Monday was February 2 -- the 10th anniversary of the day Grant actually asked me to marry him. (Totally unprompted! With no arguing on my part that engagement was the only way to go! All his idea! Hey, it's been ten years; we can remember this any way we want.) We had raid on Monday, so we switched our celebratory dinner to Tuesday, February 3, and made a reservation at Barking Frog in Woodinville.
Barking Frog is part of a little resort in Woodinville wine country called Willows Lodge. We've never actually stayed there (it always seems a bit silly, since it's 10 minutes down the road), but we've now been to Barking Frog twice -- the last time on our anniversary, where we had a fantastic Oktoberfest tasting menu complete with beer. Someday I plan on writing this up as if it happened in World of Warcraft, because Grant's main (Valinar, a Night Elf who left Teldrassil to study gnomecraft and eventually wound up serving in Alterac Valley for several years -- do I have that right?) and my former main (Ovistine, a dwarf raised in Stormwind who spent her whole childhood trying very hard to be as un-dwarfy as possible in order to fit in, but who eventually found a group of really fun dwarves to hang out with, and has started reclaiming her native culture) would totally have gone for a meal like this -- and WoW even has an in-game festival called "Brewfest" which is pretty much just like Oktoberfest. :)
But! That was not what we did last night. Last night, we had an utterly divine dinner that started with Salty & Sweet Big Eye Tuna (topped with toasted peanuts, wasabi sprouts, and Asian caramel), followed by a Warm Dungeness Crab Timbale (with green apple, butter braised leek, and spiced walnuts), and then I had Seared Ahi (with crispy pot stickers, baby bok choy, and soy-miso butter sauce), and Grant had Sea Bass (which isn't on the online menu, it's newer, but it was served over this amazing lentil thing that had prosciutto and onions).
Every single bite of dinner was outstanding. We actually started out with a tasty homemade bread with butter that had mustard seed in it (yum!), and then the tuna arrived. It was a seared tuna with a spicy crust, and every bit of flavor was interesting and fun. The Dungeness crab timbale was delicious, every bite better than the last -- if I have any complaint at all, it was that the apple slice wasn't quite large enough that I could have a bite of apple with every bite of crab; they went together wonderfully. I also really enjoyed the walnuts, and if I could find those at a local store, I'd definitely buy them, but I may have to make my own -- they were spiced with cinnamon and sugar and perhaps a little ginger, and were delicious.
As for the dinners, mine was just wonderful. The seared ahi was great, but it was even better dipped into the soy-miso butter sauce. Unfortunately, while I love miso, I have a slight sensitivity to it, which meant Grant finished off my tuna while I ate a good bit of his lentils. Oh my! I'm going to have to figure out how to do that with lentils, because that was great. Meanwhile, Grant's sea bass was great as well. If anything was less than stellar, it was perhaps my pot stickers, which were crispy-fried instead of pot-...stuck. Whatever it is they normally do to pot stickers, I think that would have gone over better than the crispy-fried. Still, with so much on our plates, I didn't feel like I was missing anything!
We came home and had cake, which may not have been our best choice ever; as people who have stopped eating sugar for the most part, we really can't have cake without it having serious consequences. However, I feel pretty good this morning (and hopefully Grant will feel better this afternoon), and although I sure don't feel like eating anytime soon, I'm really, really glad we went out there again; we had a great time. :)
Tags: out to eat, tasty
Wow, that all sounds really good! I rarely eat appetisers at restaurants because then I won't have any room for the main course (especially if the main course is something like fish that's not going to reheat very well), but those are really tempting.
Potstickers should have at least the bottoms browned, though I like to do a little browning on all three sides because I like more crispiness. I usually find potstickers at "Asian" restaurants (as in fancy Asian-style American restaurants (PF Cheng's, etc.), rather than more authentic Japanese or Chinese restaurants) to be pretty disappointing (as in, not browned at all).
I think the crab appetizer could have been a meal on its own if we hadn't split it, and it was pretty fabulous. :) I ate way more than I usually do, but it was definitely worth it! Yum!
I love the more "typical" pot stickers -- when we lived in Bloomington, there was a restaurant (Mark Pi's) that had fantastic pot stickers about the size of... say, half a fist?... and they were always browned nicely on the bottom. NOM NOM NOM! It does seem like the fancier/more mainstream a restaurant is, the less likely you are to get really good pot stickers!