Wednesday, June 17, 2009

IEM Session #10- We Need Another Vietnam (Part I of the Ethnic Sandwich Trilogy)


Photo by Canderson


It’s a real bummer when your country gets invaded and colonized. It has a tendency to destroy your traditional way of life. Invariably, a bunch of people get killed; and it's mostly your people, rather than the colonials. But there’s a silver lining that might make some nations think twice before they oppose colonization. Often, the conquering hoarde introduces foods from their homeland into the new colony. When the French colonized Indochina, they brought food items like crusty bread, pâté, and mayonnaise. The natives could’ve told the French to simply shove their baguettes up their a-holes. Instead, they took local ingredients like pickled carrots and daikon, traditional meats, and fish sauce and placed them on French bread along with the mayo and pâté. The banh mi sandwich was born. After the Vietnam War, many Vietnamese emigrated to the US, bringing their sandwich with them. In recent years, the banh mi has enjoyed a big surge in popularity. There was even a story about them in the NY Times this year. Who knows, banh mi could be the tapas of the twenty-tens. But unlike tapas, which were mostly a bunch of overpriced hype, banh mi is a real sandwich for real people. It doesn’t try to fool people into eating something that’s going to leave them saying, “THIS is my meal? I spent $75 and I’m still starving.” The typical banh mi costs less than about any sandwich you can buy. Hell, for the price of one of those bigger Carl's Jr. burgers, you could get TWO banh mi and get fuller than you would from the burger, and not feel all greasy afterwards. And don’t be afraid of the pâté. These days, most banh mi in the USA don’t have pâté, unless you ask for it.


This is clearly food for the people. I am out of work now (yes, still!), but even if I were gainfully employed making $300/hour, the banh mi would remain high on my list of favorite foods. If you don’t have banh mi where you live, you need to move the fuck away at once, because your town is a worthless backwater that I hope never to visit. If there are banh mi available in your town and you’re not eating them on a regular basis, you need to come to the light and stop eating your stupid goulash, turkey roll and Velveeta on white bread, or whatever the hell it is lame white people eat instead of Vietnamese sandwiches.


Seriously, in this economy, if you’re not eating banh mi and taco truck tacos a good portion of the time, you must be some kind of rich bastard thumbing his/her nose at the 99% of the world who can’t afford to pay $20 for a cheeseburger. Start eating banh mi right now and perhaps you’ll fool the rioters when the shit starts to hit the fan, which should be pretty soon at the rate things are going.


Eating Day: May 8, 2009

NOTE: All locations in Oakland unless specified otherwise.


1. BA LE COFFEE SHOP- 812 Franklin St.- 8:45am- $2.20 (Grilled Beef)


In the unlikely event that I’m able to find work again, I have no idea how I’ll ever wake in the early hours like the rest of the working stiffs of the world. At my last job, which I held for nearly 10 years, I didn’t have to get to the office until 10:30am. That was ideal. I’m fully aware that most positions will require me to arrive at work by 9:00am, if not earlier. If I have to work in SF or in a godawful suburb, like I did last time, I’ll probably have to rise before 7:00am to get there on time. On the last two IEM sessions, I did my best to get an early start to afford myself the maximum number of eating hours. I got out of bed around 7:00am on both occasions, but wound up staring in silence for an hour before I even began preparing to leave. Getting an early start for the banh mi session would provide a definite edge. Many of the places open at 7:00am or earlier, but I know of only one purveyor open after 8pm. Alas, I didn’t get to the first stop until almost 9:00am. Two hours of precious eating time had been flushed down the crapper. I was already worried.


If you come to Oakland Chinatown, don’t expect to see a bunch of touristy shit and a large selection of poorly made souvenirs. Unlike the “other Chinatown” across the Bay, Oakland Chinatown is not geared to fanny-packed, Croc-wearing visitors from Milwaukee. This is a working neighborhood that strictly caters to the local Chinese, and to an almost equal extent, Vietnamese populations. With few exceptions, the restaurants here are pretty mediocre. There’s better Chinese food on the other side of the Bay and the Vietnamese spots around International Blvd. @7th Ave in Oakland are generally far superior to the ones in Oakland Chinatown. There used to be a store on Webster St. that sold nothing but various varieties of jerky (known to me as “The Jerk Store” in tribute to George Costanza.) Since The Jerk Store’s closure, the luster of Chinatown has significantly worn off, as far as I’m concerned.


I ate at Ba Le Coffee Shop once before and remember the sandwich having a stale roll, so I hadn’t returned until this session. There were a bunch of Vietnamese men hanging around on 2 adjoining tables, which I took as a good sign, despite the sad-looking stuff I saw in their hot food steam tray. The bread wasn’t stale this time, but it had a peculiar quality that suggested it might have been purchased from a novelty shop. I took one bite and the crust exploded all over me in a cloud of crumbs. Banh mi bread is always on the crumb-y (not crummy) side of the spectrum, but this was something to behold. It was kind of fun, actually. My guess is the bread was day-old, but had been revived by placing it into a toaster oven for a minute or two. At least it didn’t taste stale. While they prepared my sandwich, I saw them take a plate of meat from the fridge and stick it into the microwave. This is sometimes a bad move, but the meat was delicious, though still somewhat cold on the sandwich. You don’t see beef much on ‘nam-wiches. This stuff was kind of teriyaki-esque. I could see ordering this on a semi-regular basis, especially when you consider they have a “buy 5 get 1 free” deal. The place was pretty bereft of the locals, other than the men at the table, who seemed like they may have been the owner’s extended family.


A lone “urban” youth came in and perused the steam tray. The men went silent. The kid looked puzzled. “Ya’ll ain’t got sweet and sour pork?” The lady told him they didn’t have that dish. “Why you ain’t got no sweet and sour? Every Chinese place got sweet and sour, ‘cept you. That shit ain’t right, yo!” He pulled his pants up a couple of inches, adjusted his penis, and exited while muttering under his breath and clucking his tongue in disgust.


2. CAM HUONG- 920 Webster St.- 9:08am- $2.50 (Curry Tofu)


I walked around the corner from Ba Le Café and crossed the wacky diagonal crosswalk that you only see in Oakland Chinatown. It was still pretty early, so the area wasn’t yet bustling with throngs of people speaking Cantonese and shoving each other. (Just as French is the language of love, Cantonese is the language of shoving.) Since the crosswalk was almost empty, I took advantage and walked slowly along the decorative tiles with my arms extended, as if on a balance beam. A guy on the corner looked at me and pointed and then yelled something to another guy standing just inside a Chinese grocery. I’m pretty sure he said, “Look at that crazy white guy in the middle of the street. What the fuck is he doing?”


Cam Huong was the first place I ever tried a banh mi sandwich. It was back when I worked in downtown Oakland, circa 2000. I used to routinely eat two of the sandwiches and a few items from their steam tray as my lunch. It’s no wonder I gained 40 lbs. the first year I worked downtown. Several years passed before I realized there were other places to get this wonderful snack, but Cam Huong remained my go-to spot for a long time because I knew what to expect there. They also have another larger location in Oakland’s “New Chinatown” (which isn’t very Chinese at all) where I would sometimes go for my banh mi fix on weekends. Until the middle of this decade, I hadn’t eaten banh mi except at their two outlets.


When I arrived, there was a Filpina ordering items from the steam tray after her sandwiches were ready. She pointed to one item and said, “I’ll take some of that pork there.” The lady behind the counter told her it was actually bitter melon. “No thanks,” the Filipina said, grimacing. This dance continued for a little while…


Filipina: “How about some of that beef porridge over there?”

Counter Lady: “That’s pork blood.”

Filipina: “Oh God, no! What’s in that roll?

Counter Lady: Liver pâté.

Filipina: Oh boy. I guess I’ll just take the sandwiches.


I chose the tofu curry sandwich once before on a recommendation from a friend and really enjoyed it. (See, I don’t just eat pork!) I remembered large chunks of rather crispy tofu with significant curry seasoning. This time, the tofu had no trace of curry flavor and it was shredded, resembling soggy frosted flakes. They didn’t adequately heat up the tofu prior to placing it on the sandwich, either. It was just mushy and flavorless. Plus, the roll tasted funny. It clearly wasn’t fresh and had a strong taste of shortening. How is this possible? As far as I know, every banh mi place in the East Bay gets their rolls from one of two bakeries. I’ve had stale rolls before, but never one with these Crisco overtones. The only possible explanations are: 1. A really old reheated roll emits this flavor. 2. Cam Huong now has a substandard source for rolls with which I’m unfamiliar. Plus, the pickled daikon was way too sweet.


The whole thing was a pretty lame offering. It’s possible that Cam Huong doesn’t get fresh rolls until later in the day, but that doesn’t explain the cruddy tofu and daikon. And if they can’t provide a quality roll early in the morning, they should wait until later to sell them. To top it all off, they used to have a very sexy chubby-ish girl with a huge rack working there. Unlike the staff at just about every other banh mi place, she spoke fluent non-accented English and could answer any question you had about the food. And she seemed glad to help even the greenest of customers. She’s gone now, and I think she may have taken the decent sandwiches with her. Until the girl and/or the good sandwiches return to Cam Huong, neither will I.


3. BANH CUON OAKLAND- 1326 East 18th St.- 9:31am- $2.25 (Combination)


There is at least one more place to get banh mi in Oakland Chinatown (BC Deli), but I decided to go eat in another part of town. I made it back to my car with less than one minute left on the new-fangled electronic parking meter. I hate paying to park more than almost anything, but if I can exhaust all the time I've paid for, I feel somewhat vindicated.


I turned left off of International Blvd. onto 14th Ave. and was almost T-boned by a guy going westbound at Mach 3. He blew the red light, spun out after he hit the brakes to avoid the fence on the BART tracks, and then turned left at the East 12th St. Burger King, jumping a center island at one point. Seconds later, three OPD cruisers came blasting down 14th Ave in pursuit. They turned the wrong way on East 12th St. A minute later, I saw the cop cars race back in the direction of the perp. I envisioned that they had taken directions from Jay Silverheels on the side of the road who advised, “Him go that-a way.” Mayor Dellums may be right to reduce the police force if these are the Keystone Cops we have patrolling the streets these days. Despite this display of idiocy, it was pretty sweet seeing this kind of Quinn Martin shit so early in the morning.


Banh Cuon opened earlier this year. For years, the building housed Vida's, a soul food-type fried fish place. The slogan on their sign read, “You buy, we fry.” Vida’s actually had pretty good fish, but they were painfully slow. There were never more than a couple of people in Vida’s at a time, but a half-hour wait was guaranteed regardless. Vida was 180 years old and ran the place by herself, even though her feet could muster no more than a shuffle. I’m reckoning she passed away next to the deep fryer with a piece of catfish in her hand. Now that Vida’s is gone, another slow place has filled the void. Usually banh mi is a quick meal, as most of the ingredients are already cooked. The staff generally need only construct the sandwich with little or no cooking required after the order is placed. At Banh Cuon, they cook the meat to order, so when I ordered a grilled pork banh mi a few weeks earlier, it made sense that it took a while. Of course, it’s always nice to get freshly cooked food, but if it slows down the pace so much that you can’t serve others, it may pose a problem for Banh Cuon. There’s hardly ever anyone in this place, so speeding up the orders a little might keep more customers coming.


It took nearly 15 minutes to get my combination sandwich. This made no sense, as this sandwich requires zero cooking to order. It was a little smaller than the first 2 entries, but the bread was very fresh. The top had the right degree of crunchiness, but there was no mushroom cloud of crumbs after each bite. In addition to all the usual condiments/vegetables, the combo banh mi includes sliced ham, pork cake, sliced head cheese, and pâté. I’m not one of these gourmet types, so I won’t front and say, “I love pâté! I love head cheese!” Like you, I am often culinarily immature and still fear liver and many mystery meats. But these items were far less threatening than I had expected. The pâté had only a slight organ-y flavor to it, resembling canned cat food more than anything else. The head cheese is sliced very thin, so it looks similar to prosciutto. The only thing strange is its texture. It was like chewing on a rubber glove. And pork cake is somehwat alike in texture to bologna.The whole experience was surprisingly quite pleasant. I will order a banh mi with these oddities again. Contrary to what one might expect, the combination sandwich does not cost extra. In fact, in many banh mi spots, the combo is cheaper than the single-meat varieties.


If you eat inside the restaurant at Banh Cuon, you’ll find an element of class that no other spot around here has. First, they have a really nice big-screen TV on the wall playing ESPN. Secondly, they comped me a glass of hot tea with the meal. And the counter lady was very friendly. I hope they succeed here, but the location is a little obscure. I was encouraged when I left because a couple of groups came in. Before that, the only other visitor was a crazy-looking woman in pajamas. She brought in some of those fluorescent green and orange gelatinous rice treats packed in a styrofoam tray and covered with Saran Wrap. The counter lady put them on the table by the counter along with some other to-go items. I think she paid the pajama lady with soup, as I never saw any money change hands. FYI, the current exchange rate for 4 packs of colored gelatinous rice= 1 large bowl of Bun Bo Hue.


4. TU TAI- 13898 Doolittle Dr.- San Leandro- 11:45am- $2.95 (Vietnamese Bacon)


I drove home and waited to hear from my fellow unemployment victim, Clark Mosher. He had expressed interest in coming along for a couple of sandwiches. As soon as I exited my car, I felt my fecal window closing like one of those automatic doors in the opening credits of Get Smart. I had seconds to run up the three floors before I made a boom boom in my pantaloons. Prior to the opening trio of banh mi, the last thing I had eaten was a 2 lb. bag of baby carrots at around 10pm the previous evening. I thought I was certain to spray loose orange-hued stool all over the bowl as if from an unholy perfume atomizer. Eating that many carrots often yields very interesting results in the bathroom. Miraculously, the product was a smooth offering, roughly the diameter and length of a billy club after it had been broken off on hippy’s skull a few inches from the tip. It was closely followed by a spiny maritime-inspired descendent, which turned the bowl into a replica of a dead coral reef. And although I had only eaten 3 sandwiches so far, the whole place now reeked of fish sauce.


The timing of this turd couldn’t have been better. After ridding myself of the billy club and the sea-poop, I felt completely invigorated, with seemingly unlimited space cleared for future ‘nam-wiches. Clark called me and I went to pick him up. We waited a few minutes until area vocal stylist Jason Morgan arrived. We all got into my car and headed for San Leandro. I just discovered Tu Tai a month or so earlier, but they were closed every time I drove by. It’s in a crappy shopping center close to the San Leandro Marina, which is a beautiful place. Want to create and impressive date for a pittance? Pick up a few sandwiches here, take them down to the Marina with your main squeeze, and watch the sparkling bay while planes land at Oakland Airport every couple of minutes. You’ll be in Makeout City in no time.


Tu Tai was playing Asian-iszed Muzak versions of some classic tunes: “Before the Next Teardrop Falls”, “500 Miles”, “I Want You to Want Me”, etc. The flaccid arrangements couldn’t kill the grandeur of these blockbuster hits, so a pleasant atmosphere was established. There was a woman there with a floppy hat and gaudy make-up running the waitress ragged. She was making new requests of the waitress every time she passed the table. I don’t understand Vietnamese, but when the waitress turned to go back to the kitchen, she mumbled under her breath. By the dead look in her eyes, I’m going to wager that she was saying something close to, “Please kill me.” I ordered the Vietnamese bacon. I’d gotten it elsewhere once before with similar results, so I’m determining now that this option is probably not for me. The bread was crispy on the outside and nice and fluffy inside and all the condiments were in balance, but the bacon is not at all like the bacon you get at Safeway. Firstly, the strips are entirely white as if they are completely composed of fat, which oddly isn't as good as it sounds. Secondly, the strips were heated somewhat, but not at all crisp. Thirdly, this bacon was even saltier than regular bacon. Every bite filled the mouth with a salty greasy film, but there was no real flavor to be found until a few bites into the sandwich. I began to notice a strange flowery undertaste. Jason said he had a similar taste on his grilled pork banh mi. We guessed that the sandwich maker may have washed her hands prior to making the banh mi and neglected to rinse the lather sufficiently, leaving a scented soapy essence to both of our sandwiches. If it’s not that, they must marinate one of the vegetable condiments in some variety of flower-scented water. Anyhow, the bacon was a little funky and Jason said his grilled pork was pretty bland. I’d be willing to give Tu Tai another shot with a different kind of meat, but if that flowery aromatic is present next time, I’m going to have to cross them off the list. If the essence of flowers trumps fish sauce, something is amiss.


5. LEE’S- 24788 Amador St.- Hayward- 12:35pm- $2.99 (Shredded Pork)


I’ve only eaten one banh mi in San Francisco, even though you can get loads of them in the Tenderloin. I just don’t get to The City very often. And when I do, I’m usually too late for ‘nam-wiches. On a recent drive through the ‘Loin I saw the SF branch of Lee’s. I did some research and learned that Lee’s is a mostly-West Coast chain specializing in banh mi. They even have a branch in Hayward. I debated whether the place was too chain-y to qualify for a session. I finally decided that Lee’s inclusion in this session wouldn’t violate my by-laws, as they are sufficiently unknown to the casual eater.


Calling Lee’s the “Mc Donald’s of banh mi” isn’t quite fair. The sandwich took way too long to be considered true fast food. In that aspect, it’s more like the “Nation’s Burger of banh mi.” In addition to banh mi, Lee’s has “Euro Sandwiches,” which consist of a BLT, turkey croissant, etc. They also have breakfast croissants and something called “Deli Manjoo.” Despite the décor and sterile feel of Lee’s, they were a disjointed operation that ran less smoothly than every mom and pop place I would visit. The counter lady couldn’t figure out who was next in line and they kept fucking up orders, if the complaining group to the right of the register was any indication. Sorry folks, it takes more than mass-produced professionally manufactured lighted signs to make your store a contender to the Grimace and the Hamburglar.


Most every banh mi around here comes on a roll, but Lee’s sandwich comes on a portion of a baguette, which I understand is the way they usually do it “In Country.” The bread was fresh and still appropriately crunchy on the outside with a nice soft center, so I really have no preference in the debate of roll v. baguette. Alas, the pork on the sandwich was a little cold and quite dry and looked like fish food. It tasted like that weird jerky product they used to sell in a smokeless tobacco tin that let kids pretend they were “dipping.” Luckily, there wasn’t much of the stuff on the sandwich. I liked that they were generous with the hot peppers. They helped to disguise some of the sketchy pork. There were all the usual toppings on the sandwich, plus some white stringy items that I suspected were boiled rice noodles. While I was inspecting these and asking Jason and Clark what they thought these things might be, a guy at the next table leaned in and said, “That’s pork skin.” I think the guy thought I was going to get grossed out, but I just shrugged and said, “Well, what do you know,” and kept on eating.


This sandwich wasn’t great, but I have to attribute most of its faults to my choice of meat. I probably wouldn’t have liked this variety too much anywhere. In fact, Jason initially ordered this variety at Tu Tai and the waitress dissuaded him from doing so. It must be an acquired taste that folks outside of Vietnam are unlikely to acquire. It wasn’t inedible or anything, but there are easily half a dozen other banh mi choices that I’d rather order.


6. BANH MI BA LE- 10174 San Pablo Ave.- El Cerrito- 2:50pm- $2.25 (Meatball)


Clark, Jason, and I parted ways. Next, I was to meet Lily Chou and Chris Anderson (Berkeley’s "First Couple of Rock n' Roll Photography") in El Cerrito. They had both only recently discovered the joys of banh mi, which I considered a travesty. I felt it was my duty to get them to eat more of these godsends.


Five sandwiches into the session and I was flying high. Meeting the 8-sandwich minimum was all but a certainty at this point, even with the short hours of the banh mi purveyors. Now, the goal was to put up some big numbers in style. I lingered at home while I waited for Lily to call and tell me when I should meet them.


This seems like as good a time as any to tell the naïfs out there a little about fish sauce. In its general application, fish sauce does not impart a disagreeable or strong taste. It just adds a subtle, pleasant, slightly fish-inspired flavor. Most SE Asian restaurants know not to use it in excess, because an over-pour can turn a delectable dish into an inedible heap of garbage. However, it has a serious smell, even when used sparingly. Its power was made even more evident when filtered through the methane-enriched corridors of my digestive tract. Each banh mi has a mere sprinkling of fish sauce, but my rectum belied this fact. Each vapor apparition I created was a dead-ringer for a child’s long-neglected fish tank, complete with murky water and lifeless decomposing fish floating on the surface. If not for the screens on our windows, the aroma I created would’ve certainly drawn flies into the apartment. If I owned a cat, I suspect he would’ve been rallying around my anus.


Lily finally called and I headed towards El Cerrito. I’ve been aware of the Banh Mi Ba Le on San Pablo for years, but this was my first visit there. I didn’t think this outlet was run by the same people as the Banh Mi Ba Le stores on International in Oakland, but I checked the signs there and they were identical. Incidentally, Ba Le, apparently means “Parisian” (i.e. French) in Vietnamese, so it’s not that uncommon to see unaffiliated sandwicheries with this name or something very similar (e.g. Ba Le Coffee Shop in Chinatown.)


Lily and Chris arrived and we ordered. They’re both semi-vegetarians so they ordered the vegetarian sandwich, which replaces the meat with a weird soy-based loaf that looks a lot like the pork loaf found on most combo banh mi. Those guys eat fish, so they could’ve chosen the sardine version, but they apparently don’t like sardines. So, they went with the weirdo veggie loaf. I don’t like sardines much either, but that veggie loaf looks like astronaut food, so I think I would’ve preferred sardines in this case.


For the past couple of years, meatball has been my banh mi of choice about 95% of the time. Don’t order it thinking you’ll get a Subway-esque meatball sub with red sauce. The meatball banh mi has no red sauce and once the meatballs are on the sandwich, they’re no longer in ball form. They get sort of crushed. It’s wonderfully seasoned pork with tons of flavor in every bite. I suspect they’re the same meatballs you get in pho, just pulverized a little. I’ve encountered new jack banh mi neophytes who fear the meatball option, thinking incorrectly that it may be a “weird meat,” a la pâté or head cheese. Rest assured, this is a very accessible meat. The meatball here was stellar and warmed nicely. The meat itself was as good as the version at my regular place. It was spiced perfectly with a subtle mix of garlic, salt, pepper, and anise, I believe. The only thing a little disappointing was the bread. It wasn’t as fresh as it could’ve been. Perhaps that extra 15 minute drive from Bui Phong bakery on International allowed the bread to age a little too much. Lily and Chris both really enjoyed their veggie loaf-wiches, so if you feel like eating a sandwich fit for a stowaway to the moon, you know where to go.


If you live in Contra Costa county, I highly recommend this Banh Mi Ba Le outpost. You’re not going to find a better banh mi in your area. But if you’re in Oakland or Berkeley, you don’t need to make a special trip here, as the Ba Le at International and 19th has slightly better sandwiches and a bigger selection. Also, the preponderance of white folks at the place in El Cerrito bugs me. I prefer to be the only Caucasian when I order these things. A surplus of white people always ruins ethnic food. I’m happy to recommend ethnic eateries to my white readers, but please coordinate with each other and visit these spots no more than 4 at a time, lest you turn a Taqueria Sinaloa into a Chipotle Grill.


7. HUONG TRA- 12221 San Pablo Ave.- Richmond- 3:30pm- $3.75 (Chicken)


Huong Tra is just a couple of miles up San Pablo from Banh Mi Ba Le. It’s mostly a regular sit-down Vietnamese restaurant, but they have a couple of banh mi on the menu. When I walked into the place the stench was so strong it felt like an invisible assailant had punched me in the face. I hypothesized that somebody may have spilled a jug of fish sauce; but it was as if a malignant vagina had exploded 2 weeks ago. And since no one would agree to clean it up, the funky gaunch was left to ferment even further. It astounded me that people were sitting at the tables there eating, oblivious to the noxious vulva afoot. A woman who looked like a slightly Asian version of Shirley Hemphill took my order. She was speaking Vietnamese to her co-workers, but would slip in an occasional bit of Ebonics in mid-converstation. “Ping pang pong, MY BAD. Ping pang pong. Chee chow chu. FOR REAL, DOG! Wing wang wo, FO’ SHO!” It is people like this that make the Bay Area interesting to me, not people in Temescal wearing Palestinian scarves. There were only two sandwich choices- “pork” and “chicken.” I chose chicken somewhat hesitantly. I’d never had a chicken ‘nam-wich before, but I was reticent to try it due to a disturbing incident that happened in December of 2008. It seems like only yesterday…


I had driven by that new buffalo wing place in West Oakland a few times and finally decided I needed to try their wings. I stood at the bulletproof window and ordered two dozen wings- 12 regular and 12 Cajun. Unfortunately, these weren’t the wings you get at sports bars, Original Buffalo, or even Wing Stop. These were the kind you see on crummy Chinese buffets in Texas. There was a sort of rub on the skin and not much sauce. The regular wings weren’t totally terrible, but they weren’t what I wanted when I was jonesing for buffalo wings. The Cajun variety were pretty gross. The coating tasted like a rancid honey-roasted peanut. That didn’t stop me from eating all 24 wings, though. I felt a little nauseous afterwards, but thought it was just due to the grease. The next day, I developed a fever of 102+ degrees and a very sour stomach. I had diarrhea that came every half hour or so. Thinking I had the flu, I slept on the couch to spare Kelly my germs. I awoke to find my drawers, pajamas, legs, and back doused with watery shit. The stuff was all over the blanket and on the cushions of the couch. It was a total mess that might have prompted a lesser man to move to another apartment while the HazMat team cleaned the site. Unless you count that time I puked once after eating a Burger King veal parmagiana sandwich, circa 1982, this was my first incident of food poisoning. I, the Inhuman Eating Machine, who ate 36 tacos in one day from trucks that may harbor bacteria not yet known to the CDC, was turned into shit soup by mere chicken wings. How embarrassing. I was sick for three days because of those tainted wings, but I didn’t think much of the incident until a few months later when I went to KFC to get a 4-piece. Every bite of the Colonel’s chicken made me queasy. I didn’t puke or loose-poop or anything, but I did not feel good at all. In fact, I even discarded part of one piece and some of the skin. I just don't do things like that! 2 months after that incident, I saw a sign at Church’s advertising a 2-piece box for $1.99. I was already laid off, so there was no way I could pass up that offer. I had the same reaction to the Church’s chicken! What was wrong with me? I love fried chicken. I don’t get queasy from food unless I eat it for 10 hours straight. I didn’t think I’d developed a sensitivity to fried foods in my old age, as I’d eaten plenty of grease-laden stuff in the last half-year. And then it hit me. I had heard how some people develop an aversion to foods that they suspect had previously caused them food poisoning. This was surely my problem. I had developed a condition, physical or psychological, that was preventing me from enjoying chicken. How could I live if I couldn’t eat chicken again? Granted, chicken is probably my fourth favorite meat out of “The Big 4” (1. pork, 2. lamb, 3. beef, 4. chicken), but there are plenty of dishes I will miss dearly if I can’t eat chicken. Take Dulcinea Gonzalez’s fried chicken, for example. I have had dreams about that stuff. If she makes that at a party again and I can’t eat any, I may as well just slit my wrists in a bathtub. I don’t want to live in a world where I can’t eat her fried chicken.


I decided the only way to beat my chicken issues was to confront the problem head-on. I had to continue to eat chicken until it no longer makes me sick. As I waited for my sandwich in the toxic vagina dining room, a very precocious blonde pre-teen girl came in and ordered a meal to go. A few minutes later, her very aggro grandmother came in to pay for the meal. While the woman rifled through her billfold for the correct credit card, her phone rang deep in the recesses of her massive purse.

“Grandma, that’s your cell phone ringing.”

“I KNOW! I can only do one thing at a time!”

“It smells bad in here. Can we get some wontons?”

“You don’t like wontons!”

“Yes, I do. It’s Caitlin who doesn’t like them.”

“No, it’s you.”


Fun scenes like this make me wish I were having kids. The sandwich came just as I was becoming used to the room’s essence of gynecological fermentation, but I decided to take the sandwich to go. I took a few bites outside before I drove. The bread was very light and fresh. So, it’s not impossible to get a quality 'nam-wich roll this far from Bui Phong. The chicken was very tender and moist and tasted like a cross between the five spice chicken they serve at Cordon Bleu in SF and the BBQ chicken you find on Vietnamese rice plates. I was very pleasantly surprised with the sandwich, despite its high price tag. Even though they had created a great banh mi, I was still getting somewhat queasy from the chicken. I got in the car and ate while I drove. With seven sandwiches inside me, I was deathly afraid that my newly acquired poultry aversion might cause the whole megilla to take flight from my stomach. I kept one eye on the curb, in case I needed to pull over abruptly. I somehow managed to get through the entire sandwich unscathed. And afterwards, I felt pretty great. I felt like my pollo-phobia was waning. I reckon that in a few months I should be eating buckets of chicken in my underwear. And I will leave the couch diarrhea-free unless the guys behind the counter “forget” to wash their hands after going to the toilet. I was starting to get somewhat full, but I knew I could eat at least a couple of more sandwiches in the next hour or so without any difficulty. This Inhuman Eating Machine thing is a piece of cake.


8. PHO GA HUONG QUE CAFE- 1228 7th Ave.- 4:52pm- $2.25 (French)


I’d walked by this place a million times and had no idea they had sandwiches in addition to their pho and other Vietnamese specialties. It’s on the edge of Clinton Park, the de facto town square for the New Chinatown neighborhood, which is really about 75% Vietnamese. I guess the name “Vietnamtown” just doesn’t bring in the dollars the way “Chinatown” does. The park hosts the annual Tet Lunar New Year Festival and other Asian cultural events. They even had a Pow-Wow there once in association with the Intertribal Fellowship located half a block from the park. When the cultural stuff isn’t happening, the park is full of old Asian men screaming at each other and smoking the hell out of cigarettes. There’s an occasional derelict passing through, but they don’t seem to hang out too much, at least during daylight hours. The park is only one block square with a lot of hustle and bustle around the perimeter, so it’s probably one of the safest parks in which to hang out in Oakland. There is no place for bad guys to hide here before they spring and bash your head open with an aluminum bat, which happened in Dimond Park.


The café is huge for a neighborhood joint. Close to 200 people could eat here at once. However, it was empty, except for the employees and their ill-behaved toddlers running roughshod all over the place. I don’t know how they can keep such a huge place in business when it was this dead so close to dinnertime. The banh mi choices were chicken or “French.” I had no idea what a “French” banh mi would entail, but I wasn’t prepared to try another chicken offering so soon. I was getting over my chicken issues, but I know I had to take the process gradually. I envisioned the French sandwich containing escargot, but it turned out that it was simply a “combination,” like the one I had at Banh Cuon. I think the pâté on the sandwich is what makes it “French.” The sandwich was strangely longer than any I’d eaten that day. The roll had an extra crunchy crust, but tasted very fresh. The sandwich was pretty identical to the version at Banh Cuon, except the pâté here seemed to be a little mayonnaise-y and their head cheese was less rubbery than Banh Cuon. Which version was better? Let’s just say it was six of one, half a dozen of the other.


I sat on a bench in the park taking in the scene. Two albinos were doing REALLY slow tai chi. I mean, these guys were moving so slow their movements could barely be detected by the naked eye. It’s possible they were actually just a couple of stroke victims on a walk. Enter a very dirty derelict with a head that consisted of 5 dreadlocks that resembled dried cow shit. He was yelling into a garbage bin- loudly. “I SAID, I can’t hang with that bitch, okay?!” Perhaps he was trying to coax some returnable cans out of the bin using this scare tactic, but he left empty-handed, except for a couple of plastic spoons. That, my friends, is dinner theater East Oakland style.


9. SAIGON WRAPS & SANDWICH- 3301 E. 12th St. (Fruitvale BART Plaza)- 5:35pm- $3.25 (BBQ Pork)


I’ve written before about the plaza at the Fruitvale BART station. In theory, it’s a good idea to have a mini-business district there so BART riders can pick stuff up quickly as they get off the train. However, in practice, the whole set-up kind of blows. Just outside the plaza is the REAL Fruitvale district where you can get all the great Mexican food you’d ever need- for cheap. Within the plaza, however, are sterile ethnic eateries only slightly more exotic than what you’d find in a mall food court, with prices considerably higher than outside the plaza. There’s the crummy sushi place, the crummy Chinese place, and even a crummy Mexican place, unless that closed already. The only reason anyone would eat at any of these places is because they were either too lazy or too afraid to go out onto International Blvd. There’s also a beignet/coffee place called Powderfinger or Powderface or Powderpuss or something. I’m a big fan of the beignet, but I checked the prices there once and kept on walking. In addition to the restaurants there is Plug, a tattoo/piercing emporium where you can also get gold teeth and “urban clothing.” Now that’s more like it.


Saigon Wraps and Sandwich is the plaza’s attempt at co-opting the ‘nam-wich places 20 blocks to the west. Wraps? Really? What year is this? When I first moved to Oakland, you couldn’t walk a block without seeing a place selling “wraps.” Who thought it was a good idea to put any goddamn thing inside a tortilla? And who thought a green tortilla was appetizing? Was there something wrong with sandwiches back then that caused people to decide that they must be replaced by a faux-rito? Luckily, those wrap places (360 Burrito, World Wrapps, etc.) are now all but gone and they took almost every Boston Market outlet with them. Saigon Wraps looks like all of the other places in the plaza and has a very chain-y look about it, but it may be the business' only location. The posters in the window are very pro-looking, but they’re chocked full of hilariously awkward English: “Extra thick Texas toast pan-grilled layered with 2 cheeses, fresh bacon, eggs, and a melting sensation outside.” AND “Now this is call a BBQ.” Normally, signs this cute would be enough to make me a regular patron, but they’re not really trying very hard with the sandwich here. The bread was toasted in the toaster oven, but it was so dry to begin with that even the loads of mayo they applied couldn’t moisten it. And the bbq pork tasted like nothing. If not for the jalapenos, I may as well have been eating wet wood chips in a toilet paper roll.


Now it’s time for a message about bbq pork (xia xiu) banh mi. This meat option seems to be the most popular choice for novice banh mi eaters. It’s what I ate before I got some stones and ventured further. Most bbq pork versions aren’t as lifeless as the Saigon Wrap offering, but even the best I’ve tried pale in comparison to even a mediocre meatball or grilled pork sandwich. Meatball, in particular, packs so much more flavor and is never dry like xia xiu often is. Please do yourself a favor and try something other than bbq pork next time you order banh mi. There’s a whole world of wonderful meat waiting for you out there, so don’t limit yourself. You wouldn’t restrict yourself to only carne asada tacos at the taqueria would you? (If you answered “yes” to this rhetorical question, please kick your own ass.)


This sad banh mi finally pushed me into the realm of the uncomfortable. I knew the sensation would pass in a little while, but I was going to have to rest a little before I ventured further. I had to take a leak really bad and nobody in Fruitvale will let you use their toilet. Since I didn’t think I could make it home without wetting my pants, I went to our practice space. NOTE: My window for urination is almost as small as the one for defecation. I need to put a Travel John in my backseat.


10. BANH MI BA LE- 1909 International Blvd.- 6:20pm- $2.50 (Egg)


After I relieved myself at the practice space, I couldn’t help but see the familiar red awning on the corner of International and 19th Ave. I was pretty full already, but I didn’t think it was right to do the session without eating at my regular spot to see how their banh mi stacks up. They were going to close in about 10 minutes, so I figured I’d just get one sandwich to go and eat it when some measure of hunger returned.


As far as I can tell, this Ba Le location is the only place in the East Bay that offers an egg banh mi. This is strange, because everything I've read talks about how popular the egg ingredient is on the banh mi in Vietnam. The egg is cooked sunnyside up with the yolk left runny. You can get the egg as the sole protein on a sandwich, or you can get an egg added to any other sandwich. I think it’s an additional 50 cents as an add-on. Any banh mi with an egg is immediately taken to the next level of awesomeness and it will help keep you full. If I had eaten egg on every sandwich of the session, there was no way I could’ve completed the session. I would’ve folded before noon. According to the menu at Ba Le “opla” is Vietnamese for “egg,” but it must have some other connotation. When I ordered, the counter lady and a guy who may have been her brother or cousin began cracking up and shout-singing. “Opla! Opla! Opla! Hahahaha!” I laughed along with them, but I had no idea what I was laughing at. “Egg! Egg! Egg!” Man, that is some funny, funny stuff.


There are three Banh Mi Ba Le stores in the East Bay now. There’s the one in El Cerrito that I already talked about. There’s the big one with the eggs on International and 19th Ave. And then there’s another one (the original store, I think) on International and 15th Ave. Yes, that’s right, they have two stores 4 blocks away from each other on the same street. The one at 15th Ave closed about the same time they opened up the much larger version at 19th Ave. The new place also has a much larger menu with a wider selection of banh mi, plus soups, smoothies, rice plates, noodles, and more. I figured the one on 15th Ave. had simply closed to make way for the new and improved 19th Ave store. Nope. About 6 months after the 15th Ave store was closed, they reopened exactly the same as before. I still don’t get it. The one at 19th Ave has EVERYTHING the 15th Ave place has and much, much more. Are there people in the neighborhood who won’t travel those additional 4 blocks to get to the newer store? Is there an invisible gangland borderline that patrons will not cross? Who knows? I’ve eaten from the new-old store on 15th Ave since it reopened and it was as great as ever, but they don’t have egg, so I really don’t see why I should ever choose it over a place that is closer to our practice space that has eggs, a place to sit, and as I learned since this session, a bathroom! I won’t have to use the filthy toilet at the practice space ever again- unless it’s after 6:30pm.


I got home and I thought my throat was going to close up from thirst. I had drunk considerable amounts of water throughout the day, but it must not have been enough. My tongue was dry and felt like it was caked in goo. Banh mi usually gets a little sprinkling of fish sauce just before it’s served. Although they don’t use much, fish sauce is very high in sodium, so I suspect that even a little of the stuff could induce the powerful thirst I experienced. I went to the kitchen and drew a tumbler of water from the tap- 24 ounces or so. I drank the whole glass in a few seconds while standing, drew another tumbler, and then sat down. I drank that glass in a few minutes and still couldn’t quench my thirst. I rose and filled the glass again. I drank some more and the thirst began to subside, but my belly was now distended far in front of me and I was impossibly full. My stomach was now churning loudly like an institutional dough mixer. I was powering out gurgly farts even fishier than what I was producing earlier in the day. I belched cautiously, because every burp brought a little acidic, watery “batter” into my mouth. I looked at the wrapped egg sandwich on the coffee table. The paper was saturated with yellow yolk. But there was no way I could fit even a bite into my gut with all of the water I’d ingested. I would have to wait until the waters subsided. I sat in extreme pain as the walls of my stomach stretched from the pressure of the water and sandwiches. I conjured up a gaseous finale that shook the room like a timpani roll in the “1812 Overture.” It reeked as if I had stored a whole mackerel in my anus, gripping it for weeks in my sphincter. This release allowed me to drift off to sleep.


I awoke around 8:30pm. I ran to the toilet and urinated furiously with juicy flatulent accompaniments. I was hungry again. I sat down and unwrapped the egg sandwich. The whole thing was moist from the yolk now, but it was perfect. The bread still seemed fresh. The carrots, peppers, and daikon were all appropriately crunchy and there wasn’t too much mayo. The egg white was cooked perfectly- not runny, but not too rubbery, either. Ideally, the egg banh mi should be served hot. When you combine it with the meatball topping, you cannot find a better banh mi sandwich in the East Bay. But even in this compromised condition, Banh Mi Ba Le creates the Vietnamese sandwich that everyone else wishes they could be. I polished off that soggy piece of heaven in a minute or two and was more than capable of eating a couple of more now. Unfortunately, every place was already closed, except for Saigon Express on Shattuck in Berkeley, and I knew I’d never arrive before they closed. I didn’t really mind that I didn’t make it there, though. I was perfectly happy to end with the sandwich I always suspected would be the best.


THE BEST: Banh Mi Ba Le (International Blvd @ 19th Ave)

THE WORST: Saigon Wraps and Sandwich


COMING NEXT TIME: Italian Deli Sub Sandwiches- Part II of the Ethnic Sandwich Trilogy

Thursday, April 16, 2009

IEM Session #9- Two Eggs EVERY Style

When I first began this journey, I asked readers for suggestions for future sessions. Most of the input came from people who didn’t quite understand the whole concept of what I do here. I’d get stuff like, “Why don’t you eat as many Chicken McNuggets as you can in an hour?” While I would love to eat a ton of those things (if they weren’t $6+ for twenty nuggets), that’s not how IEM works. The first person to forward a reasonably sound idea was Mitchell Cardwell, a fellow recession victim who has accompanied me on parts of 2 eating sessions. He said I should do a session on breakfast. I didn’t quite know what he meant at first. Breakfast is a big umbrella of food. It could mean granola or it could mean deep fried, peanut butter-stuffed, french toast wedges. While both of these things are indeed delicious, you can’t really compare them. They’re too dissimilar. He then suggested I compare the “classic breakfast” of eggs, meat, potatoes, and toast. He was scheduled to come along on part of this session, but he had to withdraw when his stereo receiver broke down. As of today, he still hasn't gotten the receiver back from the shop. So many esoteric records are going unheard.

I can’t say I was very excited about this session theme. Truth be told, I’m not all that into breakfast. No, I don’t mean that I’m against eating in the morning, nor am I against eggs or bacon. Don’t be a moron. I wholeheartedly support morning eating. And am a big contributor to the fund for bacon and eggs. My issue lies with designating certain items as breakfast food. For instance, why is spaghetti not appropriate breakfast food when a waffle is? When I ask some people why "regular food" isn't available in the morning at most restaurants, I’ve been told that people don’t eat chili, or a hamburger, or a falafel for breakfast because they want something "light" for the first meal of the day. What a sham. Bacon, homefries, fried eggs, and buttered toast are the furthest thing from a light meal. I can see eating a piece of fruit, or a salad, or steamed vegetables, or muesli if your wish is to start the day without weighing yourself down mere minutes after awakening. But the classic breakfast is as heavy as any food traditionally reserved for lunch or dinner.

And the classic breakfast is bland. All the elements of the meal are sound, but there is a serious lack of spices used. The ingredients can be incorporated in a myriad of other dishes with bold seasonings, but when they stand on their own, they’re kind of meh. There is a reason the “Mexican breakfast” is starting to become so popular. Americans are realizing that the classic breakfast imparts all of the detrimental fat, sodium, and cholesterol of a chicken fried steak dinner, but has all the flavor of a cotton ball. When you get a Mexican breakfast, there’s some salsa, the sausage is spicy, and you get scoops of lard-laden refried beans. If you’re going to eat something greasy and heavy and reduce your lifespan considerably, why not make your suicide flavorful?

Despite my reservations, I decided this was an important session. Some people simply love classic breakfast and it’s not as plentiful around here as it is in many other areas. I hoped to determine if there could be significant differences when comparing these food items, as they use so few seasonings. In an effort to make it at least somewhat interesting, I decided that I would eat toast from as many types of bread as possible, eat every breakfast meat available, and get eggs cooked in all of the usual cooking methods: scrambled, sunnyside up, over easy, over hard, over medium, and poached. For potatoes, my choices were limited to hashbrowns and the occasional homefries.

So here we go. I’m doing this only for you, the reader. I hope I have provided more breakfast options that you previously had. Those clinging to the false idea that breakfast is a light meal, should have their world blown apart before I’m done.

Eating Day: March 28, 2009

NOTE: All locations in Oakland unless specified otherwise.

1. FIFTH WHEEL- 898 San Leandro Ave., San Leandro- 8:51am- $4.95 (3 strips bacon, eggs over medium, hash browns, sourdough toast)


I had to avoid the highways to get down to San Leandro. This was the day of the big funeral at the Oakland Arena for the 4 cops that got killed by Eastmont Mall in the shootout with that scumbag. There was to be a motorcade on I-880 with cops from all over the area. It would snag traffic for hours. Despite everyone's sincere sentiments, it seemed a little excessive to go to such lengths to commemorate the fallen officers. Will forcing thousands of commuters to sit in their idling cars for hours bring back these heroes? Don’t misunderstand me. It’s true that in my days as a stupid angry youth I might have ignorantly sided with the “community activists” in the International People’s Democratic Uhuru Movement. They held a vigil for Lovelle Mixon, the guy who shot the cops. But I’m older and slightly less stupid now. Regardless of the tension they have with the OPD, it is unconscionable that these people can champion a child rapist who has preyed on their own community. They’re as bad as the fools who say Oscar Grant deserved to get shot because he was resisting arrest. To Hades with Lovelle Mixon for putting a black cloud over my pre-planned eating session.

I wound up having to traverse my way through the back streets of East Oakland to get through town and into San Leandro. And then I wound up getting stuck in the traffic near the Coliseum complex, anyway. I was already getting quite a late start for a breakfast session. And when you add the throngs of mourner traffic into the mix, it was close to 9am when I arrived at the Fifth Wheel. In case you’re not a big-rig trucking enthusiast like I am, in trucker parlance, a “fifth wheel” is the coupling device that connects a semi’s trailer to its cab. It’s kind of like a huge trailer hitch. Knowing this bit of trivia and learning that this restaurant dates to the 1950’s, I can only assume that it used to be a truck stop. Like Mac Arthur Blvd., San Leandro Ave. was probably a major highway here before the days of the Interstate system. These days, there are no truckers hopped up on goofballs hanging out looking for $10 hookers. Instead, there are folks from all walks of life enjoying a time capsule of a diner. The menu states that the current owners have run the place since 1978, so they may have been in the first group of Koreans to run a greasy spoon in the Bay Area. Thank these pioneers for preventing every restaurant in the region from morphing into overpriced fusion cuisine.

The breakfast here was a decent start to the session, but I wasn’t as bowled over by it as I was by non-breakfast items I’ve had here. The bacon came in large pieces with a good ratio between crispy and chewy elements, but the eggs were a lot closer to over hard than over medium. The yolk was almost completely solid. The hash browns had a decent golden crust, but the interior was somewhat undercooked and there was a pool of grease inside. I have my suspicions that the potatoes may have been frozen. The sourdough was clearly of the “commercial” variety, but it was well-toasted and well-buttered. I was able to polish off the meal in fewer than 10 minutes and didn’t feel the least bit full afterwards, but it already felt as if my entire body had been coated in lard from within. I was starting to wonder whether this session would result in me drowning on fat. As grotesque as that sounds, it would make a pretty cool news story, or at the very least, a fun segment on 1000 Ways to Die.

As I ate, a 20-something African-American gent down the counter was talking to another guy. “Those cops had to have expected this. You treat the community like they do, and someone’s gonna strike back eventually.” The 5th Wheel is a place where cops eat. It’s a good thing that nearly every officer in the county was on his way to the funeral at Oakland Arena, because if there were any Fuzz eating here on this day, the guy at the counter would be eating his omelet with a lead chaser. Listen, nobody’s debating that the OPD doesn’t have a very good record dealing with its black constituents. However, this Mixon guy did not shoot those cops to make a political statement. He shot them because he got pulled over for a parole violation and figured he would rather be a dead gangsta than a live bitch in prison. If he was trying to be the next Huey Newton, he would’ve methodically picked off the pigs and then sent a letter to the Tribune taking responsibility for the shootings along with a list of demands. The guy would’ve wound up getting gunned down in the end, anyway, but in that scenario, the community could at least claim he was an activist, rather than just a child raping waste of carbon. I really wish people would think before they court controversy in public, especially when I have hundreds of fat grams to consume.


2. SOUTHSHORE CAFE- 531 W. Southshore Center, Alameda- 9:36- $6.20 (4 sausage links, eggs over easy, home fries, rye toast)



I took the town roads back from San Leandro to avoid any more death-centric motorists. I saw the traffic on 880 below me as I crossed over on the Davis St. overpass. There was a line of cop cars with their lights flashing that stretched as far as the eye could see in the left lane of 880 North. They were moving about 5 mph towards the Coliseum complex. The other lanes were at a complete standstill with drivers standing next to their cars as they watched the processional pass. It was quite a display. It’s tragic that those dead cops weren’t here to see it all. I bet they would’ve gotten a kick out of the whole thing. I know I would have. (IEM readers: when I meet my certain food-related demise, please honor my passing in a similar manner. And be sure to give the food concession at the funeral to the California Avocado Growers and Sinai 48 hot dogs.) As I approached the Oakland Airport, I saw more than a dozen police helicopters overhead going in for a landing in a single file formation. I know the occasion called for somber tunes, but it was impossible not to hear C.W. Mc Call’s “Convoy” in my head:

By the time we got into Tulsa-Town
We had eighty-five trucks in all
But there was a roadblock up on the clover leaf
And them bears was wall to wall
Yeah them smokies was thick as bugs on a bumper
They even had a bear-in-the-air
Callin' all trucks, this here's The Duck
We're about to go a huntin' bear

Shortly after this somber aerial display, I crossed into Alameda using the secret back entrance near the airport. I’ve been to the Soutshore Shopping Center (now the Alameda Towne Centre- gimme a break!) a million times, but had only a vague idea where this cafe was located. If you’re heading west on Otis, it’s to the right of where the old Safeway was. It looks like the décor here hasn’t been touched in 30 years. The somewhat dim lighting is probably due to their laziness in promptly replacing light bulbs, but I’m sure it helps to mask a multitude of eyesores. The brown booths are somewhat broken down and the carpet looks like it needed to be replaced 25 years ago. In addition to the booths, there is also a counter with a few stools facing the window to the kitchen. I sat at the counter and looked at the artwork on the walls, which includes some motel-style paintings and 2 large murals painted on the walls. One mural is a beach scene; the other a lighthouse. They’re undoubtedly the work of an “outsider artist,” possibly one of the geriatrics eating at the café. I was the youngest patron by at least 30 years. The establishment is reminiscent of one of those café/diners that are popular among the old Jews of South Florida. They even have an early bird special. The seniors sit around talking and eating while they make the sole Asian waitress really hustle for her tip (or lack thereof.) They all seem to hang out for a loooong time. The groups were conversing like they would be there long enough to enact a new tax code and the solo diners all had books or newspapers with them. Nobody was in there for a quick bite. Eating there is a marathon, not a sprint. The waitress knew many of the customers by name. This must be THE hangout for the Alameda geezer in the know.

The friendly waitress may have also been one of the owners, because she was yelling at the cook like she had some kind of authority over him. They’re not the usual Koreans, though. I think they’re Thai, if the Thai food section on the menu is any indicator. The food here was surprisingly good. The eggs were half the size of the eggs at the 5th Wheel, so I assume they weren’t using the same size eggs. (Believe it or not, there is a big difference between a jumbo egg and a medium egg.) The yolk had the right degree of runniness, even though the whites had some crispiness to them. The sausages were standard-sized breakfast links, but they had a nice mix of spices without that chemistry-set flavor you often get. And they weren’t swimming in grease. This was to be one of only 2 stops where I had the option to get home fries rather than hash browns. Their version leaves the skin on and cooks the outside until it’s somewhat crisp, yet leaves the inside soft. They’re well-seasoned with a Lawry’s-type concoction. They packed a total flavor punch and were far less oily than any hash browns I would eat during the session. The rye toast was a nice change of pace. It had a significant caraway flavor, so I was surprised when it tasted so good with all 3 flavors of jam provided. I checked the menu and saw that they have a “Joe‘s Special,” a mixture of beef, onions, spinach, and eggs that is purported to have originated at the late, lamented Original Joe’s in the S.F. Tenderloin. I may have to sample this and see how it stacks up against the original version. I also noticed that there were a few small bottles of Gallo wine on the counter outside the kitchen window. I assume that they must have a liquor license, so lonely widows can get hammered while they play sudoku for 6 hours straight.

On her way to the toilet, one of the regulars chatted with the owner. “I’ve got to go to the bathroom now. Oh, there’s somebody in there? They better hurry up because I need to go. Afterwards, I’m visiting Ned at the cemetery. I figure this is a good time to visit the graveyard because everybody’s down at the…you know.” Thanks go to child-raping cop killer, Lovelle Mixon, for enabling an incontinent woman to visit her late husband’s tomb in peace.

3. BLACK AND SILVER BURGERS- 1927 International Blvd.- 10:26am- $5.50 (ham, scrambled eggs, hash browns, white toast)



Black and Silver is right around the corner from our practice space. Along with Banh Mi Ba Le, we finally have something do over there other than ogle the scantily-clad teen girls on the corners and play the hottest game in East Oakland: Ho/Not a Ho. Black and Silver is located in a space that used to be a “café.” There was a sign on the awning in Vietnamese, under which there were always the same group of menacing young men sitting in patio chairs and smoking. The place didn’t seem to be open to the public. I’m guessing it was a kind of private club where the goings-on were not always of a legal nature. That place was closed for a few months and then it seemed like Black and Silver entered the space almost overnight. The new place is run by another group of SE Asians- Cambodians, I believe. As you might infer by the name, there is quite a bit of Raiders paraphernalia on the walls, but it’s not over the top. Any sports bar in a 30-mile radius of the Coliseum is far more tasteless in that department. The space is massive, yet there are only 9 tables in an area where they could fit at least 30. The cavernous tiled room reverberates like a church gymnasium. There is a pool table in the middle and Street Fighter and Puzzle Bobble video games by the window. These may be relics of the previous establishment, but they’re a nice bonus in this new eatery that has a decent burger, hot dogs, fried fish, and cheesesteaks along with breakfast fare.

Scrambled eggs are not as easy to make correctly as it may seem. There’s about a 30-second differential between the perfect specimen and eggs you wouldn’t feed to a starving chimp. The ideal offering is fluffy and moist, but with no trace of runny yolk. If you go wandering around and leave the eggs unattended, it’s almost certain that they’re going to wind up looking and tasting like canary jerky. Black and Silver seems to have gotten their scrambled eggs down to a science. They looked like yellow clouds that could float away with the slightest breeze. The only downside is the cook had a somewhat heavy hand with the salt. With any egg, it’s generally best to go light on the salt during cooking and allow the eater to add any extra later. I’m not the biggest fan of ham as a stand-alone meatstuff. I enjoy it just fine as a cold cut on a sandwich and I like it okay when it’s served in thin slices with mashed potatoes and rolls during gentile holidays. But when a big hunk of the stuff is sitting on a plate as a steak stand-in, I’m not that into it. The curing, salting, chemicals, sugar, etc., in ham are a little too much for me to enjoy it when it's presented in such a manner. The ham here was large in diameter, but it was cut quite thin, thankfully. It was grilled as to allow a little char to develop on its surface, which may have leeched out some excess nitrates. I tore off a piece and put it on my toast along with some of the eggs and hash browns. It was a fine example of an open faced sandwich. The hash browns were cooked in a huge thin sheet with a serious crust on top. The underside was kind of chewy, which was unusual but pleasant, and there was an unexpected cheesy undertaste. My guess is there was a little cheddar mixed in with the potatoes, which may have contributed to the chewiness. While the hash browns didn’t seem to be at all greasy, my stomach was already starting to feel that rumbling sensation that I had endured early on in the fish and chips session. In spite of this, I was certain I had more than adequate capacity remaining to consume many more breakfasts.

While I ate, I observed the only other party in the restaurant. It was a group of youths in their late teens/early twenties who could be used to cast a new edgy youth culture show on PBS or an East Oakland version of Degrassi High. There was their leader, a Latino guy with spiky hair and a “Don’t Tase Me Bro” t-shirt; a nerdy Asian girl with glasses that kept falling down her nose who wore a shapeless red polo shirt with East Bay Asian Youth Center on the pocket; a tall, ridiculously skinny black guy with retro Adidas Top Tens who seemed to be forcing himself to use as much city slang as possible; and finally, the fast-talking Chicana with painted-on pants and cleavage for days. I don’t know whether these kids were teachers or peer counselors or if they had some kind of position in the correctional system, but they were having a deep discussion about how to deal with unruly kids at school. The leader took notes on a legal pad while the Asian girl transcribed them on her Blackberry/Palm Pilot/iPhone/Electric Abacus. At the end, the sexy one actually stood up and read back the minutes of the meeting. The two guys gave each other a manly half-hug and the girls hi-fived each other and may have exchanged a “you go girl” or two. As they all walked out, the guy who took my order shouted at them, “Good luck, you guys. Stay strong!” I waited for a voiceover to tell me what to expect on the next episode, but all I heard was the guy in the kitchen rapping in Cambodian. If this is what unemployment is all about, I’m NEVER going back to work.

4. HIDE-A-WAY CAFE- 1920 Dennison- 10:53am- $4.95 (bulk sausage, eggs sunnyside up, hash browns, wheat toast)


There are plenty of spots in previous sessions that also feature the classic breakfast, but I tried to eat at as few repeat venues as possible. That said, there was no way in hell I wasn’t returning to the Hide-a-Way on this session. On my initial visit (see the Cheeseburger session), the 40-something skateboarders raved to the owner about her hash browns, but I would’ve returned even if the hash browns were laced with dung. This place is a national treasure and I will come back here for as many sessions as possible just so I can witness Ms. Kim’s floor show. The quality food at bargain basement prizes is just a wonderful bonus that turns the restaurant into a bizzarro-world interpretation of dinner theater.

I had incorrectly surmised that the Hide-A-Way would be much busier on a weekday than on a Saturday, which is when my first visit took place. When I arrived, one guy exited as I was walking in, but the place was now empty. The recession must be hurting Kim significantly if her place is this dead at almost 11am. She greeted me with the same, “You ready? I’m ready!” as last time. When I ordered, I paused as I decided whether to get my sausage in link or patty form. “Oh! You should get patty. Just ask my police officers. They ask where I get my sausage patty. I tell them I only work here. My family bring to me.” If it was good enough for the OPD, it was good enough for me. I sat down and enjoyed KOIT playing my favorite lite-rock classics like Hall and Oates’ “I Can’t Go for That.”

A leathery guy with a pony tail and biker tattoos came in for a pack of smokes. He was clearly a regular.

Leathery Guy: There’s a place near the Park St. Bridge where I can get cigarettes for 50 cents less. How come your prices are so high?
Ms. Kim: What you talk about? My cigarette prices are good!
Leathery Guy: No, at Cigarettes Cheaper, they’re 50 cents less per pack.
Ms. Kim: Nobody like cheap cigarettes. They want Marlboro, Kool, Newport. Cheap cigarettes nobody buy.
Leathery Guy: Cigarettes Cheaper is the name of the store.
Ms. Kim: I no carry those.

This latter-day version of “Who’s on First” went on for way too long before Kim began explaining that the city and state were charging her out the wazzoo for the permits to sell smokes. “It not worth it! My sister used to have store in Oakland and she no sell smokes because of hassles with permit. She moved to Hayward and now she make so much money on smokes. Here it not worth it. I only sell because my customers want. I hate the mayor!” She was getting pretty worked up. So worked up, in fact, that she kept talking about smokes to herself long after the ponytail guy had left the building. Then she asked me what I did for a living. When I told her I was laid off, she looked at the ground and paused and then sighed and kind of moaned a little. “Very hard times! Many of my customer unemployed. You got to be strong. You must keep going.” She made a fist and punched the air. “Very, very sad. I have a tenant who laid off. I feel sorry for him. I ask him if he hungry and bring him food. He no hungry! His parents are rich! Hahahaha!!! Hard times cause me stress. I go to gym 6 times a week and run on treadmill. It get rid of stress. Without that, I go crazy! Hahaha.” She then reverted back to talking about cigarettes. “I no like Schnegger!” She then went back to check on my food. I took me a little while to realize that “Schnegger” meant the Governator.

The egg, meat, and potatoes all looked nothing like any entry I would receive before or after. The yolk on the sunnyside up eggs had a film over the yellow part, as if they were eyes with cataracts. They tasted fine, the yolk was perfectly runny, and the whites were done, but the look of the filmy-eyed eggs was a little disconcerting. The sausage wasn’t really a patty. It was from bulk sausage and was in a single sheet that covered up as much area as the hash browns underneath. The sausage had ZERO chemical taste and they were chocked full of herbs and mild spices. I could taste some fennel in there, which usually only appears at fancy places where they charge you $10 to lick a bagel. This was easily the best sausage of the day. The hash browns were also in their own class. Unlike all the other browns I’d eat, these didn’t seem as if they had been grated. The potatoes were in strands about the thickness of an earthworm. They had gotten a little black in places, probably due to her rant about cigarettes, but they had a great potato flavor, even though they were pretty greasy. It was kind of like eating an order of fries from the old Kwik Way after they had been run over by a fat kid on a Big Wheel. The wheat toast was unremarkable store brand bread, but it helped to soak up a little of the oil from the potatoes and the sausage. After this meal, I really felt it. My stomach was gurgling non-stop like a white noise machine. I hadn’t really consumed that much food pound-wise, but my gut felt like it was filled with molten lead. It was difficult to move, talk, or breathe at this point.

A guy with cargo shorts and an Inhuman Butchery t-shirt came in with an older guy who looked like Eddie Money’s doppleganger. I later learned that Inhuman Butchery was a Chilean death metal band, but at the time, it seemed like a sign that the Inhuman Eating Machine was butchering himself in the name of the 12 dorks on the internet. I went home. I sat upright on the couch, afraid to lie down fearing I might be unable to right myself- like a giant sea tortoise. I went in and out of sleep for an hour. I was periodically awoken by explosive gas pungent enough to induce nausea, but my stomach continued to churn at warp speed, so regurgitation was out of the question. The discomfort had become so pronounced that I really needed to release some pressure immediately by any means necessary. I felt no need to defecate, but I had to at least attempt a bowel movement or I was in danger of rupturing. I sat on the toilet, once again in periodic slumber. After a few attempts, I finally released a series of slimy Lincoln Log-like compositions that jettisoned from the source as if on a flume ride at Six Flags. The pressure had been relieved very little, but it was enough to allow me to regain proper respiration and my sense of balance. I curse your session suggestion, Mitch Cardwell!


5. EMERY BAY CAFE- 5857 B Christie, Emeryville- 1:55pm- $6.25 (4 strips bacon, eggs over hard, hash browns, sourdough toast)


I was finally able to get off the couch around 1:30. After resting a little, the gurgling had subsided somewhat and I felt there was a little room in my stomach. I looked up the addresses of a few of the places Mitch had recommended, but at this late hour and in my diminished state of being, I decided that it didn’t make much sense to go solo all the way up to Vallejo to eat an infernal sausage and egg breakfast. Eating eight or more breakfasts in one day and writing about my farts and shits made complete sense, but going to Vallejo alone was madness. I opted to stay closer to home.

I’ve been going to the International Food Court in Emeryville on a semi-regular basis since I first arrived in the East Bay. I driv past the Denny’s across from Circuit City every time, but had no idea there was another restaurant in the back of the parking lot behind their building. There’s a big multi-story office building there, so I assume the cafe mostly caters to the occupants of that building, the workers in the office park near the theater, and maybe even some of the zillions of workers at Pixar and in the biotech industry. When I arrived, the only customers were a really trashy looking fat white chick in a wifebeater and a non-supportive black bra and her boyfriend, a short Filipino with a souped-up Acura. They went outside to smoke while they waited for their food. The dude was half a head shorter than the girl, who was in heels, so his face was positioned right at her chest level. They embraced as she sat astride his lap and then the guy motor-boated her right in front of the restaurant. Classy kids. There was also a 50-something guy in the back of the café drinking coffee and reading The Da Vinci Code. He looked very laid-off and wasn’t going anywhere for a while. But that was it. Sure, it was almost 2pm, but shouldn’t a place like this be busier during the workday? These sessions were illustrating the reality of the economic downturn more than the Wall Street Journal or CNBC ever could. So many of the places I visit are primarily the domain of employees in nearby buildings, yet they’re all at minimum capacity. Perhaps the workers are trying to make ends meet and are brown-bagging it and bringing their coffee in a thermos. But I suspect there just aren’t as many workers around anymore to eat at these places. During my unemployment, I’m glad I can do a small part in helping these eateries by spending some of my government-issued checks on their premises.

2 tiny Asian girls staffed the counter. They were very delicate-looking and may have been in their twenties, but neither looked a day over 14. Since the place was so dead, they were constantly texting while they sat back-to-back on a box. The cooks, who may have been their brothers, occasionally hassled them to induce the girls to do a little work. Bay Café is a pretty massive space with an entire unused area roped-off. One of the girls picked up a broom and started sweeping the area in front of the counter while the other girl cleaned the coffee pots. When they noticed that the cooks were no longer paying attention to them, they both sat down and went back to their phones. Those cooks may be slave-drivers, but they know their way around the griddle. The bacon was enormous. The strips had to be close to 8 inches long and quite thick. They must have started with some serious bacon to yield strips of this magnitude with a good amount of chewiness mixed in with crispiness. It was almost like eating a strip of bacon steak. The egg was perfectly round as if it had been cooked in a mold and the yolk looked like an opaque yellow gemstone. The toast was from a fancy loaf; thickly sliced and well-buttered. The hash browns were the only weak link. They were almost identical to those at the 5th Wheel, except slightly less greasy.

The radio in the café played the latest hit by Christian-songbird-turned-quirky-sex siren, Katy Perry. Yes, you hipster fucks, her records are “product” the same way a Baby Alive or an Arch Deluxe are products. But you’re all fools if you deny what impossibly catchy products those songs are. Spend your day in a grease-induced fog and then tell me that “Hot ‘N Cold” isn’t a song for the ages. My innards were reaching critical mass. Eating the minimum eight servings of breakfasts was starting to seem an impossibility. I was certain that I had a Crisco-like substance running through my veins, in my lungs, and coursing through my lymphatic system. And then I got a call from my wife, Kelly. I had completely forgotten that we had made plans weeks ago to eat dinner with 2 of her clients/friends that evening. It was far too late to cancel. Not only did I have to consume at least three more breakfasts that day, I had to eat Thai/Lao food, be sociable, and pretend I didn’t feel like death.

As I exited the café, I saw one of the cooks pulling a large box of restaurant supplies from the trunk of his car. As I walked passed him he monotoned, “LSD.” I have no idea whether he was selling, buying, or merely reciting the name of this drug, but I certainly had no desire to partake of it or any other mind-altering substance, as I was already on a very bad trip, man.

6. JODIE'S- 902 Masonic, Albany- 2:44pm- $7.40 (1 hot link, eggs over easy, hash browns, Russian rye swirl toast)


I’ve heard about Jodie’s from several different Albany residents. They all spoke about it as a quirky treasure. I love places that fit that description, but when people say a place like that is in Albany, I envision a “playful” new take on classic comfort food where you pay three times more than you should because the establishment is part of the Slow Food movement. Luckily, Jodie’s is really a weirdo place that does greasy spoon food quite traditionally. And the prices are only 50% more than fair. It’s tiny. Other than the kitchen, there is nothing more than a counter with 6 stools. It must be a complete madhouse on weekends, or closer to noon on weekdays, recession or not. Every square inch of the walls is covered with photos, posters, stickers, and other junk. Also, 2 of their 3 menus are on the wall. One menu lists the specials; the other lists regular items that don’t appear on the standard hand-held menu. In total, Jodie’s has over 100 items available, which is insane for a place that seats only six people at a time.

The stuff on the wall brings to mind the Top Dog on Durant, but Jodie himself comes across as one of the kindest souls on Earth, while the literature at Top Dog suggests it may be run in absentia by the Unabomber. Jodie is reminiscent of one of the seven grandfathers on the Cosby Show and appears to be a universally loved character in the Solano Ave. area, if one can believe the photos and testimonials on his walls. A small television was playing a tape of a Fine Living Network show that featured a segment about Jodie’s. I asked Jodie when the show aired and he said it had been on only one week before my visit. When his wife of 50 years appeared on the screen, he pointed at the set and explained that she had just died a few weeks ago. Wow. It must’ve been tough for him to watch his dead wife on a show that didn’t air until after she had died. Learning of his wife’s untimely passing kind of killed the comedy of this otherwise zany locale.

Once again, I was the only customer when I arrived. Jodie was assisting his sole employee, a youngish hipster type with a shaved head and a jaunty cap, who was cleaning the walls above the stovetop while standing on a board placed on top of the burners. I was afraid they might be closed when I saw this sight, even though the sign said they were open until 4pm. Jodie informed me that they were indeed open, but they were working on some cleaning projects since they didn’t have any customers. He was really hyping up the grits. “You know what grits are? These are the best you’ve ever tasted” He gave me a spoonful to taste. I thought he was gonna stick the spoon in my mouth like a mother feeding her infant. He wasn’t lying. The grits were delicious and unbelievably creamy. I was tempted to order them, but I couldn’t think of an item for which they could substitute. And I was not going to eat a serving of grits in addition to toast, eggs, meat, and potatoes. He seemed genuinely bummed out when I didn’t order them. As I waited for my food, the radio played a talk show that featured a guest expounding on the virtues of wearing magnets.

A junkie-looking guy with a trucker cap and a fu manchu was hanging out at the table on the sidewalk. He came inside a couple of times to talk to Jodie, who was trying not to get annoyed as he helped his employee clean. The junkie asked if he could give Jodie a brown paper bag to keep in his refrigerator. I think he said it was fudge. Jodie didn’t seem happy about complying, but he took the bag and told the guy to make sure he got it out of the fridge before he closed at 4pm. Since there were only a couple of feet between my ass and the wall, the junkie had to brush up against my keester every time he walked past. I thought for sure he was trying to pick my pocket, so I moved my wallet to the pocket in the front of my pants. Yes, I’m a paranoid square who doesn’t trust junkies and their fudge bags. Call President Obama and tell him I killed hope.

The egg was one of the best entries of the day. The white was cooked firm and the yolk oozed nicely. The bread made great toast. It had a beautiful swirl and must’ve been from one of the local high-fallutin’ bakeries. It was almost too good to keep company with diner fare. The hot link was quite spicy and was oozing red grease all over the rest of the items on my plate. The hash browns were golden throughout with a rather hard crust on top, but the hot link made certain they weren’t too dry. The potatoes tasted fine, I guess, but this was the entry where I was officially over hash browns. Who needs these things? They’re the crummiest permutation of potato possible. How is it that they are more appropriate for breakfast than french fries or tater tots or a baked potato or au gratin or mashed potatoes? Those are all superior potato manifestations. Hash browns are basically the same everywhere. Even when they’re not greasy, they’re greasy. The shredded center doesn’t soak up grease; it merely allows oil to collect, as in the reservoir tip of a condom. Except for the weirdo browns at Hide-a-Way, there were only microscopic differences between the various hash browns I ate in the session. It’s not right that home fries were available at a paltry 2 stops on my journey. While they are usually more filling than hash browns and probably not something I’d want to eat 8+ times in a day, they at least take some finesse and imagination. Hash browns are a cop out and uphold the status quo. After this session, it will be a long time before I eat them again. They represent mediocrity and are the petit dejeuner personification of the decline of America in the new millennium. When you eat hash browns, Bin Laden wins.


7. MERRITT BAKERY & RESTAURANT- 203 E. 18th St.- 10:53pm- $9.25 (4 strips bacon, poached eggs, hashbrowns, sourdough toast)


After Jodie’s, I went straight home. It was close to 4pm and we were scheduled to go eat at Champa Garden at eight. Every square inch of my stomach was filled with greasy starch. To have any chance of eating a Thai dinner and then follow it with 2 additional breakfasts to get the minimum, I needed to rest and allow some settling to occur. Every belch was phantom vomit; every fart was an olfactory rape. I faded in and out of a fetid siesta until Kelly came home. When she came in the door, the first thing she said was, “My God! Open a window! Use the spray!” A cumulus cloud of methane had permeated our entire apartment. Granted, we live in a Junior 1BR that is less than 500 sq. feet, but polluting the entirety of any living space with your own body is still quite an accomplishment.

We had a pleasant dinner with Kelly’s friends, a same-sex married couple originally from Montana and Wyoming, respectively. They met at college in Montana where they must have felt more out of place than an Irishman in a dry county. We had a $25 gift certificate, so of course we were obliged to order a lot of food. We got an appetizer, a large salad, 3 entrees, and beer and wine. I made every effort to appear that I was hungry, but I was moving very slowly. It felt strange to yield much of the food to Kelly and our companions. Usually, eating at a restaurant is an exhibition where I eat non-stop until all traces of food have been eliminated- included all sauces and garnish. If my fellow diners wish to have a chance at satiating themselves, they must eat in a frenzy and throw an occasional body check my way to prevent me from taking their portions. I try to be as polite as possible, but when I’m hungry and there’s food in front of me, all of my years of comportment school are forgotten. This evening, however, I was letting others take the lion’s share. And at the end of the meal, there were leftovers, which I ceded willingly to our guests. Kelly suggested that I should make it a practice to eat 6 pre-meals whenever we go out to eat with friends, especially when it’s our first meal with them. “It’ll keep you from making a pig out of yourself in front of people we hardly know. And that way, you’ll talk with the people, rather than eating non-stop,” she said. Sorry, wife, I gotta let my freak-flag fly for friends and strangers alike. I will NOT hide my light under a bushel.

I was able to escape Champa Garden only somewhat fuller than when I entered, but I was still distended far beyond the limits of comfort. Every breath was a struggle that required a deliberate effort to avoid inducing violent hiccups, which could, in turn, cause massive vomiting. But when I got to the Merritt, I felt certain I was able to find the will to finish 2 more meals before quitting. I have a love/hate relationship with the Merritt. It was the first place I ate after I moved to Oakland. I lived across the street from it with my ex-wife for a year and a half. I was over there several times a week for their 2-for-1 day old cake slices and I ate their amazing fried chicken often. The prices were reasonable then and they were open 24 hours a day. Around 2000, they changed their hours and were only open to 3am on weekends. And their prices started rising to levels that are not what you’d expect at an old-school coffee shop. Plus, the quality of the food began slipping. I ordered pancakes there a few years ago that tasted like they came out of the microwave. After that incident, I only ate at the Merritt as a last resort. As of the past year, they are now only open until midnight and the prices are almost too high to qualify for an IEM session. Staying open late on the edge of East Oakland has some serious disadvantages, but if the Merritt is going to serve mediocre food and close prior to last call, they have no business charging those outlandish prices. Until the visit on this session, the only thing I had to recommend about the Merritt (other than the bakery and take out chicken) was that it was a good place to go to the bathroom on the east side of the lake.

The Xmas wreaths were still up in late March, yet another sign of half-assitude that further illustrates how the Merritt is still just an unintentionally kitschy diner. It can try and con people into thinking it’s better than it is by charging prices you find at more contemporary establishments, but it takes more than $12 eggs benedict to polish a turd. When you consider my problems with this place, the visit on this session was an incredibly positive surprise. The bacon was even longer than at Emery Bay and almost half an inch thick. It was the best bacon I had all day. It had just the right degree of saltiness and smokiness and had a “small batch” flavor. In Oakland, you generally only find flavor like this in gourmet bacons at restaurants located in areas with far fewer crackheads in their parking lot. The toasts were huge rounds, at least as thick as the Texas toast served at places like Bonanza. I suspect the bread was hand cut directly off a locally-baked loaf of sourdough. The home fries were large chunks of potatoes and bits of onions and peppers. The potatoes must have been partially boiled or steamed before they hit the griddle to be this moist. It was spiced with paprika, garlic, and some cayenne and wasn’t the least bit oily. They were truly delicious and would’ve made a great accompaniment for a steak. Unfortunately, there was a HUGE pile of the stuff, not what I wanted after 6 breakfasts and a pretty decent amount of Thai food. This was my first experience with a poached egg, so I can’t say for certain if it was cooked correctly. It had a consistency similar to a hard-boiled egg, but with a runny yolk. I don’t understand why they’re served in their own cup. The little pool of residual water on the bottom of the cup was a little unpleasant. I would recommend draining off the water and patting the surface of the egg dry and then dropping it on the plate with the potatoes. It was okay, but I don’t think I would order this style again.

This meal made me rethink my feelings on the Merritt. I can no longer tell folks the convenient blanket statement, “That place sucks!” This breakfast proves that’s not the case. But will I eat here again? I don’t think so. As good as it was, it’s still just classic breakfast and classic breakfast should not cost more than $9- anywhere. In the past few years, I had no interest in eating here ever again, but if somebody else wanted to try the Merritt and s/he felt an urge to pay for my meal, I’d be very happy to join him/her. So if you’ve got some money burning a hole in your pocket, let’s set that shit up!

8. NIKKO'S FAMILY RESTAURANT- 340 23rd Ave- 11:51pm- $6.95 (1 link of linguisa, eggs over hard, hashbrowns, wheat toast)


Magically, I didn’t really feel fuller after the Merritt than before. My belly was churning and distended as ever, but it seemed that the Merritt food and the Thai items somehow managed to rearrange the food already inside me like a gastrointestinal game of Tetris. I had only one meal left to eat to make the session official and was quite certain I was going to make it at this point, but I knew any false move could cause everything to come tumbling down like the walls of Jericho.

Other than the Denny’s on Hegenberger, which after dark is probably like Ft. Apache, I’m quite certain that Nikko’s is the only 24 hour non-fast food restaurant in all of Oakland. Considering this fact, Nikko’s prices are completely reasonable. They must have to spend a good deal of their overhead paying the medical bills of employees who get shot in hold-ups. The location is convenient for robbers- just off 880. And they have a parking lot, which is more precious than gold for customers and felons alike. Nikko’s deserves consideration if only for these amenities, but the grub alone is good enough to merit a visit. I’d been to Nikko’s late at night a few years ago and they were packed. It was nearly midnight on a Friday on this visit and there were a few people there, but it was far from crowded. I don’t know how they did it, but my order arrived on the table 4 minutes after I ordered it! Are they cooking with plutonium? Strangely, the only thing not cooked enough was the toast, which is the only item that a normal person might be able to make in 4 minutes. It was barely-toasted commercial grade wheat bread. It came with grape jelly that got me thinking. Why is it called "Concord" grape? Did this grape variety originate in Concord, CA back when that town was agricultural, rather than a suburban hellscape populated by dirtbag heshers? The eggs were cooked-through with a yolk that had the proper hardness. The linguisa was hot inside and outside with char marks on the skin and LOTS of grease issuing forth. They had taken a single link and butterflied it into 3 interconnected pieces. It was nothing less than meat-based origami. I had never even heard of linguisa before I moved to the Bay Area in 1996. It’s a sausage I rarely get, but usually love. While I generally prefer the spicier hot links to linguisa, the texture and complexity of spices in Nikko’s linguisa was near perfect. The hash browns were as brown and crispy on top as entries that took 15 minutes to arrive in front of me and weren’t too greasy. But, as stated earlier, I was over hash browns at that point, maybe forever. After finishing this plate, I was nearly paralyzed by all of the carbs and fat inside me and was in a state of sheer agony. Even if there was another place where I could eat at this point, I had no interest in going there. This session was now official and I was surrendering like a Frenchman.

It had been almost a decade since I ate at Nikko’s previously, but after this visit, I can see eating here somewhat regularly, especially in the late night hours. In most scenarios, I would prefer to eat something “ethnic”, but at 3:45am, you’re shit out of luck in that department in Oakland. As Kelly and I left Nikko’s, my bowels began twitching vigorously and audibly. Before I was 10 yards from their door, it became clear that I had to shit and soon. I’ve written before about my “window of poo.” Once I feel that I must defecate, I have roughly 10 minutes to drop the deuce in the toilet (or elsewhere.) In addition to my problem with my fecal timeframe, I also have many ridiculous neuroses, so I refused to re-enter Nikko’s to go to the bathroom. I had to get home immediately, by any means necessary. I had the sharpest pains in my abdomen that were only exacerbated by my safety belt. I was speeding and was afraid I might get pulled over by a cop. What would I tell him? “I’m sorry for driving too fast officer, but my duodenum is about to give birth to quintuplets. Can I get a police escort home?”

Miraculously, I made it home with seconds to spare. For what seemed like hours, I spewed forth something that resembled an algae-encrusted anchor chain you might find on a steamship submerged since the Crimean War. After I was finished producing it, I slumped over and nearly fainted. I was covered in sweat. My heart was beating so hard I though it might leap from my chest. I was hyperventilating, but I tried in vain not to inhale the vapors I’d created. Although I’d crapped out what felt like 100 metric tons of volume, I still had the sense that my belly was being externally inflated. My entire midsection was tender. I could not lie down and spent several hours sleeping upright on the couch. I later managed to go to bed, but had to sleep on my back. When I rose the next day, the distention had subsided, but my belly was still sore like a pregnant Catholic girl who had instructed her boyfriend to kick her in the stomach to induce a spontaneous abortion. It took 2 full days for me to get back to normal.

The Best: I supposed I enjoyed my meal at the Hide-a-Way more than any other place, but that's probably mostly due to Ms. Kim's personality. As far as the food itself goes, they're all pretty similar. No single place was so great that it changed my life; no place came close to being so terrible that I would steer people away. It's just classic breakfast, people!

COMING NEXT TIME: Banh Mi (Vietnamese sandwich)