Jai Yun for Authentic Shanghainese food in San Francisco

This is the restaurant that triggered me to start a food blog. We went to Jai Yun on the edge of Chinatown in San Franciscoe as it was a bit of a cult in San Francisco. It is where all the chefs go to eat when they get off work. It is run by chef/owner Nei Chia Ji who has been described as both an artist and a genius. There is no menu, you just tell them how much you want to pay and they food starts arriving. The decor is sparse and but not dingy.

This was the beginning of a 22 course meal and for our $40 budget. Every dish was cooked fresh, was totally unique, cooked in a different style and every flavour was distinct and quite amazing.

Jai Yun San Francisco

Starters: Lotus root, Vegetarian chicken, duck, imperial vegetable, jelly fish, beef, pickled cucumbers

Jai Yun San Francisco

Jai Yun San Francisco

Stir Fried Prawns with chickpeas

Jai Yun San Francisco

Soyabean, goji berry, fu chuk and spring onions

Jai Yun San Francisco

Squid in garlic, chilli and pepper garnish

Jai Yun San Francisco

Fan pei, shanghainese noodles

Jai Yun San Francisco

Deep fried crispy beef

Jai Yun San Francisco

Yin choi with tofu and chives

Jai Yun San Francisco

Stewed pork knuckle

Jai Yun San Francisco

Spicy chicken with nuts

Jai Yun San Francisco

Double fried egg plant

There was plenty to eat but we felt a bit cheated when the table of 10 next to us got a fish dish as well. We were a smaller table so maybe that was our ration.

Of all the chinese places that I have eaten at in San Francisco Chinatown, this was the best by a mile. The food was not like the Americanised chinese food that is in most of the restaurants in Chinatown. Not  chop suey to be seen. I have not been back in while so am not sure if it is still there. Definitely worth a visit, if you want an authentic chinese food experience.

Jai Yun on Urbanspoon

Hugh’s Fish Fight – Dolphin unfriendly tuna is supermarkets

I was watching Hugh’s Fish Fight and on it a couple of Greenpeace ladies went to Ghana to trace the origins of the tuna that they bought from Tesco. They followed code on the can to the fishery which ended with a fishing boat supplying that fishing boat.

Two of the fisherman from that boat said on video that they caught shark, turtles and dolphins in their purse seining nets, 3km long nets that just sweeps up everything in its way.

The Tesco spokesperson watched the video clip and said that he was shocked that dolphins were caught.
Err right.

Hugh then gets an interview with the Tesco person and tries to get them to change the “dolphin friendly” label on their cans. I have been informed by the knowledgable people on twitter that even Waitrose, Sainsbury and Coop have the same labelling and fish could be from similarly dolphin unfriendly sources. I guess Hugh will get to the bottom of this at some point.

Update:

greenpeace_tesco tuna

What is the solution to stop this type of fishing? Buy only pole and line caught tuna instead.

There is a campaign going on to end this at http://www.fishfight.net. Over 100,000 people have signed up already. Support the cause.

You can see Hugh’s Cooking Videos and Books here.

Feel free to add your comments on this issue below.

Read more here to http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/jan/13/fishing-industry-needs-to-change


Would you eat farmed salmon?

Tonights show covered farmed salmon, which is quite iffy too. Pregnant women are advised not to eat it. Here is a list of alternative fish you can buy instead.

farmed_salmon_alternative