Posts Tagged ‘Oshawa’
Foodie@Large: unorthodox deconstruction…
My mind’s eye keeps travelling back to December 2010 and my first bite of “fundraiser moussaka” purchased from the back kitchen at the Greek Orthodox Church in Oshawa, Ontario. It’s the best I’ve ever eaten. And what with growing up in my best friend’s Greek kitchen in the early ’70s and living a stone’s throw from Toronto’s Greektown for a lot of my life, suffice to say, moussaka is in my blood.
I can’t tell you how happy I was to return to the church kitchen this afternoon and find the same ladies behind the counter dishing out homemade, front-scratch lemon-oregano rice, roasted potatoes, shish kebabs, spanakopita, dolmades, baklava and, of course, their decadent multi-layered moussaka.
I tried chatting them up in hopes they’d talk moussaka-speak. But they’re crafty, this lot of blessed cooking babes. They feigned not understanding, shook their heads collectively, spoke to one another in their mother tongue.
It’s not that I don’t want to support their cause. I do! It’s just that I really want to try my hand recreating their dish in my own kitchen. Perfected, I could whip up a pan of moussaka at midnight should the fancy take me.
I couldn’t trust myself to stay the course and not eat the test subject before deconstructing it so I bought two portions of moussaka. I chowed down the first piece in record time. God. Just like I remembered. So friggin’ good it ought to be illegal. Or at least cost more than the paltry $4 they charge. This is a regular Thursday afternoon fundraiser for the church. They’re never going to reach their building fund goals with these prices. This thought must have been playing on my mind because I told the lady to keep the change from my sawbuck.
Satiated, I went to work on the second piece of moussaka, ever-so-gently pulling back the layers, a notebook and pen at the ready to record my findings.
For one thing, they use ground beef, not traditional ground lamb which is way more expensive and wouldn’t allow them to dish it out at four bucks a pop. What I couldn’t figure out is whether or not they cook off the potato and eggplant slices before assembling the moussaka. I’ve made moussaka countless times and always par-boil the potatoes and oven bake the eggplant slices before incorporating them into the dish. But the texture of the potatoes and eggplant in the fundraiser moussaka was way different than mine. I’m thinking they’re cooked off first but maybe using a different method. Perhaps they steam the potato slices and pan fry the eggplant?
Time and testing (and re-testing) will tell.
Annunciation Of The Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church
hosted by The Hellenic Orthodox Community of Oshawa in the church hall,
261 Bloor Street East, Oshawa, ON L1H 3M3
(905) 728-5969 eat in or take out
Catering for all occasions call (905) 725-3083
Greek food served every Thursday 11 am to 4 pm
Foodie@Large: Mad about Mad’s Mad Cafe
Yesterday I had a chance to sit awhile with 21-year-old entrepreneurial phenom Madeleine Kassinger at her downtown Oshawa Mad Cafe to talk homemade cupcakes, local food procurement, Durham’s art scene and to sample, for my very first time, vegan soup which was, by the way, full flavoured and utterly delicious.
The afternoon flew by. From the warm conversation to the original artwork that adorns the walls to the how-to tutorial of how Mads crafts a cat from the milk froth on top of her lattes to her whimsical cupcake flavour combinations, suffice to say, this chick knows what the hell she’s doing in front of and behind the counter.
You’ll have a chance to meet Mads up close and personal in the March/April edition of East of the City Magazine. For good measure, she’ll be sharing a recipe or two with the readership.
For those of you who simply cannot wait, drop by and visit Mads. And don’t forget to sample her Chocolate-Peanut Butter, Maple Bacon or Traditional Red Velvet cupcakes. Order all three if you fancy. You’ll thank me later.
Mad Cafe
38 King Street East, Oshawa, ON L1H1B3
905.571.0227
Monday-Friday 7:30am-8pm
Saturday 9am-6pm
Sunday Closed
Three Steps Up to a whole lot of flavor…
Judy’s an excellent cook, so when she suggested eating out instead of whipping up a meal herself, I knew the place she’d picked had to be that good.
Judy didn’t disappoint, introducing me to her favourite lunchtime haunt,Three Steps Up, in Whitby, Ontario.
Three Steps Up is a Fair Trade coffee house that boasts an in-store bakery, private meeting room, gourmet/artisanal food section, and a spacious dining room with conversation-enhancing two- and four-tops for patrons wishing to pause a while.
Suffice to say, owner Vicky Kemp knows a thing or eight about opening a shop, serving fresh, local house made fare, and wowing customers time and again: Vicky opened Three Steps Up during the last recession. Fearless? Yes. Indeed!
Vicky prepares her changing-with-the-seasons bill-of-fare gourmet salads and thought-provoking soups and sandwiches fresh every morning. Salads come topped with either marinated and grilled flank steak, grilled citrus chicken, Albacore Tuna, or wild Atlantic salmon, and with one’s choice of homemade olive oil-based dressings.
Hearty organic soups the likes of Butternut Squash with Toasted Almonds, or the signature Organic Sweet Potato, Carrot & Ginger delight the palate and whet one’s appetite. Vicky makes her soups low fat. And many, oftentimes, are dairy free.
Where Vicky really out does herself is with her savvy sandwich combinations. Absolute simpatico between two slices of whole grain artisan bread. Take Vicky’s Slow Cooked Pulled Pork sandwich, for example, paired perfectly — as it is wont to do — to her Vodka Infused Raspberry Thyme Mustard. Her Grilled Maple Chicken and Pear sandwich (which we ordered) was dressed in Vicky’s house made tarragon mayo and was utterly delicious. Our sandwich was so good in fact that Judy and I were hard pressed to say more than two words to one another — ooh and aah, mostly — while chowing down on this delectable creation.
Three Steps Up doesn’t use any processed meats. And the chicken incorporated into their dishes comes by way of Buckingham Quality Butchers and contains no hormones or antibiotics.
It’s 24 hours later and I’m still thinking about that sandwich I had yesterday. The taste memories almost as good as the real deal.
Three Steps Up Coffee House
605 Brock Street North
Whitby, ON
905.430.7817
Hours:
Monday thru Wednesday 8am until 5pm
Thursday and Friday, 8am until 8pm
Saturdays 9:30am until 4pm
Sundays Closed (for family time)
A Shiraz to remember… and eat!
Think shiraz and you think red wine, right?
But what if I told you there was another Shiraz out there that was more magnificent than the finest, most ungodly priced Syrah varietal Australia or South Africa ever produced? And that it’s to be savoured long and slow and with much more gusto than any potable red man ever created?
I know what you’re thinking… I’ll have what she’s having.
And so it goes that my discovery of Super Shiraz Persian Bakery & Fine Food began. Tucked away in a it’s-hard-to-get-to-if-you’re-driving-westbound strip mall in Oshawa, Ontario, I’d passed this place many times since its opening several months ago thinking it a make-your-own wine shop.
Boy, was I wrong.
Super Shiraz Persian Bakery and Fine Food epitomizes what utterly perfect ethnic fast food is all about. A pristine eat-in/take-out establishment, friendly and knowledgeable staff, amazing pricing, and incredible Persian fare and sweets. A quadruple threat that’s sure to catch on once word gets out.
There’s EVERYTHING to love about Super Shiraz. As a matter of fact, I was so taken with their front woman, the divine Ms. M (apologies; still can’t pronounce her name) that I ordered my shawarma platter to go but then sat down and ate it there. Foodie conversation abounded. The divine Ms. M knows her Persian cuisine inside out, and had a great answer to every indigenous ingredient question I asked.
What’s that? What about the shawarma?
Glad you asked!
As divine as the divine Ms. M herself, hands down, the best shawarma I’ve ever eaten. And I’m talkin’ about on either side of the big pond!
Believe me, that’s saying something.
I pride myself on my discerning shawarma-tasting palate and for years Pitaland had my shawarma-eating heart. But Shiraz puts their collective hearts and souls into everything they make. Their pride of ownership is evident in everything they do. At $7.50, my shawarma platter proved enough great food to satiate not only my lunchtime cravings, but to also guarantee me a light supper of leftovers later that day. The platter came with my choice of basmati rice (plain/saffron/dill) which was light and fluffy and with subtle hits of dill, and was sided by a just-tossed chef’s salad.
Quite smitten, I returned to Super Shiraz two days later and sampled their Koobideh Kebob platter ($7.99). Same great sides but with two perfectly spiced and grilled ground beef skewers instead. YUMMY, yum, yum.
Next week I’m giving Super Shiraz’s Vaziri Breast a whirl. Can’t wait!
Super Shiraz Persian Bakery and Fine Food
785 Taunton Road East
Oshawa, Ontario
905.725.9880
www.SuperStoreShiraz.com
Take-out/Eat-in/Delivery/Catering
From the “what goes in, must come out” department, this just in…
Seems a GIANT COLON is coming to Durham Region.
That’s right my darlings, a GIANT COLON. So big, in fact, that you walk upright through all 40 feet of it.
A “hands-on” display being set up in the centre court of The Oshawa Centre on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011 from 9:30 am to 9 pm, this GIANT COLON is being brought to you by Durham Region Health Department; Metroland Media; Colorectal Cancer Association of Canada and the Canadian Cancer Society.
Public health nurses will be on hand to talk about what you can do to prevent colon cancer after you see how cancer and other diseases affect the colon.
For more information, contact Durham Health Connection Line at (905) 666-6241 or at (800) 841-2729, or online at www.durham.ca.













