Showing posts with label Burgers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burgers. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Weighing in on Pounds & Ounces


While Chelsea may be a fantastic area to play, lounge hop, and people watch, one thing it has seemed to lack is a one-stop shop where you can enjoy delicious food either as a snack with friends over conversation, specialty cocktails, intimate lounge seating, a communal bar with a great group scene, or secluded dining, along with outdoor seating in great weather.  And then I met Pounds and Ounces (160 8th Ave at 18th Street).

I was pretty thrilled to discover Jeff Kreisel had recently taken over as Executive Chef, as his creations in Long Island City at Penthouse 808 had really elevated rooftop dining in my neighborhood.

In a recent post by The Village Voice, the chef explains, "The whole dinner menu is new. We still have some burgers, but we've added lighter fare and gluten-free options, and we've focused on seasoning properly, portioning properly, and sourcing very locally."

Chef Kreisel is working on the lunch menu and a late night menu, so I can't wait to return soon to see what new dishes he has in store.  In the meanwhile, here are is a preview of what a great dinner menu he already has set in place.




Summer Watermelon Salad with mint, cucumbers, tomatoes, ricotta salata, toasted pine nuts, & lemon dressing.
Chicken Liver Pate with truffle salt
Citrus & Herb cured salmon with beet couscous, citrus creme fraiche, and corn blinis
Lobster Corn Dogs with Meyer Lemon Aioli
Seared scallops with eggplant caviar, roasted tomatoes, crispy sunchokes, & aged vinegar
Seared Halibut with maitake mushrooms, fingerling potatoes, and scallion-ginger pesto
F&Kn Burger with onion marnalade, fontina, pineapple braised short ribs, pickled green tomato chips, on brioche.
Pounds & Ounces on Urbanspoon

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Five Buck Chuck



One of the most delicious things about living in Western Queens is that eating cheap never has to mean settling for cheap quality.  From individual dishes to lunch specials and even full dining experiences, this month we round up some of the neighborhood’s most affordable edibles, showing how to fill up your tank without breaking the bank.

Here are ten penny-pinching but appetite-quenching bites worth mentioning for five bucks or less.

25¢ wings – Tuesday nights from 8 p.m. to midnight, some of Astoria’s most popular wings can be ordered any way you like ‘em for just twenty-five cents a piece.  Dillinger’s Pub & Grill, 46-19 30th Ave, Astoria, NY 11103; (718) 956-5601

$1 caviar – At Kumo Sushi on Northern Boulevard, all of the a la carte sushi is just one dollar, from salmon roe to sea urchin, over thirty pieces of fresh fish and veggies are available for a single buck. Kumo Sushi & Lounge, 47-11 Northern Blvd., Long Island City, NY 11101; (718) 728-9600; www.kumonyc.com


$1.75 – the tamales at De Mole are deliciously steamed in corn husks, available in three different flavors.  Or try the squash blossom quesadilla for $3.50, or any of the $3 tacos; De Mole, 42-20 30th Ave., Astoria, NY 11103; (718) 777-1655; www.demolenyc.com


$2.75 – Like palm-sized pot pies, coxhina de frango y catupiry are tasty egg-shaped golden croquettes stuffed with shredded chicken and creamy cheese.  NY Pao de Queijo, 31-90 30th St., Astoria, NY 11101; (718) 204-1979; www.newyorkpaodequeijo.com


$3.50 – The Completo at San Antonio Bakery arrives on its own little stand, like a pedestal for this famous frank on a homemade bun, topped with sauerkraut, avocado puree, diced tomato, and a zigzag of mayonnaise.  Ask for pebre sauce, too!  San Antonio Bakery 2, 36-20 Astoria Blvd,, Astoria, NY 11103; (718) 777-8733; http://sanantoniobakery.net/                                                                                                                                                                                       


$3.50 – Queens Comfort serves up a delicious version of Elotes Callejero, Mexican street corn on the cob—which is grilled, slathered with mayo, rolled in parmesan, and then drizzled with sriracha.  Queens Comfort, 40-09 30th Ave, Astoria, NY 11103; (718) 728-2350; www.queenscomfort.com


$3.99 – Woodside’s famed Ottomanelli butcher shop opened a burger and Belgian fry joint just down the street, where $3.99 gets you a single burger with any seasoning folded into the meat (chipotle, caramelized onion, roasted garlic, jalapeno-cheddar, or bacon-cheddar).  If you get the fries ($2.89) add a side of truffle parmesan aioli for 79¢; F. Ottomanelli Burgers & Belgian Frites, 60-15 Woodside Ave., Woodside, NY 11377; (718) 446-7489

$4 – The Bok Choy Blossoms at Seva Indian Cuisine are dipped in a chickpea batter and lightly fried, dusted with mango powder, and served with a citrusy mint dipping sauce.  Seva Indian Cuisine, 30-07 34th St., Astoria, NY 11103; (718) 626-4440; sevaindianrestaurant.com

$4.75 – Euro Delights offers over sixty different crepes ranging from sweet to savory.  There’s something to be said for simplicity, however, like the Hot Feeling crepe for $4.74—a simple paper-thin French pancake draped in sugar, butter, and cinnamon.  Euro Delights, 32-02 Broadway, Astoria, NY 11102; http://eurodelightsastoria.com


$5 – The Long Island City Food Truck Lot is home to many affordable eats loved across the city, like Rickshaw dumplings and Pera Tacos, open weekdays from noon to 3 p.m.  But who can resist a homemade gourmet ice cream sandwich from the Coolhaus truck? Long Island City Food Truck Lot, 43-29 Crescent St, Queens, NY, 11101; check http://www.facebook.com/LICfoodtruckLOT for the weekly schedule of trucks.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Whimsical flavor layering on new menu at Queens Comfort

Queens Comfort's signature Chicken & Eggos

Queens Comfort40-09 30th Ave (½  block east of Steinway), Astoria (718) 728-2350


Kitschy comfort food joints with country tchotchke, mason jar tea mugs, over-greased chicken thighs, and lackluster mac-n-cheese are a dime a dozen.  But at Queens Comfort, settled on 30th Avenue between Astoria’s retail thoroughfare and “hookah alley” on Steinway, comfort isn’t merely a gimmick.

On any given Sunday, twenty guests huddle by the entryway near the Big Chief smoker, or perch on swivel stools at the old diner counter eagerly waiting to jigsaw their party into the long communal table, snickering while Hulk Hogan battles on WWF reruns, gawking at a young loin-clothed Schwarzenegger in Conan the Destroyer, or quoting the dialogue to Weird Science... all projected onto a screen at the back of the dining room. 


While the atmosphere and energy transport you back to a time of bouffant bangs and parachute pants, it is the universally nostalgic food—albeit admittedly Southern in influence—that is the true flux capacitor here.  At Queens Comfort, Cheetos are crunched into chili cheeseburgers, Eggo waffles sandwich the fried chicken, Cap’n Crunch trumps panko breadcrumbs, and hamburgers are glazed with grape jelly, the buns slathered with gooey peanut butter.  But far more than just memory-evoking morsels, some serious love goes into the cooking and service.  It’s the kind of staff you’ll want to friend request before you leave (ask for George or Maria), and the sort of place where the whole family pitches in on the recipes and operations.

The Egg McRuffin'

Owner and cook Donnie D’Alessio opened Queens Comfort almost a year ago, and the menu has been perpetually evolving rather dramatically… until recently.  In the early months, the selection could literally overhaul completely overnight.  A favorite dish one week may have proven ephemeral, never to be seen again.  Now with Chef David Ginipro on board coaching the back of the house (a veteran of several kitchens in the Finger Lakes, who’s been cooking since he was fourteen), the culinary team is focusing on a fairly steady menu, with the addition of several rotating specials to maintain the whimsy (plates range affordably from $3.50 to $14).  “Our style is contrast,” explains D’Alessio, “we like to layer, and we take a lot of care into how people register flavors.”

Pork & grits with redeye gravy laced with Stumptown coffee

Consider, for example, the Fatty Arbuckle, a nod to the scandal-stricken silent film comedian known for his excess.  Pork shoulder receives an ancho chili brown sugar rub before entering the Big Chief where it’s smoked with cherry, apple, and hickory wood chips, then braised in Coca-Cola and pulled.  That juicy haystack is stuffed into a pork tenderloin medallion, liberally dowsed with a Kansas City-inspired barbecue sauce, made with onions, ancho chilies, molasses, and vinegar—all topped with cheddar and a crunchy apple slaw, served on a soft Martin’s bun.  The loaded masterpiece is simultaneously sweet, tangy, tart, hot, cool, crisp, and profoundly tender.  During weekend brunch, the pork shreds are stacked atop creamy Nora Mill grits with a moat of Stumptown-coffee-laced redeye gravy.

Cap'n Crunch chicken fingers with chili bacon caramel

Another mouthwatering layering of flavors is the Cap’n Crunch chicken fingers—substantially plump and juicy tenders dusted with the crushed sweet peanut butter cereal (also used to coat chubby French toast sticks during weekend brunch service), accompanied by a bowl of thick caramel sauce studded with bits of smoked bacon and red pepper flakes.  The red peppers are home-dried by D’Alessio’s father, a tradition passed down from his grandmother—which is used as a seasoning in several of the dishes and soups.

Three-leek macaroni & cheese with Cabot cheddar and vintage gouda

Macaroni and cheese arrives in a massive ceramic boat, studded with either bits of meatloaf, sausage and thyme with cabot cheddar, or leeks with smoked vintage gouda.  For Super Bowl weekend, pre-orders are being taken, including a version of cheesy mac with spicy buffalo chicken and bleu cheese.  


Disco Tots


Tater tots are draped in thick and peppery sawmill gravy, then crowned with golden cheddar, and baked until bubbly under the salamander.  Whole cobs of grilled corn are slathered in mayo, sriracha, and parmesan ($3.50).  These are plates intended for sharing, but witness how rapidly the forks fly at the quickly disappearing dishes.

The Sloppy Po'

An eclectic array of sandwiches range from the Sloppy Po’—a countrified banh mi of fried shrimp with bacon, pickled onions, shredded carrots, and chipotle mayo—to an open-faced fried pork chop of tenderloin brined in maple syrup, sage, and anise, which is then deep-fried, served on thick challah and topped with a velvety maple cheddar sausage gravy and a sunny-side-up egg.

Ring of Fire 

A rotating “Burger Stand” showcases a stellar take on In-N-Out’s Animal Burger with a dead-ringer of the special sauce and caramelized onions only on a much thicker and juicier patty, a PB&J Burger with a slab of smoked bacon, and a behemoth Ring of Fire Burger stacked with a fiery inferno of battered bell pepper rings stuffed with fried jalapenos, melted cheddar, and sriracha mayo.  Another comes blanketed in dijonnaise, cheddar, and crunchy fried pickle coins.

Cheetos Burger

The ultimate nostalgia burger arrives piled with beef chili and a layer of Cheetos under a homemade cheddar sauce speckled with crumbled bits of the cheesy corn snack (sadly only a special not in the daily rotation).

Meatloaf Sandwich

The restaurant’s signature sandwich is a boneless breast of chicken brined overnight, buttermilk-battered, and glistening with maple butter and Tabasco—stabbed between two Eggo waffles with a steak knife.  The honey dripper features the same bird beaded with golden droplets of honey, the sweetness cut by stoneground mustard and spicy bread & butter pickles.  Not your grandma’s meatloaf, a thick slab is served under a lava flow of melted cheddar, stacked with onion rings on a soft bun spread with house bacon ketchup.


In a neighborhood where brunch is the busiest meal of the week for restaurants, the BYOB policy creates a vibe of communal party, with store-bought bottles of bubbly and pitchers of orange juice on nearly every table.  Benedicts of whole butter-poached lobster are tucked into jumbo croissants and capped with a fried egg and lemon aioli.  Kentucky hot browns are smothered in Dijon mornay; brioche is dipped in custard and French-toasted.  The Mickey D’s classic is upgraded to an Egg McRuffin’ with béchamel, vintage gouda, cheddar, bacon, and fried egg on an open-faced English muffin accompanied by tater tots.  




A surprising must-try is the fried bologna sandwich, with generous slabs of Leberkäse (from Forest Pork in Long Island) that have been flash-fried (beautifully charred on the outside but juicy within), then stacked with a sunnyside-up-egg on a bun slathered with mayo and Texas Pete.

Port-poached pear salad

In the wake of Paula-phobia and New Year’s resolutions, D’Alessio acknowledges that not everyone readily indulges in such decadent and rich meals, which is why he added the Old Dirty Bastard, a 7-grain sandwich of grilled beets and honey roasted carrots, goat cheese, and seasonal pickles.  A glistening port-poached pear arrives fanned over a mound of baby arugula, ornamented with craisins and candied pecans lightly tossed in a honey apple vinaigrette.  Paired with $4.50 cups of sweet potato coconut or turkey noodle soup with spinach and those spunky red chilies, hearty, light meals are just as exciting as their more lush counterparts.

Double-glazed Trix donut

Desserts are prepared by the duo of D’Alessio’s mother—who makes eclectic bread puddings (salted caramel & chocolate, red velvet, eggnog, and s’mores)—and sister—who turns out free-spirited pies and baked sweets.  “Montana doesn’t spend half the time worrying most people do,” D’Alessio brags of his sis, “which I think helps; if you’re afraid, the flavors don’t come out, which is what works here… everything is over the top.”  Her biggest hits include a cereal donut and a cereal bar marshmallow treat with peanut butter, Corn Pops, Lucky Charms, and a ribbon of homemade strawberry jam, as well as a banana pudding layered with chocolate chip banana bread, graham crackers, and Chessman shortbread cookies.  Quirky ice cream flavors often guest star, like Grape Kool-Aid or Hot Chocolate with marshmallows.

Homemade ancho beef chili cheddar fries

Downsides are minor and few, but can be easily avoided.  Ingredients and produce are inventoried to avoid excess waste, so daily specials often run out by the end of a busy meal service… best to arrive early if the website broadcasts an irresistible dish.  And remember that comfort is the operative word.  It may be a recipe for disaster to plan a “quick bite” during a peak service time—especially brunch.  With a tiny kitchen, orders can get stacked up—which the staff admits quite candidly as guests are being seated.  Stumptown coffee from Brooklyn can be ordered even while waiting to be seated.  Better yet, just around the corner is a liquor store where boozy brunchers can snag an extra bottle of cheap champagne to mimosify the time.  Because when it does come, the food is hug-your-ribs comforting, and the kind of stuff worth bragging about to friends for weeks to come.

Queens Comfort on Urbanspoon

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Petey's Burger adds more than just a new location

A cheeseburger, fries, and drink are a deal at Petey's for $8.21

Petey's Burger (30-17 30th Ave in Astoria, 46-46 Vernon Boulevard in Long Island City)

Though Vernon Boulevard brags the eagerly awaited soon-to-open second location of Astoria's famous Petey's Burger, patrons of the original spot have recently been treated to a few new off-menu items. Often compared to the West Coast smash hit, In-N-Out, Petey's doppelganger features a similar no-frills burger, only with a slightly juicier and more flavorsome Pat LaFrieda all-beef patty, sandwiched with iceberg lettuce, a wheel of tomato and onion, and gooey all-American cheese on a soft, fresh-baked bun.


Just as In-N-Out is known for its own own secret menu ("animal style" fries and burgers), Petey's is now offering their own version, called "California-style," with grilled onions, secret sauce, and melted cheese (with the new option of sweet potato fries).  Milkshakes are available with chocolate & strawberry swirl, as well. 


One of the most exciting new additions are Petey's kickin' chicken wings, substantially meaty and juicy with a crisp coating, available in classic buffalo, hot, super hot, smoky BBQ, honey mustard, and teriyaki.


While you can still order for delivery from the Petey's website, it should also be available via Seamless within the next few weeks.  One of the most affordable and deliciously addictive classic burgers in the city, sandwiches range from $3.99 (burger) to $6.99 (triple cheese) with meal combos averaging between $8 - $10.


The Petey's melt is served on grilled sourdough with caramelized onions and double cheese (pictured here with bacon added).  Petey's may not be your boutique patty with foie gras and fancy fixin's, but when it comes to a classic at a classic price, these burgers would be pretty difficult to beat.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

First Look: Killer Grizzly Burger & New Winter Menu at Bear

The Grizzly is a dangerously serious new contender

Bear Bar & Restaurant (12-14 31st Ave., Long Island City)

Chef Natasha Pogrebinsky is playing hard core.  The angel-faced young chef is refreshingly genuine and sweet face-to-face, but in the kitchen she is playing some serious hard ball.  Don't be fooled by the dazzle of the Swarovski crystal lamps.  This may be the home of Long Island City's first "New European" menu but not all dishes are duck confit and caviar fork-and-knife refined.  There's a burger, for one, that absolutely blew me away.


Starting with the bun, the buttery challah is sandwich perfection.  But the patty on this grizzly is absolutely mystifying.  Organic prime beef, your teeth are met with a beautiful chargrilled crunch, and then they immediately sink right into the middle of one of the most delicately ground, juiciest meatballs you have ever tasted.  And the seasoning... almost like a Balkan sausage or cevapi.  Add to that a blanket of melted fontina with paprika aioli, and the kicker--a crowning of carrots that have been shaved to paper thin ribbons, beer battered, and deep-fried.  All with a side of Persian pickles and steak fry wedges.  This bad boy truly is a very special burger, and at $9 for the entire platter, it's easier on the pocketbook than many of its neighbors.


The duck shepherd's pie, available in two portion sizes, is one of the most sophisticated, heartiest, most savory winter meals to hit Western Queens.  The ridiculously tender slow-roasted duck has been gently pulled, tossed with a blend of seasonal winter vegetables, and capped with toasted mashed Yukon potatoes, served in an individual ceramic pot ($9/$16).


An edible sculpture, the winter ceviche is scallops tossed in lemon and lime juices with delicately sliced Granny Smith apples, cilantro, and scallions, all jeweled with Alaskan salmon caviar, wasabi tobiko, and pea shoots.


Now I'm a sucker for a croquette, but I also love arancini--the Italian stuffed rice balls.  But the Three Little Bears is like a divine marriage of the two, almost little shepherd's pie fritters.  The perfect snack, these three substantial croquettes are stuffed with meat and cheese, served on a smeared dollop of creme fraiche.  Crispy golden delicious perfection.


Earthy woodland mushrooms have been stewed with roasted onions, garlic, thyme, and rosemary, then tucked into a ramekin with baby potatoes, topped with a soft-centered farm egg that has been brûlée torched with a ribbon of cheese.


Crispy-coated pork belly stuffed with garlic and parsley has been rendered exceptionally buttery and tender, one of the most delicious platings of it I have ever enjoyed.  One of the chef's personal favorites, this is a quintessential hearty winter dish.


Two pasta dishes are showcased on the winter menu, including a slow-roasted rabbit with house fettuccine and a white wine cream sauce, or one of my personal favorites, a stroganoff of mixed forest mushrooms seared with onions in a garlic-rosemary gravy with cheese shavings.


Crispy-skinned pan-seared sole with just a hint of lemon zest is an exercise in how delicious simplicity can be, served on a pedestal of potatoes poached in butter and dill with carrots, celery, and scallions.


Plump diver sea scallops make a highly-requested return, stewed in cherry tomatoes and a tarragon-barley risotto.


Short ribs braised in red wine falls off the bone, accompanied by carrots and fried-baked potatoes.


Formerly a whole-roasted duck, the confit is now available as a leg and thigh, served in natural juices, with a whole roasted apple and pan-seared young potatoes.


On Tuesdays, mussels & fries and select wine & cocktails are just $5 at the bar from 6PM to midnight.  And don't forget to check out the Saturday and Sunday brunch prix fixe for $14 with unlimited coffee and a brunch cocktail.

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