stevez wrote:They didn't check out LTH, Moon Palace or Shui Wah, all of which produce some very fine examples of Pot Stickers. I've got to agree with them about Ed's though. Although Ed's Potsticker House is one of my favorite restaurants, I'm not a fan of their namesake potstickers.
Kitchen Monkey wrote:I saw that in the trib today too. I was pretty disappointed in the breadth of places. How did they come by their list of nominees? Plus what about more non-chinese places that serve potstickers? No history, cultural references, availability of frozen potstickers in markets and no recipes. I think I am spoiled by this forum!![]()
However they do ask for suggestions at the end of the article.
billdaley wrote:I'm sorry Erik M. didn't like "porky goodness" but, you know, the phrase works. And how often do you ever get a chance to write it? LOL.
Erik M. wrote:billdaley wrote:I'm sorry Erik M. didn't like "porky goodness" but, you know, the phrase works. And how often do you ever get a chance to write it? LOL.
It's all good, Bill. Really.
It's a peeve of mine, that is all.
As a seven year veteran of Chowhound (and now LTH), I could track for you (with great accuracy, I might add) the origins of that expression. And, I will say that it grated on my nerves the very first time that I heard/read it. I have been anxious for folks to move on for quite some time.![]()
E.M.
ChrisH wrote:At least in my (Chinese) family, there were two different types of pan fried dumplings. There is the kind, described in the article, where you take an already boiled dumpling and pan fry it. I don't know quite what the term is but I don't think of it as guo tie. I'd be a little surprised if the family interviewed in the article did.
A proper guo tie is, in my view, pan fried from the start, with enough water in the pan to steam them first, and then crisped up in the pan after the water evaporates. I think guo tie should be elongated, with open ends at either side, although I will allow that there can be differences about this. I have yet to find this version anywhere in Chicago. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. The one time I tried Ed's version, it was long in shape but oddly wrapped (like a spring roll) and I didn't particularly enjoy either the wrapper or the filling.
gleam wrote:I noticed Mike Sula referred to Ed's Potsticker House's eponymous dish as being filled with "porky goodness" in this week's reader, as well. Are Bill and Mike coordinating now?
ChrisH wrote:I think guo tie should be elongated, with open ends at either side, although I will allow that there can be differences about this. I have yet to find this version anywhere in Chicago.
gleam wrote:I noticed Mike Sula referred to Ed's Potsticker House's eponymous dish as being filled with "porky goodness" in this week's reader, as well. Are Bill and Mike coordinating now?
billdaley wrote:LOL! Gee, that's coincidental. Believe me, I wrote "porky goodness" nearly two weeks ago.
:m'th'su wrote:gleam wrote:I noticed Mike Sula referred to Ed's Potsticker House's eponymous dish as being filled with "porky goodness" in this week's reader, as well. Are Bill and Mike coordinating now?billdaley wrote:LOL! Gee, that's coincidental. Believe me, I wrote "porky goodness" nearly two weeks ago.
For the record, the Ed's Reader blurb was written about a year and a half ago. I'm pretty sure I hadn't ever seen that descriptor on Chowhound before, but I trust Erik will provide a detailed citation.
Bill, you mind me kiping "nice pleats" sometime? I like it.
Mike
m'th'su wrote:For the record, the Ed's Reader blurb was written about a year and a half ago. I'm pretty sure I hadn't ever seen that descriptor on Chowhound before, but I trust Erik will provide a detailed citation.
Bill Daley wrote:Let me know where it started...pm if you have to so the thread stays germaine.
Cathy2 wrote:Tight insistence of laser focus dialogue is a Chowhound characteristic. LTHforum drifts into tangential conversations almost always keeping on the general target of food. So a discussion of 'porky goodness' within a dumpling thread is what keeps people readng everything to avoid missing anything!
Cathy2 wrote:HI,
Until Erik went back to RST's post, I thought 'porky goodness' phrase had originated (only in the context of CH-LTH boards) with Seth ... so we have Zim to thank!
zim wrote:btw,
Erik I'm kinda honored that i somehow kinda originated a "pet peeve" of yours