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Showing posts with label Food - Restaurants Peninsula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food - Restaurants Peninsula. Show all posts

Thursday, July 25, 2013

A fantastic Farmer's Market Frittata at LYFE Kitchen

The other morning Hubby needed a ride to work which gave me the perfect opportunity to have breakfast at one of my favorite restaurants: LYFE KItchen.

From their summer breakfast menu I ordered the Farmer's Market Frittata which is made of Organic Egg-Whites, Avocado, Spinach, Scallions, Cheddar, and served with Fingerling Potato Hash, and a mildly spicy Salsa Fresca Sauce ($6.49).

It was FANTASTIC and by fantastic I mean incredibly delicious and healthy.

This was one of the best meals I've ever had at LYFE Kitchen.

The meals at LYFE are so balanced you don't have to worry about consuming a day's worth of calories or sodium in a single meal. It was only 343 Calories and contained 568 mg of sodium.


But here's what I couldn't get over. Look how vibrantly green the baby spinach was. I've never seen spinach in a frittata, omelet, or scramble that was so beautifully green before. Usually spinach looks boiled, cooked, and kind of muddy greenish-brown or just a very dark opaque green which isn't nearly as appetizing as seeing it so fresh you're startled by its color.

And the avocado added more green and a richness to the texture of the frittata.


And the potatoes with their spicy sauce and grilled onions were the perfect accompaniment. The portion was almost too large for me to finish.


But that may have been because I also ordered the Strawberry Rhubarb Chia Water.


If you looked closely you could see the chia seeds suspended in the liquid. The flavor was a little tart and sweet, but not cloyingly sweet. I found it to be refreshing and would definitely order it again, especially on a hot day.


But my eating there isn't all the news I have to share. Another new LYFE Kitchen just opened in Tarzana, CA this week! If you live nearby you should go and try the Farmer's Market Frittata! I know I'll be going back for another at the Palo Alto location before too long because it was that yummy!

For more information about their new product line of grocery store entrees you can visit their website:


Or one of their restaurants:

LYFE Kitchen Tarzana, CA
18700 Ventura Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 91356


LYFE Kitchen Palo, Alto CA
167 N. Hamilton, Palo Alto, CA 94301
650-325-LYFE (5933)


LYFE Kitchen Culver City, CA (Read my Culver City location review)
9540 Washington Boulevard, Culver City, CA 90232
310-507-7955


LYFE Kitchen Chicago
OPENING FALL 2013
419 N. Clark Street in River North, Chicago

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Oh My Apple Pie (OMAP)


Have you been to the Peninsula Creamery Fountain and Grill in downtown Palo Alto? It's an old fashioned diner located on the southwest corner of the intersection at Emerson and Hamilton. The food is good, I've eaten there a few times, but it's their pie display case you'll remember even if you don't order a slice or step foot inside of the restaurant. As you pass or enter through the Hamilton side door, you can see the display case from the sidewalk. One pie in particular captivated me the moment I laid eyes on it years ago.


They call it "Apple Pie" but a better name would be the "Foot High Apple Pie" because that's how tall I think the pie is with its huge, domed, crystalized sugar crust. Hubby said this picture doesn't show the scale well enough but if you look at where the pie plate ends, then consider how much pie crust you see above it I think it gives you a pretty darn good idea of how ginormous this pie is!


So, the other night I finally ordered a slice. LOL a lot of my friends freaked out when our server brought it to the table and they saw how big it was. One bite and all I could think was OMAP.


Here's my report: The apple pie filling was perfection. You can tell it was made from scratch with fresh apples, not that syrupy canned filling you get in a lot of pies. When I offered a bite to anyone who wanted to try it at the table my friend Gordon came away with what suspiciously appeared to be half of an apple on his fork. LOL. The flavor of the filling was excellent and the texture wasn't too gelatinous the way canned filling can be.

And the crust was equally perfect. You can tell from the photo above that even the bottom crust was dry and flakey. And that bit of granulated sugar that had caramelized over the top of the crust elevated the pie above and beyond any other restaurant fruit pie I've ever had.

To think I've been missing out on this for so many years, always admiring from afar but never partaking.


If you enjoy old fashioned diners you should consider a visit. There's plenty of seating, a wrap around counter, a working juke box, both modern and classic diner food and nostalgic beverages like egg creams, hand scooped milk shakes, and the classic root beer float.

They're open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Downtown Palo Alto Creamery - website
566 Emerson Street
Palo Alto, CA 94301
Phone 650.323.3131

Stanford Shopping Center
(Facing El Camino Real)
Stanford, CA 94304
Phone 650.327.3141

Monday, November 28, 2011

Breakfast at LYFE Kitchen


For the past few years hubby and I have gone out for breakfast every weekend. It has always been his choice of where we would go but this past weekend he let me pick! Of course I'd been wanting to try the "Wake Up Call" breakfasts at LYFE Kitchen in Palo Alto so away we went...

Breakfast Sandwich with a Gardein Breakfast Patty

I ordered the Breakfast Sandwich: farm fresh organic eggs, turkey sausage or Gardein Breakfast Patty, tomatoes, arugula, and cheddar cheese on a whole-wheat english muffin, with garden fresh salsa. It also came with a little cup of fresh fruit.

It was so tasty! Like really, really good. I especially loved spooning the salsa over the sandwich each time before I'd take the next bite. I will definitely go back and order this sandwich again.

I pulled the tomato slice out just a bit so you can see it.

At $5.99 it's affordable and with a maximum of 463 calories and 855 mg of sodium it's as healthy as it is delicious.

Whole-grain Buttermilk Pancakes: $4.99 with 484 calories and 638 mg of sodium

Hubby isn't health food oriented at all so he ordered the Whole-grain Buttermilk Pancakes served with fresh blueberries, strawberries, greek yogurt, and 100% real maple syrup.

He was a little disappointed the pancakes are served without butter but he seemed to enjoy them. He was also a bit distressed that there was only Sugar in the Raw offered at the table so our server went back and got him a small dish of refined white sugar for his coffee.


I also tried a Café Mocha. I have to be honest and say that I couldn't taste any chocolate at all. I added two packets of Sugar in the Raw and that sweetened it enough to what a typical Mocha tastes like but the chocolate flavor was missing completely. If I order this again I'll have to remember to ask for extra chocolate :)

Breakfast is served from:
7:00 AM to 11:00 AM Mon-Fri
8:00 AM to 11:00 AM on Weekends

LYFE Kitchen
167 N. Hamilton
Palo Alto, CA
650-325-LYFE (5933)

Now that I have a say-so about where we'll be having breakfast on alternate weeks I'll be sharing more recaps here on the blog. Currently on my short list is Calafia and hubby really wants to go to Bucks in Woodside. If you have a favorite place for breakfast you think we should try please leave me a comment and let me know!

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

A Palo Alto, Epicurean Food Tour


Our June Food Adventure was old and new favorite places to eat in Palo Alto, CA. Stops included: Shokolaat, Fuki Sushi, Mediterranean Wraps, Cool Cafe and Calafia.

Along with my fun loving foodie friend Carl Mindling we spent the day visiting several great areas like University Avenue and the Stanford Campus after attending the LYFE Kitchen Fork Lifting Ceremony at 10:00 AM that morning.

Because we were in Palo Alto, a city well known for being the home of the prestigious Stanford University, I thought I should use a an equally impressive word in the post title, hence the choice of "Epicurean."

To be honest I wasn't even sure what it meant so I looked it up:
Ep•i•cu•re•an |ˌepikyəˈrēən; ˌepiˈkyoŏrēən|
noun
• ( epicurean) a person devoted to sensual enjoyment, esp. that derived from fine food and drink.
While I don't think I am particularly devoted to food in a "sensual" way I have been told many times that my photos of food would qualify as "food porn" so there you have it.


This month I made our restaurant list (with addresses and lunch hours) and instead of printing it I put the file on my iPad. It worked great! An added bonus was when one restaurant asked about our blogs I was able to pull up last month's East Bay Food Tour post to show them.


Shokolaat was a place I'd read about online that I had to go to. I call it a "place" because it's four things in one: A restaurant, patisserie, chocolatier and lounge.

Not only are their pastries beautiful, another huge draw for me was when I read on their website that their products are made from organic and humanely certified milk, cream, butter, flour, and sugar. That alone made me love the Shokolaat before I'd even tried their desserts!

We ordered at the patisserie counter then found a comfy spot in the lounge area to enjoy a breakfast of treats!


My first order of the day was a glass of pomegranate juice (I think it was around $4.00 but lost my receipt) with a fresh lime wedge.


And what to eat? There were so many choices! I was leaning towards the Framboise Mousse in the lower right corner. It's a raspberry mousse encasing a vanilla creme brulee with genoise sponge cake and a white chocolate glaze topped with a fresh raspberry. . .

Jaconde Sponge, Coffee & Praline Mousseline, Chocolate Ganache and Espresso Sirop with a flake of Edible Gold Leaf.

But I finally chose this very demure Opera Cake ($4.90). It was subtle, elegant and not too sweet. One bite and I could taste a light coffee flavor from the mousseline and espresso sirop. That's not a typo, "sirop" means "syrup" in French.

The thing that really made me want to sample the Opera Cake was that it contained joconde sponge cake, which is the cake I learned to make during my first Daring Bakers' Challenge.


Our next stop was inspired by the GIrl Geek Dinner I'd attended two nights earlier in Palo Alto.

Hosted at Palantir Technologies our guest speaker that evening was Linda M. Krieg who after a 20 year career with the FBI became the Assistant Executive Vice President of Operations at the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC).

She and the Girl Geeks at Palantir outlined how they are now working together since Palantir offered to work with NCMEC pro bono to create an improved database system that allows NCMEC to cross reference multiple databases (missing children, registered sex offenders, geographic areas, suspect vehicles, etc.) to help identify either suspects or who an abducted child is when someone thinks they may have witnessed an abduction in progress.

The dinner that evening was hosted by Fuki (pronounced foo-key) Sushi Japanese restaurant and for me it was fantastic because rather than offer one or two vegetarian options there were several which included a Vegetable Gyoza, a Wakame Seaweed Salad and several kinds of sushi: Avacado Maki, Oshinko Shiso Maki, Umekyuri Maki, Kappa Maki, Jumbo Roll and my new all time favorite, their Vegetable Tempura Roll.


I knew Carl would love the Vegetable Tempura Maki Sushi so it was our first lunch stop that day. Located on El Camino Real Fuki Sushi is a well established restaurant known for their high quality, traditionally prepared food. The ambiance is very "Japanese" with ikebana floral arrangements, beautiful artwork, warm colored wood, shoji screens and window coverings and four distinct, understatedly elegant, dining areas that include two dining rooms, tatami rooms and a sushi bar. Overall the restaurant has a welcoming feel that says "come in, enjoy your food and be comfortable."


As soon as we were seated our waitress brought us a complimentary spicy bean sprout salad.

I'd brought my own chopsticks which is part of my eco-friendly campaign to create less waste when I dine out..


Carl wanted to try two things so we ordered the Konsai Age ($8.00) which was Kabocha (squash), Renkon (lotus root), Fresh Bamboo Shoots, Gobo (burdock), Carrots and a single green Shiso Leaf all fried tempura style. It was served with a dipping sauce and was delicious! The lotus, squash and carrot were my favorites.


And we shared a Vegetable Tempura Roll ($8.00).


It's a reverse roll where the seasoned rice is on the outside and the inside is filled with tempura carrot, tempura green beans, avocado, lettuce and a slice of nori seaweed. OMS (Oh My Sushi) this roll is AMAZING. Love, love, love it and will be back to have it again and again. I didn't even add wasabi or soy sauce. I just ate it plain off the plate and it was perfection.

BTW Carl loved it too.


Our next stop was Mediterranean Wraps, one of Carl's favorite places to grab a bite.


We had the Falafel Deluxe Wrap ($6.95) which along with falafel is filled with lots of veggies including eggplant & potato.

To be honest I'm not a huge fan of wraps, in fact I usually don't care for them at all but this one was really good and I'd happily go back for another. The wrap itself was thin and not too doughy and the flavor of the fillings melded together perfectly while the soft and crisp veggies and crunchy texture and fluffy interior of the fried falafels all simultaneously contrasted and blended together nicely.


I should have taken a photo that showed the bright green interior of the falafel but I was so busy eating I forgot. Sorry for that.


Our next stop took us by surprise. Carl mentioned Jesse Cool's Flea Street Cafe just as I was reading about her Cool Cafe online. Talk about synergy. What we didn't realize was that the Stanford location of the Cool Cafe is located in the Cantor Arts Center on the Stanford campus. Yowsa! What a grand entry to lunch!

As we entered the museum I was kind of shocked because I'd never heard of the Cantor Museum before. Collections include art from Europe, America, Asia, Africa and Oceania, modern and contemporary works as well as Native American art and the Stanford Family Collection. I can't wait to go back and spend a day peeking around.

We walked through the main entry, through a small exhibit area and down a long hallway. At the end of the hall on the right is the Cool Cafe.


A small counter area with informal indoor and outdoor seating awaited us.

Notice the Separation of the Tea and Lemonade Before Stirring My Arnold Palmer

The first thing to jump out at me on the menu was the Arnold Palmer ($2.75). My friend Gordon Garb had ordered one at dinner at least a year ago. It was the first I'd ever heard of an Arnold Palmer. In case you're as unfamiliar as I was, it's a combination of iced tea and lemonade. Nice because I don't really care for iced tea and though I love lemonade it's usually too sweet, so they cancel each other out combining to form a cool and refreshing not-too-sweet drink.


As an entree we ordered the Balsamic Beet and Goat Cheese Salad ($9.50). This was one of my two favorite things I ordered that day. The portion is very generous. More than enough to be an entire meal. The mixed lettuces were fresh, the goat cheese creamy with a bit of tang and the beets were nice and sweet. The walnuts were slightly spicy with just a bit of hot flavor to them. Definitely a winner of a salad.

After the fact, while researching for this post, I learned that Jesse's restaurants use ingredients harvested and produced sustainably and regionally. Being a locavore restaurant has many benefits including supporting the local economy and helping to sustain local farms. Cool Cafe uses as many organic ingredients as possible with a focus on ingredients produced without petrochemicals, artificial coloring, growth stimulants, antibiotics or pesticides. And seriously, we could taste the difference. The food was so fresh and flavorful.

The only downside was the limited vegetarian options on the menu. While delicious sounding meat options abound there were only two vegetarian entrees to choose from. So for vegetarians the choices straight off the menu are slim and for vegans the only option would have been the lettuce salad. That's not a criticism persay, more of an observation. I will be going again because I loved the food and the way it's produced.


For dessert we shared the Warm Berry Cobbler ($5.00). It was delish. The fruit was good but the cobbler top was really the standout element of this dish. It was a nice, light, sweet cake, not biscuit-like at all. I really loved this and would order it again though Carl was torn between the cobbler and the butterscotch pudding so we may have to order two desserts next time.


Our final destination was Calafia located in the Town and Country Village shopping center at Embarcadero and El Camino Real.

Owner and Chef Charlie Ayers is best known for the six years he worked as the executive chef of Google Inc., a position he won in November of 1999 in a cook-off, judged by the company's 40 employees. Charlie's wanted to create "fine food for the fast crowd" and Google, Inc. was the perfect place to bring his concept to life.

A really neat aspect to Calafia's menu is that along with the brunch, to go and catering menus there's also a "vegetable menu" and a "meat eater's menu." For vegetarians and vegans this is a huge win that the vegetarian menu is equal in size to the meat eaters side of the menu. Awesome.

Calafia Offers Indoor, Outdoor and Bar Seating at the Open Kitchen


I'd had the Burrata and Potato Pizza ($13.00) once before but wanted to have it again so Carl could try it. Burrata is a rich and creamy fresh mozzarella cheese. For the pizza it's combined with Yukon Gold potatoes and thin coins of zucchini. I added some freshly ground peppers and was happy as can be.

Not only are the toppings yummy, the crust is really tasty too. I love pizza crust that actually tastes good instead of it being a tasteless bread vehicle with which to transport said toppings into your mouth. Crust with flavor is a huge bonus.


Carl had the Vegetable Soy Lentil Quinoa Burger ($13.00). It consists of a patty of ground vegetables, pureed organic tofu, lentils, brown rice, quinoa, basil and garlic stacked with a citrus beet relish and smashed avocado on a multigrain bun. It sure was pretty!

While the flavors were nice he said the bun was a bit too dense for his taste. I have to admit I'm not a huge fan of multigrain breads. They are often rather heavy so even though they're healthier than an enriched bun I usually prefer either a simple whole wheat or enriched white bun or bread in most situations.

Someday I'll try this but will probably order it with no bun and the side salad and fork and knife it :)


And the big moment, the funniest part of my food adventure was the Mocha ($5.00) I ordered at Calafia. Why would a mocha be such a big deal? Because it was the first time I'd ever had a cup of any kind of coffee. . . In my entire life. LOL

I tried a sip of coffee over 25 years ago and didn't like it so I'd never tried it again. Hubby has a mocha every day and occasionally will tell me I should start drinking coffee. I always reply it's a habit I don't need to start.

Did I like it? I did. It was tasty with milk, chocolate agave syrup, cocoa powder and a shot of espresso. Yummmmmm I can just imagine how good it would taste and how cozy it would make me feel on a cold and rainy day with a grilled cheese sandwich.

I find hot chocolate to be too sweet so the mocha was a grown up version of hot chocolate. The first few sips had just a tiny bitterness to them. I'm not sure if it was eating the pizza or just the mocha cooling but after a few minutes the flavor changed. The bitterness was gone and it was smooth and creamy tasting like coffee ice cream in a glass.

So as always, the whole idea with our food adventures is to inspire you to try a new restaurant or dish wherever you live. Go to that cool place or hole in the wall that everyone is raving about or chase down that food truck and try something new :)



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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

A Light, Late Lunch at Burlingame's Il Fornaio Restaurant

Something to keep in mind... When not shopping at a mall not all restaurants stay open from 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM. Such was the case when I recently found myself in Burlingame at 2:00 in the afternoon looking for somewhere to enjoy a late lunch while acting as tour guide for my friend Michelle, an out-of-town guest visiting from Australia.

We tried to go to two of my favorite restaurants.

First we went to Straits Cafe, a place that serves great Asian fusion. Their door was open, but once inside they kindly and regretfully told us they were closed until dinnertime.

Next, we tried Stacks, a very popular coffee shop. Turns out they had just closed too.

They say third time's the charm and it worked for us. We ended up at Il Fornaio, a spacious Italian restaurant and bakery with a stellar reputation for good food.

il-fornaio-burlingame-pizza-salad

I chose the following two items and both were delicious!

Insalata del Fornaio
Mixed greens, garlic croutons and shaved parmesan; house vinaigrette. ($6.99)

The Rustichella
Housemade flat bread topped with goat cheese, mozzarella, tomatoes, red onion, kalamata olives, basil, oregano; baked in the oven. ($7.99)

The Rustichella alone would have been enough for a meal but I wanted the salad just to have something fresh and green. All of the parmesan probably negated the healthy aspect but I was glad I ordered both.

il-fornaio-butternut-squash-ravioli

Michelle ordered the Cappellacci di Zucca which is fresh ravioli filled with butternut squash and walnuts, tomato sauce, brown butter, parmesan and crispy sage (10.79). The raviolis come in two portion sizes: three pieces or five. They are BIG and Michelle said three turned out to be more than enough.

Funny thing is I always thought Il Fornai was a local, small chain. Nope, they're located in 6 states with a total of 22 restaurants!

So if you're dining during off hours in Burlingame you might want to just head on over to Il Fornaio and save yourself the walking around. Unless you enjoy walking around, then Burlingame Ave is a really fun place to walk, eat and shop.