Saigon Sandwiches & Deli

Not to be confused with Saigon Restaurant, this little Snack Shop-Convenience Store-Sandwich Shop resides in the same strip mall as Cam Ky, and right next to, of all things Cafe Dore(which I need to update). So you have two shops serving Banh Mi, right next to each other….and both shops do a pretty brisk business.

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Moresaigonswdeli_001 This little shop also stocks various Vietnamese snack items, serves Boba and other drinks…and from what I noticed does a good business in Vietnamese Phone Cards and  Vietnamese Cigarettes. Who needs 7-11????

A little old lady occupies the area behind the cash register, taking orders, and ringing up purchases. One dozen variations of Banh Mi are offered, any one of which would be a nice remedy for the heat.

On this day I ordered the Banh Mi Dac Biet($3.25):

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Saigonswdeli03_2 Thin slices of Lean Pork Sausage and Vietnamese Ham on a medium sized (7-8") baguette. I thought the ratio of meats to pickled vegetables, cucumber, etc, was very good. The baguette had a nice bit of "crackle" but was a tad too doughy. Some richness was provided by the nice "smear" of Pate, which when I tasted had a very pronounced cinnamon flavor. The sliced jalapenos weren’t as searingly hot as what I’m used too. Even the cilantro consisted of more leaves than tough sinewy stems. This was pretty good.

The Banh Mi Thit Nuong (BBQ Pork – $2.75):

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Saigonswdeli05 As with the Banh Mi Dac Biet, the ratio of ingredients was good. But the BBQ Pork, though very nicely caramelized, really fell short in flavor. Very bland.

Did you notice these sandwiches are nearly sliced in half? You can halve the sandwich with little effort. This gave me an idea….

One of the Guys in the office had never had Banh Mi, so one day, I asked him if he’d like to try some of these sandwiches. Which meant that I could purchase several different sandwiches, and half them with him. Why didn’t I think of this sooner?

The Banh Mi Xiu Mai (Meatball – $2.75):

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This Banh Mi featured chopped, moist, "porky" meatballs. The crust of the bread was nice and crusty, if a bit on the dry side. I noticed that the Jalapenos in this bunch of Banh Mi were on the mild side as well.

Banh Mi Ba Chi (Pork Belly aka Vietnamese Bacon – $2.75):

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Moresaigonswdeli_007 Thin slices of roasted pork belly made this a a slightly chewy sandwich. I didn’t think that there was enough pork belly, the overall flavor was on the mild side.

Banh Mi Cha Lua (Lean Pork Sausage – $2.75):

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Moresaigonswdeli_011 I described this as being sort of like Bologna to my eating companion….he really didn’t care much for it. I think it was more of a texture thing. I thought the portion size of the sausage was too small to really make much of an impact on the sandwich. This was the one sandwich where the flavor of black pepper and mayo came through. Not bad, but I’ve had better.

I think the sandwiches at Saigon Sandwiches and Deli are pretty good. The bread is always crusty, and they are generous with their pickled vegetables. The prices seem high, but I’ve noticed that the prices for Banh Mi are rising in the area (A Chau’s Banh Mi now top $3). The Little old Lady gets more friendly as she gets to know you. On my last visit, as I was waiting for my order she handed me the shop’s business card, and told me, "next time call ahead, and you won’t have to wait". I’ve also noticed that the shop has a table right outside that is always full of people drinking coffee and other drinks having a good time. so next time you need some Vietnamese Phone Cards….or maybe some Vietnamese Cigarettes, give SaigonSaigonswdeli06  Sandwiches and Deli a try.

Saigon Sandwiches & Deli
4133 University Ave
San Diego, CA 92105

Open Tues-Sun 7am – 5pm

Point Loma Seafoods- a relaxing lunch on the waterfront

mmm-yoso!!! is never on vacation.  Today, Cathy is blogging.  Kirk is busy with work and doesn’t feel like it.  Ed is in Yuma, ideally also busy with work.  Why am I not busy now? Oh well.

Hi.  The Mister and I were in one of those depressed moods on Saturday, again (please do not mention the words "state", "Appalachian" or "Oregon" together in any one sentence, for a while).  We wanted seafood, and what better place to go than Point Loma Seafood for a nice lunch? It was after 4 p.m. and not crowded.  We parked and enjoyed the view first. Plsf_012_2

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We could see the downtown business buildings as well as some of North Island Naval Air Station.  We also saw a cruise ship leaving.  Most of the fishing boats had not returned from their long day of work yet.

We walked to the front door and saw the Specials Board out front.Plsf_003_2 Plsf_008_2 Plsf_007 Fresh raw soft shell crabs were being sold for $5 each, but I know I could not fry them up at home the same way I could get them done here.

Whoo Hoo! Soft shell crabs are in season again.  I was going to get my ‘usual’ the fish and chips platter, but, oh no.   Having them cook it properly is worth the $12.02 price.

You walk in; it is a fish market.  I did not take photos inside, but the menu is up on the wall in back, as well as here and on the website.  (where there are some good photos inside the store). The men behind the counter will take your order, give you a number and you wait.  When they call your number, you go to get your food and pay.

While waiting, I asked a nice Young Man for ‘about a pound’ of assorted smoked fish ($4.99/lb- in the corner of the refrigerator). I got this beautiful selectionPlsf_006_3 :

There was smoked shark, salmon, swordfish, wahoo, bonita and  two pieces of salmon candy (belly).  The total price for this was $6.74 and it was a snack with our late lunch, as well as being our lunch on Sunday.

Soon, our number was called, we paid and walked next door to the seating area, found and empty table and got ready to eat.Plsf_004_4

The ceviche cocktail ($4.16) is made with fish only ( no scallops and no shrimpPlsf_009)

along with an excellent ‘salsa’ of fresh, tasty tomatoes, sweet light flavored onions and cilantro, all marinated in fresh citrus juice.  You can buy a pint in the counter for $10.90, but this was just the right size for us.  (Our beverage here is always the iced coffee, by the way).  They have a good selection of beers on tap and bottled as well as wines you can buy by the glass or by the bottle in the store.Plsf_005

The Mister had a craving for the squid sandwich ($7.38) that is made with strips of squid steak and served with tartar sauce on fresh sourdough bread.  It is kind of sweet and fried to a proper crispness.  I don’t care for sourdough in general and thought the bread flavor took a bit away from the squid flavor and ate a piece of squid with just the (in house made) tartar sauce.

Plsf_010_2 My soft shell crab sandwich.  One crab, breaded, fried, plump, flavorful, cut in half and served with the wonderful simple in house made cole slaw on a fresh soft white bread roll.  Oh, it was perfectly fried; juicy and crispy and so fresh.

As I said, I usually either get the fish and chips plate, made with whatever fish is in abundance that day and served with skinny crispy fried potatoes and the fresh cole slaw for $9.23, or I will get the tuna salad sandwich ($7.38), made with fresh baked tuna steak and very simply/light dressed with mayonnaise and celery.  Always fresh and wonderful.

We went walking around on the waterfront and saw they were getting ready for the fishing boats to come in with fish for processing and took note of the new charges they had for the Fishermen.Plsf_011_5

We have always enjoyed the simplicity and freshness of the food here and if you haven’t tried it, you should. 

Point Loma Seafoods "The freshest thing in town" 2805 Emerson Street San Diego 92106 (619) 223-1109

Mon-Sat 9 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Sun 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Link to website

Solunto Bakery in Little Italy- Breakfast and snacks and baked goods

Solunto has closed.  It will be missed.

mmm-yoso is being blogged by Cathy today.  Kirk is doing something else. Ed is sweltering.

Hi, again. The Mister and I were downtown early on Saturday morning and wanted breakfast.  We have a few "regular" spots we like to go to before the crowds (and parking meters) kick into gear, and since I do blog about the foods I eat…here we go!Solunto

Solunto Bakery on India Street.  Been there forever.  They supply the bread to most of the Italian restaurants- in a par baked form- so it is always fresh.  We go to the source.

Technically the food area in the back is "Honey Bee Ltd." It is run by the same ladies who work in the bakery. They use the same cash register.

Solunto_009 Solunto_007 Solunto_006 The red menu is the breakfast menu; the middle one is the sandwich and specialties menu and the third, more yellow one is the bakery items price sheet. (Click onto any photo to enlarge)

Solunto_001 I got the spinach and cheese two egg omelet ($6.95) It comes with the potatoes and a fresh roll and butter.  You can watch the ladies crack the eggs and make the omelet and grab a par-baked Frenchette roll and warm it in the convection oven.  (You can buy the par baked frenchettes for 40¢ each or $4.35/dozen).

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You can see from this cross section that there is plenty of fresh spinach inside the omelet.  The cheese was a mild cheddar. The potatoes are nicely crispy on the outside and flavorful, soft on the inside…olive oil for cooking, Not overly buttery.  Of course the Frenchette is excellent. Crispy outside, with a great sesame flavor in every bite.

Solunto_002 The Mister saw the calzone in the refrigerator case and asked if we could have one heated up for breakfast…of course we could! ($5.95)Solunto_004

As you can see, it is filled with ham, pepperoni and capicola as well as the nicest, creamiest, freshest ricotta and mozzarella I have had in a long time, surrounded by that wonderful handmade crust.  The sauce for dipping was a very nice tomato based one, with  a slight amount of garlic and olive oil added.  Just right. Tastes so fresh.Solunto_003   

The regular coffee here is, meh, and the cappuccino is better with breakfast, but we knew we were heading to the New Downtown Albertson's (it has a Peets inside) and so we just got a regular coffee on this day.

We always get something par baked ( panini are 55¢ each or $5.75/dozen or  a demi loaf $1.75), but I didn't take a picture and since it is Tuesday, well, it's gone.

Occasionally, as it says on the menu, they have Sfingi for 25¢ each or 5/$1 and I grab them up when I can…(basically small fried donut holes, made with orange and lemon zest- usually eaten for the Feast of San Guiseppe- and sometimes stuffed with a ricotta mixture if you get it from a Good Italian Home)(The Mister and I had some from this teensy bakery in Naples, still warm, and it brings back good memories to taste the warm orange/lemon flavoring in a lightly fried dough…)

Solunto Bakery and Honey Bee Ltd. 1643 India Street San Diego 92101 (619) 233-0881

Vinh Long Food to Go

Early one weekend morning, while taking one of my now all too rare excursions checking for new restaurants, I noticed a little shop in an alleyway, on El Cajon Boulevard, between Chamoune avenue and 46th street.

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Now how the heck did I miss this place? So I made a mental note to remember the name, and reinforced that by constantly repeating the mantra, "Vinh Long Food to Go, Vinh Long Food to Go….." Can you imagine if I got into an accident and had to be questioned? I’d be lying on the ground, being questioned:

"What’s your name?"
"Vinh Long Food to Go…."
"Where do you live?"
"Vinh Long Food to Go…."
"Do you know where you are?"
"Vinh Long Food to Go…."

Am I a food dork, or what? Of course, I subsequently went home and forgot all about Vinh Long. For some reason, two of my surviving brain cells managed to rub against each other in my deteriorating gray matter….and what did I remember? "Vinh Long Food to Go…." of course! I managed to snag a parking slot(of the 6 available) in front of the tiny 2 table shop. The customers waiting to be served were a combination of older Vietnamese Men and Hispanic Young Men. The steam table was doing bang-up business.

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Vinhlong03 But since the weather recently has been on the warm side, I decided to get some Banh Mi. The prices were pretty much in line, at $2.50.

So here we go. The Banh Mi Thit Nguoi(combination meat):

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Here, the combination meat consisted of thinly sliced "Char Siu" like pork, which was freshly sliced for my sandwich, and Gio Lua(lean pork sausage – sometimes called Vietnamese Bologna). Not much meat, but lots of pickled radish and carrot, which really didn’t have much taste. Enjoyed the cross slice of cucumber, but some caution should be exercised with those hidden Jalapenos! The bread was slightly toasted but still too doughy for my tastes. The length of these sandwiches were the usual Banh Mi length of about 6-8 inches.

The BBQ Pork Banh Mi.

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This was by far my favorite Banh Mi. Thinly sliced marinated and grilled pork(think sweet-salty) along with the usual suspects from above. Oh yes, and those who know me understand that I’m not a big fan of tough stringy cilantro stems…..short stems with leaves are fine, but I don’t eat Banh Mi with the intent purpose of flossing my teeth.

The Banh Mi Cha Lua (Lean Pork Sausage)

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Vinhlong07 Though I thought this sandwich was a bit short on the meat side, what made this sandwich really tasty was the nice "smear" of pate. Again the bread was a bit too doughy for my tastes, and not crusty enough. There was a bit of the jalapeno roulette going on with this sandwich as well. But, that pate was very good!

The service I received was friendly, and prompt. This is not fast food, and it takes a while to toast the baguette. The steam table food goes for $4.50 for 3 and a starch, and seemed to be quite popular.

Vinh Long Food to Go
4575 El Cajon Blvd Ste B
San Diego, CA 92115

Oh yes, parking is limited, and the alleyway is pretty much a single lane job. Which led to an interesting confrontation as I was waiting to back out of my parking stall. An older Vietnamese woman driving a early 90’s Toyota Corolla turns into the alley. A huge dual axel pick-up is coming down the alley. And yes ladies and gentleman, we have a stand-off! Guy in the pick-up pops his horn and waves for the little old lady to back-up…….."Ba Noi"(Grandma) does nothing. Guy, sticks his head out the window and screams something I can’t write here to Ba Noi, nothing happens. About ten seconds later, Ba Noi, apparently fed up with the situation, sticks a closed fist out the window and starts driving toward the pick-up. White Guy in pick-up’s eyes almost pops out of his head, he quickly shifts his truck into reverse and quickly backs down the alley! He-he-he, you don’t mess with Grandma!!!!

Tea Houses- Boba- Snacks? Why has this been kept secret?

Bolsa_011 mmm-yoso is not on vacation.  That is the name of the blog, silly. Cathy is a-blogging and Kirk is taking a much needed rest, and really is on vacation.

Oh, I am sooo the White Girl on this blog…I had no idea exactly how Caucasian I was.  Sure, I had the whole "chee fee" incident, and I didn’t know sago were the same as boba and…well, I didn’t know much about boba…and, I had seen "tea houses" and "tapioca drinks" and figured ‘eh, Asian Starbucks wanna-be’s’.  Really.  I figured those ‘tea’ places served hot tea and those silly boba drinks.  Lots of young Asian kids hang out there; I saw some drinks coming out in plastic cups and also figured well…you do know the signs say "Starbucks Coffee", right? So it must be the same- tea and those boba  drinks and Starbucks makes coffee and all those frou frou drinks.  No big deal.

ANYHOW…Years ago, from the place inside 99 Ranch, I got a tea and milk and ‘pearl’ drink and it was good tasting, although I thought chewing on the giant boba (tapioca pearls) was kind of like chewing on snot, albeit flavorless snot, but the boba part held not much fascination to me…I love tapioca pudding, but the actual boba in a beverage…eh.  Well, I liked the tea part, then the milk and there was a lot a lot of liquid sugar…and I don’t like sweet.

Then there was an epiphany.  I was having lunch with Mr.  C, at Bolsa on Mira Mesa. Bolsa_009

and we had our ‘standard’ Pho stuff:Bolsa Bolsa_008   Bolsa_006

and we started talking about boba drinks. In my mind I was thinking, ‘oh yeah, sweet stuff with snot chewies on the bottom’. However Mr. C has never steered me wrong, and he started telling me that the place in the same mall as Bolsa, Tapioca Heaven, had the *best* milk tea boba of anywhere. So, I was polite.  I had the milk tea at Tapioca Heaven and it was *wonderful*.  It tasted like …tea…with milk…and there was a choice of boba  to put in it- regular brown, small brown, green and strawberry. Boba Bolsa_010 You could ask for no sweetener.  Who knew?

The most fascinating thing I noticed at first inside of Tapioca Heaven was that they had free wi-fi.  Hello!

Then I noticed something else, much more important- they have snacks.  Fried snacks.  Inexpensive fried snacks. But Mr. C and I had just finished a nice lunch at Bolsa and I didn’t want to eat any more, even a snack.Boba_001_2

and so, I wrote Kirk a note. "Why haven’t I heard of these places that sell boba drinks with snacks?" I asked.  "They are wonderful- so much more fun than a Starbucks, which does fascinating high calorie coffee based beverages and sells some ‘meh’ tasting sweets and sandwiches, but by no means sell fried goodies".

The reply, from The Missus, was "Oh boba, that is so last century". 

Ahem.

So anyhow, I was on a quest.   Since Mr. C had told me that  the boba milk tea at Tapioca Heaven was the best, I decided to make that my standard…to see if any tasted better anywhere else.  Of course, I needed to try snacks also.

So The Mister and I went to Tapioca Express. See, it used to be next to Bolsaa-Te_2on Convoy.  Bolsaa isn’t there any more, so you won’t be confused. It is going to become some Cajun-y place in the summer.

When you walk into Tapioca Express, the wall is lined with the menu of beverage choices.Te_009   At the register, where you order and pay, were two typewritten pieces of paper with a menu.  The Mister and I had to try a bit of everything.

Te_004 Te_005

Te_006 Te_002

Te_008 Te_007 Chicken nuggets, chicken wings, fried squid, all with a choice of no spice, medium or hot. (we tried all three,the no spice was great and the medium was good too, the hot was just a little too much in the sense that you couldn’t taste the chicken as well as with the medium spice).  Steamed pork dumplings and also fried donut holes with both whipped cream and also a vanilla cream dipping sauce.  Each of these snacks were less than $4 each. This is wonderful snacking- or a meal.  I saw one guy with something that looked like loco moco and I will go back to try that.

Next we went to K Sandwiches, got a boba milk tea, hot milk coffee and fresh squeezed orange juice. Boba_002

Also, since we were at K…I got a pate chaudBoba_008; its only $1 and so flaky and fresh and filled with a wonderful pork pate mixture.  A friend, who  was born in France and is working out here,  said it is very authentic and good.

We also got a BBQ pork Bahn Mi  ( think it is Number 9 on the menu) for $3.69.  Here is a cross section view of both.Boba_007

Snacks, free wi fi and boba drinks.  Fascination. 

So, the other day The Mister and I went to the Tea Station on Clairmont Mesa.  Its in the same mall as Lolita’s and Teri Cafe and that Pho place everyone says they go to.

Boba_009They have sit down service inside, and a menuBoba_015 .

We sat down and were waited on! At the other places you would walk up and pay and wait for your drink, kind of like Starbucks. Boba_016   

We tried the tea flavored dumplings ($6.50)Boba_013 Boba_014

The flavors were different between the green ones and white ones both the dumpling and the filling, but you can see in the second photo (click- all the photos enlarge) a cross section and that the dumplings were quite meaty and full, very fresh and I believe one was chicken and the other pork.  They were delici-yoso!

We also had to try the fried spicy chicken ($4.50)Boba_010

Lightly crispy, nice spice (you can tell them the level of spice you want).  Fresh.  Great.  Gosh, it’s adult chicken nuggets!

Boba_012 Tea flavored spiced pork slices ($6.50), served with 3 side dishes, it says…either they figured we could not count because we were White, or rice is one of the sides.  Whatever.  Plenty of food.

Oh, and we got beverages…

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So, anyhow, the secret is out.  Tea, milk tea, boba, not Starbucks…all with free wi fi and snacks…fried snacks.

We have now gone to many of the tea places around town, not always with a camera…and we try the fried chicken at least.  Nothing has been bad or disappointing.   

Some of the beverages are unusual- sesame, lavender, rose, yogurt..just about everything Starbucks doesn’t have.  { Snow ice, or snow bubbles are merely finely *fine* shaved ice with flavoring-kind of a Slushee®, for the White folks out there.}

Tapioca Heaven definitely had the most tea-tasting milk tea, but getting any of the beverages without sweetener helps.

Oh, and now I kind of enjoy chewing on those tapioca snot-like things….it’s part of the whole "boba experience"

Tapioca Heaven Cafe 9225 Mira Mesa Boulevard Suite 115 San Diego 92126

Tapioca Express 4646 Convoy, #106B San Diego 92111 (858) 363-9889 website

Tea Station 7315 Clairmont Mesa Boulevard San Diego 92111 (858)268-8198website

Cafe 67-Great, plentiful food at the end of the freeway!

mmm-yoso is the blog and you are looking at it.  Today’s information is provided by Cathy.  Kirk is on vacation.

Hello,again.  Cathy here.  I was talking with a friend, Mrs. L, who told me I had to try this place,  located at the  end of Highway 67.  I was trying to think to myself ‘where does a Highway end?’…and it occurred to me that on Highway 67 in Lakeside, once you hit  Mapleview Street with the Rodeo on the Northeast corner, there is a traffic signal.  The Highway does indeed end, goes down to one lane for a while and then vacillates from one to two lanes up to and through Ramona and to Julian and it is all called 67.  So, indeed, Highways do stop being Highways at some point.

I had seen the sign in front of the old Pernicano’s, Cafe67 on that Southwest corner of Mapleview at 67, one day in February and had made a mental note that I should try it out one day, when I was in the area again.  I did pass it a few more times, but always was alone and not overly hungry, and it kind of looks a little too new and gimmicky and I didn’t want to go inside alone to eat.  So I waited.   Then Mrs. L told me about *how* good it was, and that we should go there one day, soon. She even gave me a paper menu she had taken from the restaurant (she did not know I did this blog, which made her recommendation make me take note).Cafe67_003 Cafe67_002 Well, first thing I noticed is that the entire menu is available "To Go".  Shoot me now. Then I noticed they are only open from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m..  Hmmm…limited cuisine.  I like that.

So, this past Saturday, The Mister and I decided to head East, to the Santee Swap Meet, instead of west and Kobey’s Swap Meet. Of course, we were hungry and wanted breakfast. I decided to try the basic:Cafe67_004

One poached egg, Monterey potatoes(shredded potatoes with Jack cheese and herbs), bacon and rye toast with coffee, of course. ($5.50) 

The bread was a nice, thick marble rye- I imagine the one they use to make the lunch sandwiches.  The bacon was thick and crispy, the way I like it.  The egg was poached and still runny with  a very fresh orange colored yolk …and, wow! those Monterey potatoes.  I have had the pre-made reheated, Sysco’d Monterey cakes and I like them.  These were  made from freshly shredded potatoes, had evenly dispersed shredded Monterey Jack cheese and the herbs were a nice blend; perhaps Herbes De Provence, but I am not certain.Cafe67_005 Cafe67_006

The Mister could not decide, and got "The Works" Omelet ($7.75) with the home fried potatoes (That is almost half a plate of red skinned potato quarters, topped with cheese) and a biscuit, served with either country gravy or honey.

The omelet was made with at least three eggs, filled with ham, bacon and sausage, bell peppers, tomatoes, onions and cheese (The Mister asked for no onions and it was no problem).  The bacon and ham were nice and thick and cut into nice sized pieces and the breakfast sausage was crumbled and excellent. The home fried potatoes were superb. Prepared simply and were so fresh tasting and wonderful, especially with that cheese.  That biscuit- oh my!.  Definitely made from scratch, shortening based, baking powder.  Wonderful, light, large and if I do say so, perfect!

This place seems to always be busy yet service is great, attentive and fast.  I have seen buses stop here on weekdays; some sort of regular, local tour group it seems to be.  There is a larger side room and I saw that the Local Rotary Club meets here also.

The only downside- I confess, I am a coffee snob.  It was fresh coffee, but either Folgers or Farmer John brand and I just don’t like the flavor.  It was served with real half and half though, in those cool coffee cups.  That kind of made up for it all.

We saw several tables getting lunch menu items, sandwiches in particular which were *huge* and looked really good.  If made with the same bread I had for toast, they were a good size and at minimum, great bread.  From what I have heard, everything here is good, and I believe it.  Thanks for telling me to try this, Mrs. L! If you happen to be in Lakeside,or just traveling through it, on 67, do stop in.  I think you will be pleasantly surprised.

Cafe 67 12381 Mapleview at Highway 67 Lakeside, CA 92040 (619) 443-4100 Open daily 6 a.m.-3 p.m.

Mediterranean Cafe on Washington Street-walk on in!

mmm-yoso is the blog.  It’s Cathy’s turn today.  Kirk is on vacation. 

Hi, it’s me again.  The Mister and I were driving about Little Italy about noon on Saturday because we so enjoy trying to find a parking space and then walking many blocks.  We did not feel like waiting in lines with lots of tourists, but were hungry and decided to head up Washington Street and probably going for a slice of pizza.  Bronx Pizza is really close by.

Being the ever vigilant blogger, I knew that Bronx would kind of be a redundant post; a ‘wasted meal’ in a sense, and that it would probably just provide fodder for the vocal anti-Bronx crowd out there.  The Mister and I both like it, and that is that.  It is good pizza.

Ah, where have we also gone that we liked but I have not yet blogged about? Oh sure, Kirk did, but like a long time ago, in September of 2005. Kitty corner from Bronx-Medcafe

Mediterranean Cafe! Yes, we went here about 2 years ago, -when the line for Bronx was out the door- and we *really* liked it.  Besides, I sort of wanted some sort of greens and Bronx is only pizza. 

Medcafe_002 Here is the menu.  Pretty much standard Mediterranean fare, with a lot of vegetarian options.

There are nine small tables inside.  It seems most people were getting "To Go" orders, although at all times there were at least two tables with ‘eat in’ people, even at 2 p.m. on a Saturday.  You can walk up and order and pay, or sit at a table and someone will take your order and bring the food out to you.

I wanted to try the Gyros and hummus combo plate ($8.75).

Gyros, hot pita, a lot of mixed greens salad with shredded carrot, tomato, olives, fetaMedcafe_004

In store made fresh hummus.  Herbed rice (the herb was dill) with green beans mixed in.  (Option of rice, fries or more salad was given).  The rice is not the sticky kind, but was fresh and tasty. 

The gyros meat was plentiful and good.  Not the best I have ever had, but not bad.  The hummus was wonderful.   The side of tzatziki was also fresh and nicely sour.  You make your own salad dressing with the condiments provided on the table. 

Medcafe_003_2 The Mister, still craving pizza, tried the Cheese pizza, small (8 inch) served with a  side of Greek salad ($5.95).Medcafe_005 

This was a *lot* of cheese, melted properly (i.e., some burned cheese)on top of a pocketless pita and had a mild tomato/garlic/olive oil  sauce. Wow!  It was heavy with cheese and we can only imagine how much they put on top of the ‘large’ (11 inch) pita bread. Excellent.

Even though we weren’t that hungry, I was curious about the sign "we proudly make our own Key Lime Pie" at the counter and decided we must try a slice. Medcafe_006

Wow, again.  Real whipped cream topping-not from a can- and the lime flavor was subtle, not sweet, texture creamy and the crust was a good crispy graham cracker crust.  Definitely home made.  It costs $2.50 a slice or $18 for the whole pie.  Once again, I strongly urge everyone to be certain to have their children study math.  {This slice is not 1/8 or even 1/7 of the whole pie-the profit margin on the whole versus sliced pie is quite high}{This phenomenon shall hereafter be dubbed the "inverse Costco effect": thanks, Hao}

I am thinking that it is even busier in here during the week, with this great deal on sandwiches that is available. Medcafe_001 (click and it will enlarge)  I am trying to think of how I would be able to have the tzatziki sauce on a sandwich with any of those meats, but suppose I could just do a cheese sandwich and all the veggies and then it would work.   

Anyhow, try this place; it’s been in the same location for a long time and it’s good.

Mediterranean Cafe 112 West Washington (corner of 1st and Washington) San Diego 92102 (619)98-7738 Fax (619) 298-7739

Arely French Bakery Cafe- Excellent food!

mmm-yoso is not on vacation.  Cathy is just letting you see some of her meals, versus Kirk showing you what He ate.

Hi again.  The Mister and I were on a quest for some weird items the other day (among them, helium quality balloons and an Old Maid card game), and ended up at the 99 Cent Only store in Clairemont Mesa mall.  When we were leaving, of course I was hungry and I looked over at Woody’s Hot Dogs, where I have enjoyed a few good meals. (I still can’t figure out how to put up a link to the post that Kirk did on Woody’s.  Look it up under the "hot dogs" section of the blog on the left column here; and, really, we have heard all the Woody jokes already). I noticed on the corner right on the other side of the parking lot, the old Liquor store was gone and a pick Up Stix was in its place.  Then I looked for the Viking Bakery and it, too, was gone and in its place wasBistroa_2 this signage.

Now for some reason, I have been seeing and going to a number of French Bistro places around the county lately and had intended to go back and blog them, but hadn’t had the time  Fortunately, I had my camera with me, so here it goes. 

This one, Arely, is the smallest of all I have gone to, but also the least expensive.  There isn’t much atmosphere,but the food was *excellent*, and I mainly talk about the food in this blogging forum, so that is what I will concentrate on.

There are 3 tables inside, two tables out in front and the menu is on the wall (in all the other French Bistros I have gone to, there is a menu you can sit down and read, then you go up and order and sit back down again).  This way, at Arely, is fine though.Bistroa_001 Bistroa_002

We decided to try some "basics" to see how well it was done.

The Parisien sandwich-ham with Brie, lettuce and tomato on a baguette ($4.50)Bistroa_004.  The bread is fresh made in the store. The ham was black forest, and excellent, and, I dare say, too much ham was in the sandwich…the Brie was not warm, but cut into chunks with the rind and I could taste it, and it was good.  I would have been happy with just the Brie and bread, actually…and the lettuce  was crispy and tomato slice had flavor (unusual these days).

We got a wedge of the spinach and cheese quiche-Bistroa_003_2 only $2.95. A quarter of the made in store quiche, filled with fresh spinach, a nutty flavored swiss cheese, creamy eggy custard, nutmeg and a delightful, light crust.  They offer 3 flavors a day  the spinach and cheese, ham and cheese and vegetable) and you can buy a whole quiche for $12…of course, I would just buy 4 individual slices…(this is when Basic Math comes into play in real life).

We also wanted to try the French Onion soup ($3.50), since it is a French Cafe…Bistroa_005 DO NOT be put off by the styrofoam cup.  The ambiance is the *only* thing lacking here.  You are not paying for it, you are paying for good food, and that is what you get. 

The soup was superb; filled with a fresh herb-y, beefy broth topped with  slice of fresh bread and more of that wonderful swiss cheese (it tasted close to Jarlsberg, so nutty in flavor).

The bakery items are made in store and are beautiful.  I saw one person eating an omelet and it was quite large.  I will go back for breakfast. 

This place has excellent food.  If you are going to the movie theater just on the other side of the mall, this is a place to go to either before or after.  They have just extended their hours (used to be open only until 3 p.m.).  Give it a try, you will not be disappointed.

Arley French Bakery Cafe 4961-a Clairemont Mesa ( in  the Clairemont Mall at Clairemont and Clairemont Mesa; Two places down from Woody’s Hot Dogs) Open 7:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Mon-Sat, 7:30 – 6:00 p.m. Sunday

Observing Lent-Part 2, A plethora of fast food seafood

mmm-yoso is not on vacation.  Cathy is continuing blogging and Kirk is merely eating out somewhere and not telling you about it.

Hi once more.  This is part of my little blogging about Lent, the Christian sacrifice of the 40 days before Easter, usually having to do with food (although, again, some Christians sacrifice with stuff I think might be even more difficult for some of us, like giving up television for those 40 days, or even the Internet…) one common sacrifice is ‘not eating meat’ for those 40 days, or at least ‘not eating meat on Friday…and now there is a new definition as to "meat".  I was raised Catholic and, apparently fish, shrimp and various sea foods do not ‘count’ as meat.  You may have noticed this lately…places that normally do not sell fish have some kind of fish sandwich on their menu.   

Jack in the Box comes to mind. $1.29 for the fish sandwich.Lent_006 

Quite nice.  Two pieces of fish, lightly battered and served with lettuce and tartar sauce on a sesame seed bun.

Del Taco has a fish taco for $1.39Lent_001.

It is served with two corn tortillas and is one large piece of fried with cornmeal batter fish, on top of a bed of shredded cabbage, a white sauce and some salsa, as well as a wedge of lime to squeeze over it all.

Del Taco also has a crispy shrimp taco for $1.79.Lent_002 

This is served on a single flour tortilla.  the shrimp are tasty and juicy and with a nice crust.  Its also served with the cabbage/white sauce/salsa concoction, as well as the wedge of lime. I liked it a lot.

As an aside, one of my favorite sandwiches is the tuna salad from K Sandwiches. $3.49.  Its made fresh daily and served on a fresh baked croissant.

But, overall, my most favorite, and decadent indulgence is the infamous Filet-o-Fish from McDonald’sLent_005 -and it is only $1.29 on Friday at most participating McDonald’s.  (It used to be 99¢, but with the advent of the raised minimum wage, it all trickles down to us, you know).  I used to know the calorie count, but I try to ignore it, and merely enjoy…It’s on the airy white bread bun, served with a lot of tartar sauce and a slice of …mmmmm…American processed cheese food.  Its the only time I eat that orange goopy stuff , and I love it.   

The most expensive, but by far a meal in itself (you don’t need to buy more than one) is the Fish Sandwich from Carl’s, Jr.Lent_007  ($3.19)

Two large pieces of beer battered fish on a large (made for the $6 burger) sesame seed bun, with lettuce and tomato and tartar sauce.   It does taste great and you don’t need to buy two.

And, last, for now, but not least, is the infamous 99¢ Fish Stacker from KFC.Lent_008

KFC uses their own (patented by them) style of cooking the chicken and also this fish.  Its very close to Broaster™ method in that its pressure fried.  The fish does not taste like the chicken, it is cooked in its own area of the store.  Its a good size piece of fish and served on a sesame seeded roll.  It was very good.  If you are familiar with the KFC Snackers size, it can be or might not be a meal, depending on your eating habits.

So that’s it for now.  I did not bother to show you Rubio’s 99¢ (on Tuesdays only) fish taco, nor their shrimp taco.  Its always good there. 

Hope everyone is having a good Lent season.  As we talked about  in the comments section of "Observing Lent, Part One",  sometimes the ‘sacrifice’ of having to eat fish on Friday is actually a treat for a lot of us, so it kind of isn’t a sacrifice.  Easter is just around the corner, though.

Baby Back Jack’s Old Fashioned Broiler

*** Baby Back Jack's has closed

A few months back Howie, who does A Foodie's-Eye View of San Diego's Best Restaurants mentioned "Jack's Broiler" to me in an email, about a month after, Candice, who posts in Oh-So Yummy mentioned Jack's Broiler as well. So during a recent weekend, we drove on up to Hillcrest and dropped by Baby Back Jack's Old Fashioned Broiler(whew, that's a mouthful) for lunch.

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If I remember correctly, this used to be a Yogurt shop. The interior of Jack's goes for a mild "retro-old fashioned" look.

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And tunes like Earth Angel and Venus in Bluejeans flow throughout the restaurant.

The menu is small, but covers very familiar territory, with everything from Hot Dogs and Burgers, to Baby Back Ribs.

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On this visit, the Missus went for the 1/2 of Jack's "Famous Wild Chicken"($7.95). Check out the "wild chicken"……

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Jacksbroiler05 Basically, a roasted half chicken that is slathered with BBQ sauce and heated on the grill. The chicken comes with Coleslaw and one "side", in this case the Missus chose fries.

The Missus told me the coleslaw wasn't really that great, a bit on the sweet side for Her…but She did scarf it up. I loved the fries, which were the skin-on natural style fries, with a chili-garlic-paprika seasoning. The Missus thought the fries were a bit on the salty side…but I finished them all up. Never got a chance to use the Ranch-style dipping sauce that was provided.

The chicken was quite large, and the Missus couldn't finish it.

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On the good side, the chicken was large, and the meat moist through and through. On the bad side, the interior of the chicken was still slightly cold. And though the dark meat had some flavor, the white meat was bland. The BBQ sauce didn't do it for me either, it had a bit of a neutral BBQ flavor, but had a weird aftertaste, and left a strange coating on my tongue. Overall, this was quite a bit of food.

I had the "World Famous Beef Dip"($7.95):

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Just by looking at it, you know right away…this ain't no "Philippe's". First off the "roll" was on very dry side, and the meat looked kinda, well, "grey", and was dry and tough. I enjoyed the "jus", it was beefy, and not overly salty…I used up all the jus and the Horseradish sauce. I think this is a bit over-priced for $7.95.

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Jacksbroiler09 On a side note…guess how much the soda pictured on the side is? It's $2, for one of those plastic 12oz cups. Luckily, refills are free, but if you're doing take-out, forget about the drinks. The two sodas I ordered put us over the $20 mark for lunch.

But still….I really enjoyed those fries…..

So I returned for lunch when I was in the area recently. And since you just can't order fries…I ordered my fries($1.95) with a side order of a Cheeseburger($5.50).

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Jacksbroiler11 Thought the fries were not as heavily seasoned as on my last visit, they were still pretty good.

After ordering, I struck up a short conversation with the "cook", who asked me how I'd like my burger, and though I'd usually ask for it "medium", I just told him to make the way he thought was best.

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The burger was delivered dressed with lettuce, tomato, and slices of red onions, cooked  just a tad on the "well" side, but the meat was moist, juicy, and had a nice mildly beefy flavor. At first I thought there was too much bun for the burger, but the bread had a nice pillowy texture. I wish the cheese was melted a bit better. I'd forgotten to tell him to skip the "sauce", which was a Thousand Island style dressing, but at least it wasn't slathered on, and the sauce was very mild so it didn't interfere with the flavor of the burger. Still, I usually like my burger without dressing. Not a bad burger, it's not going to set the world on fire, but it's pretty good, not as good as some, but better than many. I'd have it again.

Jacksbroiler13 As I usually do for "What Howie Eats" posts, I emailed Howie for His input. Here's what he said; "My fries were my favorite thing about the meal. I had the ribs, and they were decent, esp for the price." So there you go….

Baby Back Jack's Old Fashioned Broiler
1290 University Ave
San Diego, CA 92105