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broad.JPG.jpgWhen we arrived, it was threatening to rain.  Nothing had started yet, but it was leering at us.  With umbrellas at the ready, we headed out.  the event was larger then either of us thought it would be, and there was a good number of people for a first time event.  Broad Street was blocked off for three blocks.  Twenty Five restaurants set up along the street.  Most booths had an assortment of items that could be bought for three dollars each.  It appears that some booths were running out if items.  We snatched up one of the last peanut butter brownie cupcakes from The Sweetest Thing, and they weren't even a restaurant booth.  I overheard them saying that they brought a little over 300 cupcakes.

Well -- what did we have, and how did we choose it. They provided everyone with a map of the area, and the courses offered by each restaurant. There were a few TBD, but you could walk up and see what they were presenting.  Many of the restaurants had shellfish on the menu.  After seeing the setup, we decided it would be a good idea to avoid any of the booths that served shellfish.  I'm allergic to it, and the odds of someone preparing a shellfish based dish, then preparing a vegetable or meat dish were high.  I don't like to take risks in a crowded environment like that.

I'll see if I can remember the order we ate things in.

From Positive Vibe Cafe
We got Tuna Seviche and Bison Flank Steak with Jicama Slaw

tuna.JPG.jpgThe Tuna Seviche was unexpected.  Well, the presentation was.  I'm used to seeing diced fish.  This was like a tenderloin of beef.  Slices were cut off the hunk of tuna and laid over a bed of iceberg lettice with some diced tomato and onion.  I was quite pleased

The bison flank was also good.  I think we have added this a place to eat lunch.  I grabbed a business card and was pleasantly surprised when I looked them up on-line.  The cafe is a 501c3 charity that, and I quote:

Povides hands-on training and meaningful employment in food services to individuals with physical and developmental disabilities. 

The GLMD Foundation/Positive Vibe Cafe is creating an evolving model for training and employing people with disabilities in order that they enjoy the satisfactions of geing gainfully employed and fully contributing members of our community. This focus will help to create their confidence to self-actualize through the development of their diverse talents.
We will end up eating here for lunch soon.

Enoteca Sogno

We got the Stuffed Olives - stuffed, battered, and deep fried.  These were good, and very temperature hot.  Three for Three dollars seemed a little steep.

Antipasta plate.  mortadella, parmigianno reggianno (I think ), buffolo mozzarella, roasted red pepper, and salumi of some sort.  Not spectacular, but not bad.. 

Bistro 27

We got the Kahhlua chocolate mousse served in a filo dough.  Three per plate, so we all got to eat one.  This is another place I'd like to try for lunch.

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Savor 

fatElvis.JPG.jpgWe got the Fat Elvis Panini - Brioche, bananas, peanut butter, and chocolate.  All pressed together in a panini grill.  When it was fresh from the grill it was good.  As it came to room temperature, it started to lose its appeal.  Not to gloat, but I make some damn good brioche.

We got the little guy a raspberry Italian soda.  He was QUITE happy with it.



italianSoda.JPG.jpgTJ's at the Jefferson

This was a freakin steal.  most booths had three dishes.  If you wanted to try all three, you were out nine dollars.  Not here.  They gave you all of it for three dollars.  This was great, especially considering that the portions were the same size the nine dollar places.  We got Carrot and Dill soup (hot), Smoked Shenandoah Valley Lamb with (cheesy) Ashland Grits, and Rice Pudding with Gold Flakes.

Everything was good.  Jen even liked the rice pudding, and she normally hates them.  The grits were the best.  Stone ground - so they had a lot of texture, and cheesy.  Some panchetta would have thrown them over the top.

Jen tried a fresh salad from Zed Cafe

They pride themselves on offering locally grown and organic items.  the salad was good, but I thought it was a little salty.


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We've eaten there multiple times, so I knew what to expect.
We got the Pimento cheese with homemade bread and butter pickles

I don't know if it is because my mom made it, but I leek my pimento cheese to be spreadable, not tossed grated cheese with pimentos and mayonnaise.  I like it all mixed together and almost pasty.  nice and spreadable.  I guess if I want it that way, I will have to continue to make it myself.  The pickles were good.  cheese was ok.

and Deviled eggs with surry sausage and watercress.

As RVA foodie said, deviled eggs are deviled eggs.  Anyone can make them and they all kinda taste the same, not great, not bad.  Surry sausage is surry sausage. These were split lengthwise and griddled.  I'm pretty sure they are the same surry sausages that they have at FreshMarket (IE::I can make them at home).


That was it for the restaurant booths.  There were five judges who were given a signature dish from each of the restaurants. The judges will award one of the dishes the "To Die For" award.  I expect it will go to a shellfish based dish, but I could be wrong. There were an assortment of bakeries.  Next year I think they should have a competition for the best baked item.  that would draw more local bakeries into the mix.

rain.JPG.jpgThe turnout was very good.  Especially considering about 45 minutes after we got there it started to rain.  People in line with umbrellas, eating under the trees, zipping strollers from booth to booth.  Even with the intermediate light rain we had a really good time.  Hopefully next year we will see some restaurants that didn't show up.  Like Sensi, Julip's, and something from the RRG.  I was surprised that the RRG did not send any representation.  Europa practically makes small three dollar tapas.

We left right before it started to pour.  The one thing that it really lacked was music.  We were told that the band went off stage right before we got there because of possible rain.  They need a tarp or something.  Or backup outdoor speakers to pump atmosphere music in.  It would have given it the vibe that it was missing.  They did get the kid entertainment down.  Hey had two tents for activities, and a little game spot that was being changed when we walked past.  I think it was a beanbag toss.  Overall -- this was a great event for Richmond, and I look forward to this next year.

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My two remaining reviews of Dining in NYC will have to wait a few days. I wanted to talk about yesterday -- First, I made a banana bread with my son.  It has a hint of orange and vanilla, and partially crushed sweet cacao nibs.  Turned out wonderfully.  Slice it, toast it, pat-o-butter.


The sweet cacao nibs add the extra boost it needed from the previous recipe.  and the hint of orange is a nice flavor note on the tongue -- it's not too powerful, but it is recognizable between the nibs and banana. 


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The main event for Saturday was the Lebanese Food Festival.  We all had a good time.  There were about 10 booths selling food.  All the food was homemade, and much of it was cooked on site.  they spend months preparing the food for the weekend festival.  some of the dishes can be made months in advance and frozen, some are made on site.  When you sell cookies for three days, you have to have a ton of them already prepared.


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We got a large sampling from the booths and sat down in the grass for dinner.  Our son ate just about everything we gave him. My favorite dishes were the tabouli and the spinach and feta cheese pie.  After the hearty portions, I braved the lines to get us a sampling of the desserts. They were frying doughnuts on site, so I grabbed an order of them, then I got an assortment from the cookie table.





The doughnuts were nice and warm.  The cookies were good, but they all had a similar flavor and texture.

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We showed up, got seated, got our water, and 7 minutes later the waitress showed up to drop off the menu's.  Eight minutes later, we placed our food and drink order.  They didn't have any of the teas on the menu, then we attempted to order juice for our son.  She rattled off four or five juices, we ordered apple juice, and Jen returned her drink (not diet).  The Waitress came back and told us they didn't have any juice, so he got to try Sprite for the first time.  We both ordered the lunch sushi special, and got vegetable tempura appetizer for the little one.  She served four other tables drinks before she brought our drinks out.  Jen commented "she must not have kids" - appetizers and drinks are supposed to be fast - it gives little children something to do when the parents wait for their food.  His stuff came out last.  We waited 20 to 30 minutes for our sushi, soup, and salad.  Everywhere we've been brings out the soup and salad first.  Like they did at the other tables at Carytown Sushi!

Our soup and salad came out 5 minutes after our sushi was delivered.  Once we were done eating, we had to wait 9 minutes to even see a waitress, and she didn't even look at us her first three passes.  So, in review - the service was really bad. 

Now, about the food. Is it better then the other sushi places in Richmond?  Not really.  The menu is frighteningly similar to Sakura's, but a little shorter, and fewer specialty rolls.  Technique wise - the California rolls did not have enough rice on the outside, and the avocado was a little over-ripe.  The cucumber rolls were not 'sealed' very well, two or three fell apart when I picked them up.  The spicy tuna rolls had a layer of 'crunchy' - fried panko -on them, my wife likes that, but they were not very spicy.  Also - there was no option for tuna rolls on the lunch menu, just spicy tuna.

I think they are a little better then Sticky Rice, but I would not go back.  Akida has better sushi in the fan (Robinson and Grace), if you are downtown, go to Hana Zushi or Kobe.  Osaka, Sushi Bay, Rhoda, Sakura, and Akida are better options for Short Pump/West End/VA Center areas.

Review: Sensi

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sensi-Logo.jpgMy wife and I sent to Sensi this weekend.  It's an Italian Chop House that has little to no advertising.  I've seen two reviews of it, and you have to look really hard to find them.  Veronica has one over at kitchenmusings, and I found another at citysearch.com.  They have a registered URL - www.sensirestaurant.com -- but sadly, there is NOTHING there.  It returns dns errors.  This is either an oversight, or someone dropped the ball.  The url is on their business cards.

When I found the restaurant online, we were a little worried.  No ads, no press, 2 reviews.  We were either going to have a great dinner, or we would be on the next episode of Kitchen Nightmares.  When we got there, all fears were left at the coat check.  The restaurant has a very urban feel, ambient trance music, bold colors, metal accents, high ceilings, string lights.  We were seated immediately.  The tables were large, seats were comfortable, and the wait staff was very fast and receptive.

The drinks came out rather quickly, the waiter even checked to see if they had a hard to find wine in the back (they didn't).  We decided to give the 7 course tasting menu ($80 a person).  I asked if they would be able to do a shellfish free version for me, the waiter didn't even have to go back and check, he said it would be no problem.  The table side bread service was fast, but the bread was mediocre.  My wife commented on it before I even tried it.  It was a lackluster French baguette, bland and unexciting.  About halfway through out meal, a warm foccocia was making the rounds, but we were well past the stage of eating bread.

sensi-soup.jpgWhen the first course came out, the waiter brought both of us soup.  Someone from the kitchen came out with him and asked which one of us had the shellfish allergy, he then switched the plates and explained to the wait-staff how to serve us from then on (this was quite impressive, usually I have to mention it over and over and over). My first course was a butternut squash soup with cream fraiche, nutmeg, sauteed mushrooms, and panchetta.  It was SO good. I think the mushrooms were sauteed with the panchetta. It was nice to have the contrasting saltiness in the otherwise sweet soup.  My wife got the lobster bisque, she was going to send t back and ask for a shellfish free meal (for my benefit), but I told her to give it a try.  She loved it.

Our second course was an appetizer sampler. Proscuitto wrapped melon, rare tuna, and an heirloom tomato with fresh buffalo mozzarella and micro greens.  The plate was drizzled with a few condiments:  reduced balsamic with wasabi, herbed oil, olive oil, and chives.  My wife got a small crabcake instead of the tomato.

Our third course was strikingly different. My wife got seafood risotto. Shrimp, clams, oyster, mussels - very much like a Spanish paella with arborio rice. I got a sausage gnocchi.  The wife got to try both, she preferred the risotto.  This was surprising, I liked mine, and she typically doesn't eat seafood.  I think I missed out on something special there :D

The fourth dish was a seared rockfish in a creamy sauce.  The center of mine was wonderful, but the edges were a little overcooked and tough(I prefer rare fish).

The fifth dish was a microgreen salad with passion fruit emulsion, yellow and red beets, and goat cheese.

sensi-lamb.jpgThe main event was a rack of lamb, potatoes doppio, and broccoli rabe.  I only have post destruction pics left...  The lamb was cleaned well, seared very well, and quite good. The potatoes were excellent, but it was getting hard to eat at this stage.  The broccoli had an almost Asian feel to them.  Sesame, red pepper flakes, garlic - they were good, but almost felt out of place on the plate.

Dessert was amazing.  A trio of small desserts to make you feel uncomfortable. If you were able to keep up with the previous six courses, you would be very full by now.  And you just had to eat them, they looked and tasted SO good.  The 'worst' of the three was the bittersweet chocolate tart - I saw worst because it was out least favorite, not that is was bad, it was quite good.  The semifreddo was our second favorite, very creamy and luscious, but the nutty base (hazelnut possibly) was a little hard to eat.  We both liked the bodino the most, it was excellent with the fresh fruit and compote.

By the time we left, the place was pretty full, which means that word of mouth has done wonders for Sensi.  We were both quite pleased, and will be returning in the future.

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