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Family - Vancouver Restaurants
Caffe Artigiano (web site, map, 4359 Hastings Street, Burnaby, BC, Canada, phone: 604-473-2180) is a coffee house / cafe with several locations around Vancouver. They are famous for their award winning specialty coffees. The manager of the Burnaby location, Sammy Piccolo, is a Canadian Barista champion, and several-time medal winner from the World Barista Championship.
Pictured below is the Smoked Turkey Panino ($8.49) which was really tasty, as well as a Tall Caffe Americano ($2.45). I don’t usually drink coffee, but I’m sure glad that I made the exception and tried the coffee at Caffe Artigiano!
Check out their web site for a list of their other locations in Vancouver and Calgary.
Smoked Turkey Panino ($8.49) and Tall Caffe Americano ($2.45) from Caffe Artigiano in Burnaby.
16,403 views - Posted Monday, September 29th, 2008
Posted in Affordable, American, Authentic, Award Winning, Budget, Cafe, Casual, Chain Restaurants, Coffee, European, Family, Favorites, Food Photos, Fun atmosphere, Hastings, Healthy Food, Italian, Large Groups, Lively, Lunch, People Watching, Reasonably Priced, Restaurant, Sandwiches, Students, Take Out, Tourist Attraction, Vancouver, Vancouver Restaurants | No Comments »
Urban Thai Bistro (map, reviews, website, 1119 Hamilton St., Vancouver, BC, Canada, phone: 604-408-7788) is a great place to go for delicious and affordable Thai food in the heart of Yaletown (in downtown Vancouver).
At lunch time, there are some great specials which include a salad, spring roll, a main entree and rice for $8.00 before tax and tip. Service is fast and attentive, and the restaurant’s decor is pleasant and inviting. Urban Thai Bistro also serves a good selection of vegetarian and tofu dishes which make it a regular place to visit for some of my vegetarian friends. Dinner time prices are also reasonable, in the $12 to $18 per person range.
Pictured below is Lunch Special 76S ($8.00), which their menu describes as beef with green curry paste, eggplants, bell peppers, peas, basil leaves and coconut milk. It is also served with a spring roll and a green salad (not pictured).
For more photos and info, please view Part 3, Part 2, and Part 1. Their menu is also available on their website.
Beef with green curry paste, eggplants, bell peppers, peas, basil leaves & coconut milk
11,356 views - Posted Saturday, September 27th, 2008
Posted in Affordable, Asian, Authentic, Award Winning, Beef, Budget, Casual, Chicken, Comfort food, Creative Dishes, Downtown, Family, Favorites, Food Photos, Fun atmosphere, Healthy Food, Large Groups, Large Portions, Lunch, Lunch Specials, Near Canada Line, Patio, Reasonably Priced, Restaurant, Take Out, Thai, Tourist Attraction, Vancouver, Vancouver Restaurants, Vegetarian, Yaletown | 1 Comment »
Seok Gi Si Dae Korean Restaurant (map, #4 – 602 Clarke Road, Coquitlam, BC, Canada, phone: 604-937-0330) is a very authentic Korean restaurant, so authentic that you can easily fool yourself into thinking you are in South Korea!
All the restaurant’s patrons were sitting cross-legged on the hardwood floor, at low tables (although there are some Western-style tables as well). I found sitting this way added to the experience, combined with the contemporary wallpaper of Korean lettering, bare light bulbs (which reminded my friend of home), and some strangely familiar Korean pop music. Not to be outdone by the fact that I was surrounded by many people speaking their native tongue and enjoying food of their country.
There are some English words on the menu, but I recommend ordering the house specialty, which is the first item listed: thick strips of pork fried at a gas grill at your table (pictured below). The fat from the pork drips away into a bowl, and once cooked, you cut the sizzling strips of pork into bite size pieces. Nestle each piece into a fresh leaf of lettuce, top with a tangy Korean salad (pictured below) and garnish with Jalepeno peppers and raw garlic (if you are so brave!).
According to my friend, it is a custom in Korea to take an entire piece of pork lettuce wrap and gleefully “stuff” the whole thing into one’s mouth before munching away. This contrasts with the so-called “polite” western way of eating, where everything is consumed in small morsels with a fork and knife. Perhaps this custom of “gleeful stuffing” developed out of tough economic times when the ability to stuff down any amount of food was considered a luxury. Or maybe it’s to be able to enjoy all the flavors at once. In any case, I thought it was great fun!
The meal of grilled pork slices (as described above) also included the typical Korean garnishes such as kim-chee, and a really wonderful poached egg served in a stone bowl (also pictured below). The meal finished off with some truly awesome fried rice, grilled on the same surface as the pork where it absorbed all the flavors left behind.
We were quite satisfied with the special pork meal (which is about $15.95 per person), but we wanted to really celebrate so we also ordered a large Korean Pancake ($15, also pictured below). This was really delicious, and was similar to the Japanese pancakes (okonomiyaki) which I have tried around town.
Korean pancake
Click here for a picture the name of the restaurant written in Korean, and click here for a map provided by the restaurant.
Korean fried pork (on the grill, before it is cooked)
Korean salad
Korean egg
Korean Garnish
Korean restaurant in Coquitlam
Map to Korean Restaurant in Coquitlam
19,757 views - Posted Monday, September 8th, 2008
Posted in Affordable, Asian, Authentic, Barbecue, BBQ, Casual, Comfort food, Coquitlam, Ethnic, Family, Favorites, Food Photos, Fun atmosphere, Healthy Food, Home Cooked Style, Korean, Large Portions, People Watching, Pork, Reasonably Priced, Restaurant, Seafood, Vancouver Restaurants | 2 Comments »
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