to say I soon suffered a food coma after I got home...
Bun Cha Ca Hoang Yen, 5155 Victoria Drive, Vancouver, BC. Tel: 604 321 2711
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| I had to check this out! |
| There were many cereals to choose |
| My combination of cereals with milk |
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| Pastel pink cherry blossoms are out |
Spring allergies didn't really hit me until today. After days of rain in Vancouver, which is now called "an atmospheric river", we were surprised to see the sun and blue skies!
When that happens you have to go out for a walk, and today was particularly significant as it's the first day of Spring.
| Magnolias have begun to bloom |
But after my walk I started having sneezing fits and my eyes watered.
Ten hours later my eyes are still itchy, my nose can't stop dripping.
When I was in Hong Kong I never had this problem!
Nevertheless, still thrilled to see that winter is behind us, even though we had no recorded snow this year. The last time that happened was 43 years ago!
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| Dassai Junmai Dai Ginjo 23, 39, 45 and Nigori 45 |
In the late 1980s sushi and sashimi came to Vancouver, and along with it, sake.
At the time Japanese restaurants served sake warm, presenting them in silver buckets meant for ice, but instead filled with warm water.
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| Bluefin tuna crudo with blood orange |
However it turns out warm sake is typically lower-grade sake to mask the harsh flavours, while premium ones are served chilled, much like white wine.
Last night I got a chance to try some sake by the brand Dassai, which I have tried a few times with Japanese food.
At the Governors Ball following the Oscars last Sunday, Hollywood elite were treated to Dassai sake to have with food prepared by celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck, along with sushi prepared by sushi chefs. And for those curious, it was Dassai 23.
But the exercise last evening was to sample the sake with Western-style food to show non-Japanese that sake can be paired with anything from cheese to pizza and steak.
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| Rice polished at different percentages |
He explained that sake has umami, the fifth sense, described as savouriness which can be found in food like tomatoes, mushrooms, soy sauce, anchovies, cheese and dashi.
The numbers on the bottles indicate how much the brown rice has been polished. In the case of Dassai 23, that means 77 percent of the rice has been polished, and for Dassai 45, 55 percent of the rice was polished. The more the rice is polished, the cleaner the flavour and brighter the aroma.
We started off with a sparkling sake which was milky in appearance, followed by Junmai Dai Ginjo Dassai 23 Centrifuge paired with bluefin tuna crudo with blood orange segments. The centrifuge helps filter the sake from the lees for a cleaner taste, or so they say. This pairing extended the sweet taste of toro and chutoro.
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| Foie gras torchon with brioche and apricot |
The main course of USDA prime Omaha striploin was rolled with proscuitto and served with stewed San Marzano tomatoes, black truffle and whipped potatoes, and was paired with Junmai Dai Ginjo Dassai 45. This was similar to Dassai 39 with a clean taste that had no trouble holding up to the strong flavours of the beef.
For dessert, Madagascar vanilla panna cotta with poached pear sauce together with Nigori Dassai 45.
After dinner, Ellis also told us that Dassai sake ingredients were sent to the International Space Station last fall to try sake fermentation in space! It returned to Earth recently and will be made into sake soon. He was hinting that if we end up living in space, the easiest alcoholic drink to make there will be sake, not wine.
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| Striploin rolled with proscuitto in tomato sauce |
I asked Yamane about how Dassai managed to get served at the Governors Ball and he explained that one of the Dassai partners is in the movie business. What a great marketing strategy! Apparently director Steven Spielberg pronounced their sake as "exceptional".
When I asked Yamane about the biggest sake market outside of Japan, he said it was China. Before it was Hong Kong, but like seafood and steaks, some of it goes across the mainland and it's hard to know exactly how much.
We also talked about Hong Kong, and he knew of a sake bar called Sake Bar Ginn that he had visited, and I had been too! Too bad it closed during Covid.
| Yamane talking to the sake crowd |
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| Lobster meat stir-fried with egg white at Lanxuan Restaurant |
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| Crab meat stir-fried with egg white at Dynasty |
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| A large fish in a hot pot with braised pumpkin |
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| A large portion of bitter melon and spare ribs with lots of rice! |
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| Mini pineapple buns and flaky egg tarts |
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| Borenstein (white suit) and Talankin with their Oscars |
Happy with the results of the Academy Awards?
I did not watch the whole thing, but thrilled, ecstatic, excited that the films I did watch, won Oscars:
Jessie Buckley for Best Actress in Hamnet.
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| Buckley was the favourite to win |
Buckley said in a podcast that after making the film, she was desperate to get pregnant! Now she has an eight-month old baby girl and in her acceptance speech said she loved being her mother.
"It's Mother's Day in the UK today, so I would like to dedicate this to the beautiful chaos of a mother's heart. We all come from a lineage of women who continue to create against all odds," she said.
All The Empty Rooms for Best Documentary Short
It's a haunting documentary, seeing the empty bedrooms of children who were killed in school shootings. Not only is it commendable for journalist Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp to visit these grieving families, but also record these children's rooms to prove they existed, they were loved, they had lives with hopes and dreams.
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| Cazares was so brave to speak out on stage |
"My daughter, Jackie, was nine years old when she was killed in Uvalde. Since that day, her bedroom has been frozen in time," Cazares said.
"Jackie is more than just a headline. She is our light and our life. Gun violence is now the number one cause of death in kids and teens. We believe that if the world could see their empty bedrooms, it would be a different America."
Mr Nobody Against Putin for Best Documentary Feature
In accepting the golden statuette, co-director David Borenstein warned the audience what authoritarianism is.
"Mr Nobody Against Putin is about how you lose your country," he said. "And what we saw when working with this footage is that you lose it through countless, small, little acts of complicity.
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| Talankin (on floor) urged for wars to stop now |
He then introduced the star of the documentary, Pavel Talankin to speak through a Russian translator.
"For four years, we looked at the sky, for a shooting star to make an important wish. But there are countries where instead of stars they have shooting bombs and shooting drones. In the name of the future, in the name of all of our children, stop all of these wars now," said Talankin, who is now in exile in Europe.
Afterwards when Borenstein spoke to the media, he made another warning:
"One interesting thing about working with a team of Russians throughout this process has been my desire as an American to constantly compare the situation in America to Russia," he said.
"But a lot of my Russian colleagues and friends always said, 'No, no, it's not the same situation. It's actually happening quicker in America than it's been happening in Russia,' Trump is moving a lot quicker than Putin in his early years."
The Girl Who Cried Pearls for Best Animation Short
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| Well deserved award for Szcerbowski and Lavis |
Co-directors Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski make their acceptance speech short and sweet.
"We just really want to thank our amazing neighbourhood and the amazingly talented community of artists that we've had the superb luck to work with," Szczerbowski said. "Thank you to the fantastic city of Montreal. Thank you, Canada."
"Canada!" Lavis chimed in, as they raised their Oscars.
They gave a shoutout to composer Patrick Watson and actor Colm Feore who narrated the film.
Big congratulations to all the winners and nominees!
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| O'Brien will be hosting the 98th Academy Awards |
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| Puck (left) with Miyazaki beef |
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| Hong Kong's Antinori will make cocktails |
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| Are the transit police around enough to make people feel safe? |
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| Buses are great for getting downtown |
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| Lukewarm slices of Peking duck at Quanjude in Vancouver |
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| Duck soup with seaweed and tofu cubes |
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| Beef ribs with mushrooms |
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| The highly prized skin eaten with sugar |
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| Prawns covered in a wasabi sauce |
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| Dessert of jelly with water chesnut, osmanthus |
| Bubbling hot (and mildly spicy) tofu soup with kimbap, banchan |
| Colourful and substantial portion of kimbap |
| The set lunch includes banchan, small dishes |
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| Avocado, mango and milk tea drinks |
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| The animation feature topped the box office opening weekend |
There was a lot of buzz that the animation feature Hoppers beat out The Bride!, making it Pixar's biggest opening weekend in a decade.
Hoppers was screening at our neighbourhood theatre so we took two kids, aged 7 and 8 to watch this film -- in 3D.
The 3D enhances the animation, but it isn't totally used to its advantage.
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| Mabel is an environmental activist in her teens |
But then the mayor, Jerry Generazzo has plans to destroy the natural habitat for animals in order to build a freeway and Mabel is desperate to stop him.
She asks for help from her biology professor Dr Samantha Fairfax, but then Mabel discovers they have developed technology that helps them communicate with animals.
Mabel uses it to try to convince them -- in particular beavers, as they are "nature's engineers" -- to move back to the glade, along with everyone else, but it's not as easy as she thinks.
The premise of the film, that Mabel can communicate with the animals is fun, creative and she also learns "pond rules" and the hierarchy of the animal kingdom.
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| Dr Fairfax (left) is Mabel's biology professor |
Actor John Hamm makes for a sneaky mayor, and Bobby Moynihan is a funny beaver monarch named King George. I was surprised to see Meryl Streep voiced the Insect Queen, a short, but amusing cameo.
Apparently the Pixar animators enlisted the help of ecohydrologist Emily Fairfax who studies beavers and how they change landscapes by altering the flow of streams and rivers.
Hoppers has a strong environmental message, how to strike a balance between conservation and development, and how most humans view their role in the world as being at the top of the food chain.
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| Ecohydrologist Emily Fairfax |
But then he discovered that beavers are "nature's engineers" and thought that was really cool and took six years to develop Hoppers.
Don't watch too many of the trailers because some of the gags get old really fast. Just go watch it in the theatre!
Hoppers
Written and directed by Daniel Chong
105 minutes
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| Carnations for women on International Women's Day |
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| A book to consider reading |
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| Gloria's monologue in Barbie |
A fire above Osteria Otto has displaced six residents Last night a fire broke out in Vancouver, near Broadway and Main, which destroyed a re...