Posts for category ‘Hole in the Wall Files’

Hole in the Wall Files: Der Jaeger Antiques and BBQ Pit
Danielle | June 11, 2010

Willkommen! Welcome to Der Jaeger. Whether you are hunting for fine art, fine dining, collectables, militaria, or just a quick bite; you’ve come to the right place. But you don’t have to be German to enjoy all that we have to offer…

I love Pennsylvania. If you happen to be driving through the town of Lake Ariel, perhaps during a weekend trip to the northern Poconos Mountains, you may suddenly get a whiff of BBQ. Rocco caught it first.

All I saw was an antique store, but…

>> Read on to find out where the sweet smell of meat was coming from. >>

The Hole in the Wall Files: Milt’s Stop and Eat
Casey | March 15, 2010

Over the past ten days, Dan and I put 1500 miles on a hardy little Ford Fusion rental as we toured a bunch of national parks throughout Arizona and Utah. We started in Phoenix and wound our way up the Colorado and Green rivers, through the Grand Canyon and Monument Valley before scaling a few mountains at Canyonlands and Arches.

Though we managed to down a fair amount of local specialties (incredible green and red chile sauce at 15.Quince in Jerome, AZ, Grand Canyon Sunset Amber Ale brewed in Williams, AZ, and way too much Navajo frybread over two nights in Monument Valley), by the time we pulled into Moab, Utah, we were more than a little weary of the typical soup, salad, and faux steakhouse menus encountered along the way.

Thank God for Milt’s Stop and Eat, a few blocks off Moab’s main drag.

milts stop and eat, moab, utah, hamburgers, shakes
>> Read on to hear about what makes this 1954 throwback perennially popular. >>

The Hole in the Wall Files: Taqueria Los Jarritos
Danielle | February 5, 2010

People say that Rosa Mexicana or Mexicana Mama serve the best Mexican food in New York. Bah. They obviously haven’t had dinner at Taqueria Los Jarritos.

Ride the 1 all the way to 190th Street, take the elevator up, and turn left on St. Nicholas Avenue. Look for the blinking lights right next to the old Armenian church.  Los Jarritos looks like a grocery store run by a mariachi band, yet hiding inside are four or five plastic wrapped tables, none of which are more than a few feet from a jukebox blaring Mexican hits and classics at top volume.

Grab a menu and order from the pictures. Nobody speaks English and you may get something other than what you were expecting. Here you’ll find hearty, well-done staple dishes from Puebla, not the jack cheese-plastered stuff we consider Mexican food, however comforting it may sometimes be.
>> How is the food at Los Jarritos different from typical Mexican food? Read on. >>

The Hole in the Wall Files: Trung Nam French Bakery
Danielle | January 7, 2010

My second entry in The Hole in the Wall Files is Trung Nam French Bakery in St. Paul, Minnesota, right in the center of an industrial area called Frogtown. Always a working class neighborhood, it’s now home to large Vietnamese, Thai, and Laotian communities, as well as the largest Hmong community in the United States. During the summer there’s even a Hmong farmer’s market with a large selection of hard to find Asian herbs and vegetables.

Trung Nam thrives in the former digs of a Popeye’s restaurant and turns out what are rumored to be the very best croissants in the Twin Cities.

Inside Trung Nam Bakery, looking out on University Avenue

Most of them that are delivered to restaurants around the area, but if you want to pick up a croissant fresh from the oven, you’ll have to do it before 1pm. Actually, that might even be too late. Go earlier.  If you don’t make it, get a giant bánh mì sandwich instead and satisfy your lust with its warm, crusty French baguette.

If you were to judge Trung Nam French Bakery by its outward appearance, you likely would pass it by. But now you know.

Trung Nam French Bakery, 739 University Ave. W., St. Paul, MN. 651-229-0887

The Hole in the Wall Files: Dixon’s Hoagie Hut
Danielle | December 1, 2009
Years ago, during the first of many visits to Naples, Italy, I learned an important lesson about how to find great local food. My dear friend Maureen and I were wandering the winding streets of the Spanish quarter, searching for a place to have dinner that had soft lighting and ambience. Yet, each time we found a restaurant that fit our vision, the place was filled with German tourists. The locals all seemed to be dining in tiny spaces with peeling paint, buzzing fluorescent lights, and makeshift altars to the Madonna set inside circuit breaker boxes. In Naples, an economically poor city of crumbling palaces, the best local food is found at the hole in the wall. Since then, I have always held more affection and admiration for these worn little spots than for a restaurant with 3 stars that employs a waiter specifically devoted to grinding pepper.
 
My first entry into the Hole in the Wall Files is Dixon’s Hoagie Hut in Factoryville, PA. Located on a lonely stretch of Tunkhannock Road, not far from the Susquehanna River, it’s not anywhere near where you’re likely going to be. Just in case you are, make sure you stop in for a sandwich. First, this is the menu.
hoagie sign
 
But really, you should order the steak and cheese hoagie, because it’s going to be the best one you’ve ever had. Seriously. It kills the best Philly cheesesteak—Pat’s, Geno’s, whatever—this is better.
 
I hear from the locals that the Hoagie Hut has been operated by the same family for a long time. Two teenagers, presumably of the newest generation, made our sandwiches, though it was noted that there’s an older woman working there who makes them better, even if she is less generous with the meat.
hoagie hut sign
 
The steak is put on the grill with slices of cheese on top. As the steak is cooked, it’s chopped and the cheese melts over it creating a molten cheese/meat combo. Sweet and spicy peppers are mixed in along with onions and then served on a hoagie bun. The bread is on the thin side, making the experience of eating your hoagie an oozing, decadent affair that requires your full concentration, and the occasional mission to recover dropped pieces of steak.  It’s similar to balancing the thin slices of rye bread on which good hand-cut pastrami is served. You’re gonna need a big pile o’ napkins.
 
I wish I had taken a picture but I guess my fingers were covered in cheese. I was full after my first half, Thanksgiving dinner having been consumed within the prior 24 hours, but I wasn’t willing to relinquish my second half. I went slowly, taking deep breaths, putting it down for a few minutes at a time, then picking it up quickly when I noticed my boyfriend giving it the eye. Rocco went through his good dog paces in my peripheral sight, sitting, laying down, and waving his best “shake” paw at me as my glance grazed him. He never had a chance.
 
If you were to judge the Hoagie Hut by its outward appearance, you likely would pass it by. But now you know.
hoagie hut
 
Dixon’s Hoagie Hut, Tunkhannock Rd, Factoryville, PA 18419 (570) 945-5685