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ebisu on robson |
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http://images.sodahead.com/polls/001..._1_xlarge.jpeg |
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:alonehappy: |
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Hows the fried chicken at the 7-eleven on joyce and kingsway? |
Ahahaha well a couple pages back I was raving about LA Chicken ... I never mentioned Ebisu until Asmodeus brought it up ;) ... BUT you gotta admit our Chicken Karaage has got big and juicy chunks of boneless chicken, it's our best seller! :awwyeah: |
People need to ask for fresh chicken at the franchise joints. |
churches chiken da best |
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Last time I ate it my face broke out the day after :fuuuuu: |
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But when you start doing chicken, or like pub style wings night at home, then you might only be able to get 1 session out of it. The flour gets in there an burns. I'm still looking for a filter I can hook up to it and stretch my oil out for 2-3 sessions. |
Was given a discount on a 3 piece meal at Churches. Meal was supposed to be like 10 bucks taxed in, but came out to 7.90. Guess it was because I was wearing my Toyota uniform since everyone there knows one of the service advisors from his church. When I got my total I was like :pokerface: then :fullofwin:. Delicious meal was delicious. |
I thought you guys would like to try these: KFC that pulls rank on the Colonel - The Globe and Mail Zabu Chicken's "Zabu Soy Original" with a side of pickled radish in Vancouver Feb. 2, 2012. John Lehmann/The Globe and Mail The Dish KFC that pulls rank on the Colonel ALEXANDRA GILL | Columnist profile | E-mail From Saturday's Globe and Mail Published Friday, Feb. 03, 2012 7:26PM EST Last updated Friday, Feb. 03, 2012 7:32PM EST Happy Day Metro House 109-5021 Kingsway, Burnaby 604-431-6995 $45 for chicken for two with beer, tax and tip Cuisine: Korean ************************************** Zabu Chicken 1635 Robson St., Vancouver 604-602-0021 $40 for chicken for two with beer, tax and tip Cuisine: Korean During a 10-hour stopover in Seoul last month, I went on a whirlwind culinary tour with an expat food blogger. We hoofed it to a street vendor for freshly steamed kimchi buns, made a mad dash through narrow cobblestone alleys to snack on hand-shaped dumplings stuffed with pork, crushed tofu and sweet potato noodles, then sat down to 12 quick-fire courses at a gourmet Buddhist temple restaurant. Sadly, one local taste sensation we didn’t have time to try was the city’s famous KFC – the other kind. “You’ve never had Korean fried chicken?” my guide exclaimed, as we devoured deep-fried shitake mushrooms brushed with a sweetly sour chili glaze, the monks’ refined vegan variation. No, I hadn’t. But upon returning to Vancouver, I made it my mission to find some of this crisp, papery skinned, American-inspired bird that has flown the coop and fluttered full circle, recently ascending as one of the trendiest comfort foods in New York and Los Angeles. A cross between Southern fried chicken and Buffalo wings, Korean fried chicken (yangnyeom dak) acquires its distinctive crunch from a par-frying technique that renders the fat from the skin, making it thinner and less greasy. Although recipes vary, the chicken is usually dredged in a fine-flour batter, fried for 10 minutes at a relatively low heat and shaken vigorously in a wire strainer to smooth out the coating’s nubs and crags. After being quickly cooled, it is plunged back into the deep fryer until evenly browned and tossed in sauce, which is absorbed through the lean crust without getting soggy. The search led to Happy Day Metro House, a garishly lit outpost on Kingsway near Boundary Road. Seated at a spacious purple booth while being serenaded by Korean pop and Katy Perry, a friend and I were slightly disappointed to discover that this suburban dive doesn’t provide the customary complements of pickled radish (their wilted broccoli banchan looked awfully sad) or Korean beer (we made do with draft glasses of Okanagan Spring lager). Happy Day does, however, offer massively mounded plates of “real potato chips” (imagine the spiraled “hurricanes” at Richmond Night Market, plucked off their wooden skewers and heavily salted). After perusing a confusing menu (three menus, actually) with 20-odd fried chicken dishes overlapping in several sections, we eventually settled on spicy drumsticks and a combo platter of boneless white and dark meat with mustard sauce on the side. “On the side?” an otherwise aloof waitress asked quizzically. Lesson learned: Don’t ignore a server’s subtle hints when dining in unfamiliar territory. There was nothing wrong with our long juicy tenders buried under slivered green onions. Or the mustard sauce, a magnificently sinus-tingling, minced garlic slurry. Pale golden breading was thicker than expected, leading us to wonder if the chicken had been fried only once – or perhaps brined and steamed before frying (the method David Chang uses for his rarefied Korean fried poulet rouge at Momofuku Noodle Bar.) But when reheating the leftover pieces (still crisp and moist two days later), I couldn’t help thinking that we had missed a potentially explosive KFC moment by not eating them sizzling hot right out of the fryer, all tangled up in sticky scallion clumps. If you go, order your chicken as the server suggests – although you can safely skip the spicy drumsticks (more delicately fried, but heavy-handedly smeared in goopy, fermented-chili gochujang). A modern snack food not served in traditional restaurants, Korean fried chicken is still a stealthy target in Greater Vancouver. Zabu Chicken was the only other place I could find it. Painted in wall-to-wall black and pulsing with bubbly pop music, this rowdy student hangout in the West End’s little Korea Town is more of a late-night bar than restaurant. But it does offer take-out, plenty of Korean beer (including a shattered bottle of Hite that one very tipsy urban soldier dropped at our feet) and extremely addictive, crackly crusted, lightly sauced KFC. While Zabu’s “freshest, not frozen” chicken can be ordered in various portions of wings and sticks, I suggest the “original,” a whole chicken hacked into bite-sized pieces with all its flavourful thigh meat and finely crusted back bones that are such fun to scrape and chomp. Especially when tossed in Zabu’s finger-licking soy garlic sauce, a mildly sweet honey-garlic glaze ignited by savoury umami. And served with a refreshing side dish of pickled radish. Mission deliciously accomplished. © 2012 The Globe and Mail Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
^ I've had Zabu Chicken countless of times. It's great, but overpriced. The owner told me that it's double fried. Church's > Zabu |
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The chipotle burger was just alright. The Spicy thigh sandwich is miles better IMO |
The restaurant called "happy day" in the globe and mail is the old Lee's chicken. I like zabu chicken, but it is over priced. Also the spicy thigh sandwich is very delicious. Better than chipotle chicken breast sandwich. |
LA chicken has THE best deep fried chicken ever Richmond No.5 n Cambie |
chicken party on north road is pretty good, the garlic soy was money. surprisingly, koreans know how to make good fried chicken. |
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Fried chicken is HUGE in Korea. |
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Not really in the lower mainland but for non flips you guys should really try jollibee fried chicken. They call em chicken joys. LOL so damn good. Posted via RS Mobile |
I've also heard good things about Chester fried at 7/11 corner of Joyce and kingsway Posted via RS Mobile |
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