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La Chocolaterie in Richmond, BC

La Chocolaterie in the Izumiya Marketplace in Richmond. Photos by David Lansing.

Well, this is interesting: About a year ago, maybe less, the city of Richmond decided to hire a food blogger whose job would be to write about the Richmond food scene every day for a year. The blogger would be paid $50,000 plus get an apartment to live in and a $30-a-day food budget. Sweet, right?

Evidently they had over 1,500 people from all over the world apply for the job (why not?). And the winner was a young woman named Lindsay Anderson whose biggest claim to fame was that she’d been the head cook at a tree planting camp in British Columbia (evidently she also had a killer YouTube video applying for the job, which you can see here).

Anyway, I haven’t met Lindsay. But another food blogger I’ve been hanging with, Amy Sherman, has. And Amy says that Lindsay told her not to miss this little Japanese chocolate shop in the Japanese marketplace, Izumiya.

Well, it just so happened that Amy and I had lunch yesterday at a Japanese restaurant that is next door to Izumiya. So after lunch we went looking for the chocolate shop. Which, being just inside the front door, wasn’t hard to fine.

Kayoko Hamamoto at La Chocolaterie

Kayoko showing me my box of chocolates at La Chocolaterie. Photo by David Lansing.

The shop is called La Chocolaterie and it’s run by a husband and wife team, Taka and Kayoko, who both worked as researchers at a confectionery company in Japan for 10 years. Then in December 2010, they moved to Richmond and opened La Chocolaterie.

Here’s their philosophy: To make chocolates “with beautiful colors, elegant fragrance, and delicious textures to satisfy not only the appetite but also the mind.”

Sounds so Japanese, doesn’t it?

When Amy and I showed up, Kayoko, who is as cute as a Hello Kitty doll, was oh-so-carefully cutting up a big block of their signature green tea chocolate into little squares. Had to have some of that. What else? There was raspberry cacao and mango and tomato and ginger and coconut and wasabi and yuzu and lemon basil—the list seemed endless. So I told Kayoko to give me a mixed box—9 kinds of chocolate with 2 pieces each) and just put whatever was good in it. “But make sure you put in some of the green tea chocolate,” I told her. “And the lemon basil. And the yuzu. And….”

Kayoko carefully selected each piece of chocolate and put them in a beautiful square green box, slowly tied a white ribbon around it, and then put it in a plastic bag with a small frozen bag of ice to keep the chocolate from melting before I got it back to my hotel room.

So here’s the deal: The beautiful green box of chocolate is sitting on a table in my hotel room. I haven’t taken the ribbon off because when I bought it, I was thinking I’d take it home with me and give it to someone very special. But now I’m sitting here on my bed typing this up and I’m also wondering what the blueberry chocolate tastes like. And the green tea. Or the lemon basil.

But don’t worry, I’m not going to open the box. Really. I am most definitely not going to open that box of chocolate. I can assure you that I’m pretty damn sure of that.

Maybe.
La Chocolaterie on Urbanspoon

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Chef James Xin Jiang Man BBQ

I don't know how Chef James makes any money selling 3 skewers for $7 and 5 for $11. It's a bellyful of food. Photos by David Lansing.

Mijune and I spent more time at the Richmond Night Market this weekend. There are just so many stalls I want to try—you can’t do it in a single visit.

“You like lamb?” Mijune asked me.

I love lamb.

“Okay, then let’s head over to Chef James. He makes the best lamb skewers around.”

Chef James at Richmond Night Market

Chef James with skewers of lamb, his signature item. Photo by David Lansing.

Chef James is actually James Chen. His weekday gig is as a chef at the Fairmont Waterfront in downtown Vancouver. But on weekends, he’s a rock star out at the Night Market. I’ll tell you what—if the Fairmont is hiding Chef James in the back, they’re not taking full advantage of his talents. James is a natural showman. He’s got moves like Jagger. Truly.

Even before you get to his stall, which is called Chef James Xin Jiang Man BBQ, you hear him talking up the crowd, moving them towards him like a carnie at the state fair. “You want bbq, I know you want bbq, so you should come and get bbq because I make the best bbq you can find.”

Xinjiang is in the far western region of China, near Afghanistan, and what Chef James is pushing is a staple of the region’s Uighur cuisine, lamb on a skewer flavored with salt, black pepper, red chili pepper, and roasted cumin seed. It’s the cumin that sets Xinjian cuisine apart from other Chinese cuisine.

Chef James doesn’t just grill up lamb. He’s also got beef, chicken and honey garlic prawn skewers. And they’re all good. But the lamb is the thing.
Richmond Night Market on Urbanspoon

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LuLu Island Winery ice wine

Fruit wines, LuLu Island Winery

The fruit wines at LuLu Winery in Richmond. Photos by David Lansing

It’s Sunday. “Let’s go drink some wine,” Laura says.

Fine by me.

Her friend, Polly, is pouring today out at LuLu Island Winery. Perfect.

You know how web sites load particular terms into their sites to attract more attention from Google? Well, if you Google LuLu Island Winery, you’ll see that 8 out of the top 10 search terms have something to do with ice wine. You’ve got Canada ice wine and best ice wine and Vancouver ice wine—well, you get the picture. LuLu is obviously known for their ice wine.

Frankly, I’m not a big sweet wine guy. But you know who is? Asians! They love the stuff. And John Chang, who first visited Vancouver from Taiwan twenty years ago, knows that. That’s why he started a winery in 2001 that specialized in fruit wines—blueberry, cranberry, and raspberry wine—and later ice wine. Now LuLu Island is Canada’s largest exporter of wine to China.

Tasting room at LuLu Island Winery in Richmond.

Polly pours me some red at LuLu Island Winery. Photo by David Lansing.

You know who loves ice wine besides the Chinese? Laura! So while Polly was pouring me a mineraly Pinot Gris and a crisp Sauvignon Blanc and a spicy Viognier, Laura was standing in the corner pouting.

“Is it time for the ice wine?” she whined.

Not yet, I told her. I still hadn’t tasted the reds.

Laura pretended to be looking at a Chinese Olympic athlete’s uniform on display while Polly opened a Cabernet Franc. “What do you think of that?”

“I think I like it,” I said, finishing off the taste. “But I’m not sure.” Polly poured me a bit more while Laura pretended not to notice.

When I finished sampling the Meritage, which was really quite delicious, Polly announced quite loudly that it was time for the ice wine. Laura hurried over.

“Maybe we should try the fruit wines first,” I said.

“Really?” said Laura. “Fruit wines?”

I started to tell her a story about drinking Boone’s Farm wines in college and why I thought the Green Apple was superior to Wild Raspberry or Strawberry Hill.

“Fine,” she said in a huff. “Try the damn fruit wines.”

Which I did. When I’d finished with LuLu’s Cranberry wine, Polly started bringing out the ice wines. She had several bottles.

“Oh, not for me,” I said, walking away from the tasting bar. “I think I’ve had enough.”

Just before I got to the door, I turned around. “Just kidding,” I told Laura. She acted like I wasn’t even there. “I’ll drink his and mine,” she told Polly. And she did.

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Pineapple buns at the Lido Restaurant

Pineapple buns, Lido in Richmond

David and the pineapple buns at the Lido in Richmond. Photo by David Lansing.

Saturday morning. Early. Kind of gray out. It’s the middle of August but it looks like it might rain. It’s one of those mornings when you feel like have pastries and coffee in bed while reading the paper.

My buddy David Lang, who is from Hong Kong, keeps telling me I need to go to the Lido Restaurant and order a pineapple bun. A pineapple bun with butter—boh loh yaau as they say in Hong Kong. I’m thinking today is the day.

So I just throw on some clothes and head up the street to the Lido which is in a crappy-looking stripmall midway between the Aberdeen Mall and Parker Place Mall. It’s barely 8am but the place is packed. No big deal. My plan is to order a couple of pineapple buns to go and eat them back at my hotel with a nice hot latte.

There’s a bakery cart right by the door holding dozens of fresh-out-of-the-oven pineapple buns. I tell the boss man at the cash register that I’d like two to go. While I’m waiting for someone to bag them up, I hear my name: “David! David!”

It’s David Lang. Sitting in a booth behind the cash register. He’s already got a pineapple bun in front of him.

David invites me to join him for breakfast, so what the hell. I tell the boss man that I’ll be having the pineapple buns here. Oh, and could I also have some coffee. “Hong Kong-style?” he asks.

David Lang doesn’t wait for me to answer. In Cantonese he tells the boss man to give me Hong Kong-style coffee and to give me two pineapple buns, both with butter. “You got to have butter,” he tells me.

About pineapple buns: There’s no pineapple in them. They are called pineapple buns because their crispy tops resemble the texture of a pineapple. They are to Hong Kong what beignets are to New Orleans. And every bit as addicting.

About Honk Kong-style coffee: It’s like Nescafe made with sweetened and condensed milk and tastes as awful as it sounds. But after awhile, you get used to that condensed milk taste (I remember nomadically traveling around Spain and Portugal many years ago in a VW camper and not being able to get fresh milk reliably so I’d end up making coffee with Nescafe and condensed milk and damn if I didn’t get so addicted to it that I was drinking it that way when I got home a year later).

Now you probably think, like I did, that if you order a pineapple bun with butter that you get a little pat wrapped in foil on the side, or maybe they spread a little margarine over it like you would a piece of toast. But you’d be wrong. They slice the still-warm pineapple bun in half and put a slab of butter in the middle that is about three inches by five inches and maybe half an inch thick. I mean, it’s like half a cube of butter. Real butter. Sweet butter.

And damn is it good.

So my two pineapple buns come and then my Hong Kong-style coffee and David has the same, and I’m thinking, We are set for the day. We have got enough here to hold us over until dinner. But I am wrong.

For David Lang, this is just the start. This is the appetizer. He’s already ordered a big bowl of macaroni and pork in broth. And congee, which is a nasty looking rice gruel. And a ham omelet. And a Hong Kong donut, which looks kind of like a churro. You know, to go with his two pineapple buns with butter. In short, enough calories to fuel a large family for three or four days. Unless you’re really hungry. Which, evidently, David is.
Lido Restaurant ???? on Urbanspoon

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Halibut for 14

Sea urchins, Steveston Fisherman's Wharf

Sea urchins from the Steveston Fisherman's Wharf. Photos by David Lansing.

I probably would have had plenty of time to get my fish & chips in Steveston if I hadn’t got hung up hanging around the fisherman’s market. First there was the guy, a young diver, selling live sea urchins. He only had a few left. And they were three for $10, which seemed like a hell of a bargain to me. I asked him when he’d caught them and he looked at his watch and said, “About three hours ago.”

Then there was the couple selling locally-caught shrimp and the salmon fishermen. But my favorite was the guy selling fresh halibut. There was a Russian woman there and she wanted a 14-pound halibut. Why did she want a 14-pound halibut? I have no idea. But the guy pulled a big fish out of an ice bin, weighed it, and told her it was 14.75 pounds. The Russian woman thought about it for awhile and said that was okay. She’d take it.

Afterwards, I stopped her and asked her why she wanted exactly 14 pounds. She said she and her husband were hosting a party tomorrow night for her sister who was getting married. And there would be 14 people at the party. “One person, one pound,” she said. And with that she walked off carrying the large halibut over her shoulder.

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