Archive: September, 2010

POSTED: Monday, September 20, 2010, 5:18 PM
Filed Under: Food Events | On Wheels
Back in August we were excited to share the news of The Food Trust's night market launch, which will take place on Thu., Sept. 30 at Passyunk and Tasker. They've just begun sneaking out mentions of which food trucks, vendors and restaurants will be serving at the event (it'll run from 6 to 10 p.m.) So far, we know there'll be live music from Attia Taylor and AkiLLES, and we know we'll be snacking on ...
  • Smoked mozzarella arancini from Paradiso
  • Vietnamese banh mi with black forest ham and dill aioli from Tyson Bees (the night market doubles as their official launch)
  • Shrimp ceviche with tomatoes, jalapenos and avocado from Cantina Los Caballitos
  • Chocolate-hazelnut macarons from Sugar Philly
  • Hot chip chocolate chip takoyaki from Maru Global Takoyaki
  • PLUS: tacos al pastor, sausage sandwiches, savory waffles, oxtail stew, gelato, cupcakes (no names officially attached to these yet, but we're guessing Honest Tom's, Renaissance Sausage, Chhaya Cafe, Denise's Soul Food, Capogiro and Buttercream and/or Call Me Cupcake)

Tweets that mention What’s in store at The Food Trust’s inaugural night market :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-09-20 14:14:36
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Coup de Taco and Kathleen Skirkie, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: What's in store at @thefoodtrust's first-ever night market next week? http://bit.ly/9dMG8y [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 5:18 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, September 20, 2010, 4:41 PM
Filed Under: Openings
Photo | Neal Santos
Stephen Slaughter, co-owner of South Philly's very popular Green Eggs Café (1306 Dickinson St.), tells Meal Ticket he'll launch a second location, at 719 N. Second St. in NoLibs, this Saturday, Sept. 25. Replacing a Cacia's, the café is a little bigger than the original, and will feature a walk-up counter for pick-up and to-go orders. The menu/offerings will be identical. "We know there's a few competitors up here," says Slaughter of the Northern Liberties area — no doubt referring to popular brunch servers like N. 3rd and Honey's — "but we still felt there was a need for a brunch place and daytime restaurant, given the high amount of residents in the area." Though not set in stone yet, the Green Eggs team is toying with the idea of a daily 7 a.m.-to -7 p.m. schedule, as well as a special early-bird grab-and-go menu available between 7 and 8 a.m. (South Philly serves daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.)

Ticket Stubs: Meal Ticket Weekly Recap, Sept. 20-24 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-09-27 08:31:32
[...] Green Eggs Cafe, already a hit in South Philly, opens its second location in NoLibs. [...] 

Tweets that mention Green Eggs No. 2 opens this Saturday :: Meal Ticket :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-09-20 12:14:34
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by karl z, karl z and Gumppette, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Second @GreenEggsCafe opens in NoLibs this weekend: http://bit.ly/aBWOCn [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 4:41 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, September 20, 2010, 1:00 PM
Filed Under: Meal Ticket | Ticket Stubs
Monday, September 13 Recap of the penultimate Top Chef D.C. episode finds the final four battling it out in Singapore. The "urban chic" Liberté opens in the Sofitel this fall. Elizabeth "Baker E" Halen will take over the Flying Monkey Patisserie in Reading Terminal Market. Adam Erace gets wokky with his final Top Chef Not So Quickfire. Fuel, Two Cents Plain, Adsum, South Philly Tap Room and Garces Trading Co. are just a few of the spots Team Meal Ticket ran through in Notes from the Weekend. Tuesday, September 14 Stephen Starr releases some prelim details (chef included) on his upcoming 18th/Sansom pub. What the hell is a pawpaw? Read on to learn why you should eat them immediately. Wednesday, September 15 Restaurants south of South Street have banded together to kick off a Restaurant Week of their own. Hop Angel Brauhaus, from the owners of Grey Lodge, is now open in Fox Chase. Center City will soon get Elixr, a café brewing coffee from Chicago's Intelligentsia. Village Whiskey launches a full-of-dealage Saturday afternoon happy hour. Thursday, September 16 UPenn's Museum has a new eatery called Pepper Mill Café. Real oysters have found their way back into Yards' Love Stout, and the results are very tasty. Top Chef D.C. is all over — here's our final episode recap of the season. Congrats to chef Kevin Sbraga! Friday, September 17 Commonwealth Coffee will be opening soon at Sixth and Christian. Check out the menu for the last Starr-curated pop-up dinner, headed up by Scott Schroeder of South Philly Tap Room, Cheesesteak cookies, with real meat and onions? Just one of many offerings on deck for the upcoming Cookie Confidential. The all-vegetarian Indian quick-serve spot Philadelphia Chutney Co. just opened on Sansom Street.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 1:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Sunday, September 19, 2010, 11:30 PM
Filed Under: Where'd We Eat?
Photo | Drew Lazor
Great lunch/brunch situation this afternoon. Do you know where we were?

Matt
Posted 2010-09-19 18:55:41
Looks like Cafe Lift

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-09-19 19:01:06
Matt, it's totally been a long weekend...I meant to set this to post tomorrow morning! Oops. But it doesn't matter, because you are absolutely right. Sausage frittata and crab benedict, awesome!
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 11:30 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, September 17, 2010, 10:03 PM
Filed Under: Menu Time | Openings | Photos
Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer
Earlier this week, we told you a bit about the soft-open Philadelphia Chutney Company (1628 Sansom St.), but now we have some more details about the operation. Taking over the space that was Remedy, PCC is an all-vegetarian operation owned by partners Nirav Mehta, an attorney and IT specialist by trade, and Baldev Singh, who owns Aman's in East Norriton and Aman's Bistro in Chalfont. The duo says the Chutney Company fills a void in quick-service Indian food in Philly; the South Indian-style menu features a big selection of dosas, which are basically paper-thin crepes, anywhere from 12 to 14 inches across, stuffed with fillings like seasonal grilled vegetables, cheese (paneer and otherwise), vegetarian chicken and veggie tuna. They also do uttapas, which rely on the same batter as dosas, but are griddled thicker, resembling more of a pancake. Elsewhere, there's wide of chutneys and condiments (that's the curry chutney above), and side snacks like medhu wada (fried lentil cakes); idli (steamed lentil cakes) and spiced potato samosas. Mehta says they'll start delivery service in about a month; for now, stop in Monday to Thursday between 10 a.m. and 9 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. till late (maybe 2 a.m., depending on demand). They're closed Sundays. The Chutney Company's grand opening is set for this coming Wednesday, Sept. 22, when they'll offer 30 percent off the entire menu.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 10:03 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, September 17, 2010, 7:01 PM
Filed Under: Dealage
Photo | Drew Lazor
Need somewhere to get your deal on tonight? Every day during next two weeks, Team Meal Ticket will bring you a daily Restaurant Week pick. We will highlight some of the best deals being offered by officially participating restaurants, as well as some renegade Restaurant Weekers around town. - Finding a Friday Restaurant Week Reservation is tough. Unless you booked weeks ago, most places are packed tonight, but there are still tables and deals to be had around town.  From the official list, I recommend Zama (128 S. 19th St.) for their sushi (above) and because they are offering an extra fourth course.  They have a steady stream of slots available tonight, according to OpenTable. - Tonight or tomorrow would also be a great opportunity to check out some of the South of South Restaurant Week choices.  James (834 S. Eighth St.) for $35? Sign me up. - Check out Mémé (2201 Spruce St.) on Sunday for their weekly Sunday dinner deal — $37 for three courses and wine. This Sunday's menuw ill feature ricotta agnolotti with corn, truffles and reggiano; roast prime eye round of beef with grilled mushrooms, red potatoes and black pepper gravy; and a chocolate ganache cake with vanilla gelato.
Posted by Anthony Sica @ 7:01 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, September 17, 2010, 5:54 PM
Filed Under: Openings
Cookie Confidential, the local cookie-baking company Melissa Torre started four years ago, is moving offline and into its own space — 517 S. Fifth St., which was last a café called Savory Off South. Torre says the café, tentatively slated for an early November opening, will feature her cookies, plus brownies, cupcakes and her signature bacon peanut brittle; she'll also offer One Village Coffee, ice cream from Franklin Fountain and other locally sourced treats. Plenty of vegan options, too — while Torre's not one herself, she's well-versed in creating vegan baked goods. But sweet-tooth omnivores shouldn't worry, and the bacon brittle isn't the only meat-laced option she's working on — she's also developing a cheesesteak cookie, a cheddar-based dough with dehydrated beef and onions mixed right in, plus a tomato cream cheese frosting (!!!!!). Cookies using Art in the Age's SNAP and Philadelphia Brewing Co.'s Walt Wit are also in the works.

Philly Grub
Posted 2010-09-17 13:12:07
Melissa rocks!!!!

Holly Moore
Posted 2010-09-17 13:18:22
Yes, but will she be baking pies?

melissa torre
Posted 2010-09-19 09:38:21
No pies Holly...SORRY! 
But PLENTY of other delicious treats!

xox

Alicia Mee
Posted 2010-11-18 12:10:20
Congrats Melissa!!!

Cookie Confidential opens next week :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-11-17 11:26:49
[...] Melissa Torre’s Cookie Confidential (517 S. Fifth St.), which Meal Ticket first mentioned back in September, looks like it’s going to open on Nov. 26 (Black Friday!). Ready or not, here cheesesteak [...] 

Dawn Nelson
Posted 2010-11-28 04:22:12
Melissa has been doing this for a very long time and has worked really hard to create unique, handmade creations using only the finest quality ingredients! I'm so proud of her for making it this far... Congrats babe!!

NOW OPEN: Cookie Confidential :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-12-07 13:12:04
[...] come to life just off South Street. Her new shop opened on Black Friday, and as soon as we got the cheesesteak cookie word, we had to drop [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 5:54 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, September 17, 2010, 4:40 PM
Filed Under: Chef Salad | Food Events | Menu Time
Scott Schroeder (right) of South Philly Tap Room (1509 Mifflin St.), who happens to be one of the heads highlighted in our recent feature about chefs you should follow on Twitter, is the third and final* chef to sign on for Stephen Starr-organized pop-up dinner, joining Aimee Olexy and Konstantinos Pitsillides. Scheduled for Tue., Sept. 28 and Wed., Sept. 29 from 6 to 9 p.m., the pop-up will take place at Starr's Continental Mid-town (1801 Chestnut St.), a venue shift from Washington Square. Schroeder is doing an Oktoberfest-themed menu (in full after the jump); the $45 tix are all-you-can-eat and all-you-can-drink (beer). The Mid-town will start taking reservations today at 4 p.m.; call 215-567-1800. * Nope, no Angelo Sosa, as previously announced. Sorry Top Chef fans.

Off the Grill

Rieker’s sausages with mixed mustards

Grilled trout with dill sour cream sauce

Hot Food

Sauerbraten

Roast chicken with bread dumplings and gravy

On the Buffet

German potato salad

Pickled beets with mustard seed

Rieker's liverwurst on rye with onions, pickles and mustard

Cucumbers with dill and sour cream

Sauerkraut with potatoes, pork belly & kielbasa

House rolled pretzels

German chocolate cake

On the Taps

Manayunk Brewery Marzen-Oktoberfest firkin

Sly Fox Oktoberfest sixtels

PBC Harvest in the Hood pins

Paulaner 200th Anniversary Oktoberfest


Tweets that mention Menu for Scott Schroeder’s Starr pop-up :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-09-19 18:27:30
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Jessica Rossi, winston yuan, Gene Giuffi, SouthPhillyTapRoom, SouthPhillyTapRoom and others. SouthPhillyTapRoom said: RT @mealticket: Menu for @foodsyoucaneat's Oktoberfest-themed @StarrRestaurant pop-up, Sept. 28-29: http://bit.ly/aivSQc [...] 

poncho
Posted 2010-09-18 18:17:16
Wow, barryg! Do you hate simply to hate? You frequently comment in a negative know-it-all style and this time I have to speak up.  Scott is a talented guy and I find nothing disappointing about this menu, upscale setting or not.  I only hope this comment means you will not be attending this pop-up because your kind of hate is contagious, and I do not want it ruining my good time.

barryg
Posted 2010-09-17 15:41:09
Wow this is kind of disappointing.  Scott kicks ass at SPTR and I would love to see what he could do in a more upscale restaurant environment.  I'm sure this will be delicious, but I was hoping to see some more ambition come from this partnership.

steve jenkins
Posted 2010-09-20 16:03:36
is there any reason why this is the last pop up dinner?

are you serious
Posted 2010-09-18 00:36:37
The point of this is to do something different in an environment you wouldn't normally see it in. This sounds like a version of the awesome SPTR farmhouse party from last year, but in a Center City restaurant on a big scale. If you knew anything you would know that Scott comes from a fine dining background but cooks what he wants to which is why SPTR's food is great. But I guess it's more fun to bitch about topics you don't know shit about on the Internet than actually pay attention. Ambition? Who do you think you are?

Notes from the Weekend: Sept. 27 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-09-27 16:29:43
[...] Saturday night by going to South Philly Tap Room (1509 Mifflin St.), where I eagerly discussed the upcoming pop-up dinner with some staffers. Started off with a Southampton Pumpkin Ale and got guacamole with homemade [...] 

barryg
Posted 2010-09-19 07:48:52
It is fun to bitch, but my point is not to criticize Scott at all--I love his food and frequent SPTR regularly for his specials.  I was hoping to try some of his food outside of the bar food mold and I am let down to see a sausage fest buffet, especially because I don't care that much for German food.  That's my own preference, Scott can do what he wants.

Thanks for supporting Scott so militantly, I am glad he has such passionate fans because I am also one.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 4:40 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, September 17, 2010, 2:00 PM
Filed Under: Coffee | Food News | Openings
Photo | Adam Erace
Just touched base with Mariel Freeman, who’s opening Commonwealth Coffee with partner/boyfriend Mat Derago in the Sixth-and-Christian shell you see above. “We’re hoping to be open next month, or more reasonably, November,” says the L&I-wise part-time yoga instructor. The Bella Vista and Queen Village crowds have their fingers crossed; Commonwealth’s got Stumptown lined up for brew, Chi-town’s Intelligentsia for espresso and no one yet for tea, though Freeman estimates they’ll carry about 20 blends. Chi-chi cookies, cakes, scones and other sweet, sweet carbs will come from Garces Trading Co.; Freeman trained Jose’s baristas during her three-and-a-half-year tenure at Lambertville’s Rojo Roastery, supplier of Garces' private-label beans. Commonwealth will seat 25 to 30 and will be open 7 a.m. through 8 or 9 at night — "We'll see what the neighborhood wants," Freeman says. Not like it’s a commute for the New Hope native — she and Derago now live down the street, in the house where Derago’s parents grew up.

Martha
Posted 2010-09-19 20:44:22
I am looking forward to this place opening! I miss my Intelligentsia in L.A.

benji
Posted 2010-09-17 15:53:21
It'll be nice to have some Stumptown coffee in the neighborhood
Posted by Adam Erace @ 2:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, September 16, 2010, 9:46 PM
Filed Under: Chef Salad | Food TV | Top Chef

I'm spoiling this rightrightright now so go away and hide if you don't wanna a spoonful of spoiler.

Our dude Kevin Sbraga, the Willingboro native who we've been calling Jersey Kev on this blog since Day 1, took home Season 7 of Top Chef like a damn boss! And Brendan Fraser goes WILD! I'll be honest — as I touched on last week, I had this weird feeling that the sensationalized treatment of fellow finalist Angelo's freak ailment in the episode previews was something of a death knell for both Kev and New York-based chef Ed — what better storyline for the drama-guzzling sluts of the Bravo network than a lanky, peculiar half-Dominican chef rising from the dead on his Latino Lazarus grind to outcook two competitors not afflicted by unidentified Southeast Asian parasitic invasion?! I'm glad they didn't go there, I'm glad I was wrong, and most of all, I'm glad that this season's belt — unlike some otherrrrrr seasons — was scooped up not only by a chef who represented well in the final challenge, but did his thing throughout the span of the always-preposterous Top Chef season, as well. This final episode began with the transcendently beautiful Padma revealing that the remaining threesome would be randomly, knife-drawingly paired with three past Top Chef winners — Season 2's Ilan, Season 3's Hung (my dude! with the beast chicken game!) and last year's winner, Michael Voltaggio — who would serve as sous chefs. Ilan, who can be seen bitching at a Singaporean tailor about a suit in this video, ends up with Ed, Jersey Kev lands Michael V. (they're actually boys from back in the day) and Angelo, who as we know very well is a highly skilled Asiaphile who likes to talk about getting physically intimate with his ingredients (c'mere, you sexy geoduck, you!) is paired with mymanpotsandpans Hung. "I'm in Asia, I'm in the finals and I get Hung," he exclaims. "This is the trilogy." No, this is the trilogy, Ang (did he mean trinity?). Though I did like your chances a whole, whole lot at this point.

Tom C, who seems very relaxed and jovial in this hemisphere (perhaps the tropical climate feels nice on his chromedome?) and your mom's favorite Gallic silver fox, Eric Ripert, hit up some markets to supply ingredients for the chefs' final challenge — to cook the best four-course meal (dessert REQUIRED!) of their lives. Each must do a veggie, fish, meat and sweet course, using identical components. Singapore is the world's number one exporter of Boo Berry, so obviously that's a priority. They also pick up rouget, cuttlefish, pork belly, black cockles (so hot right now) and slipper lobster. For what it's worth, this picture came up when I Google-Image-searched slipper lobsters out of curiosity:

The three finalists kick with their sous (souses?) before the competition, and this is when Angelo first announces he's not feeling so hot. The next morning, Ed and Jersey Kev head to prep, but Angelo is so ill he can't even get up; he deathbed-whispers instructions to Hung over the phone, and then a doctor comes and visits him and sticks him with an antibiotic ass injection the physician informs him has about a "3 percent chance" of working. OK I'm not a doctor but I'm pretty sure that dude just made that up. Watch how easy: When I leave work today, I have a "100 percent chance" of drinking whiskey. Alright bad example, that's wholly accurate. Anyway, the shot seems to work on our dude, as he springs back up and dramatically re-enters the kitchen, Willis Reed-style, just in time for the big day. Silver living: The mystery ailment gave him a bit of time to catch up on all that reading he's been slacking on!

The chefs and their assistants (Kev/Mike and Ang/Hung work together great, while Ilan seems to want to stick his nose in Ed's bidness a bit) put out their food for a group of esteemed diners, including a bunch of prominent Asian restaurateurs/chefs and prominent Asian-American chef/malcontent David Chang. First course: Kev does a veg terrine (Chang thinks that it "takes a lot of balls" to start with that); Angelo puts out pickled mushrooms with homemade noodles and char siu bao pork belly; and Ed rocks a corn veloute that Ripert le loves (shocker!). Second: Kev with the seared rouget/cuttlefish noodles/pork belly; Ang with an Asian-style bouillabaise; and Ed with a bacon-wrapped lobster and a stuffed rouget ("I need a user manual," Singaporean street food expert Seetoh says of the super-complicated presentation). The third course sees Kev with a duck breast/dumpling/bok choy plate; Angelo with a crazy-ambitious duck/foie/gras/cinnamon marshmallow concoction; and Ed gets Blalicchio style with it, doing a duck duo.

FINALLY — and I think this is the course that really put Jersey Kev over the top, solid — Kev rocks a crazy-colorful, inspired "Singapore Sling 2010" (right), a tropical-fruity dessert version of the cocktail; Angelo puts out a bordering-on-savory Thai jewel shaved ice; and Ed — oh Ed, Ed, Ed — cedes his dessert duties to Ilan, who puts together a dull and confusingly received sticky toffee pudding. ("It's sort of like a fuck you," Chang says of the dish, though he was laughing and meant it as a compliment. Chang! Keeps 'em guessing!) The judges have kind words for each of the cheftestants and their dishes, but it's clear early on that Ed is out of the running based on his overwrought meat course and phoned-in Ilan pudding. (Ed gets weird and defensive about the dessert course at judges' table, too, which really seals his fate.) Angelo earns plenty of praise, but Tom C and others feel his courses needed work. That leaves our dude Jersey Kev, who is able to execute his vision in a cohesive fashion, with flavors, plating and innovation — they fawn over his dessert in a manner that probably has all the Top Chef: Just Desserts contestants real salty right now — humming along in equal stead. Good on ya, Kev! The guy is currently hunting for a local restaurant space to start his own spot. Hope to hear more about this soon. Also very excited to learn, via that interview, that he regrets the baby food Quickfire. First of all, thanks to everyone for putting up with these ridiculous recaps for another season. Now I wanna hear your opinions: Did the right chefs make the finals? What'd you think of the finale? Did the right man win? Let me know in the comments. Till next season!


Adam Erace
Posted 2010-09-17 09:28:27
I feel you, J, but the judges are pretty clear chefs are only as good as their last meal. It's an arbitrary rubric for sure, one that lets someone like Josea squeak in as the winner. It really does come down to that last challenge, who makes the best meal of their life. That said, I think Kev's cooking is way more deserving of the Top Chef crown than Josea's.

Adam Erace
Posted 2010-09-17 09:38:23
There wasn't much about Ed's dessert debacle that wasn't strange. Even if he delegated the course to Ilan, a weird decision in the first place, you'd think someone would stop and say, 'Well, we're in Singapore, and it's a hundred-and-fucking-one degrees out, and maybe sticky toffee pudding isn't the best idea." That's where Kev sealed it; his Singapore Sling 2010 is exactly the kind of refreshing humidity-cutter you want to eat in that sticky island setting. 

Why did Ed bring up lemon curd in his comments to the judges? That's about as hard to make as Tollhouse Cookies.

And I've gotta agree with Terry; I love Gail, but she's not Transcendently Beautiful like Padma. Transcendently Girl Next Door, perhaps. Canadian Girl Next Door.

M.E.
Posted 2010-09-17 11:46:14
Nice to see some hometown pride, but my girl Tiffany woulda killed it in chef-to-chef combat. She owned every time they let her play to her strengths. But, it's ok because I think she's got fan favorite in the bag. No one else was nearly as likable. Thoughts, other commenters?

Kevin Sbraga
Posted 2010-09-17 13:08:26
Are you serious? You don't have better question?

Terry B McNally
Posted 2010-09-17 00:53:43
I like Gail a lot but Padma she's not.  I had a hard time listening to her voice for that long!

Terry
Posted 2010-09-16 17:04:29
Yup-Bravo finally had some Jersey that made the state look good.  Kevin snuck up on us and by last week I was over the asshole Ed wo Tiffany, reminding me of Nicolas Cage, and I've been a restaurant owner long enough to know a drug addict when I see one, Angelo.

PhilaFoodie
Posted 2010-09-16 20:43:52
Did anyone else notice that Ed s complete delegation of the dessert course to Ilan did not come up at Judge s Table?  Perhaps they edited it out, and I do give Ed credit for owning the dessert at Judge s Table.  But had Ed won, the fact that he did not have the bandwidth to conceive the entire meal himself would have have put a cloud over his title and the credibility of the show itself.  Given his ailment, the same is true of Angelo.  There are as-of-yet undiscovered tribes in the Transvaal Basin that know Hung carried Angelo to the finish line on his back.  And whose charitable comments did Bravo use to narrate many of Angelo s darkest moments?  Our man, Jersey Kev.  Thanks to Bravo's unsubtle editing, that s how you knew he won.  But a well-deserved win it was.

What, no recaps of Top Chef: Just Desserts? Don t make me wait until next season, bro! Is Gail Simmons not transcendentally beautiful as well?

Anthony Sica
Posted 2010-09-16 20:48:18
When I talked with Jersey Kev back in August, he told me " Stay Tuned". Glad I did. The day Kenny went home, Kev won this title. Great guy, great chef. Hope he comes to Philly with his new restaurant.

j leo
Posted 2010-09-17 04:19:03
Look, I don't want to take anything away from Kevin, who came on strong late and shone in the finale. Props to him. He did great in Signapore and I will try to get to his place the next time I'm back east. And it's always nice to see Philly / Jersey represented.

However....

Can you really tell me he was the best chef there, especially throughout the year? I don't remember him winning any challenges before the last 3 episodes. I seem to remember him being on the bottom a few times, and in the middle a lot. I haven't tallied up the total wins from this season (I hope you have that data somewhere), but I have to think he rates below Tiffany, Angelo, Ed, and probably Kelly for actual wins in quickfires and challenges. Maybe even Kenny. I know that's not how they decide things, and that it's week-to-week, but it seemed really unexpected compared to last season. Last season, I was so happy that the people who made the finale had established themselves as the best chefs throughout the season. I'm still surprised that Kevin was there at the end. He stepped up when it counted, yes, but I hate to say that he's one of the more forgettable winners.

BTW, I think the desserts show will make up for our lack of Arnold. Diva power!

BrianW
Posted 2010-09-16 17:08:57
I called Jersey Kev's win early on in the episode and was super excited to be right about that one (despite the fact that I'm still miffed about my main girl Tiffany not ending up in the finals). 

As a side note, despite Ilan's escalating doughy-ness (sooo evident in that suit-buying video), I still want to gay marry him forever and ever amen.

Mandy Bee.
Posted 2010-09-17 00:23:37
Top Chef: Just Desserts already seems slow, over-edited, and boring. While I certainly wouldn't mind a Lazor recap each week, this spin-off probably won't hold a candle to Top Chef in any way.

poncho
Posted 2010-09-17 13:33:00
Top Chef: Just desserts was boring - I lost interest & stopped watching it.  I love Gail but the real problem is Johnny Iuzzini

Restaurant Week Pick for Sept. 21: Fuji :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-09-21 14:32:09
[...] off your bill at guilty favorite The Black Horse Diner and a $35 opportunity to see our boy, Top Chef D.C. winner Kevin “Jersey Kev” Sbraga, at Rat’s in Hamilton one last time.   Restaurant Week [...] 

j leo
Posted 2010-09-17 04:25:05
Sorry, one more point - I just saw the link to season 5, which I agree was disappointing, with Josea winning. Funny, that's exactly who I was gonna compare Kevin to, except I couldn't remember his name (for a reason). Like Josea, he did fine and acceptable but was never really great or on top until the end. I think this season is like that, but maybe I'm too harsh on Kev.

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-09-17 01:02:17
Great commentary man! I honestly think that Ed saying Ilan handled the dessert himself would've been better than what was shown, with him basically saying, "I could've fucked up if I had taken a risk, do you really want me to do that?" But you're right, I don't doubt that they touched on that point at least once during judging and it just didn't make the final cut.

Doing these recaps causes me so much undue strife and hand-wringing that I just don't think I could make a Top Chef Just Desserts recap schedule part of my weekly grind. And yes, I realize how lame complaining about Photoshopping Tamesha's head onto Rihanna's body is.

Michelle
Posted 2010-09-17 13:38:29
I cannot believe you are comparing Kevin to Hosea! Kevin rocked it and deserved to win whereas Hosea should have been sent packing way before the finale

Michelle
Posted 2010-09-17 13:58:00
Whoa! Jersey Kev calling out PSN for a ridiculous comment on a Top Chef recap? I think this just made my day!

Jillian
Posted 2010-09-17 08:24:14
Okay, I know what my cat is being for halloween.

I'm really happy Kevin won (but come on, we all knew it when he quit Starr so quickly). However, this was the first season I really wasn't pulling for anyone. Maybe its just me, but I did not think the talent was on par with other seasons.

Great recaps Drew!!

Phyllis Stein-Novack
Posted 2010-09-17 08:30:56
Michael Klein's article in Friday's Inquirer states Kevin and his wife named their new son Kevin Angelo and he will be called Angelo. I'm wondering...did they do this in honor of Angelo Sosa? Welcome thoughts on this.

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-09-17 12:00:31
I checked, and statistically, Hosea and Kevin were pretty similar...Kevin was @ the top more than Hosea, but Hosea won more Eliminations. So that's definitely a good point. Perhaps this is geographic bias talking, but I really just enjoyed seeing what Kevin came up with this season moreso than what we saw Hosea cook.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 9:46 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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Founded in October 2008, Meal Ticket is a City Paper blog about food, drink and assorted other things that make you go mmm. We do recipes, interviews, restaurant news, commentary and much more. We don't do restaurant reviews herethose are handled in print, mostly by our critic (and Meal Ticket contributor) Adam Erace. Got a tip, question, thought or concern? Just want to say hello? Please shoot a note to caroline@citypaper.net.

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