Spice Kit Wrap

Rated: ♣

I’ve been on the hunt for some good, cheap lunch spots near my office and I came across Spice Kit a few blocks away. Spice Kit is a Vietnamese-Korean-Chinese fusion restaurant serving items such as 5-spice chicken Vietnamese sandwiches, kimchi-filled burrito-sized spring rolls, and mini Chinese sandwiches (like those at Chairman Bao). The restaurant suffers from a slight case of identity crisis, and unfortunately, does not execute well.

Twice, I’ve had the spring rolls. These massive rolls can be filled with your choice of meat (5-spice chicken, beef shortribs, roasted pork or vegetables) with kimchi, lettuce, rice, bean sprouts and a special sauce. The rolls have somewhat of a sour taste – not from the kimchi but from the rice paper wraps. Also, the rolls are so large, it’s hard to eat them quickly which leads to cracking in the rice paper wraps. Towards the end of my spring roll, I was struggling to keep everything together. The most disappointing part of the spring roll was the lack of peanut sauce. I asked the server if he had any peanut sauce, and he said they don’t offer it. Instead, they have bottles of Sriracha sauce for dipping. Seriously! People order spring rolls for the peanut sauce! At least, I do. So unsatisfying…

All-in-all, I was pretty disappointed with Spice Kit. I’ll continue trotting over to Out the Door in the Ferry Building for my spring roll fix.

Spice Kit
405 Howard St
(between Fremont St & 1st St)
San Francisco, CA 94105
Neighborhood: SOMA

you might also like...

Now every piece of brownie can be an edge piece! Brilliant.

Baker’s Edge Brownie Pan – $31.99 at Costco

you might also like...

Rated: ♣♣♣♣♣

I was wandering through the isles at the downtown SF Costco on Friday when my nose caught the aroma of a sweet, cinnamon-y baked good. I looked down and found this cute little loaf of cinnamon bread from a local shop out of San Jose called Greenlee’s Bakery. Little did I know this little loaf will be the best dang cinnamon bread I’ve ever had. Sticky. Sweet. Gooey in the cracks. I’ve been eating this sinful goodness every morning this past week and it’s so hard to force myself to only eat one slice at a time. (Each slice is 200 calories!) Toast up this baby each morning and your entire house will smell like you’ve just made it from scratch. This weekend, I’m totally going back to pick up a few more loaves!

If you don’t live in the Bay Area, you can buy a loaf online for $7! Trust me it’s worth it.

Greenlee’s Bakery
1081 The Alameda
San Jose, CA 95126
(408) 287-4191

you might also like...

Foreign Cinema Storefront

Rated: ♣♣♣♣

I’m a big fan of brunch. If I could wake up and get ready early on weekends, I’d go more often. A few friends came to the city to visit one Saturday, so we took them out to Foreign Cinema for their amazing brunch. You can probably guess by the name, but this restaurant is famous for showing foreign (or classic) films in the evening while patrons enjoy their meals. They have a beautiful outdoor seating area where they project the movie on the side of a building. Unfortunately, I came during the day, so they didn’t have any movies playing. Check out their film calendar here.

Our group went all out when we ordered. Everyone recommended the pop tarts, so we had to order that. And since they had 2 flavors (strawberry and kumquat), we had to order both. To be honest, although they were pretty good, they were still only pop tarts. Now, if it was frosted, that would take it to a whole ‘nother level.

Foreign Cinema Pop Tart

Between 4 people, we also shared a dozen fresh Hog Island Sweetwater oysters. As usual, pure deliciousness.

Foreign Cinema Hog Island Oysters

For my entrée, I devoured the Chile Verde Baked Eggs with Berkshire pork, avocado, chickpeas and tortilla chips. What a great combination of textures and flavors! The fluffiness of the baked eggs mixed with the creaminess of the avocado and chickpeas and the crispiness of the chips were a perfect match.

Foreign Cinema Verde Baked Eggs

K ordered the Balsamic Fried Eggs with Garlic-Potato Hash and Prosciutto. This too was a home run. Crunchy eggs, sweet balsamic vinegar reduction, salty prosciutto. Yum!

Foreign Cinema Fried Eggs with Procsiutto

I’d love to come back to Foreign Cinema during dinner. This is a perfect date place. Apparently, they have some amazing fried chicken which has been listed in 7×7′s 2011 – 100 Things to Try Before You Die list.

Check out more pics.

Foreign Cinema Interior

Foreign Cinema Lemonade

Foreign Cinema Coffee

Foreign Cinema
2534 Mission St
(between 21st St & 22nd St)
San Francisco, CA 94110
Neighborhood: Mission

you might also like...

I’ve been really excited about one of my recent library book check outs.  It’s the Cowboys and Aliens Graphic novel, that I thought inspired an adaptation to movie form.  Actually, after being disappointed with the graphic novel, I decided to check the history of Cowboys and Aliens.  The idea for the movie was initially conceptualized in 1997 by Malibu Comics founder Scott Mitchell Rosenberg.  A script for the movie was written in 2001 and then rewritten in 2004.  In 2006, Rosenberg decided to publish this graphic novel.

So, the comic is a story about settlers traveling to a destination where they were promised land in a boomtown.  The Native Americans aren’t happy about this since, the land belongs to them.  An alien spacecraft crash lands and brings an army to take over the planet.  The settlers and Natives have to work together to remove the alien threat, and learn to live together.

Let’s continue the history of the movie.  In 2007, another new script was written by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman.  These are the guys responsible for Transformers, Star Trek, Watchmen, and The Legend of Zorro. In 2009, Jon Favreau signed on as the movie’s director.

So, if the movie was finished before 2006, the movie would have been just a sad B-movie that nobody would be interested in.  Now that we have some real talent onboard, I’m hoping this is going to be the breakout movie of the year.

you might also like...