Freaky Week

posted in: Ruminations | 13

Well, I’ve just completed a little experiment I’ve begun to call Opposite Week. Following a week’s worth of not eating out – the usual course – I threw myself into a strict diet of only restaurant-prepared foods for one week straight. It was fun, weird, nauseating and wonderful all at times. I tried to plan my days and nights eating more or less like an average working twenty-something, and not go out to nice restaurants all the time. I did, however, end up making a few dinner arrangements, and some of my friends seemed to get quite a kick out of seeing me sit down in a restaurant, order something, and staring as I took a bite. Some of these meals were great, some were so-so, and some reminded me of why I began my little boycott in the first place (i.e. a particularly poor Chinese take-out lunch; all manner of Midtown lunches).

pretty good: a $9 chirashi lunch

tasty: a $7 Caribbean curry chicken dinner

highly snackable: a $1 steamed whole wheat pork and leek bun

I won’t be reviewing any restaurants on this blog anytime soon, and my abilities in that field are no doubt pretty rusty. However, I would like to give a shout-out to a couple of very nice restaurants that I ate at last week. Chef Matt Greco (of the charcuterie class) recently opened his first restaurant, Char No. 4, in Boerum Hill, and its Southern-influenced menu is brilliant. I also got to experience the soft opening of the hyped Walter Foods in Williamsburg, and think that it’s worth the hype. Finally, I also got to taste a few creations of the wildly celebrated chef David Chang, at the place that started it all, Momofuku Noodle Bar. (See, I had just started not eating out when his whole rise to fame began.) Am I a born-again restaurant zealout? some of you may be wondering. I think not. For now, I am sated from the city’s eating-out scene, and happy to allow myself to cook once again.

While I’m saving the details of these two weeks’ worth of eating experiences for the book, I think I learned that when eating out or in, you really can’t escape your environment. What’s so strange about a toasted bialy with bacon and dragon fruit slices, topped with a little drizzle of honey? (This is the breakfast that I broke my Opposite Week fast with.) Seriously, it’s just a combination of a few of the things I happened to have on hand: The dragonfruit I had been compelled to purchase while walking past a produce market in Sunset Park, Brooklyn’s Chinatown, after dim sum. The bialy, from Kossar’s on Grand Street, while walking back from the famed Doughnut Plant bakery.

dragon fruit sheds its thick pink skin

a fresh-baked bialy

Dragon fruit only grows in tropical climates and were probably shipped from Southeast Asia, to be sold next to durians, lychees and other exotic fruits at produce stands throughout New York’s Chinatowns. Much as I dislike the notion of shipping fresh foods halfway across the world, there’s no denying that these say something special about the vibrant food culture of the city. Originally a bread of Polish Jews, bialys as we know them are almost exclusively produced in New York nowadays. Available everywhere from coffee-and-bagel carts to hotel breakfast bars, eaten by all ethnicities, they’ve left an unmistakable mark on the city’s eating scene. These two transplanted foods – dragon fruit and bialys – both have. And so it is that, one lazy morning, I open my fridge to find them both and decide to serve them together. (Well, with a strip of crisp bacon and a touch of honey, because as spectacular as they look, dragon fruit have a very mild taste.) Breakfast of champion New Yorkers!

Or, you could disagree with this point entirely, and predict that I’m slowly losing my mind. Could be.

13 Responses

  1. Zach
    |

    I resent that quip about Midtown lunches!

    If your book insults all Midtown lunches, there’s gonna be a problem. 🙂

  2. sarah
    |

    wow, ive never seen a dragon fruit before. it looks like something straight out of mario bros!

  3. Keith
    |

    I heard that dragon fruit can help cure smoking-related afflictions. It’s true, a street vendor told me.

  4. cathy
    |

    D’oh, I was afraid of the wrath of Zach! It’s true, I should have done my research on your blog before picking up the random soups and sandwiches of Midtown.
    Keith: Ironic, isn’t it, that dragons breathe fire (or is it fitting)?

  5. Evan
    |

    Where is that whole wheat Asian steamed bun from? It looks delish!

  6. Grace Piper
    |

    Hi Cathy,
    Lyn and I are happy to have been there to burst the cherry of your Opposite Week. 🙂

    Grace
    http://www.fearlesscooking.tv

  7. Jessie
    |

    after the offended vegan comment last post I thought I’d say: that sashimi looks wonderful. There’s nothing I miss more… This summer I “lapsed” for the first time when a friend prepared a beautiful seafood dish. I was siiiiiiick. Oh well. It still looks quite good!

  8. Yvo
    |

    Heh, but I bet you missed sushi these past two years! (Unless you were eating it but not posting since it’s not cooked…?) 🙂

  9. cathy
    |

    Evan: the steamed bun was from a small bakery window in Flushing, Queens. No idea which, but you should find plenty ’round there!
    Grace: Me, too – thanks!
    Yvo: I DID miss sushi. That’s why I had to figure out maki rolls with veggies instead.

  10. EB
    |

    I love that you’re diving back into restaurants to refresh and remind you why you do what you do to begin with!

  11. Jordan
    |

    Ben and I ate the dragon fruit when we got home on Sunday–very tasty! I loved the texture. Beforehand, I loved walking around with something in my pocket that looked like it was from Mars.

  12. laser hair removal cost
    |

    laser hair removal cost

    Freaky Week » Not Eating Out in New York

  13. Best 4th Jyly Flyers
    |

    Independence Day Creative Posters for Download

    […] Download link http://bit.ly/1JjDoRa – 4th of July Flyer design template – This is one of our most popular creative posters – the Independence Day Poster – also known as “military appreciation poster template“. And this time it’s more versatile th…

Leave a Reply