No, Chicago, you’ve got it wrong.

July 1, 2008

I killed a few hours today at the Woodfield Mall in Schaumburg, IL and was so excited to see a shop called "Chill Bubble Tea."  I have gone 1.5 weeks without a honey green tea with boba and I thought this was my big chance.  No dice.  This store’s signature item seems to be smoothies with boba in them. They are obviously not boba tea purists.  My request for a honey green tea with boba was met with a blank stare.  I left empty-handed. I think mall Midwesterners could handle this drink; it’s healthier for them than a smoothie or a milk tea with boba.  Chill Bubble Tea is a franchise that started in Chicago and plans to expand to California.  Good luck with that!

The LA Curry Festival!

March 31, 2008

Mac Photog tipped me off to this delicious sounding (free) festival:

LA Curry Festival
The largest international Curry Festival in California is taking place in Los Angeles! 
All things curry from main dishes to desserts, from mild to flaming hot, from savory to sweet, from soupy to crispy…
will absolutely stimulate your senses and wet everyone’s appetite. 
FEATURING:

INTERNATIONAL FOOD, CURRY KING CONTEST, RAFFLE DRAWING, and COOKING
DEMONSTRATION. 

The Thai New Year Day’s Songkran Festival will also be taking place – with more
opportunities for other exciting activities and diverse cultural experiences!
WHEN?
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2008. 10:00 AM-7:00 PM

WHERE?
Hollywood Blvd. from Western Ave. to Vermont Ave. (Thai Town)
Los Angeles, CA 90027

Event Map
HOW?
1) Hollywood/Western Metro Red Line.  Miss Traffic. Go Metro!
2) Free parking at Kaiser Permanente (accessible on Vermont Ave. via Barnsdall Drive)
and take free shuttle to our event site.  Parking Map

HOW MUCH?
FREE ADMISSION!

http://www.thaicdchome.org/cms/la-curry-festival 

Pa Pa Walk Confessions

December 3, 2007

 

My friend Shmoo says she has this psycho-killer ability to be able to judge a restaurant by its facade.  She’s keen like that.  So when we went to Pa Pa Walk on Valley in the SGV, I anxiously awaited her judgement.  She gave it a once-over and deemed it worthy.  We sat in the bright orange-colored room and were not disappointed.  Two smoked duck plates (we both agreed there is no better way to eat duck, it’s gotta be smoked; the dish is succulent), a wonton soup, and spinach dish later, we ambled out of the pleasant shop.  The wait stuff was quite kind and friendly too.  I didn’t feel ignored and hurried like I usually do when dining in Asian places.  The staff seemed to have kind eyes.  Shmoo who can be endearingly East-coast abrasive in restaurants was melted to an Oliver Twist-like child when asking for things.  “Excuse me, would you have any chili sauce for us,” instead of “Get me some hot sauce and some bowls. Pronto!  Growl!”  

Shmoo, who is far more Foodie than I, declared this to be the best Chinese meal she’s had in L.A.   We wanted to get hungry again, so we could go back for dessert - shaved ice mountains.  We would have walked off of our food but it was raining, so we waited in my car in the parking garage, our feet hanging out the windows.  Yes, it was totally juvenile and we even waxed about our high school days - Shmoo "artfully dodged the maximum allowable classes" while I tried to, but didn’t have too many places to hide (boarding school).  We just needed some cheap alcohol and other aides, and it would have been like ditching class.  We stared out the sunroof at the garage ceiling.  It was a great moment.  There is something about sitting and talking in a parked car that seems to bring out the philosophical and angst in people.  It’s like taxi-cab confessions.  It’s like talking in the intimate space of a bed together, but not really. At 11 pm, we rolled out of the car, and got up to Pa Pa Walk just in time to see the kind-eyed staff leave.  They closed at 10 pm.  So no shaved ice for us, but still a great night.

Pa Pa Walk is a Taiwanese street food restaurant in the Hilton Hotel shopping plaza.  On this cold rainy night, it was the only packed restaurant in the plaza.  Hands-down, the place has the simplest decor, but probably is the happiest place there.  The plain walls seem to say: “this place is just about the food.”  You eat without distractions, but the orange-ness gives it all a good glow.

I went back the next day (without Shmoo because she lives too far away) and had the shrimp omelette, sausage fried rice, and fishball and meatball soup, all delicious.  The place has a missing ingredient I don’t see in a lot of Asian restaurants - an unhurried harmony.

Pa Pa Walk
227 W. Valley Blvd., Ste. 148-B
San Gabriel, CA 91776
626-281-3889
11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Closed Tuesdays

pa pa walk duck

#16, Smoked Duck with rice, eggs, and veggies   $5.50
(the waiter said it was a salty dish, but it’s not)

#48, Taiwanese sausage and egg fried rice,  $5.95

#70, Shrimp Omelette,  $4.75

#80?  Spinach, $3.50  (Sorry, forgot to take pic, but this was good.)

#94, Mixed Ball Soup (Fish & Meat),  $3.95

Here’s what Wandering Chopsticks and Henry Chan thought of the place.  Be sure to click on Henry’s video to see the orange-ness of the place. 

 

And might I suggest afterwards go and get a foot massage at either the Tibetan place or Vivid Spa upstairs. 

*** UPDATE ***

I’ve had the duck plate several times now since my original post.  Sadly, it’s never been as good as the first time that rainy night.  Maybe because Shmoo and I had to work so hard to get there, braving the rain and all.  Also Shmoo came from pretty far away.   I actually just had the duck again today and got a stomach ache from it.  Life is cruel this way.

But other dishes I have eaten there such as the spinach noodles and coffin bread soup were delicious, especially the soup. The strawberry shaved ice dish was okay, overly sweet, but still fun to eat for two.

 

Great soup in a tasty, crunchy bread box.  I’m sure this is high in carbs and calories.

 

Pantyhose Tea in Hong Kong

October 27, 2007

Lan Fong Yuen is famous for its milk tea which is made by straining many different varieties of black tea through a pantyhose-like filter.  The full story is here.  It’s kind of like boba milk tea but is richer and more complex.  If boba milk tea were a carefree kid, HK-style milk tea is a hardworking adult.  According to the Wiki, milk tea in HK has the same popularity as coffee to Westerners.  Ah no wonder I liked it so much - any culture that favors tea over coffee is where I belong.  The Wiki also says some tour books neglected to put in HK-style milk tea in favor of British tea or said milk tea was not as good as other teas; shame on them!  Lan Fong Yuen also has a popular drink called bistro which is a mix of tea and coffee but I did not have this.

 

 

  

The macaroni noodle soup in these bowls looks like good comfort food.  Hong Kong has funny food because of British colonization.


See the pantyhose?  It’s funny what becomes a tourist attraction in Hong Kong.

 

It was very crowded inside, yet still harmonious.  I noticed this throughout Hong Kong, crazy tight spaces with people moving everywhere like ants, yet there was overall harmony.  I guess that’s how people adapt to the population density.  The last shot of dishes being washed outside Lan Fong Yuen reminded me of Baja, Mexico where I saw the same thing.  Our guide told us that Lan Fong Yuen was one of the last street stall restaurants of its kind, something about the government not wanting to permit more outdoor operations like this.  Well, I guess outdoor dishwashing is not the most sanitary, but still the place was great, the tea good, and the toast tasty.  I was only in HK for 2.5 days so not really a chance to get too far off the beaten path.  Next time, I’ll go for much longer!  I put more pics of this place on biggestmenu.com

The Truth About Boba

September 24, 2007


I’ve been drinking boba for 10 or so years now, always suspecting it wasn’t good for me, but loving it too much to stop.  Recently, I found a few different sites which give the calorie content in milk tea boba. Lollicup’s 16 fl. oz boba is 440 calories. Oh no!!!!
http://www.dietfacts.co … oba-milk-tea-41829.htm

Its Honey Green Tea (16 fl. oz) without boba is 181.6 calories:
http://www.dietfacts.co … ey-green-tea-41842.htm

Boba balls are reputed to have 7 -15 calories each!  Typically there are 20-30 or so balls per drink.  Adding milk is a no-no too:  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16540633/

Finally, be wary of high fructose corn syrup:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/

Drink your boba responsibly folks! ===ooo=oo==oo (That’s boba in a straw.)
This public service announcement brought to you by UnHipLA.com.  
I have now switched from boba milk tea to honey green tea (pictured above far left).

East West Magazine for $7 a year!

July 16, 2007

emoticon Hi there reader,

East West magazine, "Life through an Eastern lens," is offering UnHipLA readers a $7 a year subscription rate.  (Offer good till the end of July.)  EW is a wonderful publication covering global Asian issues as well as Asian American life and style, everything from Bollywood to political figures.  I’ve been contributing to them for a couple of years now.  

You don’t have to be Asian to enjoy the magazine.  It seems like everything nowadays has an Asian-influence. 
www.eastwestmagazine.com
Click on Subscribe and use the special blog exclusive rate:
code “ BlogEW2007” on checkout.

One dollar of each subscription goes to charity.

Without this offer, a subscription costs $17.50; a single issue costs $4.25.  Just think, for cheaper than a movie, you’ll get a quality publication delivered all year to you.  Makes a fanta-bulous gift! 

Thank you!  And Happy Reading!  emoticon

P.S.  If you do subscribe, could you let me know?   

My Favorite Boba (Temple City)

July 15, 2007

is at Tenju Tea House in Temple City !

I will drive out of my way to get Boba from this place.  The Boba milk tea here actually tastes like tea and is not over-milked and over-sweetened as in other cafes. And it’s in a mature cup.  At first, I missed the heat-sealed lid, but now I like being a Boba adult. emoticon  (Though it did spill in my car, twice.)

 

Could it even be healthy?  I don’t know, but the other tea line-up here looks pretty good, and their website pushes the health value of their drinks.  (I once tried lavendar tea at another cafe and well, I ended up with a mouth full of actual lavendar pellets or whatnot; it was very chalky and not pleasant.) The popcorn chicken here is VERY yummy, in its own league, compared to other boba cafe, chicken snacks. Get the the three snack combo for $5.99; the squid rings and green beans are very tasty too!  Beware though, the food is pretty greasy. There’s free Wifi, but I have yet to work at this place.  It’s always been too loud, too crowded, too dark, and too orange for my tastes.

You can call ahead to have your order ready.  The chicken takes longer than you think a snack should take, but perhaps that’s why it’s sooo good!  Also, make sure to get their stamp card: buy 10 drinks and the 11th is free.

TENJU TEA HOUSE
5817 Rosemead Blvd.
Temple City, CA 91780
(Cross street Las Tunas, in T. J. Maxx Plaza, next to Blockbuster)

(626) 287-2888
Hours: Monday - Sunday 11AM - 11PM
www.tenjuteahouse.com

 

 


Would you like to join the “See the Boba Half-Full” Club?

October 10, 2006

Is your Boba always half-full or half-empty?  Mine tries to be half-full.

Join me and other club members as we have half-sized portions of Boba and enjoy life.  Who needs a full-sized Boba anyways?  It’s got too much caffeine and sugar.

Join by leaving a comment below.  Thank you. 

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo emoticon

LIVE LIFE, ONE BOBA BALL AT A TIME.

 

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