Saturday, April 25, 2009

Restaurant Review - Stevie Rays of Colorado Springs

I enjoy restaurants that make effort in providing healthy and natural dishes. Stevie Ray's Eastside Grill is one of the few mainstream restaurants that put forth this effort.

It's "mainstream" because it's not another Adams Mountain Cafe, Dale Street Cafe, Gertrudes or Olive Branch. In other words, it doesn't appear to cater specifically to health nuts. You can order fish and chips or burgers like most other American food restaurants, but it's not some disgusting MSG laden chain like Applebees, Red Robin, TGIF or others similar. Even my son who has an arsenal of food allergies can eat the burgers from the kids menu.

The restaurant is very family oriented with old classic cartoons beaming from television sets around the dining hall to the model trains that circle above your head. It also has a classy feel, which is unusual for family restaurants and gives this eating locale a character and charm of its own.

Instead of bringing out the typical complimentary oily GMO chips and salsa or fatty flavored fries, it's a plate full of crunchy carrot sticks with dressing to dip them in. When you order regular fries, it's potato strings, oil and salt. You can ask for healthy options when ordering and the waitresses and waiters are quick with their answers which I take as a queue that they are asked these questions often and the restaurant is becoming more known in the circles of natural food eaters as an enjoyable outing.

They offer an interesting burger that most people might first wince at. Imagine a bacon burger with peanut butter instead of ketchup. Don't laugh. Think about oriental food - Chiang Mai steaks, or Szechuan Beef - and you'll recall the combination of nutty and meaty timbre throughout the meal. The burger seems to be one of the local favorites because of its unique yet pleasing flavor.

I had the fish tacos, which was probably one of the lesser items on the menu. Even the side condiments were sad in appearance and texture. The owner of the restaurant seems attentive and desirous of his customer's comments but was busy waiting on tables so I left a comment on their cards for him to get to later. I was thinking today of what could have made the fish tacos great and thought up some points on how to improve them. That's what the next blog will be about.

For now, do better than me and if you order something that you don't like, tell the waitress or waiter and have it fixed. These are not the type of chefs that would spit in your food like those who work in other places (especially chain or snobbish restaurants - and there are plenty of horror stories out there that are too disgusting to mention). These are chefs and employees who work closely with the cheerful owner who takes humble honor in running his business.

I give it four and a half out of six forks.

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Living on the edge

Baker's Edge Pan
When I bake brownies they usually end up a bit soft in the center, if you know what I mean. I'm talking gummy. (Note to self - chocolate flavored gummy bears... hmmm). But for many others suffering the same result, that's changing.

The Baker's Edge pan has been reviewed by nearly every baking company and food-based organization under the sun. That is, except the main chefs at the Food Network, which I suppose will hold off on their reviews until the Food Network can sell it. Although, Emeril and America's Test Kitchen have reviews on it. But where's Alton, the kitchen-gadget-geek-extraordinaire's review?

So what's the buzz? No more gummy brownies and more slightly-crunchy chewy edges. This pan distributes heat evenly across the brownie, baking it's middle volume at the same rate as the outer pan. Several famous foodies including Alton Brown might call this a uni-tasker ... but this is a glorified pan that could bake nearly anything a regular pan could.

My first thought is how difficult it might be to get the portions out of the pan - particularly if you're dealing with Lasagna or "Mississippi Mud Pie/Cake" (aka "Sex In A Pan").

My second thought is - it's aluminum. I believe that the strong ties between aluminum and Alzheimer's merits enough concern to stay away from aluminum when I can. I even go through the labels of toothpaste and deodorant to verify it is aluminum free. Why would I want it in my food, or want my food baking in it? Other than how aluminum heats up and cools off quickly (i.e. being a good conductor of heat), there is no reason not to go with stainless steel or cast iron or even silicon - all without Teflon, of course.

It would be interesting to see if this ever comes into stainless steel or silicon variety. Silicon would be particularly interesting since the weaving bars should give it more stability.

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