Not Your Kid’s Milk Chocolate & Food Gal Contest

Yes, it's milk chocolate.

Milk chocolate doesn’t get a whole lotta respect.

Dark chocolate aficionados turn up their noses at the stuff, sneering that it’s weak, sweet, and uncouth.

But there’s a new milk chocolate in town that just might change even those snobby taste buds.

Dark chocolate lovers already know Amano Artisan Chocolate, the Utah specialty chocolate maker, for its amazingly complex dark chocolates. The company, founded by a scientist who develops search engines, has now gone the milky way. It has created two different milk chocolate bars, ($6.95 for each 2-ounce bar), which I recently received samples of. So just how do they taste?

I’ll use my patented scale of 1 to 10 lip-smackers, with 1 being the “Bleh, save your money” far end of the spectrum; 5 being the “I’m not sure I’d buy it, but if it was just there, I might nibble some” middle-of-the-road response; and 10 being the “My gawd, I could die now and never be happier, because this is the best thing I’ve ever put in my mouth” supreme ranking.

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Mooncake Time, Dining Deals & More

Fresh mooncakes at Ming's. (Photo courtesy of Ming's Chinese Cuisine & Bar)

Enjoy fresh-baked moon cakes on Oct. 3, Moon Festival Day, when the moon is at its fullest and brightest.

Ming’s Chinese Cuisine & Bar in Palo Alto will celebrate the Lunar fest with free mooncake-making demonstrations, 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. Oct. 3. A lion dance will be performed that same afternoon at the restaurant at noon and 1:15 p.m. Stop in for a taste of specialty Moon Festival dishes, or buy some mooncakes to tote home.

Sip fine wines and nibble on gourmet treats while you shop. You can do just that at “Wine & Dine Around,” 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 10 at San Jose’s Santana Row.

Participating shops and restaurants will host in-store receptions with refreshments and shopping discounts available only to ticket holders. Among those participating will be Taryn Rose, Cole Haan, Ted Baker, Footcandy, and The Blues Jean Bar.

Tickets are $25, and available at the concierge office. Price of admission includes a commemorative wine glass, and a chance to win two tickets to see David Foster at HP Pavilion in San Jose. A portion of the proceeds benefits Hospice of the Valley, the oldest non-profit hospice in Santa Clara County.

The South Bay’s own Saratoga Chocolates has opened a second store in addition to the original one in Saratoga, of course.

The new San Francisco shop, 3489 – 16th St., took over the old Joseph Schmidt space. Look for bonbons such as Marzipan le Orange, Mojito, and Grapefruit Honey.

In downtown San Mateo, 231 Ellsworth restaurant has added a new four-course tasting menu that’s available nightly.

The prix fixe is $64 per person; with wine pairings, it’s $99 per person.

Key lime pie. (Photo courtesy of Marie Callender's)

Craving pie? Head to Marie Callender’s for its pie sale going on now through Oct. 31. Whole pies are only $6.99, a savings of up to 55 percent. How tempting is that?

Choose from more than 30 varieties, including apple, banana cream, and lemon meringue. Cheesecakes and fruit pies are excluded from the sale.

If oysters are more your style, sign up for a tour and tasting at Hog Island Oyster Company’s farm in Marshall, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 6., when it will host a special event with Stubbs Vineyard.

Learn the history of oyster growing in Tomales Bay, and the perfect way to shuck an oyster. You’ll get to taste plenty of sweet bivalves and Chardonnay, too.

Tickets are $40 for members of Marin Organic; $45 for non-members. To reserve a spot, call (415) 663-9667.

For more oyster fun, McCormick & Kuleto’s Seafood Restaurant in San Francisco is hosting its 16th annual “Shuck & Swallow Oyster Challenge,” 5 p.m. Oct. 6.

A dozen teams, whose members are Bay Area restaurant employees, will compete in this free event to shuck and eat as many oysters as possible in 10 minutes. The current record is just under 200. Goodness!

Afterward, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., enjoy an oyster and wine pairing. Tickets to that are $30. Net proceeds will benefit the Marine Mammal Center.

More seafood mania gets underway 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Oct. 11 with the ninth annual Crabby “Chefs Seafood Festival” at Spenger’s Fish Grotto in Berkeley.

Enjoy an “Iron Chef”-like cooking competition, and an assortment of food booths selling clam chowder, cracked crab, and crab cakes. There also will be live music. A mobile Pacific Seafood retail store will be selling fresh seafood to prepare at home. A portion of proceeds from prepared food sales will go to the Berkeley Cal Recreational Sports Development Fund’s Camp Scholarship Program.

Dine at Il Cane Rosso in San Francisco’s Ferry Building on Oct. 11 for a good cause.

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Tantalizing Tofu

A tofu dish you'll be excited to eat.

Yes, I’m well aware that ”tantalizing” isn’t a word that one often associates with tofu.

After all, a brick of white soybean curd is not something that gets a whole lot of people excited. Not like an In-N-Out burger done animal-style, or Ad Hoc’s beautifully crisp fried chicken, or a glorious Red Velvet cupcake.

No, tofu doesn’t elicit that kind of impassioned response. But it should. It’s a versatile, inexpensive protein that’s low in calories that we all would do well to eat more of in these lean and mean times.

To that end, I offer up this beauty: “Warm Tofu with Spicy Garlic Sauce,” which has got to be one of the easiest dishes around.

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Oakland — The New Culinary Mecca

The just-opened Bocanova serves up pan-American cuisine, including quinoa salad with shrimp and orange vinaigrette. (Photo courtesy of Ashley Teplin)

If you think you’ve noticed an unusually high number of new restaurants opening in Oakland in the past year, it’s not your imagination.

Much-buzzed-about Commis, Camino, Barlata, Pican, Miss Pearl’s Jam, and Bocanova all chose to locate in Oakland. Many more are on the way, too, including Bracina from Daniel Patterson of San Francisco’s famed Coi.

Indeed, of the 160 new businesses that have opened in downtown Oakland in the past six years, 65 of them have been restaurants.

A throng of diners at Bocanova. (Photo courtesy of Ashley Teplin)

Each week, the city’s redevelopment agency fields requests for tours of available properties by San Francisco restaurateurs contemplating a new project on the other side of the Bay.

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Recession? Not at Poggio

Can you guess what this deep, dark dish is?

My husband and I play this game whenever we go out to eat somewhere new.

If the place is a true delight from food to ambience to price, we will invariably turn to one another and say, “If we lived here, this would be our neighborhood place.”

Peter McNee, chef of Poggio trattoria in Sausalito, laughed when I told him we’d already made that declaration about his restaurant from the moment the bread (a special order of just-baked shards of pizza dough, scattered with piney rosemary and drizzled with fruity extra virgin olive oil) was set down at our table. If only we didn’t live some 50 odd miles south, Poggio would definitely be our neighborhood haunt.

Crisp, warm, and delicious fragrant rosemary pizza slab shards.

Turns out he plays that game, too, when he dines out. And so must the throngs of diners crowding the very lively Poggio the recent Saturday night when McNee invited me in to try his dishes. It was my first time at the nearly 6-year-old restaurant. Every seat was taken inside the warm dining room, the bustling bar, and at the outside tables where you can feel the gentle breeze from the Bay.

Seems like a lot of people are making this satisfying Northern Italian restaurant their neighborhood spot.  They’re racking up smaller tabs now, a manager told us. And they are bringing in their own wine more often now to take advantage of the reasonable $20 corkage fee. But recession or no recession, diners continue to flock here.

It’s easy to see why. The cheery sommelier arrives at your table wearing suspenders and armed with the most colorful and memorable stories about the featured wines. Entree prices are moderate, considering the caliber of food and the amount of it. Portions are very generous here. Our half-orders of pasta resembled full-size plates at other establishments.

It’s a place where you can drop in for a Calabria pizza (Calabrian chile roasted pork, gypsy peppers, and picholine olives; $12) or a rustic spit-roasted goat leg with eggplant, and roasted onion and goat cheese gratin ($18).

A taste of the sea with albacore crudo.

The menu changes daily. From time to time, McNee also offers week-long specialty menus, including the “Festa de Pesce,” which we got to try the last night it was offered. This festival of seafood featured both cold and warm small-plate preparations of fresh local seafood.

After McNee told us how painstaking the stuffed calamari ($9) was to make, and how many pounds of squid bodies that he, himself, had to hand-stuff with a mixture of sofrito and diced squid tentacles, how could we not order it?

A shallow earthenware dish arrived as black as a Texas oil pool. The plump squid bodies were braised in their own ink. The squid were tender, and the sauce so deep, earthy, and complex that it was hard not to spoon up every drop.

From the “Festa de Pesce” menu, we also tried the local albacore crudo ($8), a mound of cubed buttery tuna with the refreshing hit of chile, lime, and mint.

Pasta with lamb

Pasta with veal

The two half-orders of pastas were not only ample in size, but plentiful with meat. The cavatelli with lamb sugo featured ridged, fresh pasta in a hearty, robust sauce. The pappardelle with slow-cooked veal and green olive sugo was a soul-satisfying dish with big chunks of fork-tender meat accented by salty, nutty Pecorino Romano.

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