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Other than the inside of the convention center, I did not get to see a ton of San Diego, but from what I did see, I know I want to go back. That is one of the fun things about work travel. I get a free taste of a place, then we can decide on our own if we want to spend vacation time and money to return. I have had a lot of great work travel experiences. At the moment, I am dying to bring the hubs to Charleston, SC and to San Diego based on work trips to those places.

Anyway, landing at the airport and going outside to meet my colleagues for a taxi to the hotel introduced me to the warm, sunny, palm tree laden city that is San Diego.

 

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Our hotel, the Marriott Marina, was a mere 10 minute taxi ride, and by all means it was massive and beautiful. I had a harbor view room, and I spent quite a bit of time at first just gazing out the window. I would NOT recommend this hotel for personal travel. It is huge, but not at all equipped to handle the number of guests. Friday morning the hotel Starbucks had 45 people in line with one person working the register and one making drinks. Absurd. The wait for the elevators was at least 15 minutes each way, and I couldn’t find the stairs. The room service food was meh, mass produced, and disappointing, and the internet, which wasn’t wireless (!) was $13/day. There was also no bathrobe or mini bar. I enjoy the little personal touches that smaller, boutique hotels offer. Did I mention that this room cost over $250/ night? I also like the prices of smaller hotels, even if I am being reimbursed eventually.

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By the time we arrived, I was starving and also in need of an hour to myself. So I went to the Starbuck’s at the hotel and purchased a salad and juice to have in my room while checking emails.

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Note to self, a fork is always helpful when eating a salad. Since I was on the 16th floor and the building’s elevators were sloooowwww, combined with the fact that a 5,000 person conference was going on, I decided to make do with what I had, and I used a cucumber as a utensil, kind of scooping up bits of lettuce. It actually worked out quite well. However, the salad was meh, so beginning a weekend of mostly meh food.

I’ve already told you about the Totally Truffles class. The rest of the weekend was spent in our booth for the most part, talking up our books, meeting people, and in general having a pretty good time. One thing that I definitely miss about an old job that I had is that interaction with customers, so it was definitely welcome.

One night, we had a cocktail party at the Omni Hotel on the Palm Terrace. Only in San Diego can you eat and drink outside in November and be completely comfortable. The spread was cocktail party style, and though I didn’t get to eat much, everything I did have was very good.

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The spread included roasted veggies along with crudités with red pepper hummus and several other dips. There was also a meat and cheese platter with a stinky, delicious gorgonzola. Servers passed yummy treats like cucumbers stuffed with mango lobster salad and three cheese puffs. I love eating cocktail party style!

Other good meals of the weekend included shrimp tacos at my colleague’s amazing discovery, Tin Fish, and margaritas and fish tacos at the Pier Cafe, along San Diego’s beautiful waterfront. The harbor area was so cute, a little village of shops, restaurants, and cafes. I didn’t go out with the late night crowd as I knew I would already be dead the next morning, but they went to a dueling piano bar, and apparently the bars in the Gaslamp District were hoppin’.

I am so so behind on blogging, reading blogs, Tweeting, commenting, pretty much everything in the blog world, not to mention being behind on my in office work from being out Thursday and Friday and spending last Wednesday prepping for the conference. I literally feel like I am blogging from scratch, completely out of practice and out of the loop. Hopefully this week will be spent catching up on all of those things, plus some sleep and exercise!

Be back later with a new recipe!

As many of you know, I was not too excited to exhibit at a conference in San Diego right before Thanksgiving. It’s not that I do not like exhibiting; I actually find it a great change of pace from the office and LOVE meeting customers and potential customers. Conferences are great because they are pretty much non stop action, and I get to wear lots of worker hats. But with a large, spread out family, the weekends before holidays can be important for figuring out who sees who when. And being on call 12 hours a day, an entire country away, foils a lot of those plans. At any rate, I always try to make the best of things, and via my friend Twitter discovered that the San Diego Food & Wine Festival was going on while I was in town. Painful really, for someone who would die to work and/or attend the festival. But very luckily there was one event that I could actually fit into my schedule! Totally Truffles with Chef Gary Thompson of Viejas Casino actually happened during my “free time”. I should have been working, but knowing that I was up at 3 to leave for the airport and working both Saturday and Sunday, I figured I deserved an hour and a half of actual time for myself during the weekend, and attending the festival might be a once in a lifetime event, me being randomly at the right place, at the right time. Still, I felt a bit stressed about not working for 90 minutes as I headed over to the Wine and Culinary Center. But, on my short walk over and my arrival there, the golden sunshine, the endless amount of food and wine magazines, and the foodies lined up for various events somehow melted that stress away.
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I checked out a map of San Diego wineries. I had no idea there were so many. After some waiting outside, which was no problem as it felt like summer, we were allowed to go into the demo kitchen.
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I am new to these types of things, and I was really excited. The Wine and Culinary Center had loads of really friendly volunteers who made it an even better experience. They were also excited, and they made everyone feel so welcome! When I sat down, I was poured a glass of Roy J. Maier Cab, and my id was checked! 🙂 The Cab was delish. Just as the tasting notes said, it had aromas of vanilla, cherry, cinnamon, and chocolate. The finish was long and full of ripe fruit. I really enjoyed it. Before the session started we were introduced to Susan Rice, the supplier of the truffles of the day. She also supplied us with bowls of truffled popcorn which is my favorite snack of all time.

 

Susan talked a little bit about truffle production and bringing truffles more into the mainstream in the US. Then Chef Thompson began cooking. Everything he served he and Sherman, his assistant chef, made on site. As you can imagine, the kitchen smelled amazing. They started the first dish last, and the smell of garlic and shallots sizzling in olive oil filled the room. As the chef talked, he passed plates of whole truffles for us to touch and smell.
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Then the food started coming. The first dish was a creamy, slightly chewy burrata with truffle oil, shaved truffles, and tomatoes.
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The cheese was to die for, and the combination of the cold, creaminess of the cheese with the earthy warmth of the truffles was amazing. I literally closed my eyes and savored each tiny bite. I used the tomato to mop up the rest of the truffle oil on the plate. Next up was a salad topped with peach wood smoked salmon with brown sugar and truffle vinaigrette. I loved the salmon, though several people nearby commented that they thought it was salty. I thought the flavor was spot on, slightly salty, slightly sweet, smoky, and perfectly cut with the tanginess of the  vinaigrette. The portion, filling a small appetizer plate, was perfect and refreshing.
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The final course was the one that Chef Thompson started at the beginning of the class, wild mushroom and truffle stuffed chicken with butter champagne pan jus with truffle and seared truffle polenta.
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The best part about this amazing dish, and all of the dishes served, was that we received the recipes. They were all new to Chef Thompson, he was trying them for the first time! I probably don’t need to tell you how good champagne, butter, and shaved truffles taste together. The chicken dish was a stunner, and I could definitely see buying a little truffle oil or even 1/2 ounce or so of truffle to make this for a special occasion. Chef Thompson was funny and engaging. Once the food started coming out, people unfortunately started talking. . . loudly and a LOT. It made it difficult to hear what he was saying, and I really wanted to hear from him! I would say that was the only negative of the event. The volunteers at the Wine and Culinary Center are amazing. They were all over throughout, filling and refilling wine glasses. I only had one small glass because I had to start work after the session, but many people around me were served four or five small pours. I would absolutely recommend this festival to anyone who is interested in food and wine and either lives in the area or is looking for a gorgeous place to visit in November. We ate lunch outside today, and I was hot in a short sleeved dress. Why do we tolerate winter again? Thank you San Diego Wine and Culinary Center and Chef Gary Thompson for an amazing culinary experience! I will be back in blogger mode starting tomorrow; I feel like I have been neglecting it this weekend!

Tags: cooking, Food, San Diego, truffles, wine

Thank You, Anthony Bourdain & TIVO

We travel. As much as we can. We travel to eat. As much as we can, and as authentically as we can – to a point. Though I generally stop short of emulating Andrew Zimmeran, I do try to follow the recommendations of Anthony Bourdain. Accordingly, when we began planning our trip to Malaysia, Singapore and Borneo, our trusty TIVO was put to good use taping shows on our exotic destinations. Low and behold, TIVO tracks down Anthony in Singapore. (See the episode on YouTube.)

As so I was introduced to Hainanese Chicken Rice. Like hamburgers to Americans, fish and chips to the Brits, and taco’s to Mexicans, this is the national food of Singapore. On our first full day in Singapore, we set out to have lunch at Tian Tian, just as Anthony instructed. Locating Tian Tian in the Maxwell Food Center might have been difficult. It’s one small stall that looks no different than the other 70 non-descript stalls, except for one thing: The long queue of people waiting to get this one simple, cheap dish of boiled chicken and white rice with some hot chili and dark, syrupy soy sauce on the side.

We dutifully joined the queue, happy to find that most of the others diners were locals. Tourists like us whispered Anthony’s name with a reverence usually reserved for church. (Appropriate, given that hawker stands are the churches of choice to foodies.) One of our group ran off to grab an empty table and track down some bottled water and beer. Finally, we reached the front of the line and received the Holy Grail of Singaporean Cuisine.

We tasted. We savored. We wondered out loud how such a simple preparation can infuse chicken meat and skin with such a subtle yet deep flavor. We all agreed we could distinctly taste the ginger, but argued whether we tasted scallion or garlic. We marveled at how each grain of rice was totally separate from the next. With pleasure and abandon, we singed our tongues on the chili sauce that accompanied every plate.

The simplicity of its preparation defies the logic of why this dish tastes so complex. We were totally unable to comprehend how this Plain Jane Boiled Chicken tasted so good. At one point, we mused that perhaps we were hypnotized by the Bourdain effect.

Luckily, a local took pity on our uneducated tourist palettes. Hui Min explained that the dish made its way to Singapore when the Chinese emigrated from the little island of Hainan, China. The traditional Hainanese method requires boiling the entire chicken in a stock made from pork and chicken bones. The broth is reused over and over, topping it off with water only when necessary, creating an incredibly rich, flavorful stock. Some cooks would stuff bits of ginger, garlic and scallions inside the chicken, while others kept their add-ins a secret. Some chose to use this rich broth to flavor the rice, while others use a more simple chicken broth, but all use extra chicken fat in the broth which adds flavor and produces a slight oily slick on each grain of rice resulting in these magically non-sticky grains.

As we talked with Hui Min, we were surprised to discover that we had actually had variations of Hainanese Chicken Rice in other regions of Asia. Thailand serves it up with a bit of vinegar, extra garlic, fish sauce and a garnish of cucumber and cilantro. Malaysian style may have coconut milk added to the rice. Before visiting Singapore, we had stopped in the old seaside city of Melaka where we had eaten Chicken Rice Balls, not even realizing this was a plate of Hainanese Chicken Rice molded into something the size and shape of a tennis ball.

I’ve tried to recreate the dish at home, mistakenly believing that its simplicity would make it an easy dish to duplicate. Nonsense. Maybe it’s the mysterious contents of the broth, or the diet of Singaporean chickens. Perhaps it’s not being surrounded by the clatter of hawker stalls and throngs of people. Maybe if Anthony comes over for dinner, I’ll ask him to show me how to make it taste like it did in Singapore. I’m betting he doesn’t know how they do it either.

Would you like to learn about great gourmet gifts, wine accessories and kitchen gadgets? Jeanette Hauser is the founder of the third largest gift basket business in Phoenix, AZ. She has been a frequent guest on the radio, discussing gourmet gifts, restaurants and food related travel, and has been honored to be a judge at the International Fancy Food Show. Visit Anything Goes Gourmet for great discussions, gourmet gift suggestions, and free wine and food reports.

Tags: Food, Travel

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