September 26, 2024

Happy Lamp Chinese American Restaurant - Since 1973. Hillcroft at Braeswood

 





Irene and I are going on a cruise next week and on previous trips we had met some delightful Royal Caribbean. staff members from diverse countries such as Ukraine and Belarus. While Irene is putting together gift bags for the waitstaff and room staff (toiletries and such that they would normally have to pay for in the cruise ship company store), I have set off to visit the several Russian and Ukraine grocery stores to buy chocolates and savories from those respective countries. My first visit is to the Armenian owned Golden Grain on Birdsall, followed by what was once called the Russian General Store now shortened to just General Store. Purchased made.
But the additional opportunity is to dine at Happy Lamp, one of the three older Chinese American restaurants in Houston. Happy Lamp was established in 1973! I settle in for a lunch of sweet and sour pork with hot and sour soup and hot tea.. The other two would be Ambassador and China Garden.
The hot and sour soup and the sweet and sour are classic Sino-American flavor profiles and I am in a Time Machine now remembering growing up in Houston and going out with my family once a week.
(I’m loving this big side bowl of the sauce, perfect for doing the pork as finger food to dip).

September 22, 2024

September 21, 2024

Retaj Yemeni Cuisine on Westheimer

 What a great day it was when I discovered Retaj! Two chefs. One is from Yemen. One is from Lebanon. 

The menu reflects the best of both cultures.

And the breads. OMG. I am already dreaming of going back to sample even more options on their menu.



















August 28, 2024

Eritrea Cuisine - Adulis Bar and Restaurant on Bellaire Blvd

 Eritrean cuisine has a similarity to Ethiopian cuisine, due to the presence of injera. 

John Nechman writes: "High on my list of countries I’ve longed to visit is the East African nation of Eritrea, located on the Red Sea north of Ethiopia. The capital of Asmara is a remarkable hodgepodge of styles, including art deco, modernist, and Italian colonial buildings stemming from its history under Italian rule. The cuisine features influences of the Horn of Africa, particularly Ethiopia, with a tantalizing amount of Italy, especially pasta, mixed in. Asmara is known as “Piccola Roma,” and I’ve read that you haven’t lived la bella vita until you’ve tried Eritrean-style lasagna.

Until I make it to Eritrea in person, I’m thrilled to know that here in Houston, I can enjoy the nation’s cuisine right in the bustling heart of Gulfton at Adulis Bar & Restaurant (5800 Bellaire). And who better to share this experience with than my globe-trotting foodie pal Jay Francis, who arrived wearing a kulfi? Cultural inappropriateness aside, we proceeded to enjoy a phenomenal, eye-opening lunch of delights served up by the delightful owner Burhana and her helper, a lovely lady from Guerrero, México who described the folds of fluffy injera bread as “tortillas africanas.”
The restaurant is softly lit and inviting, filled with the smells of berbere, cardamon, and other intoxicating spices. The menu features several Eritrean specialties as well as a small section of panini. Though the restaurant has a bar, I don’t think they offer much more of a selection of beverages than basic non-alcohol items (but I’d be willing to bet they’re BYOB).
I recognized tibs on the menu from past experiences with Ethiopian food. Tibs is like a stir fry stew eaten with hand-held scoops of that fermented injera bread. I’ve had some off-putting experiences in the past with injera that was just too fermented in flavor, but the version here called Awaze Tibs is perfect—spongy in a way that lets it soak up the juices of the stew but with just the right hit of sourness that exudes the qualities of a quality sourdough bread. The beef tips are sauteed with onions and 3 different kinds of peppers and cooked in berbere. This was poured atop a large, flatter injera “pancake” and sided with sauteed collard greens and a fresh chopped salad. It’s spicy but not sweat-inducing—a masterful platter.
Jay ordered a stew called shuro, featuring chickpeas in a creamy blend of berbere, garlic, butter, and cumin. Burhana scooped this onto the main platter around the tibs, and as an added bonus, she came by later and added scoops of lentils mashed in spices. On the side was served a Greek-like yogurt that combined beautifully with the tips and the shuro.
Though this was a huge amount of food (plenty of leftovers!), we added a panini made with an omelette of chives In a large telera-style roll with tomatoes, onions, lettuce, pepper, potatoes and a green sauce called “Adulis sauce” that also came with a complimentary order of chips. The salsa reminded us both of a classic salsa verde from Mexico.
Burhana insisted that we enjoy a cup of Eritrean-style coffee, redolent of cardamon, and though served in a cup not much larger than a thimble, it still packs a wallop. This little Eritrean espresso is a perfect exclamation point to a meal I won’t soon forget—I look forward to many future visits to this gem of a place!