Manzo

by AFG in


For my first long form review (visit vs. quickie), I will be discussing a visit to Manzo in Manhattan.  But before I get into it, a few comments on reviewing. Normally, restaurant reviewers visit a restaurant numerous times before reviewing it. This is the best way to gauge the food, service and ambiance, and control for one-time items. Given time and budget considerations, I will only be able to visit a restaurant once before reviewing it. That being said, my reviews will focus on the positive and will not dwell on the negative. Unless, there’s something very negative that happens…

So let’s begin; I am sure the format will evolve as I write (and eat).


Some people love Eataly. Some people hate Eataly. I tend to place myself closer to the love side of this continuum. For someone who likes top notch ingredients, incredible selection and “cool stuff”, Eataly is off the charts. The only problem with it is the overcrowding and its use as a tourist destination. Last time I was there to buy Guanciale for my Bucattini a L’Amatriciana, there was a family from Scandinavia taking a picture in front of the seafood display. They were empty-handed, so I assume they bought nothing. I guess there aren’t seafood displays in Oslo?

This leads perfectly to Manzo, which is right across from that seafood display. Manzo is the one restaurant in Eataly that is billed as a “more formal dining experience” and accepts reservations. It is sectioned off by a wall that is only high enough to cover the tables on the other side, with its bar exposed to the passerby.

I made a reservation for Manzo on Opentable.com for 9pm. J and I arrived at 9 but were asked to wait a few minutes as our table was prepared. The hostess was very nice but did ignore us for a bit to answer the phone before greeting us. These are always difficult situations to criticize someone for, but, nevertheless, it begins to chip away at the pleasure of the evening.

We waited about 10 minutes and then were seated. From here on in, service was very amiable, but at some points a little bumbling. This goes for our waitress, the sommelier (who is a young’un!) and the servers and bus boys. The waitress took a while to bring us our menus (we had to ask) and the sommelier asked us if we wanted something to drink but then forgot to bring us the two glasses of Roero Arneis we ordered.

The restaurant itself offers both modern Italian preparations as well as traditional beef dishes.  It has a very large selection of steakhouse-type dishes on its menu. There were two tasting menu’s in addition to the a la carte menu; one was a winter menu and the other was a taste of Lazio.  Both were about 7 courses and priced at $90.  Given that it was late, we decided to order a la carte as opposed to picking the tasting menu.  We also skipped the beef, which may have been a mistake since that is what Manzo's signature dishes seem to be.

I ordered the Fettucine with Tripe and Castelmagno to start (because I am adventurous!) and J ordered the Roasted Beets with Hazelnuts, Poppy Seeds & Smoked Ricotta. My pasta was very tasty, with the tripe tasting like, well like tripe! That sort of earthy, salty taste that pairs well with the red sauce in the fettucine. J’s beets were amazing. The sauce was a mixture of ricotta and mustard (perhaps a vinaigrette) that was multi-layered and delicious.

Fettucine with Tripe​

Amazing, Delicious Beets

To go with our main, we ordered a 2001 Brunello Di Montalcino:  La Togata. 2001 was supposed to be a great vintage for Brunello. The wine had a clean acidity that was bonded to fruit and made for a nice finish. J didn’t love it, but I thought it was very good. I could taste a little bit of age, and I enjoyed the steeliness that the acidity added to the fruit. The wine was $113 on the menu, but retails for about $50. That’s not too bad, and in general the wine list is pretty fair, with some selections in the $30ish range.

For our main, we ordered the Guinea Hen for Two with Black Truffles, Brussels Sprouts and Foie Gras Sugo. This was delicious. The hen had been deboned and presumably rolled into a brick (perhaps using meat glue) and then sliced in the round, so that it was plated as two large round medallions covered in truffles with the sprouts and the sugo. I thought the depth of taste to the hen was wondrous. The sprouts and the sugo were simple and tasty. The truffles may not have been of the highest quality (or at least I am assuming so since they were not shaved at the table) but the combination of flavors was quite a treat.

Guinea Hen with Truffles and Brussels Sprouts

For dessert, we had a Sweet Potato Crostata, which wasn’t too sweet and probably just right for almost 11pm on a Friday after a long week. It was the least successful dish of the night, however.  Not really gelling for me.

I capped the night off (as I usually do) with a $15 glass of Florio Marsala. This was definitely more expensive than it should have been, given that a bottle of Marsala really doesn’t cost much more than $20.

Sweet Potato Crostata

The prices at Manzo do seem a little out of joint for the experience:  they are on the high side and, despite the smart sectioning, the restaurant is still just a walled in part of a fancy “food court.” However, the food itself was very, good and really makes up for everything else. I bet that when I go back and write a dining quickie, it will be more well-rounded praise for the restaurant.

​A Guinea Hen for good luck!



The Little Owl — A Dining Quickie

by AFG in


The Little Owl continues to be a great little neighborhood gem on the corner of Grove and Bedford in the West Village in Manhattan.  A group of four of us went there last night for a birthday dinner and enjoyed every minute of it:  from the cozy little dining room, to the friendly service, to the delicious, thoughtfully prepared food. I started with the beet salad:

Beet Salad

It was delicious and included Bibb lettuce, pumpkin seeds and a tasty vinaigrette. This was followed by a NY Strip steak, which was the perfect size, well-seasoned and cooked perfectly medium-rare.  I did not take a picture of it, but did take a picture of one of my companions' entrees:

Little Owl Crispy Chicken (signature dish)

Desserts were a little less successful, with a cookie plate that didn't seem fresh and an apple crumble that was tasty but a little dull.

It's difficult to get a "prime time" reservation at The Little Owl.  We went last night at 5pm, but it's great for an early weekend dinner.

A couple of things to keep in mind:  the smallness of the restaurant can be a problem for larger parties, and the prices are pushing toward the upward range of fair.

Outside of that, enjoy the experience.


Momofuku Fried Chicken — Before and After...

by AFG in


We went to Momofuku Noodle Bar yesterday to have the Fried Chicken lunch.  These reservations are somewhat hard to come by.  I'd made this one about a month ago.  It was probably my fifth time, but it never gets any less exciting. It's an enormous amount of food, a combination of traditional southern style and Korean style fried chicken.  The southern style is made with buttermilk batter, while the Korean style is less battered but has a spicy marinade that gives it a full red color.

There may be better fried chicken out there, but I haven't heard about it!

Also, corkage at Noodle Bar is only $15 a bottle.  I recommend taking some Champagne to pair with the fried chicken.  A combination made in heaven!

Before:

​After

After:

​After

Also, some wines:

An okay sparkling wine (which was actually Brazilian!):

Chandon Excellence NV Brazil

And this absolutely marvelous, velvety Malbec from Argentina.  It's a Paul Hobbs Cobos Malbec 2005.  Incredibly focused with beautiful fruit, tannins and acidity and an exceptionally long finish.  This did not pair with the Fired Chicken, but was amazing in any event!

Paul Hobbs Cobos Malbec 2005


Ça Va - A Dining Quickie

by AFG in


I went with a group to Ça Va restaurant in Hell's Kitchen in Manhattan last night. It's part of the new (?) Intercontinental Hotel on the corner of 44th and 8th.  The hotel is pretty interesting, sporting a modern style along the lines of the Morgans Hotel Group. Ça Va is affiliated with Todd English, chef and retauranteur.  The restaurant is large and well laid out, a bit flashy and (at least at night) dark. Service is good for a hotel restaurant, and quick given that we had a 6pm reservation because we were going to the theater at 8pm.  The food is french brasserie style. Portions are large.  There is a good wine list and prices for both the food and the wine are fair.  Or even cheap if you consider the size of the portions!

I had an nice appetizer (Golden and red beet carpaccio, petite greens, pistachios, goat cheese panisse and white balsamic vinaigrette) that was tasty.  The salad and the cheese panisse were wrapped in the beet carpaccio.  I'm not quite sure if I loved the goat cheese panisse (it seemed a little soggy), but the dish was nonetheless good.

Then I had a nice, albeit large entree (Roasted Mediterranean Sea Bass, red lentils, keffir lime spinach, lazy man curried mussel sauce), which was quite a varied combination of flavors.  The fish was well-seasoned and well-cooked, with crispy skin.  The lentils had some curry.  And the spinach was sauteed and had...mussels?  It sounds a little odd.  It was a little odd.  But it was all tasty enough to enjoy.

Roasted Sea Bass

No dessert because we had to run to watch Spider Man:  Turn off the Dark ( that was 3 hours of my life I will never get back, but this is not a theater review...), but this is a crowd pleasing restaurant in a nice space and somewhat adventurous with flavor combinations.

Ça Va?  Oui, ça va bien.


Wednesday Night Dinner Party for 3

by AFG in


My friend G’s birthday is this coming weekend, so J and I invited her over to the apartment so we could have a birthday dinner for her.  Also, this was an excuse to drink some wine.  The apartment is starting to look more and more like a wine store these days!  It’s time to drink up! It was a Wednesday, but I wanted to make something nice, so I settled ahead of time on 4 courses, preceded by a couple of tapas snacks (in the El Bulli style), finishing with a taste of cheese and a simple dessert.  I thought long and hard about what I wanted to make, and decided on a soup course, a fish course, an egg course and a meat course.

The choice for the soup course is pretty standard for me.  Usually when I make soup it’s always Garbanzo Soup with Chorizo and Smoked Paprika, a recipe from many years ago I found on Food and Wine that has been a crowd pleaser ever since.

For fish, I already had in mind a sashimi style fluke recipe from David Chang’s Momofuku cookbook.  I’ve loved every recipe I’ve made in that book and thought this would be a unique one for G that she'd never had.

I love how rustic an “egg course” can sound, which is why I decided to include it on this menu.  My favorite egg course is the Momofuku Ko Smoked Egg with Herb Salad, Fingerling Potato Chips and Onion Soubise.

Finally, for my meat course, I decided to Sous Vide some Grass Fed fillet from Freshdirect (my Manhattan grocery delivery service), Frenchify it with some Cotes du Rhone demi-glace and pair it with some brussels sprouts hash.

I had also decided ahead of time that this would be a bread-free meal.  Minimize the carbs and people get full less quickly!

Sound daunting for a Wednesday after work?  Why yes!  Which is why I started on Monday making the soup.  Even for beginners, this recipe is pretty easy.  And very tasty.  The most difficult part is to plate it so that it looks like the picture in the recipe.   That involves making a dome of the garbanzos and adding just enough liquid to cover around it--like a volcano coming out of the ocean.  You will notice in my pictures of the soup it wasn’t plated quite as nicely!

A few recommendations for this recipe:  first, get the best quality beef stock.  It makes a huge difference.  Feel free to mix some low-sodium with regular to control the salt content if you wish.  Also, for the chorizo, the best I’ve found to work with is the Goya style latin kind, the kind eaten by Cubans.  It slices easily and renders and toasts firmly.  Spanish chorizo will be too dry and American versions of chorizo (D’Artagnan as an example) just don’t have the same taste.  Also, triple the amount of Chorizo!  Trust me, it works.

The second recipe was David Chang’s Fluke, Buttermilk and Poppy Seeds with Chive Batons.  I couldn’t find this recipe online and I don’t want to lift the text from Mr. Chang’s cookbook, so I am going to have to skip a recipe for this.  But it’s in the Momofuku cookbook, which I recommend!

In any case, this is thinly sliced Fluke sashimi, placed on a buttermilk, sour cream and Sriracha sauce that is then topped with a white soy sauce vinaigrette, poppy seeds and chive batons.  This one is usually a hit, just make sure you slice the Fluke as thinly as possible and that it is as fresh as possible.  I made the sauces Tuesday night (they are easy and take about 5 minutes) and I sliced the Fluke just before plating.  I got my Fluke from Freshdirect and had it delivered Wednesday morning.  The rest I had delivered on Tuesday.  Pictures of this are to follow.  Also the white soy sauce vinaigrette entails quite a number of specific Asian juices and condiments that may not be readily available at the local store.  That's why I use Amazon.com!

Now for the more complicated course, the Momofuku egg.  I should have taken pictures of the process every step of the way.  Next time I will!  The egg is a very time-consuming recipe.  Here is a picture from Bon Appetit a couple of years ago.

This is a show-stopper of a recipe--unique and so tasty!  You first need to make the onion soubise, which takes a while to cook down into the buttery sweetness of a savory onion marmalade.  Careful not to let the onions brown too much.  You then make the eggs.  Soft boiled eggs are a b**** and a half to peel.  I recommend using eggs that are at least 2 weeks old and following his instructions to the tea.  It is very easy to break the white and have a deformed egg.  But be careful, these maimed eggs can sometimes betray you in the rewarming and plating process!  Try to get them as perfect as possible when you peel them so that they can smoke overnight (in the liquid smoke bath) and then be gently reheated without breaking on you.  Don’t give up;  I have gone through 16 eggs just to get 4 right for this recipe.  And I often peel and smoke an extra egg, just as insurance.  The result is well worth the trouble.

Finally, I ordered 2 Hudson Farms grass fed fillet’s which I seasoned with salt and pepper and then lightly vacuum-sealed to be cooked in my Sous Vide Supreme.  To go with this I was making a reduced Cote du Rhone sauce, which was essentially reduced Cote du Rhone wine and veal stock finished with some butter.  This sauce goes very well with beef carpaccio, too!

I planned to complement the beef with brussells sprouts hash that I sliced up finely with a rotary blade in my food processor.  I would then sauté this "hash" with some olive oil and already cooked sliced bacon (although diced pieces of medium thickness pancetta work a lot better).

I would make the two tapas to begin the evening once G arrived.   The cheese and dessert would be made as we were finishing the meat course.

So Wednesday night came along and the dinner party started!

Wednesday Night Birthday Dinner

We began with a half bottle of Champagne from Duval Leroy (non-vintage).  This is an inexpensive and tasty way to soothe the Champagne bug!  We paired this with our two tapas.  The first was a Spanish Bonito Salad with Potato Chip; essentially, Spanish tuna with a little bit of mayo that is then placed on a whole potato chip and topped with a strip of pimento.  It’s pretty and tasty.  Spanish tuna (as is Italian tuna) is delicious.

​Champs

​Bonito on Potato Chips

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We followed this tapa with #2, which was Caviar on a Blini.  I used American Paddlefish Roe from Caviar Russe here in Manhattan, which was delivered by Freshdirect, and put that over crème fraiche and a pre-made blini I bought at the Amish market around the corner.  This was especially tasty with the Champagne.

​Caviar Blini

Next, we started the soup course as we finished the Champagne.  The soup was tasty, but since I wasn’t able to find the beef stock I normally use I found it slightly lacking--although, my guests didn’t mind.  Also, the chorizo was a bit too browned.  Like Julia Child would say, "That's how we like it."

​Garbanzo Soup with Chorizo and Smoked Spanish Pimenton

At this point we opened our next wine, which was a Prager Riesling 1998 Klaus.  For those who do not know the pleasures of Austrian Rieslings from the Wachau, you are missing out.  This dry, smooth and delicious wine exhibits its characteristic petrol and peaches/apricot aroma but goes down as a velvety smooth and dry elixir that is hard to top.  This wine in specific has aged very nicely, although somewhat cloudy in the glass.  It has a lot of sediment.

​Prager 1998 Riesling Klaus

Next was the Fluke sashimi.  Pretty and delicious.  Again, try to slice the fluke as thinly as possible.  Freshdirect delivered a fillet that I then had to slice at an angle with a sharp knife to get thinner pieces of to plate.  A local fishmonger might have thicker fillets that may be easier to slice vertically.

Fluke, Buttermilk, Poppy Seeds with Chive Batons

I took a quick prep break at this point to fry the fingerling chips for the egg dish.  I cut these with a mandolin, but they always come out a little too thick.  I wish I had the knife skills to get them thinner!  In any case, I fried them in grapeseed oil (make sure the oil doesn’t fall below 375 degrees) until they were golden.

Then it was time to plate the Smoked Egg, which, for some reason, happened to leak most of its yolk while plating.  It was still delicious, though.  And the combination of flavors that comes from the salad, the fingerling chips and the yolk and caviar are amazing.

​Smoked Egg

As we were finishing this dish we opened our next wine, which was a Kongsgaard 2005 Cabernet Sauvignon.  I’d heard a LOT about this wine and really wanted to try it.  It turns out I was able to get a couple of bottles on Winebid.com a month back at less than a hundred dollars and was looking forward to opening one.  The wine surprised me.  It had elements of a slightly aged Australian Syrah, yet balanced and velvety.  Though delicious and interesting, it left me a bit perplexed.  I didn’t feel it had many of the high-end California Cabernet characteristics (big fruit, balanced acidity, velvety mouthfeel).  It was almost a little boxy, if that makes any sense.  Although balanced, with well integrated fruit and acidity, the taste profile just didn't seem like a Cab.  I’m wondering if the bottle was off.  I guess I will find out when I try the second bottle at some point.

Kongsgaard Cabernet 2005

Now it was time to sauté the broccoli with the bacon I’d already sliced and fried and quickly brown the beef fillets in a pan.  I sous-vided them at 127 degrees for almost 2 hours, but I think from now on, for fillets that are an inch thick, the most I will sous vide is for 1:15.  I felt they were a little over-cooked, above medium-rare.  In any case they did have a very nice red color, which the sous vide machine accentuates.  However, the demi glace didn’t really add that much to the medallions.  Maybe the beef itself was a little bland?  Maybe the sauce needed more salt?  Not quite sure.  In any case, the hash was delicious

​Sous Vide Grass Fed Fillet with Cotes Du Rhone reduction and Brussels Sprouts Hash

The evening wound down with a bite of Societe Bee Roquefort, paired with a Gutierrez de la Vega Casta Diva 2001 from Alicante, Spain.  This is a delicious Satuernes style dessert wine.  It was full bodied and had aged nicely, but these probably can’t age for more than 10 to 12 years.  So if you have them, it’s a very good time to drink them!  This wine is very hard to find in the US.  I bought this from Winebid.com and the other ones I’ve had I’ve bought in Spain and brought back with me.

Gutierrez de la Vega Casta Diva 2001

The evening ended with a coconut ice cream that I covered with some reduced pomegranate juice (syrupy) and some Pomegranate seeds.  The coconut ice cream was delicious.  The combination was good, but not amazing.

And that was Wednesday.  G was very pleased and thanked me and J.  And then it was time to sleep and go to work the next day!


Napa Valley Cabernet - Harris Estate

by admin in ,


Although I tend to shy away from some of the larger, fruitier and more alcoholic Napa Valley Cabs that a lot of people seem to like, I do love the ones that can be massive but balance it out with clean acidity, creating a tasty, elegant elixir. The 1996 Forman Cab that I spoke about in yesterday's French Laundry post (still salivating about that meal...) is a good example of this balance.  Although judging by the alcohol content of that wine (below 14%) 1996 may have been a cooler year; the result might have had more to do with the weather than with the winemaking style.  For those of you who don't know, the more heat, the more sugar is created in the grapes, and, usually the more sweetness and alcohol in the wines.  (It's not this simple and I apologize to those who think I oversimplified it, but directionally this is what you need to know for this post!)  Some Australian Shiraz from the Mollydooker Winery are good examples of extracted wines that will make your taste buds happy and also knock you out with a high alcohol percentage.  (In fact, one of Mollydooker's more popular wines is appropriately called The Boxer.)  I just checked Robert Parker's review of the 1996 Forman and he describes it as Bordeaux-Style.  Bordeaux is not as warm as Napa--a different climate producing a different style of wine.

In any case, with dinner last night at The Lakehouse restaurant at Calistoga Ranch, J and I had a 2005 Harris Estate Cabernet Lakeview Vineyard.  It was massive, but with high acidity.  Not as high as I would have liked, but hice enough to keep the fruit in balance and create an elegant, mouth-filling wine.  Luckily, no punches to the face!

I would describe the aroma as tons of dark fruit emanating from a very opaque liquid in the glass.  The wine itself is velvety on the palate, with rich fruit enveloping the tongue and an acidity that tames a lot of the sweetness.  The wine had a nice long finish.  I sensed a slight irregularity in the flavors towards the end of the experience on the tongue (yes, I'm a critic, too!), but definitely still a keeper for the Napa Cab set.  However, not inexpensive at around $100 retail.

Check out more about Harris Estate vineyards at their website.  Quite an interesting story about a former pediatric dentist who bought an old school in Calistoga with his wife in 1997 and turned it into a winery making excellent stuff like this.  Applause to you, sir, for living the dream!

Honorable mention goes to a 2005 Schramsberg Blanc de Blancs we had with the appetizers.  It was very nice and complex for a non-Champagne sparkler. Schramsberg's always up to good stuff!


Happy New Year, Yountville-Style! (A.K.A. The Restoration)

by AFG in


Perfection is an ideal. I would never want to think that there was perfection in cuisine because it would end the drive.
— Thomas Keller, The Soul of a Chef

Last night, J and I had New Year’s Eve dinner at The French Laundry.  It was not my first time eating there.  I had been once before.  In the summer of 2007.  Although the food and the service were fantastic that time, the total experience had not been because of an annoying group of diners seated next to my table.  They spent the whole dinner talking about their possessions.  It was a large group and as they got drunker—which you inevitably do over a four-hour meal—they got louder and more obnoxious.  The French Laundry is a small, two-story townhouse.  Tables are very close together, so I was practically seated with them.  Social commentary is not the point of this blog, so I am not going to dwell on this, but I will say it left a bad taste in my mouth about TFL.  Something I was not able to get over, until last night.

I’ve been to Thomas Keller’s Per Se, many times. It sounds snotty to say given the price of a meal there. But I am very lucky to be able to. The food is amazing. The service is amazing. The setting is amazing. The space is larger than TFL. The tables are more spaced out. The ceiling is twice as high. It’s virtually impossible to hear obnoxious conversations, if anyone is having any.

I love Per Se. It is my favorite restaurant in the world. I appreciate Thomas Keller’s attention to detail. His love of rich flavors. His celebration of beauty in food. And his classical style, which holds all these elements together. Once, at a birthday party at Per Se, I was about to ask the server if it would be possible for my party to see the kitchen. I was only able to say, “I was wondering if it was possible...” Then something caught in my throat and I paused. Before I could finish, the server smiled and without skipping a beat said, “Anything is possible.”

And that’s kind of what it’s like to eat at Per Se. A dream world of food. It’s my sophisticated Disney World for eating.

But The French Laundry was not the Disneyland to Per Se’s Disney World. At least not until last night.

Okay, so all that has changed. What a f******* amazing meal. What a fantastic experience. This time J and I sat downstairs, and although we had a few tables around us, nobody was obnoxious! Thanks for picking and choosing your New Year’s Eve guests, Thomas!  Excellent from the first canapé (which was a gougère) to the last mignardise, which may have been a peanut butter chocolate truffle, but after all that wonderful, beautiful food and all that wine, I can’t remember.

What I do remember is feeling happy and satisfied on the ride back to the hotel.  Is it crazy to be in love with food?

Ten to fifteen years ago, The French Laundry was the be-all-end-all of restaurants in the U.S., perhaps even the world.  In the past decade, a lot has changed on the food horizon.  More playful restaurants that are less obviously tied to classical styling have created a cuisine that takes food to another level…almost like making it into abstract art (El Bulli, Alinea, The Fat Duck).  Tastes change and critics move on to other things, but let me tell you, Thomas Keller, on either coast, is still the best in the U.S.  And, perhaps, the world…

A thought to explore in future posts!

~

I’m still trying to work out the format for this blog, so at first I’m going to try and keep entries to 500 words or so and not get to into the weeds when describing food.  That might change, but for now I am going to see what happens.  Below I include last night’s TFL New Year’s Eve menu as well as some choice photos of edible perfection.

Cheers!

A

P.S. I recommend Michael Ruhlman’s book, The Soul of a Chefwhich I quote at the start of this post.  It’s a great approachable examination of three American chefs, including Michael Symon in Cleveland and Thomas Keller. Mr. Symon will be the subject of a future post!

The French Laundry Happy New Year 2011 Menu

​"Rosette" of Scallop and Perigourd Truffles, Belgian Endive Marmalade, Garden Mache and Pomegranate Reduction

Hokkaido Coast Sea Urchin, Degustation of Petite Onions, Potato Blini, Radishes, Garden Herbs and Kendall Farm Creme Fraiche

45 Day Dry-Aged Snake River Farms Beef Sirloin, Bone Marrow "Pudding", Matsutake Mushrooms, Nantes Carrots, Tokyo Turnips and "Sauce Bordelaise"

Wine comment:  fantastic Taittinger 2000 Comtes de Champagne poured from Magnum; a delicious 1999 Domaine Zind Humbrecht Clos Winsbuhl Pinot Gris (rich, delicious); and a 1996 Forman Cabernet…perfect Napa Valley food Cab with balanced fruit and acidity and restrained alcohol.