Thursday, September 1, 2011

Free Tours by Food

Free Tours by Foot is adding a Food Tour of Greenwich Village! I followed Courtney through the streets yesterday, sampling savory delicacies in preparation of the Food Tour. Several of her friends came along to advise which locations should be on the tour. What a blast!

We had young people from Eastern Europe, Asia, England, etc. and from NYC tasting local favorites.
One of the great things about eating in Greenwich Village is the extensive variety of foods, from Middle Eastern, to Asian (Indian, Chinese, Japanese) to South American (Brazilian and Peruvian) to Island (Cuban and Puerto Rican) to Vegan and U.S. Down Home Cooking.

So we sampled pizza, deciding which provider will be on the tour, traipsing along Bleeker — even stopping for rice balls as Faicco’s — over to MacDougal for pizza, falafel and kati rolls....

The end of the walk included sweets — we must have sweets — with some members of the group choosing gelato at Grom, others suggesting cupcakes at Amy’s, and several of us satisfying our sweet tooth at Milk and Cookies with their bag of broken cookies.

What makes the final cut will be seen soon. In the meantime, try Courtney’s Food Tour of the Lower East Side or Chinatown, which starts next week. Courtney has inside stories about the neighborhoods and the shops she visits. Since the tour is free—you are not paying $40+ to taste items you may not like—you can choose which foods to sample at each location, or to choose nothing at all. I have found that the individuals on these tours are friendly, often offering to share their samplings.

These tours can cost you less than $20/person, and a family desiring to divide up items can save even more. This allows you to be generous with Courtney at the end of the tour!


Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Burgers on Sixth and Seventh Avenues

While burgers may not exciting, bad burgers are horrible. My experience so far has been to have two really good hamburgers in Greenwich Village. Usually, I would grill my own hamburgers with my own seasonings, but since I am writing for tourists who may desire a burger while traveling, I need to review hamburgers in the area.

Joy Burger on Sixth Avenue and Washington Place opened in the Spring of 2011. The burgers are grilled with a good sear on the beef, keeping the meat tender, juicy and flavorful. A board inside lists all the toppings and flavors of sauces for the burgers.

You enter and order at the counter. After you have navigated the order, you are given a card from a deck of playing cards -- this is how you will be notified your food is ready.

In addition, Joy Burger boasts several large salads. I have enjoyed the salads while sitting and watching passers by from the large, open area onto the sidewalk. If you really want a burger and/or a salad, you won’t be disappointed at Joy Burger.

On Seventh Avenue, across from Bleeker Street Pizza is Five Guys. Here you also enter and order at the counter. A very helpful young lady assisted me by describing the single patty and double patty styles of burgers and by handing me a list of toppings — which came at no additional cost. I had my single patty with lettuce, tomato and pickles, no ketchup or mayo necessary. The burger was juicy, and the toppings provided enough flavor so I did not need to mask the taste of the meat with mayo or ketchup.

Plenty of seating is provided at Five Guys, Joy Burger is smaller — not easy for large groups of six or more.
On days that only a burger will do, or if with a group that wants a variety of burgers and salads, try either location.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Gizzi’s

On West Eighth Street between MacDougal and Fifth Avenue is a coffee house style restaurant with charm, atmosphere, and most importantly interesting and good food that is affordable. I was drawn in by the menu posted outside, and a glance inside welcomed me.

With sofa seating as well as tables, the coffee house provides a variety of options. Just plop onto a sofa and have a coffee while reviewing your emails, or order lunch off the blackboard menu. Oh, the waiter will offer you a printed menu, also, but I like reading through the colored chalk on the blackboard.

Gizzi’s Pear Salad was refreshing on a hot summer afternoon. The greens were chopped with cranberries, walnuts, feta cheese and chunks of pear with a pear dressing. I sighed when it was placed in front of me — it was huge. But, oh so tasty. As I consumed the salad, I glanced over at the refrigerator display touting all the desserts — from cupcakes to cheesecake and coconut cake, to .... Well, I did not finish the salad in one sitting so I didn't order dessert.

On a subsequent visit, I ordered a sandwich of portobello mushroom, pesto, mozzarella cheese and lettuce on focaccia bread. On the side was a salad of mixed greens and grape tomatoes. Delicious. I forced myself to finish and then had a café au lait for dessert. The coffee and beverage menu is extensive. Breakfast seems to be served all day, with a variety of omelettes suggested.

Each lunch came in at just $10 and change...affordable for lunch in NYC.

A flat screen TV plays on the back wall, and music is just loud enough to hear what is playing, but not so loud that you cannot hear the waiter. The decor is eclectic, with large paintings hanging on the wall over the lounging booths, and perched down the far end is a raised platform for entertainers on the weekend. In the front window are round tables, and behind them a sofa with low tables for easy reach of your laptop.

I asked who Gizzi is and was told by the waiter he doesn’t know. He was not sure if a Gizzi exists. When I asked where the name came from, he said it was probably just an interesting name. The restaurant is open for just a year. Casual, enticing, and offering good food.

If you are in the area, stop and have a bite and enjoy the surroundings.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Curry Kitchen

Located on West 8th Street, Curry Kitchen provides ambiance as well as good food — with lunch specials priced at $7.95 and $8.95 for several different curry  dishes. I had stopped here last year for lunch one afternoon and enjoyed the food. When I discovered the Village Alliance was sponsoring discount coupons for several restaurants in the area, I visited Curry Kitchen again and was pleased with the food, the service, and the atmosphere. Note: the coupons do not apply to the lunch specials; the à la carte menu is discounted with the coupon only. But you will be pleased at the prices on the menu, starting at  $11.95 and up

Lunch specials include a fragrant and tasty Basmati Pulao rice, salad, Papadam & Raita, along with the vegetables of the day and the entré you specify. Naan (Indian oven-baked flatbread)is extra, and the food is so plentiful that I do not order it — I barely consume all of my lunch! It was explained to me, though, that they eat naan with the vegetable portion of the meal. The “meat” or protein portion is consumed with a little of the rice. I find the rice so tasty that I like eating separately (shhhh, don’t tell them).

Take out is available and reasonably priced. I prefer dining in the interestingly decorated, narrow restaurant. The walls are plastered to appear very old and deteriorating. It is comfortable, plus I am outside all day and like the cool indoors of the restaurant.

One day I had run errands and only had 30-35 minutes to order and eat before meeting my next tour group. I explained that to the waiter, who was helpful in choosing an entré that could be prepared quickly. I received the meal within 10 minutes so could eat at a leisurely pace.

The à la carte menu explains the dishes, and the waiters/waitresses are helpful in providing details, if you are not familiar with an item. You may get a chuckle out of the misspellings on the menu — some words are printed phonetically, not correctly. Good cooks are not necessarily good spellers, and I do not care if they are if they create the same quality of food as Curry Kitchen!

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Hummus Place

For a year, I have been passing Hummus Place and saying I must go in and try it, so I finally did so. Some people turn up their noses at Hummus, but personally, I enjoy it. The recipe book Eat Up, Slim Down by the editors at Prevention Magazine printed a hummus recipe of mine...

Pleasant, small, with outside seating, Hummus Place in Greenwich Village is on Seventh Avenue, right next door to Bleeker Street Pizza, which is on the corner of Bleeker and Seventh. I chose to sit inside since I spend most of my day out and walking.

The menu offered a lunch special, but on my first trip, I decided to order the Egg-plant sandwich. Eggplant, a hard boiled egg, tahini, lettuce and pickle mango chutney are packed into two pitas (choice of white or whole wheat; I chose with the latter). On my next visit, I ordered the lunch special: any of the hummus plates on the menu, with an appetizer, all for $7.95! The mushroom hummus plate arrived with sauted mushrooms swimming in the center of a ribbon of hummus. I was asked if I wanted a hard boiled egg on top, but said, “No, thank you.” The slice of eggplant appetizer was finished with a drizzle of tahini.

Delicious! I forced myself to complete the meal, leaving a pita — used for scooping the hummus — in the basket. Also, a plate of pickles and olives was offered, as was hot sauce. I enjoyed both!

Each time my bill was under $10, and my stomach was full, and my taste buds pleased. Seated at other tables, patrons shared their different types of hummus with each other, permitting everyone to taste the variety of dishes on the menu. Alcohol is served — I do not dare to have alcohol and then try to lead a tour group afterward — as are a variety of teas and other beverages.

Try something new and maybe different. I am looking forward to Saturday’s brunch menu! You can find their menus on the internet at www.humusplace.com. Check it out; the website explains the nutritional value of hummus — it fills you up without filling you out or spiking your blood glucose levels; packed with vitamins, minerals, and Omega 3, hummus is a complete protein when eaten with pita. It is good, and good for you!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Meskerem Ethiopian Restaurant

Located at 124 MacDougal Street in the Village, across from Cafe Wha?, Meskerem is interesting, fun, and flavorful — from its cuisine to its atmosphere.

Originally I visited the restaurant to see what it was like. Now I go back because I enjoy the food, the setting, and the ambiance. Going down the steep stairway is an adventure in itself. The restaurant is located in a basement, but like the Oyster Houses of Old New York, it is worth the trip.

Ethiopian cuisine was new to me; the waiter on my first visit and the waitress on subsequent trips, have been helpful in understanding the menu — which explains the many strange-to-me names of the dishes extremely well. Each dish has a written description of the appetizer, entré or special, and the strength of the spices used.

What I enjoy is the use of injera, spongy rounds of bread made from a fermented rye-like grain. No silverware is offered. One uses the injera to pick up the meat, vegetables, and sauces and to pop them into the mouth. The meal is served on injera, which soaks up the juices of the meat, vegetables and sauces, making it a rich, tasty experience.

On the table is a Honey Wine, which I have not tasted. Since I am in Greenwich Village to lead walking tours in the afternoon, I do not want to confuse my brain with wine and details about the Village. The bottle explains the Honey Wine and its complement to the spicy Ethiopian Cuisine.

Since I enjoy lamb, I ordered it on the first visit; subsequently, I have eaten the Vegetarian Combo on the lunch menu. More than enough food is offered on the plate...I must stuff myself to finish, which I do because I so enjoy the dishes. The chickpea stew and lentil stews are filling. Each has its own seasonings: Miser Alech is a mild dish of split lentils dipped with ginger, garlic, onions, olive oil and curry cooked “to perfection,” as the menu states. Miser Wat finishes the lentils with a ground red pepper; Shro Wat is chickpeas with the same sauce of the lentils.

A read through the menu is an adventure... as will be your visit. While I eat by myself out of necessity, I have watched groups enjoy the main course in the middle of the table on a round platter with the sauces and seasoned lentil sides. The tables are almost always full of diners. with lunch prices under $10 per entré it is no wonder the restaurant is busy.

Offering fun, exciting food and a comfortable atmosphere, Meskerem is not to be missed during your visit to Greenwich Village — if you have eaten Ethiopian before, or not!

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Waverly Restaurant

On the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) at the corner of Waverly Place in Greenwich Village is the Waverly Restaurant. If you are approaching it walking up Sixth Ave., the sign along the top of the plate glass windows reads “Waverly Diner.” I eat here on days I am late getting to the afternoon tour, or on rainy days, or when I am in the mood....

The menu is posted in the front window, and reads like a diner tome. Quite extensive in its offerings — breakfast is served all day — I turn to the specials page! Clipped to one of the interior pages, the specials offer a variety of foods, which I figure are fresh or why would they be “specials.”

Tables can be hard to come by; waiters will ask you to move inside for the next table, which means you are bumped up against those eating at the counter. Tables do turn over frequently; I ate at the counter only once because a table was not going to be available in time for me to eat and meet my next tour group. That day turned out to be interesting, by the way.

Getting situated at the counter is not easy for me — I carry a large messenger bag with a binder of photos to show tourists, a book of information, flyers about our other tours, transit maps, and whatever book I am reading at the time, with a water bottle slipped in the sleeve. Then, there is my coat — well in winter it was coat, scarf, vest, hat and gloves... So they most often seat me at a table so I can rest the rest of my stuff on the other seat.

The day I am talking about was sunny last December. The sun pores through the plate glass windows, so shades can be drawn to unblind those seated in the booths along the windows. I was eating my soup — talk about that later — when a sizable man approached the cashier to pay for lunch. I glanced to see why the sun was being blocked and I realized I know this man. Looking back at my soup for a second, I considered that he was larger than I had even thought. I turned my head sideways to get a glimpse, and Michael Moore nodded at me as I recognized him. I held my breath for a second and wondered if he was filming in the area. If so, I may have to reroute the tour group, if not, I may reroute to see where he was filming.

He went back to his booth — his size made it obvious — so I watched him to see if he had a camera crew with him. No, he was with a woman and two girls, whose ages I will not try to guess. Suffice it to say they were tall girls so they could be teenagers, or in their early 20’s. My mind raced...as soon as I get outside I will call my brother and tell him whom “I had lunch with...”

I should not be surprised since the walls of the Waverly Restaurant/Diner are lined with signed photos of movie stars, stars of stage and television, and of those who want to be. Many famous people call the Village home, but I am still amazed when I see one I recognize.

Back to my salad — oh, yeah — the Greek Salad is quite large and resembles Greek Salads I’ve eaten all over the East Coast. Generally, I eat the Spinach Pie: two flaky pieces of puff pastry filled with spinach and feta cheese...a large slice that looks as if it was baked in a lasagna pan. With the Spinach Pie I am offered a small bowl of stuffed grape leaves and marinated olives. I always eat these. I do not always finish the pie and usually take it home to eat on the train while I wait for it to leave Hoboken station.

The Specials page offers items costing $8 up to $15 — I stay in the $10 range. Soup comes with the special ordered. Most often the soups are chicken rice or Yankee bean. The vegetable lasagna, quiche, burgers, sandwiches ...all look good and taste just as one would expect. The only time I was disappointed was when I ordered the brisket — I knew I should have said “lean” but didn’t and I was not happy.

Several times at the Waverly Restaurant/Diner I have bumped into people from my morning tour eating prior to my afternoon tour...or just eating there because I recommend eating lunch in Greenwich Village.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Isle Thai Restaurant -- Closed

As a tour guide in NYC, I am often asked to recommend a good place for lunch. The policy of NYC by Foot is not to recommend restaurants, but to provide information to guests on the tour. This blog will offer readers information about a variety of restaurants located in Greenwich Village, New York.

“Why Greenwich Village?” you may ask. Because that is where I eat lunch...because of the variety of restaurants, cafés, lunch spots in a range of ethnic and cultural cuisines...because....

Isle Thai Restaurant is located on Bleeker Street right where John Street ends on Bleeker. I frequent Isle because I enjoy curry dishes, and my daughter does not. If I prepare curry at home, she sticks up her nose and complains about the smell in the house. My best defense is a good offense — eat curry out. Also, I can have lunch, including an appetizer, for $9, excluding tip.

After a recent chilly morning tour, I decided it was a good curry day. I could almost taste the green curry as I provided tourists with information for finding their afternoon destinations, such as subway routes, walking directions, etc. One young lady on the tour said she was taking my afternoon tour but wanted to go up to the 50’s for lunch at a pizza place she had seen on the internet. I explained to her which train to take, and which one would get her back for the afternoon walk I was guiding. I did caution her that she may not make it back in time for my afternoon tour, though.

With that, she asked if I could recommend a restaurant closer to the start of the afternoon tour of Greenwich Village. In Greenwich Village are several pizza places — the description of which will fill a blog on a later date but which I gave to her as we walked to Church Street along Chambers to the A and C subway station. I asked her about her accent, since she had told me at the start of the morning tour she was from Thailand. She explained she is studying in Seattle, Washington, and in Thailand the children start studying English early.

As we entered the subway, I told her where we would get off and in which direction I would take her. She asked if she could join me for lunch.... My habit is to eat lunch alone, decompress from the morning, and energize for the afternoon. I do not eat with the tour guests — plus I intended to eat Thai curry, which I was not sure is authentic Thai, but is one I enjoy. I explained this to her, but she seemed to like the idea of dining on NYC’s interpretation of Thai food.

We arrived at the restaurant and I ordered, as is my custom, and retreated to the bathroom to wash before eating. When I returned to the table, she told me she hoped I didn't mind, but she had ordered us Thai iced tea. While I drink water at lunch, to replenish my system after walking for more than two hours and two miles in the morning, I wanted to taste the red concoction with milk floating on top. It was interesting — spicy with a touch of sweetness. She was drinking coffee and smiling...she noted it was authentic Thai coffee, not American coffee spiced up to resemble Thai coffee.

As we ate, I asked about the proper use of utensils. On the table are two forks and chop sticks. With the meal comes a large soup spoon. She showed me how Thai people use the fork to push the various ingredients onto the spoon, which then is inserted into the mouth. “When do you use chop sticks?” I asked. “Only when eating noodle dishes,” she said.

We enjoyed our entrees — I had my green curry with tofu, and she had ordered crispy fish. “The food is good,” she acknowledged. “We do not have any places like this in Seattle,” she informed me.

While at Isle, she spoke to the waiter and manager in Thai, and translated to me what she and they were saying. It was a comfortable lunch, the food satisfying, and conversation informative as I asked her about her childhood in Thailand and her studies at the University of Washington. Also, she gave me insights into her travels to NYC, what she had seen so far, and the woman she was visiting who had been a friend at school last year.

We finished our lunches and went to Sixth Avenue to meet the rest of the group I would be guiding around Greenwich Village. It was a lovely afternoon, and one I will not forget soon, especially since I have been to Isle since our little excursion to have the manager ask me if I were eating alone that day. I am treated with warmth most times I have lunch there, but with an extra touch since bringing one of their countrymen with me.

The atmosphere is cozy...bird cages dangle from the ceiling over the bar, tables and a long row of booth seating line one wall of the narrow restaurant. When it is cold, the manager offers to seat you away from the doorway and closer to the kitchen. Choices for appetizers include soup of the day, two types of salads, Crispy vegetarian Spring Rolls and Tofu Nuggets.

Entrees are grouped by sauces and styles with a choice of protein: chicken, beef, shrimp. tofu, vegetables or Vegetarian Duck. Asian Wok dishes, Curries, Noodle dishes, Special Seafood ($1 extra)  and Perfume of Rice dishes are the styles offered for lunch with the portions large enough that I often take home leftovers to eat at the train station waiting for the 5:16 p.m. to leave Hoboken north.