Entries Tagged as 'miso'

Roka Akor

January 12th, 2012 · No Comments


Roka Akor


Red Miso Soup with Lobster


Butterfish Roll


Wagyu Beef and Kimchi Dumplings


Filet


Salmon Teriyaki


Pickled Cucumber


Steamed Rice with Furikake


Another look at Alden’s steak.

A several months ago, I earned enough Open Table points to get me $20 off any Open Table restaurant bill. Since a bunch of the points were earned when Alden and I went out for lunches in River North, I thought it appropriate that I take him out to use my check.

We decided to go to Roka Akor, a fancy schmancy sushi restaurant and Japanese robata grill that we probably wouldn’t go to at dinner because it would be too expensive. It was a bit expensive even for lunch, but at least we got $20 off. We both decided to get the Roka Akor Business Lunch ($24 each), which includes red miso soup with lobster, Wagyu beef and kimchi dumplings, spicy crispy butterfish sushi rolls, steamed rice, and your choice of an entree. The entrees offerred were salmon teriyaki with pickled cucumber, cumin BBQ pork loin with shaved vegetables and cilantro, grilled seasonal vegetables with truffle soy butter, a 6 oz. prime beef filet or prime skirt steak. The steaks were $6 more. Alden went all out and got the steak. I got the salmon.

Everything that we had was pretty good. My salmon was very tasty and the portion size was larger than what I expected, for sure. Alden gave me a piece of his steak and it was flavorful and tender. I’m not a huge steak person, but it was really good. The pickled cucumber wasn’t too pickled, really refreshing. I also really liked the butterfish rolls and could see coming here for sushi and not even getting things from the grill. I thought the dumplings were alright. Not the stars of the show. The miso soup was pretty good too, but not outstanding.

I never had food cooked on the robata grill (high-heat method of searing and cooking using expensive, imported binchotan charcoal from Japan) and it was great. The grill area at Roka Akor is really pretty and it’s wide open so you can see the cooks using this unique grill. I would come back to Roka Akor, but probably only for a special occasion dinner. Just because I’m sure it tends to get swanky at night and the dinner prices can get expensive, but the food was great and the service was good, as well.

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Super H Mart

November 14th, 2011 · 1 Comment


Super H Mart :: Niles, IL


Come to H Mart and try some peaches. You will fall in love.


Durian


Jackfruit


Banana Flower, Aloe, Lemongrass, ToranDae


Wei-Chuan Preserved Duck Eggs


Just a few different kinds of kimchi to pick from.


Fish so fresh it’s alive!


Yes! I often feel this way about chips.


Marukome Miso – Chipotle flavor!


What we came for: Kalbi


Two whole aisles of nori


Bleh!! Beef bile & pork blood!


Sempio “salad sauce”


Many kinds of oil.


Fujiya candy at the checkout.


I got bibimbap at Durebak in the food court and it was not very good.


Not very tasty bibimbap.


Lots of toy vending machines at the exit.


Also, when we left we passed a Korean Best Buy inside the store.


Korea Times newspaper.

In preparation for my birthday barbecue back in September, Dallas and I went shopping out at the Super H-Mart in Niles. This Asian supermarket reminded me a lot of Mitsuwa, except that Mitsuwa is more Japanese and Super H-Mart is more Korean. (See my visit to Mitsuwa here.) But, it’s basically the same concept. Huge grocery area, a section of rice cookers and housewares, other stores around the edges, a liquor store, and a food court. Differences I noticed at H-Mart were that the produce section was really huge, in the other retail stores area there was a Best Buy with everything in Korean, and the seafood area had live fish.

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Miso-Glazed Salmon

January 31st, 2009 · 4 Comments

Miso Salmon

While browsing for a new way to make fish I came across this recipe for miso-glazed salmon. It was very quick and easy to make and came out super tasty. The glaze caramelizes and is really flavorful without overwhelming the salmon. Here’s a video of the preparation techniques, if you need a bit more confidence in the kitchen.

To make it a meal, I made some gyoza and edamame and Dallas made rice. The only downside of making the miso-glazed salmon was that I had to buy this whole 12 ounce package of miso when the recipe only needed 2 tablespoons. I guess it’s an opportunity to find some more miso recipes.

Miso-Glazed Salmon

Ingredients
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
2 tablespoons hot water
2 tablespoons miso (soybean paste)
4 (6-ounce) salmon fillets (about 1 inch thick)
Cooking spray
1 tablespoon chopped fresh chives

Preparation
Preheat broiler.

Combine first 4 ingredients, stirring with a whisk. Arrange fish in a shallow baking dish coated with cooking spray. Spoon miso mixture evenly over fish.

Broil 10 minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork, basting twice with miso mixture. Sprinkle with chives.

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