Med Grill- Royal Oak

1 02 2012

Med Grill
4512 West Saanich Rd.
250-727-3444

Ahh.. the end of year Christmas work lunch. This year, eight of us went to the Med Grill. I ate at the Med Grill on Fort a couple of times before Posh took over( and there will soon be a natural health clinic taking over that space very shortly). The food is very similar to offerings in better-than-average chain food like Moxies or Glo ( same owners). The interior of the Royal Oak location of Med Grill is a bit gaudy, but I appreciate the large and open layout.

I had made a reservation weeks prior to our lunch.  Upon our arrival, we were sat promptly at a long table. This was in December, so there were quite a few business/holiday lunching groups doing the same thing. Our server took quite a while to greet us, I don’t know where she was for the first 5 minutes. She brought us drinks, and soon enough, took our orders. They had a special three course meal, but I wasn’t feeling up for over-eating at lunch.

I ordered a red curry pasta, without meat, as I was still a vegetarian. There weren’t many other options for vegetarians. I’ll admit I was skeptical of a Thai/Italian fusion, but it wasn’t so bad. There were a lot of onions and peppers and some apples. Apparently that constitutes a vegetarian entree? The red curry sauce was thick and almost buttery. It had a lot of flavour but it was feeling heavy by the end of the meal. My co-worker in front of me, had the crab cakes. She didn’t rave about them, and the smell wasn’t appetizing. Seafood should have a clean and crisp ocean smell, not fishy. I just looked at the menu online, and some of the other menu items sound quite appetizing. The food was edible, the service was mediocre, and the ambiance fell a bit flat. There wasn’t a buzz in the air, or perhaps that just comes down to the location.

Med Grill on Urbanspoon





Dine Around- Has anyone been to the menu launch in previous years?

1 02 2012

I have been thinking about going to the Dine Around menu launch this year. It takes place on February 16th, 5-8 pm at the Harbour Tours Hotel ( http://www.tourismvictoria.com/content.aspx?f=General/DineAround&p=Dine_Around_details.html).

I have been searching through the menus and here are some that I am keen on trying out.

Cafe Brio- $40 menu
Aura- $30
Fire and Water Chophouse- $40
Paprika Bistro- $30 or $40
Prima Strada on Bridge St.- $20
Sips Bistro- $30
Smoken Bones Cookshack- $20 or $30
The Black Olive- $40
The Reef- $20
The Empress- $40

I always look forward to Dine Around in Victoria because it’s a great deal for a three course meal. It also gives me a chance to try out restaurants I’ve never been to, or just can’t afford on a regular basis. One thing I did notice while looking through the menus is that most restaurants are offering the same desserts and appies. A lot of creme brulees, apple pies, brownies, sorbets,cheesecakes, truffles and chocolate pates for dessert. We’ve seen them on menus before time and time again. I’m surprised there aren’t many desserts that are a bit outside of the box. As for appies, there are a lot of soups, caesar salads and rillettes. I’m curious how everything will be in terms of quality and presentation, that will really set apart the competition.

As I mentioned earlier, I might be going to the menu launch to try some of these restaurant offerings. I will keep you posted.

Menus for Dine Around:

http://www.tourismvictoria.com/content.aspx?f=General/DineAround&p=menu_list.html

Cheers

-Eating Victoria





Real Taste of India- Great goat and naan but what’s up with the bad rice?

26 01 2012

Real Taste of India
768 Fort St.
250-477-8883

I asked a friend what he thought of Real Taste of India, and he said it was pretty good. Months later, I wanted to see for myself.

A few co-workers and I made the trek downtown to Fort St. There were a couple of tables eating the buffet, but I expected it to be busier considering it’s right downtown and lunch-time.  The smell was luring us in, and I went back to the buffet multiple times. The samosas were good, although a bit salty. The butter chicken and chickpeas were good. The goat and the naan were outstanding. The goat was not all bones like you find in a lot of goat curries. It was full of flavour and a real treat considering you don’t find it on a lot of menus in Victoria. The naan was thin and crispy and wow. The fish pakoras were bland but not fishy. I liked that you could have some desserts and the chutney selection was good. The most disappointing part of the meal was the rice. I was shocked. It was watery and not cooked properly. The rest of the food was good, but rice, I wasn’t expecting that to be donked.

For under 20 dollars you can eat more than your fill, and get a lot of authentic flavours and variety. I’ll definitely go back, and perhaps try something off the menu and not just the buffet.

Real Taste of India on Urbanspoon





Shine Cafe- Downtown Demitasse replacement

26 01 2012

Shine Cafe
1320 Blanshard St.
250-595-2134

I went to Shine Cafe up by Oak Bay Junction once a few years ago (and actually once again a few days ago), so I was curious what my experience would be like at the new location. Shine took over Demitasse which I won’t lose sleep over, and from the street Shine is ‘shining’ with bright colours, specifically orange.

My first impression was wow, bright. My next thought was that there were a lot of staff working for a restaurant that didn’t seem busy. The ladies working were very casual, which matches the staff at the Oak Bay/Fernwood location.

I had a vegan pattie with avocado and salsa and onion rings. My pal, JH, had a clubhouse sandwich and salad. The food tasted fine, but it wasn’t original nor did it excite us. The vegan pattie that I ate was sloppy and difficult to manage. The onion rings were greasy and tasted like cafeteria onion rings. JH’s sandwich was decent. For almost 20 bucks a piece for lunch and a drink, meh, it doesn’t leave me wanting to come back for more. There are much better places to have lunch and for cheaper. The space is bright but it feels cheap, and maybe the service staff could be presented in a more professional uniform, just a suggestion.

-Eating Victoria

Shine Cafe on Urbanspoon





Dine Around Victoria 2012- February and March, check out the menus!

20 01 2012

The menus for DineAround Victoria 2012 have been posted. Check out what’s on offer this year! What restaurants are you looking forward to trying out?

http://www.tourismvictoria.com/content.aspx?f=General/DineAround&p=menu_list.html





Coming soon…

4 01 2012

Reviews for:

Shine Cafe(downtown location), Real Taste of India, Med Grill, Ric’s Grill, Spoons Diner, Teaopia, and White Spot at the airport. Also I am going to Las Vegas for a few days, so wherever I choose to dine there will be reviewed.

Cheers

-Eating Victoria





It’s official, I’m not a strict vegetarian anymore.

29 12 2011

Just to let all my readers know, as of 12 p.m. last Sunday, I am no longer a strict vegetarian.

This was a decision I was humming and hah-ing about for a few weeks. I knew that Christmas dinner was fast approaching, and even though I by-passed turkey at Thanksgiving, I felt like I was open to eating meat for Christmas. I have read close to ten books about food in the last 10 months of being vegetarian. The topics ranged from animal rights, to factory farming, organic versus pesticide treated produce, nutritionism movement, and even pro-meat diets. I wanted to educate myself about everything food, to set myself up to make an informed decision about how I want to live my life.

My verdict is that eating shouldn’t be so calculated and strict. As a vegetarian, I found myself in uncomfortable situations on a regular basis. I felt guilty when I would go over to someone’s house for dinner and they forgot I was vegetarian, and had prepared a whole chicken or salmon for example. Also, the options for eating out at restaurants is quite limited for vegetarians, a lot of veggie burgers or veggie quesadillas, not very inspiring.

Nonetheless, I have decided to eat meat occasionally, maybe once or twice a month. I want to be flexible, and now that I have the information, I can make good decisions about the meat I do choose to consume. Ideally, I will be eating ethically raised animals, wild-caught, preferably meat that hasn’t been pumped with hormones and antibiotics.

Eating a vegetarian diet brought to my attention just how much meat I consumed before, and it was alarming how frequently I ate it. The vegetarian diet was an experiment. There was so much fear, about protein, iron, and general health. I proved all the myths were a bunch of BS.

So my new approach to eating out will be to review the meat options on offer, and if they are not wild-caught or ethically raised then I will eat the veggie options.

I watched Food Inc. the other day on NetFlix, which I highly recommend. The movie puts some faces to names that I’ve been reading about in Michael Pollan’s books. It re-affirms why I don’t want to support large meat producers. I see their point of wanting to provide large amounts of food at affordable prices. But what they fail to include is the subsequent health costs of antibiotic resistance and unknown side-effects of hormone and chemical fertilizers, and environmental costs. I like the way the movie ends on a high. The man behind Stonybrook farm( an organic dairy operation) talks about his journey in the food industry. A lot of his friends were critics of what could be viewed as a corporate sell-out, but he defends his decision as good business. I agree with him. If Walmart agrees to put organic dairy options on the shelves, the impact is huge. Walmart reps express their interest in meeting their consumers needs, and that’s good business, give the consumers what they’re asking for. One type of organic yoghurt on the shelves in Walmarts, times however many stores they have across the world, easily puts a significant number of organic dairy farms into a viable business contract. How can anyone view that as a negative partnership? It raises the bar and standards on a huge scale. Who knows what is next? If consumers decided that they only want organic carrots in the supermarket, and expressed this to large grocery chains, most likely it would be offered. By letting them know, they are receiving a census of how many customers WANT to spend their money at their establishments. It’s a guarantee.

Anyways, I could go on forever. I am increasingly passionate about eating good quality food and educating myself about the global food system.

Does anyone have any suggestions or recommendations for restaurants in Victoria with ethical seafood/meats? Ethical meat options in groceries?

 

Cheers

 

-Eating Victoria








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