>> Eat the World NYC: Panama
Showing posts with label Panama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Panama. Show all posts

27 February 2019

KC Gourmet Empanadas

PANAMÁ 🇵🇦

While New York City certainly has no shortage of Panamanian folks, the cuisine of the country has always been a bit sparse, with the best chance of scoring a bunch of food coming at the annual Panamanian independence festival, a parade and party in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Vendors would line the park at the end of the route and music and good food would be available for the afternoon. When longtime favorite Kelso Dining closed a couple years back, the mantle to carry the Panamanian flag belonged solely to Michelle's Cocktail Lounge.

Now a chef has decided to open up a small restaurant in the far reaches of Alphabet City, a surprising place outside of the Brooklyn parts that normally cater to Panamanians. Possibly to compensate for this, they do offer standard NY deli favorites like egg sandwiches for breakfast. Beyond this, the tiny place has a very large menu, proving it is not the size of the kitchen but how you use it.

It is unclear whether the operation is a family affair, but it certainly has the feel of one. The chef and proprietor of the place has what could be her granddaughters run the register and interact with customers, sending orders and instruction back to her in Spanish. She has a presence back there that makes you feel like the food will be good before it comes out.


If you are eating in, grab one of three chairs at a front counter and flip through a travel brochure about Panamá while you wait for the food to be served. If you are friends, the counter might fit three without winter coats, but more realistically only two people will fit here and most take their treasures to go.

Homemade chicheme ($5.95, above and below) is one of many drinks and desserts that are on display in the refrigerated case. This is classified as a drink and wildly popular in Panamá, but often requires a spoon because of its thickness. Besides corn it is made sweet by vanilla, condensed and evaporated milk, and is spiced by nutmeg and cinnamon.

This was actually enjoyed on a second visit because after the first day I felt too good to write about only one trip. As mentioned, the menu is large and offers a great window into the cuisine.


Served every weekday from noon, an "entrees" section of the menu lists dishes named for places in Panamá and covers some of the main plates you might end up ordering down there in more modern restaurants, from fried whole fish to stuffed chicken in a house mushroom sauce.

Since empanadas are in the name of this spot, I was eager to try a few. While these are available in various forms throughout Latin America, Panamá does not have a focus on them like some others do, so you might see different styles. The traditional options here are deep fried half moons, of which we tried both the cheese and chicken ($2.95 each, below).

There are also a bunch of offbeat selections, which we cannot vouch for yet, but I did overhear someone order a chicken pesto bacon empanada while waiting one day. All types of meat, seafood, and vegetable options should please most cravings.


The yellow sauce served with these and other dishes is a housemade hot sauce that combines three peppers, spices, and vinegar. It is very good (and spicy!) and available to purchase in small bottles. In general the food in Panamá never comes out spicy but is often accompanied by some kind of sauce to heat things up if desired.

One of my favorite dishes from the aforementioned festival was always bofe con hojaldra, a stew of cow lung served with fluffy fried bread. The version here ($11.95, below) is served in a cooking pot and very tasty, the rich brown stew is salty but complemented almost too well with simultaneous bites of the hojaldra.

Lung, at least the way Panamanians cook it, is smooth and not intense, a good introduction to offal if you are fearful but curious. This is a dish that should not be passed up.


The most prepared items at the festival were always tamales, cooked by several vendors and always delicious. In Panamá these are large, almost a full meal, the meats cooked inside of them still on the bone.


The tamal de pollo ($6.50, above and below) had a full drumstick inside, cooked long enough that the meat slid right off the bone. This is another good opportunity to use their homemade yellow sauce, which was when I asked about it and eventually led to a conversation about the October parade. Apparently she has been cooking there for many years, so it was possible I had eaten her tamales before. It is good to see talented chefs continue to expand and fulfill their dreams in the industry.


And why not end a meal with a small cup of arroz con leche ($5.50, below), which hits just the right sweet spot after a filling lunch. KC is a great addition to the city, check it out.


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KC Gourmet Empanadas Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

09 March 2018

Michelle's Cocktail Lounge

PANAMÁ 🇵🇦

When 55 year old Kelso Dining suddenly announced their closure in October of last year, an immediate vacuum and void ate away on Franklin Avenue and the community. The slowly creeping pressure of gentrification had finally caught up to this Brooklyn mainstay. The new residents of Crown Heights could barely be bothered to notice, as they passed the now shuttered storefront on their way to pick up organic kale and have a craft cocktail made by someone with a moustache.

Thankfully the Panamanian community has another location to call home, to retreat in the evenings and share laughs over drinks. And thankfully for the rest of us, this place called Michelle's has a bit of tasty food.

The place seems eternally filled with retired Panamanians who have lived in the United States forever. Men and women wear hats and shirts emblazoned with the flag of their home country like midwesterners wear their alma maters. One man politely inquired about my presence the first evening I showed up and was surprised it was not killing time before a show at Kings Theatre. Apparently the stragglers usually fall into this category.


On the most recent visit, a woman who looked to be a manager was wearing a Michelle's shirt that said 1972 on it, making the lounge almost as old as many of its patrons. These people are the place's true connection to Panamá, as the liquor selection and foods are more of a Brooklyn mashup of Caribbean tastes. But they do have Ron Abuelo and Seco Herrerano if you look hard enough.

Not much exists in the way of information online, so I really had no expectations when I came for the first time. Not wanting to be too forward with my excited curiosity, a couple beers and the atmosphere was good enough until I started to feel the rhythm of Michelle's. But halfway into that second beer, the chef emerged from the kitchen, came right up to me, and asked if I would like some food. Without hesitation, I said yes, not knowing what it would be or how much it would cost.

A few minutes later a modest plate of salt fish (cod I believe), dumplings, and plantains arrived in front of me with a quick friendly explanation. Later I would find out that the plate was free, on Mondays and Tuesdays there was complimentary food for those coming in to drink.


After devouring this plate and getting asked a couple times if I liked it, new secrets started to be unlocked. This is when I learned of the fish fry that takes place on the first Tuesday of every month and promised to see everyone again. They smiled and nodded, apparently hearing this before.

But when February turned to March and Tuesday rolled around, the entire day's calendar was put in place to be at Michelle's around happy hour for the fish fry, which does last all night. After settling in, we inquired about the offerings and were told two options: $10 for fish or shrimp and sides, or $15 for a mixed plate with sides. The latter was ordered.


The tasty fish that came out could be described as well done and was topped with three shrimp and accompanied by tostones and salad. The fish fry night was more popular than the Monday I had been here before, with some folks coming in and leaving with many portions of takeout.

I received a somewhat different answer every time, but it seems pretty likely that some sort of food will be available most nights here at Michelle's. Thursday may be complimentary as well, while there seems to be soups on Wednesday if I heard correctly. Friday and Saturday offers different options for purchase. If a less cloudy picture of this schedule is obtained, we will update it here.

Michelle's is really a treasure for a certain kind of adventurer.


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Michelle's Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

21 November 2014

Panamanian Independence Festival

PANAMÁ

Officially, Panama's separation from Colombia back in 1903 happened in early November, but I guess this Brooklyn parade and festival takes place in October if only to avoid certain cold weather, and perhaps the New York City Marathon. It runs up Franklin Avenue in Crown Heights, past the one and only Panamanian restaurant in the city, and over Eastern Parkway to the festival grounds on Classon Avenue just east of Dr. Ronald McNair Park. In addition to the bands playing the parade, there is a DJ here and a line of vendors selling food and trinkets, amongst other things.





It is hard to move from stall to stall without noticing big steaming pots of bofe, a stew of beef lung, onion, and an assortment of pepper and spices. Flopped on a doughy piece of rich and amazing hojaldre, the stew soaks in and begs you to get your hands dirty. Those adverse to the iron tastes of innards may be put off, but this is still entry level offal, strictly because the dough and spicing is so intense.


Pots of another Caribbean specialty, caldo de pata de res, or cow foot soup, are also ubiquitous and tempting. The stew is full of content, at least part of a foot which you do not eat, as well as dumplings, corn, and a rich starchy broth.



Panamanian tamales should never be confused with their more famous brethren from up north. The photo may not show the large size of this item, but opening it up reveals an entire chicken leg still on the bone. The spices that this has been cooking in also make their way inside the casing, and so much taste is awaiting each bite. I literally sat with my mouth wide open in reaction to how delicious this was.



The 2014 parade took place on Saturday, October 11th.

10 January 2011

[CLOSED] Kelso Dining

PANAMÁ 🇵🇦

[UPDATE: CLOSED]

There certainly is a shortage of Panamanian food in New York City, especially when you know how good it can be. Thankfully Kelso has been doing its best to fill this void for many years on Franklin Avenue in Crown Heights. In years past, the place had a more African-leaning menu, with tastes of Panamá from the Caribbean coasts where many African-descended peoples immigrated. Nowadays there are a few reminders of this, as the cuisine has refashioned itself as more mainstream Latin American. The clientele has also shifted to match this, as five years ago it would have been very different in here, especially on weekends.

For me, the best time to go is for lunch, when the place is buzzing with activity and people, and different lunch specials each day make for nice variety. Away from the lunch special menu, you can also find the pollo guisado ($7, below), stewed chicken with rice and beans. The dish is very comforting, only mild in spice, and comes with fried sweet plantains. All the chicken is delicious and has obviously been stewing delectably in the pot for the morning.



Another option is the pepper steak ($8, below), which despite being a bit dry is very good. It might be wise to ask for an extra scoop of sauce when it comes. It is also a mild dish, much like most of the cuisine.


They also have a nice array of side dishes, empanadas, and fried goodies that you could complement your meal with or take home. The ladies here really take care of you, and if you sit at the bar, the woman doing the cooking will certainly venture out and make sure you are happy with your meal.

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CROWN HEIGHTS Brooklyn
648 Franklin Avenue
Kelso Dining Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato