Attendees: Shelley, Pat, Jeffrey
Wobble Cafe
21 Campwoods Road
Ossining, NY 10562-3735(M
Oh my! It’s not Saturday and yet, here is the Westchester Breakfast Club standing outside the Clinton Street Baking Company waiting for highly coveted table in this 32 seat establishment. But wait, isn’t the Clinton Street Baking Company in Manhattan? What is the Westchester Breakfast Club doing in Manhattan? Any why are we willing to stand in the cold for 2 hours to eat, what is quickly becoming a very very late breakfast?
This is why. Thanks to our Presidents, a majority of us had the day off to celebrate Presidents Day. We were missing, Shelley, one of our core members whose company was celebrating in their own special way. But we also gained a couple of guests, Claudine and Jason.
The Clinton Street Baking Company is known for their pancakes. This month it was Pancake month, where from Monday to Friday, besides their usual regular, blueberry and banana walnut pancakes, they also had an additional special flavor. For us, it was Raspberry chocolate chunk pancakes.
How can we say no when delicious pancakes are calling? So, we called this emergency meeting, packed our travel bags and made our way to the Lower East Side to answer the call.
Attendees: Reid, Pat, Jeffrey, Sylvia, Claudine & Jason
Place: Central Seafood, 285 North Central Avenue, Hartsdale, NY
This review has been long, I know. Is it necessary? Probably not, but I am using it as an outlet to never again be asked, “What is Dim Sum?” and stand there and not have an answer.
Shelley:
Happy Chinese New Year, everyone!
We arrived shortly after opening, and the restaurant quickly filled up with a combination of your average weekend diner along with families celebrating the new year.
I didn’t sample everything (I was not brave enough to try the chicken feet and tripe). The items I did try, though, I enjoyed. And, for the record, I used my chopsticks the whole time–and used them well!
Following the pork bun I had some green vegetables.
Central Seafood provided me with a good introduction to dim sum. I’d go back for dim sum again, and would also like to give them a try for lunch or dinner.
What it cost: About $15 per person
Worth it: Yes, with reservations
The Rating: 3.5/5
The details: The first rule of Dim Sum is have an open mind. There are going to be options that look familiar to those of us with an affinity for Americanized Chinese food, and there are going to be options that…well..one might not regularly encounter. This restaurant had more of the latter than the former. Overall, the food was tasty, if not exemplary, and I was pretty satisfied with my meal. The first dish they brought out was Shrimp wrapped in a big flat noodle, topped off with Soy sauce. It essentially looked like a greasy white crepe. It was a little bland, though the shrimp was cooked to a perfect al dente consistency (the noodle was soggy – the opposite of al dente). Next they brought a series of dumpling like foods. The standout here was the steamed pork buns, which were light and fluffy and stuffed with a delicious, sweet pork (though not nearly enough of it). Of the other dishes I tried, I like the steamed sticky rice and ground meat steamed in a banana leaf, and this delicious vegetable concoction that I’ve spent the last five minutes racking my brain for a way to describe with no success. The sesame balls were a delicious, if suggestive dessert. Of course, no dim sum sampler is complete without trying some of the more…exotic offerings, in this case tripe and chicken feet. Needless to say, there’s a reason we don’t usually eat these parts of the animals. Overall though, the experience was a good one, and if you’re in the mood for dim sum, Central Seafood seems as good a place as any to go.
The Recommendation: Try it!
Bair:
Andrew and Yuee
2) shui-mai
3) ha gow
4) chinese-chives fried dumpling
5) mushroom/pork wrapped in tofu skin and steamed
6) chicken feet
It wasn’t great but it wasn’t terrible
It was steamed a little too long making the whole thing mushy. the beef was not that flavorful and also suffered from too much steam time.
the shrimps were small compared to the rice crepe making it look like little sad.
overall a 3 out of 5
I think i got a piece of bone in mine, and the pork was too salty.
2/5
I didnt try this one
The skin was perfectly fried crispy but the chives inside were rather mushy.
2/5
Too much sauce, other than that it was good. the whole roll was firm, and the mushroom was springy and tasty.
3/5
The were small, covered in too much sauce and way too mushy.
1/5
Reid
In dim sum, as in life, it’s all about choices. And when your choices are tripe and chicken feet, you’ve probably made a wrong turn somewhere along the line.
Place: The Cupcake Kitchen, 100 Main Street, Irvington, NY
Attendees: Jeffrey, Pat, Shelley, Sylvia
Overview:
Pat:
What I had: Scrambled Eggs with peppers and onions, coffee, a bite of Sylvia & Jeff’s cupcakes.
What it cost: $6.00 for the eggs, $1.00 for the coffee, $10.00 including tax and tip and my pilfered cupcake portions
Worth it?: Probably not
The rating: 3/5
The details: I really enjoyed my scrambled eggs, which were runnier than eggs you usually get elsewhere (I prefer them that way). The veggies seemed fresh, if a bit soggy in the scramble. The toast was stale but offered a nice texture to contrast the soft eggs. However, there didn’t seem to be jelly or jam. The coffee was basically cafeteria quality, though at a dollar with unlimited refills it’s hard to complain about that. While I didn’t order one, you can’t go to The Cupcake Kitchen, without at least sampling the eponymous product. I stole a bite from Jeffrey’s chocolate cupcake with mint frosting and Sylvia’s red velvet cupcake. Both cakes were exceptionally moist, and both frostings were airy and buttery. Sylvia’s cupcake had a perfect cake to frosting ratio, but Jeffrey’s seemed to have a bit less frosting than I might have preferred. At $2.75 a pop, however, it’s hard to recommend your indulging beyond an occasional special mood/event.
The recommendation: Try the cupcakes once, go elsewhere for breakfast
Sylvia: I had the bacon egg and cheese on a toasted croissant and a cup of coffee.
Jeffrey: After arriving on time at the predetermined time of 9:15, the three of us waited around for our final member who was running a smidgen late. That gave us time to look over the breakfast menu. The selections were few and variety was lacking. I finally decided to have the French toast and a cup of coffee.
The coffee was served in small cute cups, which were fine. The milk was served in the same exact type of cup. I believe that if one is serving coffee, one should also serve the milk in a vessel that is made for pouring into another cup. Instead, when adding milk to our coffee, we ended up spilling some on the table or the serving plates the cups were on. I did not enjoy seeing spilt milk. I was about to cry.
Eventually the food arrived. It took a bit longer then it should have. After all we were the only other people in the place. As the plates were being put on the table, we looked at each other’s food and the first impression I got was from Sylvia’s plate. An order of a bacon egg and cheese on a croissant was haphazardly put together and plopped down on a plate. My order of French toast was two, albeit thick, slices of bread that just so happened to come into contact with eggs and milk before being cooked up. In all honesty, the French toast was decent enough, but the lack of real maple syrup killed the deal. The “syrup” was the store bought cheap sugar water that had a picture of a log cabin in hopes to lure you into the belief that it’s real maple syrup.
The amount of food on the plate was also lacking. Two slices of French toast and no sides. Yes, there was a sliver of an orange, but there was nothing else. Even when asking for some type of potato side like home fries I was shot down because they don’t have anything like that on the menu. All this for somewhere around seven dollars is completely not worth it.
Taking into consideration to selection of breakfast items, quality of the meal, and quantity of the meal versus cost, there is no way I can possibly give the Cupcake Kitchen a good review for breakfast. This is more like a cupcake bakery that just happens to serve a few breakfast items. The portions for this meal were too small to be satisfying. This is not a weekend breakfast location.
On a side note, we did order a few cupcakes after breakfast to try out their namesake. The cupcakes were indeed delicious. I do recommend them if you need a cupcake for a special occasion, or a Monday.
Shelley: Arriving at the Cupcake Kitchen in Irvington on this very cold Saturday morning (and early, too–ahem, ahem!) I was looking forward to something hearty and warm, something to stick to my bones to get me through the long day.
Unfortunately this breakfast fell short.
The menu presented a small selection for breakfast, certainly not as much variety as I’ve grown accustomed to over the past several weeks–just three choices of eggs (sunnyside up, over easy, and scrambled), some basic omelettes, french toast, cereal, bagels, and croissants/muffins. I decided upon scrambled eggs with sourdough toast and a side of bacon.
After a somewhat long wait (there’s just one person working the grill at CK, at least on this particular morning), I was presented with eggs that were too runny for my liking, leading me to send them back. After a little more time on the grill, the eggs were cooked to my satisfaction. However, the rest of the food was not up to my standards. The three strips of bacon accompanying my eggs were thin and dry, and the toast, which I believe should have been crusty and crunchy on the outside while still maintaing a softness on the inside, was just hard and brittle all over, making me think that it was a bit stale.
The portions, for the price of $6.50, were a bit small and left me still hungry. I have a suspicion that CK does this on purpose, to lure diners into ordering one of their signature cupcakes.Given its name, this is where Cupcake Kitchen seems to focus its culinary energy. I ordered a vanilla cupcake with vanilla icing.
The cupcake was a reasonable size. The cake was moist and fluffy, and the frosting was nicely sweet and creamy, not too sugary.
The atmosphere was cozy and the blue and white colorscheme was soothing. I liked the retro diner tables and chairs, although sitting by the door in winter was not our best idea. The service was fine. The price was comparable to other restaurants for breakfast, although I don’t think that the food I got was worth the price.
I’d be interested in trying Cupcake Kitchen for lunch and I would definitely go back for their cupcakes, but for breakfast I’d prefer to go elsewhere.