Sep 18, 2011

Mi Patria

Mi Patria, located at 1410 22nd St. in West Des Moines, claims to be the first Ecuadorian restaurant in the state of Iowa.  It is definitely the only one currently in the Des Moines area.
Since we have been there a couple times, I've had to look up some of the dishes we've ordered: Lomo Saltado (beef stir fry with fried potatoes that kind of reminds me of the awesomest chili fries ever), Hornado con Mote (marinated pork tips pan fried with white hominy), Churrasco (amazing marinated flank steak served with fried egg, bean menestra, fried plantain, and avocado), Arroz Marinero (translates to sailor rice; similar to paella, yellow rice with every type of seafood on top), and Camarones al Ajillo (translates to garlic shrimp; was sort of simmered in a pepper sauce and served with rice).  Conveniently, a lot of these dishes have their own wikipedia pages and appear to be staple Ecuadorian dishes.
It has been pretty delicious both times we've been there.  It is kind of sad that we've gone there on the weekend and it isn't very busy at all.  The food is made with fresh ingredients by an actual Ecuadorian!  I found out from facebook that they had offered Roasted Cuy (Yes, Guinea Pig) for a limited time and totally wished I had known so I could try that!  It is definitely the place to go to try something new.  Another dish they serve as an appetizer that I would like to try is called Llapingachos.  It is a cheese stuffed potato patty topped with peanut sauce.  The meals are very filling so if I got those I might just get them as a meal though.

Sep 17, 2011

Long time no post

Yo2Go - Urbandale

Hanna keeps an eye on the Twitter feed that announces new businesses, looking out for new restaurants and eateries for us to try. A few months back, she noticed Yo2Go, a new frozen yogurt shop. It's in the strip mall at the corner of 100th and Douglas in Urbandale. It's set up like this: you grab a cone or a dish and walk forward. There are six self-serve ice cream machines preloaded with different flavors of frozen yogurt. They rotate the flavors out every once in a while to keep things interesting. After you get your yogurt, you turn around and face the giant toppings bar. It's like a salad bar of everything you'd want to put on ice cream. There are a few warmers off to one end that have hot fudge and hot caramel.

When you pay for it, there are no price levels because everything is weighed. You put your dishes on a scale and you're charged by the ounce. We have been there a couple times and have each loaded up a dish. Both times we paid about $8.00 for a good amount of frozen yogurt.