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Showing posts with label Great Leap Brewery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Leap Brewery. Show all posts

5.10.2015

Pork and Beans 辣椒

I'm a do the things that I wanna do
I ain't got a thing to prove to you
I eat my candy with the pork and beans
Excuse my manners if I make a scene
-Weezer


Over the years, birdMAN and I have developed a killer spicy chili. Our chili includes zucchini, banana squash, ground turkey, and jalapeno chilies. Now I know die-hard chili lovers would protest. Yeah, yeah, it’s true-- the original Texas chili does not include beans, and definitely not vegetables. But hey, we are from California. And in California, everything is better with garden fresh vegetables.

In China, we have made some modifications to our California chili. We will call it California-inspired Chinese chili. Chinese pumpkin for the banana squash, xihulu (西葫芦)for the zucchini, cloud beans (云豆) for the white and pinto beans, Chinese chilies for the jalapenos, and pork for the ground turkey. 

So one evening, at Great Leap Brewery as we sipped our beers and stared at a poster inviting applicants for the 4th Annual Back-alley Chili Cook-off, we thought, hey, our chili is awesome. Oh, and free beer? Sign us up! 

Our one imported ingredient? Chili powder of course!
A couple weeks later, after a chili-making trial run, 3 bike trips to the market (my bike basket only holds so much), and hours of birdMAN’s meticulous chopping, we found ourselves carrying almost 20 liters of piping hot pulled pork chili through Doujiao Hutong to Great Leap Brewing (GLB). The entire afternoon, 12 boiling concoctions of onion, garlic, meat, beans, and chili spice perfumed GLB’s quaint courtyard. Attenders and contestants alike sampled chili and, of course, sipped beer.

Chilies varied from vegan curry pumpkin (awesome, but was it really chili or just pumpkin lentil stew?), to dried beef and venison. Contestants were allowed one imported ingredient. What the chefs threw in their chili relied on the honor system. If chefs broke the rule and added additional imported ingredients, GLB warned them that karma would reward them with a wicked case of 拉肚子 (diarrhea). As far as I know, no one was plagued with 拉肚子. However, the free flowing beer and generous helpings of chili surely left some tummies stretched to the limits with yeast and gas.



We thought our chili was amazingly flavorful loaded with veggies and shredded pork balanced with hot chilies and a cilantro. However, Texas triumphed California. A true-blooded Texas couple took the judges’ chili heart with a traditional meat chili served over cornbread. I have to admit...it was pretty tasty. 

The people’s choice went to our chili hot plate neighbor, Charlie. He brought about 20 of his closest friends, each wearing T-shirts with his face emblazoned across the front. His chili was unusual-- an initial kick of spice followed by an uber sweet amalgam of Sichuan molasses and rye whiskey. A little too sweet for our tastes, but the flavor was kick-you-in-taste-buds memorable. Charlie’s girlfriend said she thought our chili was the best. I guess I forgive her for voting for her boyfriend and not us. The second place for people choice went Andy’s chili, also a traditional Texas chili.

Texas would be proud that its chili con carne tradition has leaped the Pacific, and is alive and thriving in one of the world’s most populous cities filled with noodle-loving people. Well, on that particularly drizzly afternoon, the GLB hutong courtyard certainly had more beer-loving-chili-chugging people than noodle-loving people. And we were shamelessly of the beer-loving-chili-chugging sort.

Chinese Word of the Blog: 辣椒 làjiāo
English Translation: chili

Read MORE about the winners.

This was a lot of bike trips and chopping
Not sure if this kitchen can handle so much spice
Good thing we sort of work out. Chili is heavy!
Stir it up, baby! 
birdMAN prefers to eat his own chili
Three baldy brawnies
birdMAN pretending he won
We should have worn an outfit like the Ghetto Boys

We eat chili rain or shine
Chili shots

6.15.2014

Simple Pleasures



You've been huntin' round for treasure
Find it all in the simple pleasures
- Jake Bugg



Last Thursday, birdMAN taught his last English class of the semester. What should we do with all his free time? Study Chinese? Naahh. Let’s go play!

For us, the equivalent of playing is eating. So the following morning, we bee lined to our favorite beer and cheeseburger place: Great Leap Brewery. Great Leap is westerner’s haven. It’s clean. It’s spacious. It smells like hops. The bathrooms are not only stocked with toilet paper but also soap. The no smoking inside rule is enforced. The Indian Pale Ale beer is cold and bitter. The flavorful lamb burger is accompanied by a generous side of French fries crisped to golden perfection.

Great Leap makes a great burger
After satisfying our American bellies with American-style food and beer, we headed over to a popular hutong* called Nanluoguxiang (南锣鼓巷). Nestled amongst the stuffed pandas and silk slipper stocked shops was a real, genuine, just-like-the-kind-in-California frozen yogurt shop. For 21.5 RMB (3.50 USD), birdMAN and I shared a cup of sheer pleasure: tart frozen yogurt topped with whole almonds, kiwi chunks, and chocolate syrup.

Life just got a little sweeter.

This is my happy face
Nanluoguxiang can be crowded.
You can buy cool stuff in Nanluoguxiang. This picture reminds me of me with my two sisters.
Food options appealing to the western palate seem to be popping up all over Beijing. Pizza, Indian, Italian, cheeseburger, and sandwich restaurants are within a 20 minute bike ride of our house. Ok, the available monstrous nachos or chicken burritos may not quite meet California Mexican food standards, but it’s pretty darn good.

Eating like a westerner, however, can be pricey for an average Chinese person. A decent western entrée will cost 40 to 80 RMB (6.50 – 13.00 USD)#. An exceptionally tasty entrée at a fancy place will cost more (we don’t go to those places). A pint of Great Leap craft brew ranges in cost from 25 to 55 RMB (4.00 – 9.00 USD). Generally, birdMAN and I will spend about 150 RMB (25 USD) for a splurge meal. Ok, in US dollars, 25 bucks may sound like a cheap meal. But for comparison, our monthly water bill is about 25 RMB (4 USD). A bowl of noodles with vegetables and meat will cost 10 to 20 RMB (1.60 to 3.20 USD).

But what can we do? Californians just cannot live on noodles and rice alone.

Chinese word of the blog: 口福kǒufú (literally, mouth good fortune)
English translation: very nice to eat

Example sentence: 我可真有口福Wǒ kězhēn yǒu kǒufú
English translation: I am eating really delicious food. (My translation may not be super correct, but you do say this when you eat really delicious food).

*Hutong 胡同: Hutong is neighborhood characterized by a cluster of narrow alleys. A long time ago, China’s emperors built Beijing’s hutongs to house people according to social class. 

# Some restaurants offer lunch or dinner specials.  Subway restaurant sells a 15 RMB sandwich. One nearby restaurant discounts the 35 RMB chicken burger to 10 RMB every Monday. We take full advantage of such deals!

Great Leap also offers this vegetarian option: the Knife and Fork Sandwich
Last February we woke up early to watch the Superbowl at Great Leap. birdMAN is very happy. There's nothing like a beer at 8 am.
Really awesome pizza no matter where you are
This is birdMAN's happy face
This burrito is a cylinder of deliciousness
Beijing Nachos! Totally worth 58 RMB