Small Bites

Little Vittles

Published: Sep 30, 2008


coffee
Sriracha Latte at Beauty Shop Café

Beauty Shop Café (2001 Fitzwater St., 215-546-1002, beautyshopcafe.com) owner Jonathan Adler calls it a practical joke. We call it one way to put more pep in your step. The Sriracha Latte is easy to miss on the menu, and he's sold only three so far, but the unapologetic drink remains. When a former employee decided to use the tear-jerking red chili-based condiment as syrup and talked himself into liking it, the frothy kicker won over a few adventurous palates. Served best hot and with whole milk, Adler recommends mixing it stealthily and then passing to an unsuspecting friend — preferably one with a sense of humor. —Kelly White


eats
Lamb Kikil at Ethio Café

Ethio Café (4400 Chestnut St., 215-222-2104), which reopened two weeks ago under the management of new owner Genet Bersoma, is the place to go for lamb kikil. Available as a sporadic special, the dish is predicated on luscious, slightly fatty lamb hocks swimming in a bright yellow turmeric sauce that stains your injera-wielding fingertips. Near-microscopic diced onions and garlic and dainty slivers of jalapeño pepper lend a little spice to each savory bite. Last time I was there, they'd run out of proper takeaway containers for the brothy delight, so they happily gave me one of their Tupperwares. Don't worry, Genet, I'll return it — it gives me a great excuse to come back. —Drew Lazor


booze
Tullamore Dew 10-Year-Old

I'm generally ambivalent toward 10-year-olds — they're not young enough to be cute little kids anymore, yet they're not old enough to give cigarettes to. It puts me a weird position. But here's one decader I am very OK with: Tullamore Dew's 10-Year-Old, a triple-distilled Irish whiskey that's in limited release for 2008. Those who enjoy Tully for its smooth drinkability will revel in a double of this stuff, which has a nice woody personality thanks to aging in both American and Spanish oak casks. Other tasting notes highlight spicy and malty characteristics, but I was a little too busy refilling glasses to pick up on those. Bottles are going for $30 at most state stores. —DL


eats
Rabbit Risotto at Privé
Jesse Cornell

Chef Peter Karapanagiotis of Privé (246 Market St., 215-923-8313) starts by braising bunny thighs for four and a half hours in a tasty marsala sauce. While the rabbit is cooling off, the sauce is drained and used to make the risotto. White pepper, chicken stock and black peppercorns are added into the mix along with ratatouille. All the ingredients are balanced, and the chunks of rabbit meat are small enough to blend right in with the arborio. When I first tried the dish, it was served as an amuse bouche on three cocktail spoons. Now that it's gained some popularity, Privé has started offering it as a full-on tapas option. —Ptah Gabrie

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.


All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Post Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Name
please enter your name
Email (will not be published)
please enter a valid email
Comment
please enter a comment
Enter the security code on the right in the textbox below.
Security Code
please enter the code
Join the City Paper Mailing List
 

Also In This Week's Food Section

Feeding Frenzy
by Drew Lazor

Meet Dave
by A.D. Amorosi

Middle Eastern High
by Trey Popp

What's Cooking:
The Week In Eats
by Nikki Volpicelli

You Ask We Answer
Recent Comments
Advertisements
 


search restaurants by name
search by neighborhood
Search
search by cuisine
title
theater

Search
search for:
within:   of  
more jobs
(use zip or city, state)
Search
"Great vision without great people is irrelevant."
—Jim Collins, Author,
"Good to Great"
In Partnership with JobCircle
start date / /  select date
end date / /  select date
category
keyword
Search Buy Concert Tickets
Category:
Keywords: Search

Search Real Estate

ALL | MON | TUE | WED | THU | FRI | SAT | SUN

or

LOCATION:

ADVERTISEMENT