CMH Gourmand – Eating in Columbus & Ohio

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A Small Byte on Small Plates at Columbus Fish Market

Posted by CMH Gourmand on May 18, 2007

I go to great lengths to avoid corporate eating – but sometimes it happens. When this does occur, one of my favorite spots is Columbus Fish Market – my favorite Cameron Mitchell Restaurant (and I am allergic to fish!).

I dropped into the Crosswoods location (the staff there are consistently great). I like to dine at the bar to avoid the wait and on occasion – to get my belly rubbed. On my last trip I discovered my best cheap food find of 2007. The Fish Market offers small plates of food at the bar – all are under $3. The downside – you can only get this deal after 4 PM (I guess to prevent me from dropping in for a cheap lunch every day). For $2.95, I had three perfectly cooked Buffalo Style Shrimp with a big clump of Blue Cheese Cole Slaw. This is the best appetizer I have had in this decade for the price.

Small Plates

(these were cheaper than my class of wine – a glass of Goats Do Roam)

Buffalo Shrimp

(Buffalo Shrimp with Slaw – photo taken Batman style – Pow!)

Veggie Fries

Vegetable Fries with Chipotle Ketchup (strong on the ketchup, weak on the chipotle) were also sampled. The sauce needs some work – but the fries are fine on their own. The pre-fried vegetables are/were green beans, carrots, zucchini, red peppers and maybe a few other long style veggies, all perfectly breaded and cooked. This appetizer was well worth the price but it is a small fry compared to the Buffalo Shrimp.

An intriguing choice among the small plates was a Codwich Slider with Cheddar Cheese – I was almost willing to have an allergic reaction to try that one.  There is also an oyster special on Wednesdays – served as you like them. These small plate bar specials have been around at least 8 months, per Shawn the bartender. Better late than never for me but I feel the need to head back to make up for lost time!

Columbus Fish Market

40 Hutchinson Ave

(Crosswoods)

614.410.FISH (3474)

1245 Olentangy River Road

(Grandview)

614.291.FISH (3474)

Columbus Fish Market Web Site

Posted in bar, restaurants | Leave a Comment »

Jeni’s Ice Cream Sandwiches – so good.

Posted by CMH Gourmand on May 12, 2007

 

Ice Cream sandwich


This is my favorite way to spend $4.50 – an ice cream sandwich from Jeni’s Fresh Ice Cream in Grandview.

 

Four ice cream flavors are featured in the sandwiches. My favorite is Pistachio. The cookie ingredients mirror and complement the ice cream flavors. It is the perfect ice cream experience inside a slightly chewy and rich cookie. This has been one of my favorite cravings of 2007 with no sign of abating. The macaroons are made fresh in Jeni’s kitchen from her own receipe (it had to be tweaked so the cookies could withstand the cold of the freezer).

Sidenote: (Jeni was featured in the recent issue of Columbus CEO).

Jeni’s Fresh Ice Cream

1281 Grandview Avenue

Grandview Heights

614.488.2680

Jeni’s website

* * *

Ice Cream sandwich to go

Serving Suggestion:

An ice cream term I use often is sweat: my definition – letting the ice cream thaw a bit to the point where it is just starting to drip and begins to have the consistency of a milkshake. The science of ice cream supports that this is the best way to eat ice cream – if you have the patience to wait about 3-5 minutes after you get your scoop or dish.

Since Jeni’s ice cream sandwiches are frozen – you can truly have the “sweating” experience without suffering. When I pick my ice cream sandwiches up – it is typically a 15 minute drive back to Clintonville (THE Clintonverse – to some) so by the time I get to my house, the sandwich is the perfect temperature and consistency.

Enjoy! And let me know which sandwich you like the best.

The macaroons in the ice cream sandwiches are so good I thought they were from Pistachio Bakery but Charly Bauer was nice enough to let me know of the error of my ways. It is a still a good time to plug Pistachio Bakery (my favorite) (( Pistachio via Sopressatasome thoughts on Pistachio from a great new blog)).

Pistachio Bakery

680 North Pearl Street (behind Betty’s)

(moving to German Village in September)

Short North

614.220-9070

 


Other Ice Cream News

Scoop 1:

Why did Graeter’s Rocky Road Ice Cream disappear?

All of Graeter’s ice cream is Kosher. Kosher marshmallows are too expensive and hard to find to make the volume of Rocky Road Graeters needs.

Scoop 2:

Hartzler Dairy Ice Cream in the Columbus Metro Area.

Hartzler Dairy in Wooster, Ohio makes many organic diary products including ice cream. You can sample these at Urban Coffee.

Urban Coffee
7838 Olentangy River Road (SR 315 North, past I 270)
Columbus, OH
614.436.2326

Posted in bakery, culinary knowledge, ice cream, sandwiches | 3 Comments »

Stan Zafran – Denise’s Ice Cream Man

Posted by CMH Gourmand on May 6, 2007


Denise’s Homemade Ice Cream
2899 North High Street
Clintonville
614.267.8800

Flavor board

I was working on an article about the best Ice Cream in Columbus for C-Bus Magazine at the end of March. When I e-mailed Denise’s owner, he insisted I give him a call. When I called him, he told me to drop by. If you talk to Stan Zafran, you are going to talk about ice cream. If ice cream happens to be your topic he is going to have you make ice cream. He will ensure you make a mess of yourself in the process – if fact if you don’t, then he is a bit bummed out.

I showed up around noon – I knew Stan is talkative and passionate about his ice cream so I figured we would spend about three hours together – it was more like six. First Stan had me sample every flavor – kind of an ice cream flight – a la Sideways. Stan taught me about the elements of ice cream – specifically – what makes good ice cream. Then we got to work. I made Chocolate Chip, Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip and Pistachio. It was messy but I loved it. It reminded me of my first job at Knight’s Ice Cream.

Here is the scene of the Crime, an ice cream maker..

ice Cream maker

 

..and the results of my efforts

 

Pistachio Ice Cream I made

Stan and I discussed a lot of things while we were working together – Boston (his old stomping grounds and where Denise’s originated) vs. Columbus, doing business in Clintonville, Midwestern demographics, etc., but mostly we discussed ice cream. Creating a flavor is an art – but making the taste cross the line from good to great ice cream is a science. Stan approaches ice cream making like a craftsman with some mad scientist thrown in for good measure. He has the creativity to create inventive combinations (like Chocolate Sorbet and Burnt Sugar) mixed with the precision to make sure that all of the best ingredients blend together at the right time in the right way. If you have not tried Stan’s labors of love, make sure you drop by Denise’s – you will find flavors you never thought of – and you will find something you will like to lick.

New Flavor

Try two of the newest flavors Canteloupe and/or Blueberry (when Stan e-mailed me about Blueberry he described it as Kickass Blueberry, – it is). If you can – see if you can combine a half scoop of both for a perfect spring treat.

I have been doing some follow up sampling at Denise’s – my favorite flavors are currently Carrot Cake and Thin Mint Mint Oreo. Yum.

Posted in ice cream | Leave a Comment »

A few more bytes on Northstar (Clintonville) – The S factor, breakfast and a sandwich for skeptics

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 28, 2007


Surprise – much more ado about Northstar

Northstar Kitchen

I have been paying attention to how Northstar operates in my weekly visits. I was eating there just before closing tonight.The owners do everything right. I noticed they were eating together, talking about the day and very clearly enjoying what they have created. It is inspiring when two people can find a passion, follow through on it and see it be wildly successful. Awesome!

So this is what I have noticed about Northstar – the S Factor.

Subtle: No big sign – just a name painted on the door. The prices are all off kilter with the rest of the restaurant world – $1.88, 7.96, 6.79 – these guys think out of the box.

Simple: The menu is small. The ingredients are basic. The decor is cool but not over the top – it reminds me of IKEA or the kind of functional efficiency I expect to find in Switzerland.

Service: Everyone is NICE! You order at the counter, take a number and your food is brought to you. I have yet to encounter a Northstar employee that was not fully focused on making the dining experience anything other than great.

Saving the Planet: Local suppliers when possible. Recycled paper napkins. Northstar is a member of 1% for The Planet – so 1% of their profits goes to good things.


BREAKFAST IS SERVED

The Clintonville Northstar is now serving breakfast – Monday to Friday 7:30 AM to 11:00 AM and Saturday and Sunday 7:30 AM to 3 PM.

Here is the menu:

Granola with Vanilla Yogurt

Sweet Potato Hash

Turkey
Red Peppers
Sweet Onions
Sunny side up egg
Sweet potatoes

Big Burrito
Eggs
Black beans
Red peppers
Onions
Sweet potatoes
White cheddar

add bacon or sausage – 1.88

Cloud 9 Pancakes
Riccota cheee pancakes with maple syrup

Egg Sandwich
Egg with white cheddar cheese on a biscuit

Add bacon or sausage – 1.88

Other Items:

Praline Scone (the best I have ever had)

Ham and Cheese Scone

Morning Glory Muffin

Peanut Butter cookie

Chocolate Truffle cookie


A simple sandwich for Northstar skeptics

Turkey Dandwich

I sometimes have to lure people into Northstar because of concerns that the restaurant might be some kind of “vegetarian, hippy, tree hugger, granola munching place”. My best weapon for that kind of mindset is pictured above.

House Smoked Turkey Breast Sandwich

marinated peppers

greens

rosemary aloli

turkey

add bacon

served on hefty house made bread bound with a thick toothpick

served with roasted peanut slaw

Ok – the peanut slaw might throw someone off – but it can be replaced with a side of torilla chips if the slaw is too freaky.

Final note – my Northstar wish list is growing. I still want to see soup – soup really is good food. Also – if two items from my departed and beloved Galaxy Cafe could be added (Ricky Barnes are you reading?) – I would be in heaven. I crave black bean hummus with garlic sauce and Adobo eggs with jalepeno cornbread. A Gourmand can dream – (an when he does – it is about food.)

Posted in breakfast, kid friendly dining, restaurant reviews, restaurants, Vegetarian Friendly | 4 Comments »

The Case of the Purloined Painting…The Loch Ness Carrot

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 22, 2007

Have you seen me?

Loch Ness Carrot

(An Alana’s side note).

For background see the February Review of Alana’s

Alana’s offers a traveling art show. Periodically some of Alana’s art disappears and then comes back after a short journey – kind of like an errant garden gnome. The Loch Ness Carrot has disappeared three times. After each abduction it was returned via US mail, wrapped in cheesecloth with a note included about the travels and travails of the painting. A different work of art was appropriated by an inebriated patron. It was returned the next day and hidden behind a shrub. The culprit left a very long, repentant phone message explaining the circumstances and details of the crime to Alana.

These purloined paintings are the work of local artist Paul Volker.

Paul Volker

Pie in the Sky

If you have ever pilfered from a restaurant – post a comment.

Posted in restaurants, Vegetarian Friendly | 1 Comment »

Campus Culinary Landmark Lost…and a history lesson

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 15, 2007


The first BW-3 opened on the OSU campus in 1982. It closed last year.

BW3 window

I have never been a big fan on their wings – but BW-3 wimpy wings are great way to deliver sauce. The campus BW-3 was a source of many of my college and early 20’s post college memories. It was often the initial meeting place for the evening. I also remember the employees talking about parties in the upstairs hot tub after closing for the night. It was near The Out R Inn – which is one of the few remaining pre Campus Partners bars. I recall heckling Shucking Bubba Deluxe and watching a guy named Pat perform his famous churning the butter dance.

BW# closed

A new improved campus location opens at the corner of Lane and High Street on June 25th 2007, so I am sure they will make all of their money back in one football season.

So here is little serving of BW-3 History with a very long URL –

BW 3 History

Here is a good recipe and more information on the history of Buffalo Chicken wings.

The Kitchen Project

 

What does BW-3 stand for? Buffalo (the city in New York) Wild Wings and Weck. So what the heck is weck? Weck is short for a kummelweck bun, which is essentially a kaiser roll, sprinkled with caraway seeds and course salt. In the very early days BW-3 had beef on weck sandwiches. Outside of a small section of New York – no one has even heard of these sandwiches.

And now some sandwich history, Buffalo gave us more than wings.

Journal of New York Folklore


Here are some old Beef on Weck Notes from my friend Cliff – (Cliff Notes)– in case you ever hit the greater Buffalo area on a quest for weck.

In no particular order…

Schwabl’s – Really good, I’ve only had the Beef on weck…I’d like to try
some of the other stuff on the menu…old restaurant…old school.

Bar Bill – The rave in the very small village of East Aurora…it’s a 30-40
minute drive from the mainland, a very good sandwich, but if you need a fix
there are equally good sandwiches with a shorter drive…the only reason I
had ever been there was because my grandparents lived out there.

Swiston’s – Been there a few times….consistency isn’t always there. Their
best efforts top the charts, but I’ve had an occasional average sandwich
there…one recent complaint someone told me about was too much fat on the
sandwich…I’m torn about that comment.

Anderson’s – Original location on Sheridan Drive has expanded into I believe
8 locations in WNY. Still a decent quality sandwich, but would only be my
first choice if I was going to top it off with some of Anderson’s frozen
custard.

Anacone Inn – I haven’t been here in some 15 years, the neighborhood has
gone way downhill, I’d like to give this one a shot again, but I would want
to bring a posse along. BTW, they had a really good sandwich.

Charlie the Butcher – Strangely, this is probably one of the most talked
about Beef on Weckers, but I hadn’t tried it until this past summer…I was
not impressed…Beef was a bit dry and not piled on very high….will
probably try one more time just to confirm an unsupervised rookie didn’t
make my sandwich. (Update -Cliff tried again in 2007 – and has removed from his list)

Brunner’s Tavern – One of my favorites, mostly because of location, quality,
atmosphere…I always run into friendly faces. The big draw on Saturdays is
actually the Brunner’s Steak Sandwich, which they actually took off the menu
this past summer when the beef prices became prohibitively high and the
owners didn’t feel right charging $16.95 for a sandwich just to break even.
Even at that price popular demand won out and the Steak Sandwich was
re-introduced…I believe over Thanksgiving the price was down to 12.95.
The Steak Sandwich is great….highly underrated is the beef on
weck….usually only served on the weekends and only one big roast is served
per day…when it’s gone it’s gone….it’s not a heaping sandwich but good
size, if you’re really hungry you’ll want two. The meat is always done
perfect (bloody) and the chef (bartender) takes his sweet time making the
sandwich because he is slicing the meat off ever so thin right in front of
your eyes…it’s almost as fun watching as it is eating…and it melts in
your mouth.

Jolly Jug – This hole in the wall is notable because it serves a decent Beef
on Weck until 4am, I don’t know anywhere else that does. My guess is there
may only be 1000 people that know about this place, 500 people that have
been inside, 250 people that would admit they have been inside, and 100
people who have thought to eat there….I only knew because an alcoholic
took me there.

Eckl’s – Noted Snowbelt restaurant, been there once. Would certainly go
again, another place that’s a bit of a hike.

Metzger’s
Very good. A high quality roll can put a Beef on Weck into the upper echelon...

Two new places Cliff plans to try summer of 2007 ….Steve’s Pig and Ox Roast in Lackawanna and Franks’ Bar in Lancaster.

Posted in bar, Columbus, culinary knowledge, food, restaurants | Tagged: | 4 Comments »

A few of my favorite food things……

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 2, 2007

Blogs, Podcasts, and Websites – Paying Homage to my some of my muses, heroes, and blog peers


I am dying to go to Hawaii. The NPR program The Splendid Table had an entire episode on Hawaiian food (not SPAM). This was one of the finest hours of food radio ever. Here is where you go.

Splendid Table

Look for the February 17 episode: Honolulu and Oahu, Hawaii

Included are: an interview with Alan Wong (well known chef) discussion with farmer Dean Okimoto, a visit the Honolulu Fish Auction, a tour of Chinatown with Joan Namkoong, author of Food Lover’s Guide to Honolulu.

And, the show makes a too brief mention about one of my culinary quests – to have a shaved ice with ice cream and beans at Matsumoto’s Shave Ice on the North Shore (here is the link about this island institution).

And now…. more!

I am passionate about food and I love history – here are my two favorite sources on the history of food.

What’s Cooking America

Linda Stradley compiles the history and legends of many favorite foods here – this is a companion to her book, I’ll Have What They’re Having – Legendary Local Cuisine.

Food Timeline

Lynn Olver, librarian extraordinaire, provides an incredible resource on when various foods appeared in the world.

Local Food Blogs – because I can’t eat everything

These local food blogs are worth your investment of time – read them often and support your local food bloggers.

Columbus Foodie

A Second Breakfast

Restaurant Widow

The Hills Market

Posted in culinary knowledge, food, markets | 1 Comment »

A Tale of Two Burgers: Gahanna Grill and Thurman Cafe

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 25, 2007

Filmmaker George Motz is working on a book about hamburgers which brought him to Columbus. He was gracious enough to let me join him on his eating tour.

George did a documentary on eight great hamburger joints in the USA. It was really well done. It snagged the interest of a publisher who asked him to write a book on the best (100 or so) places.

Hamburger America

More about George at his web site

We met at The Gahanna Grill. I also met his wife Casey – although she is a 5 month pregnant vegetarian, she enjoys tagging along with George watching him eat burgers, take photos, and experiencing the Midwest. George and Casey are great so I hope we cross paths again.

Gahanna Grill

The Gahanna Grill
82 Granville St
Gahanna
614.476.9017

George and I each had a Beanie Burger.

 

Beanie Burger
(Named for Beanie Vessner who has grilled these for 30 plus years)


1/2 pound patty
American cheese
Bacon
Sautéed onions
Lettuce
Tomato
Homemade Cole slaw
Served with a side of fries

beanie Burger

The Gahanna Grill has changed hands a couple times since the 1990’s but Beanie has remained and so have the fiercely loyal regular customers. The new owner used to have a pizzeria in NYC and was private chef to Rudy Giuliani (really). He retained all of the character of the place while upgrading the facilities. In fact, Gahanna Grill has not changed much since I last wrote about it.

Gahanna Grill a la City Search

The thing to do at the Gahanna Grill is to have a Double Beanie Burger. If you can eat all of it – you get a T-Shirt with an image of Beanie on the back as well as your photo on the Wall of Fame (I am on there twice from previous forays to the Grill).

Gahanna Grill

Our next destination was The Thurman Cafe in German Village.

Thurmans

Thurman Cafe
183 Thurman Ave
(German Village)
614.443.1570

Web site

George and I each had the Thurman Burger.

Thurman Burger
At least 1/2 lb of beef
What seems like one pound of ham
Mozzarella
American Cheese
Lettuce
Tomato
Mushrooms
Sauteed Onions
a heap of pickles
Jalapeno peppers
Mayo
(Served with Chips and a pickle spear)

Thurman Burger

The Thurman-ator – twice the meat – we opted not to get that. Casey ordered some of the fabulous Thurman’s Steak Fries. Thurman’s has been around since 1937 and has always been a family operated place. It is oozing with character – wooden booths, the bar is plastered with all types of old photos, beer themed novelty items, signed dollar bills and more. There are many great spots to eat in German Village but Thurman’s is a true Columbus culinary destination.

The Thurman Burger is big – tall and wide.

This is my technique for the successful eating of the burger (works on a Double Beanie Burger as well).

1 – Place hand on Top Bun press down hard.

2 – Flip the burger over so that the bottom (very soggy by this point) bun is on top

3 – Cut the Hamburger in two equal pieces

4 – Grip firmly and don’t let go of the burger down until you finish your flipped half hamburger

George Motz

George Motz at work on a Thurman Burger

Buy George’s Book when it comes out in 2008!


FYI (Food of Your Interest) – More about Hamburgers

Business Week 2005 – Menches Brothers and the Ohio Hamburger Connection

Our Ohio – more on Menches

The National Hamburger Festival is July 21 and 22, 2007 in Akron. It will feature a Hamburger Eating Championship, the Burger Queen Pageant, and restaurants will compete to be the best hamburger in the nation.

Hamburger Festival

Ohio Magazine did a nice overview of Ohio hamburger history. Check out the article below.

Ohio Magazine on Ohio hamburgers

Posted in Columbus, hamburgers, restaurants, sandwiches | 10 Comments »

Fabian’s Redux

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 18, 2007

Fabian’s Chicago Style Pizza Place

691 North High Street
Columbus (Short North)
614.221.8240

Fabian’s Pizza


Thank you Fabians! I have been getting 70 – 170 views of my blog per day. I must give much of the credit to Fabians since “Fabians Columbus” is the most common search term that leads people to my blog. Fabulous!

(Now – how do I get people to come back?)

I previously reported on a trip to Fabian’s in October. It was not one of my typical glowing reviews – but the place is good. My main concern was the faux Chicago style menu. I am still of the same opinion. The food is good – a few items are overpriced and while some ingredients are authentic Chicago – the end result is not Chicago style anything.

A strong positive – they offer a reasonable Happy Hour. The happy hour prices are the best way to experience Fabians.

Fabians

Chicago Food 101

Here is a Chicago food primer so when you go to Fabians – which I encourage – you will be able to objectively decide – is Fabian’s Chicago Style food or not?

To begin – some information on Chicago pizza:


Food Timeline – Chicago Pizza


Wikipedia – Chicago Pizza

And now on to the Italian Beef –

Wikipedia – Italian Beef

Pat Bruno is the authority on Chicago Food – here his Beef overview –

Pat Bruno – Hemispheres Magazine June 2006


And Chicago Hot Dogs – (Note: Fabian’s Hot Dog is $7 with a salad… Huh?)

Wikipedia – Chicago Style Hot Dog

Some of the Windy City’s best Dawgs – (I vote for Byron’s and Clark Street Dog)


So now you know just enough to make an informed decision – go forth and eat – then let me know what you think about Fabians.

Posted in pizza, restaurants, sandwiches | 1 Comment »

And now a word about HoneyDip Donuts…

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 11, 2007

Honey Dip donutsHoney Dip Donuts
4480 Kenny Rd
Columbus, OH
614.459.0812

Hours:

Monday to Wednesday 5 AM to 9 PM
Open 24 hours Thurday to Saturday

Sunday – Closes at 2 PM.

I do not crave donuts very often – but when I do – this is the only place I think of. Honey Dip is just a basic donut shop – nothing (and no one) fancy. There are about 25-30 varieties of donuts as well as some muffins and cookies. The regulars come in for coffee and lottery tickets.

Pumpkin donuts

The sign says it all – the pumpkin donuts are customer favorites. I really like the chocolate iced cruellers, the glazed old fashoned, and the whole wheat varieties.

One of my favorite holiday memories involves Honey Dip Donuts. It was the night before Thanksgiving (in 1986). We walked in when the shop was closing for the holiday weekend. As it turned out, they were giving donuts away since they were going to be closed for three days. We each took a couple boxes. Mix in a pint of chocolate milk, a long night and 6-8 donuts and I was not doing so well 2 hours later. I went back the following three Thanksgiving Eves but the magical donut giveaway never happened again.

So…. is it donut or doughnut????

 

Link to the Wikipedia entry on this important matter

Posted in bakery | Tagged: | 2 Comments »