Showing posts with label davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label davis. Show all posts
Ally
109 E Street, Davis, California 95616.  (530) 753-3196
http://www.yakitoriyuchan.com/

It’s finally open!

Six months ago, my friend Kerry gave me the heads up that the design company she works for, Benning Design, had been hired to work on a soon-to-be-opened yakitori place in Davis. The owners, a Japanese couple, anticipated opening Yakitori Yuchan by fall. Since then I’ve been eagerly (and patiently) waiting to eat some yakitori without having to drive to the Bay Area. Last night, I finally got my wish. My friend and I popped in during their soft opening and had a very pleasant dinner. The interior is quite pretty- a beautiful artsy bamboo lighting fixture takes center stage, there’s lots of color splashed throughout the restaurant (I love the bold, sunset orange-red that highlights the walls), and the sake bar is pretty badass looking with its upside down, hanging dispensers.

When you sit down the server gives you a menu and a small list. The list is for marking what kind of skewers you’d like to order. Each order comes with 2 skewers. Yakitori Yuchan offers several different kinds of chicken, pork and veggie skewers. On some of them you can choose to have it with shio (salt) or with tare (a basting sauce made from mirin, soy sauce, sake and sugar).  

If you're unfamiliar with yakitori, here's a textbook definition:

ya·ki·to·ri:  /yäkiˈtôrē/, noun


“Yakitori, grilled chicken, is commonly a Japanese type of skewered chicken cooked over a special kind of charcoal. The term "yakitori" can also refer to skewered food in general. Kushiyaki, is a formal term that encompasses both poultry and non-poultry items, skewered and grilled.”

Here’s a few that we tried:
  
Eringi  (grilled King Trumpet mushrooms with a garlic sauce – the mushroom has a nice “meaty” texture to it when grilled)




Negima (grilled chicken with spring onion)




Chicken Liver (one of my favorite skewers to order- I love the dense meat and slightly iron-like taste)




Grilled chicken drizzled with a wasabi cream sauce ( the sauce had a nice horseradish bite to it but was not overwhelming)




Pork wrapped around a quail egg (perfectly cooked, chewy pork wrapped around a tiny, hard-boiled quail egg)





We also got several appetizers to share:

Nasu dengaku  (miso glazed eggplant)



Takoyaki ( creamy octopus “balls” sprinkled with bonito and drizzled with sauce)




Garlic Brussels (grilled Brussels sprouts with a delicious miso sauce, sprinkled with bits of fried garlic and pepper threads)




And a yaki onigiri  (fried riceball)

All of the skewers were delicious. I also loved both the nasu dengaku and the Brussels sprouts dish, I could have eaten another serving of each. The fried bits of garlic and teensy sliced pepper threads made the savory dish absolutely addicting. Next time I’d also like to try the fried pumpkin with curry sauce and the squid app. One thing about the service that I really liked was that the dishes are brought out in waves as they are ready, in true izakaya fashion. This gives you an opportunity to relax, chat and knock back a drink in between dishes. (They have a nice choice of sakes to make your way through.)

If you get a chance, I highly suggested checking out Yakitori Yuchan. Yakitori is the perfect food to nibble on while socializing. It’s also great if you’re doing a no or low carb diet as most of the skewers are meatcentric. 

Note: Yakitori Yuchan currently opens for dinner at 6pm and is closed on Mondays.




Ally

 
If you've followed my blog for awhile, you probably know that I've been squawking for years that Sacramento needs another sushi place or brewery like I need a hole in my head. What I would love to see instead though is a restaurant dedicated to yakitori (known as a "yakitori-ya"). “Yaki” means grilled and “tori” means bird; however, nowadays the term yakitori is used interchangeably with the more formal kushiyaki (which means grilled poultry and non-poultry items). Yakitori is one of those dishes that is universally loved in Japan. You can often find it being sold by street vendors, at festivals and at izakayas. It consists of small bite-sized pieces of meat threaded onto a bamboo skewer, basted with tare (a glaze made with soy sauce, mirin, sake and sugar) then grilled over special Japanese hot coals called binchoutan and served with sake, beer or shochu. Well Santa's apparently coming early kiddos because a yakitori-ya is coming to the Valley- finally! It's not located quite in Sacramento, but in Davis rather...but hey, I'll take what I can get. ☺

The restaurant, Yakitori Yuchan is still in the midst of obtaining permits. Construction should be starting soon and it will be taking over the space formerly occupied by a Beach Hut Deli at 109 E Street. I can't wait! Hopefully they'll carry my favorite yakitori - rebā  and kawa.

Here's a Crash Course on Some Common Types of Yakitori/Kushiyaki:

Momo (chicken thigh)
Negima (chicken and negi- a type of leek)
Tebasaki (chicken wings)
Sunagimo (chicken gizzard)
Rebā (chicken liver)
Nankotsu (chicken cartilage)
Shiro (chicken small intestine)
Tsukune (chicken meatballs with cartilage mixed in)
Bonjiri (chicken tail)
Tori kawa (crispy chicken skin)
Hāto / Hatsu  (chicken heart)
Tori niku (all white meat chicken)
Seseri (chicken neck)
Mune (chicken breast meat)
Hatsumoto (chicken aorta)
Mame (chicken spleen)
Sasami (chicken tenderloin)
Hiza nan-kotsu (chicken knee cartilage)

Gyūtan (beef tongue)
Butabara (pork belly)
Kashira (pork cheeks)
Atsuage tofu (thick, deep-fried tofu)
Shiratama (quail egg)

Shishito- (small Japanese pepper)
Ninniku (garlic)
Ikada (grilled scallion)
Shiitake (shiitake mushroom, sometimes sprinkled with bonito flakes)
Ally

One of my favorite things to do when my friend Judy comes to town is go to dim sum. She always knows all the best places. When we get there she rattles off our order in frantic Chinese and points at various carts and the kitchen...and Voila! amazing little, piping hot dishes start materializing on our table. One of my favorite dishes to indulge in at dim sum are the dumplings- especially the har gau (shrimp dumplings), xiao long bao (soup dumplings) and jiu cai bau (chive stuffed dumplings). My mouth is watering just thinking about them! So when I found out that UC Davis was offering free dumpling making workshops, I was excited and registered right away. If you read my previous post back on Dec. 16th, you probably remember me discussing the Confucius Institute, a partnership between UCD and Jianghan University in China that opened in the fall of 2013, to promote a better understanding of Chinese food and culture. [Interesting fact: Chef Martin Yan (of Yan Can Cook fame) is a culinary advisor to the program.] Well, I finally got to attend one of their dumpling workshops and it was a blast. The workshop was  informative, interesting and the instructors were extremely nice.
 
Our workshop was led by Sa (Sally) Woo, an Associate Professor at Jiangnan University and instructor at the Confucius Institute at UC Davis. You can't help but like Sally right off  the bat. She's bubbly, friendly and very patient. She started off our workshop with a brief but informative lecture on the origin and development of Jiaozi (Chinese dumplings). We then watched a quick video on dough and filling making.



Once we moved into the cooking facility, we were divided into groups of four to a table/burner. We were given a handout, a bowl of dough, pre-prepared filling, a mini rolling pin, and various other kitchen tools that we would need to make our own dumplings. Sally then had us gather around her and she showed us step by step how to cut and roll out the dough, place the filling in the dough and then various ways to close the dumpling. She showed us four different decorative edges we could make to seal the dumplings. Then we were give ample time to try out our newly learned techniques for ourselves while she and her assistants walked around and helped. Once we were done making our batch of dumplings, we were showed the proper method to boil the dumplings so that they get cooked evenly. This was a pretty quick process and then we got to eat the fruits of our labor. I've eaten a lot of pan-fried and steamed dumplings in my lifetime but I have to say the boiled dumplings we had were just as tasty - and so simple to make! There was even a condiments table set up so we could mix up our favorite dipping sauce concoction.


 





 



I went with two friends and we all had a great time. I plan to use my new dumpling making skills to make a few batches of dumplings to celebrate the Chinese New Year.

If you're interested in learning how to make your own dumplings, check out the Confucius Institute's webpage:
http://confucius.ucdavis.edu/programsevents/index.html

All the dumpling classes for this quarter are full at this time, but you can get on their mailing list so that you know when registration opens up for next quarter. The Confucius Institute also offers workshops on tea and paper-cutting, as well as language classes.

Ally
New Year's is right around the corner and with it comes the tradition of making New Year's resolutions. Well good news, if one of your resolutions is to learn a new skill-- check out the Chinese Dumpling Making Workshops at UC Davis' Confucius Institute. My friend Mary tipped me off about this new program which had it's grand opening not too long ago in September 2013. The Institute is a partnership between UC Davis; Jiangnan University, one of China’s top research universities in food science and technology; and Hanban, part of the Chinese Ministry of Education. The institute offers free workshops to the community on the art of tea ceremonies, tea tasting, and dumpling making. If you're interested, the Confucius Institute is currently taking registrations for it's 2014 dumpling making workshops. At the workshop, you'll get a lesson on the history and culture of the Chinese dumpling before practicing dumpling wrapper-rolling and stuffing with a meat and vegetable filling. The workshop is hands-on and participants will be cooking and eating their dumplings.
 
Photo Source: Craftbag Designs

 
Registration (the January dates are currently full, but there is space open currently for Feb 21, Mar 7, Mar 21) :   http://confucius.ucdavis.edu/programsevents/dumplingworkshops.html
Ally

Readers, I know May seems a bit far off but this event just sounds too good not to share!

On May 14th, the Tour de Cluck will be taking place in Davis. Yep, that's right...I said, Tour de Cluck...as in chickens!

The Tour de Cluck includes: a self-guided bicycle crawl of neighborhood clusters (coop loops), backyard poultry experts providing information and assistance on breed selection/feeding options/coop design and construction, an art exhibit and silent action (with all kinds of cool chicken art), a clucking exhibition and a Fowl Food Fair. Best of all, the Tour de Cluck benefits the Davis Farm to School program.

Sounds like a cluckin' good time. Put it down on your calendar!

For more information:    http://tourdecluck.org

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