Archive for the ‘USA’ Category

New Orleans Cuisine, Mostly Creole with Just a Sprinkling of Authentic French Spots

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

NEW ORLEANS: THE CAPITOL OF CREOLE CUISINE

New OrleansWe are taking a peek at New Orleans in late 2009, when it is finally emerging from the devastating floods caused by the levies collapsing after hurricane Katrina hit the metropolis head-on, and destroyed a good deal of the city. All major hotels, except for the Hyatt, have now reopened although, there is still a great deal of work to be done in the private sector. The people have galvanized in an effort to help each other, but sadly some businesses and restaurants never reopened.

The city of New Orleans is the nucleus of Creole and Cajun cuisine which, is a highly respected form of cooking and enjoyed by many devotees. Personally, after many visits to this charming city spanning several decades, I find Haute-Creole food served in the city’s most esteemed restaurants to be generally heavy and clumsy. The use of roux, cooked until chocolate brown and used freely in almost everything, is appalling to me. The French gave up this style of heavy-handed cooking years ago and adopted to reduce sauces rather than adding roux. Fortunately, the first glimmer of this lighter, healthier style of cooking is starting to become evident in the menus of many of the new restaurants beginning to spring up around the city.

It is difficult to make the differentiation between Creole and Cajun, as there are so many similar influences in their cultures although, following is a brief attempt to summarize them.

Creoles
Creoles were descendants of the first French settlers in the colony of Louisiana and took the name to distinguish them from recently landed French immigrants.
The Creoles that live in New Orleans are light-skinned blacks or mulattos while French-speaking blacks from small towns in rural Southwest Louisiana are called Creoles to differentiate themselves from French-speaking whites called Cajuns, (Arcadians) that came from Nova Scotia by way of France.
The Creole lineage comes from Africa, Europe and the French Caribbean although, some whites in South Louisiana describe themselves as Creole but do not like the affiliation with Africa.

Cajuns
Forcefully expelled by English troops from Acadie, Nova Scotia in 1755 these people finally settled in southwest Louisiana and intermingled with French, Spanish and Germans already established there. They lived in the bayous and marshes and, over time, borrowed much of their culture from their black Creole neighbors. The mix of these different nationalities created a new group—Cajuns.

The basic Creole dishes are:
Gumbo, a spicy soup consisting of crab, shrimp, oysters, chicken, sausages, ham and seasonings, simmered in a thick broth, roux and filé.
Crawfish Etouffe, a delicate combination of crawfish tails, onions, green peppers and spices in a flavorful sauce, served with buttered noodles
Shrimp Clemenceau, shrimp sautéed in garlic butter, mixed gently with garden peas, potatoes and mushrooms.
Jambalaya, a seasoned rice, shrimp, and sausage mixture served as a compliment to many Creole dishes.
Veal is the mainstay of all Creole kitchens as the pungent Creole sauces can enhance its mild flavor.
Court Bouillon is also important to Creole cooking, it is a combination of flavorful fish and Creole seasonings that together produce a unique taste sensation.

I am going to start off by saying, try to avoid all the popular tourist dining spots such as: Antoine’s, Galatoires, Arnaud’s, Commander’s Palace, Brennan’s; all are New Orleans restaurants serving bastardized French cuisine however, I realize that if you have never tried this type of cooking, if you are in the least bit inquisitive, you will probably not be able to resist at least trying it. After all, this is New Orleans and you must try their famous cooking, Right?

THE FRENCH RESTAURANTS

The Le Meridian Hotel at 614 Canal Street had a very good “strictly French” dining room, before it was taken over by J.W. Marriott Hotel which offered another choice of proper French cuisine in the city.

John Besh, La Provence (photo credit: la Provence)La Provence
French
25020 Highway 190, 4 miles East of Mandeville
504-626-7662, 504-626-9598
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

It is certainly worth the forty-minute drive over the causeway across Lake Pontchartrain and through a State Park to visit one of New Orlean’s best restaurants, La Provence. Surrounded by pines and oak you might think you were in the heart of Provence in France; the building reminds one of similar structures in Aix en Provence or St. Tropez.

When Chris Kerageorgiou, the original owner passed away, his former chef de cuisine John Besh took over the restaurant from his fallen mentor. Besh is already a well known and popular Chef in New Orleans.

The wine list is as good as any list in this part of the country and is collected with understanding with a solid base in wines from the southern part of France that lend themselves to this climate so well.
The cuisine is based on recipes from that part of France and is mainly good, it probably would be close to perfect if the kitchen was not dealing with the American palate. With the exception of a slightly overcooked Gigot d’Agneau (Leg of Lamb) were all outstanding. It is interesting to note that no salt appears on the table—I approve.
Saucisse Merguez, North African lamb sausage; Quail Gumbo (a creation of the late owner Chris Kerageorgiou); Rabbit (his mother’s recipe); Menu á prix Fixe.
Wines: Ch. Roubine Côtes de Provence, Cru Classé, a delicious wine from the Maures Hills behind St. Tropez available in white, rose and red. Domaine de la Gautiere, Bandol Ch. De Pibarnon light, drinkable and reasonably priced wines from the South of France.

Luke, New Orleans (photo file: Luke)Lüke
American Brasserie
333 St. Charles Avenue 
504.378.2840
Credit Cards: all Major
Prices: Moderate

At John Beck’s Lüke, a melding of Alsace and New Orleans recreates an old-fashioned brasserie albeit more American in style than anything else, weighted toward big portions and well prepared everyday food.  Everything from charcuterie to duck cassoulet with sausages; to a hamburger with fries and local fish bathed with French Meunière sauce, and of course, the de rigueur selection of raw shellfish.

St Louis Hotel, New Orleans (Photo file: St. Louis Hotel)Louis XVI
French
St. Louis Hotel
730 Bienville St. (between Royal & bourbon Streets)
504-581-7000
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

It appears that the restaurant is no longer open in the evening and the hotel has fallen into disrepair.

Louis XVI is situated on Bienville Street in the lovely, old St. Louis Hotel. The restaurant is accessed through a tranquil and well-landscaped courtyard with a statue in its center.
The atmosphere is too cold and the wait staff has too much pomp and stuffiness for its own good and it gets in the way of smooth, seamless service.
Our waiter approached the table and announced that his name was Dwaine and that he would be assisting the Captain, Rene, tonight. A while later, Rene stopped by the table and introduced himself. As the evening progressed, he repeated his name on two other occasions, prompting one of our guests to ask his name one more time, in jest of course.
The menu lists all the standard French fare with a sprinkling of Creole favorites. A rack of lamb when sliced was rosy pink and other dishes ordered came out properly presented, and without any real complaint to register, I felt that the wine list could have had more interesting selections in the middle ground and that the cooking—just had no oomph.

Bizou (Now Closed)
French/Creole
701 St. Charles Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70130
504-524-4114

This was another authentic “strictly French” restaurant that I enjoyed, but Bizou is no longer in existence, and Daniel Bonnot is filming TV spots for “Great Chefs” and is now teaching cooking in an 18th century farmhouse in Provence, when he is not teaching in France he is in New Orleans. Chef Daniel Bonnot, of Chez Daniel, on the outskirts of New Orleans in Metairie, moves into the city to open this new informal restaurant. Picture windows overlook the street corner in this St. Charles Street café and brown and white-striped chair covers add a funky look to the otherwise minimalist décor.
Starters: Boxed Sushi of Smoked Salmon, Crab, Tobiko Caviar with Traditional Garnishes; Corn Fried Oysters with a Spicy Ginger BBQ Sauce; Crawfish Beignets.
Main: Seared Veal Chop over a Three-Bean Cassoulet; Marinated and Grilled Pork Tenderloin with Cheddar Grit Cakes, Braised Greens and a Southern Comfort Demi-Glace.

Crozier’s (Now Closed)
French
3216 W. Esplanade Ave. N. (Causeway Blvd.), Metairie
504-833-8108

Unfortunately, the Crozier’s sold their restaurant and opened Chateaubriand Steakhouse that was badly damaged by the resulting flood caused by the hurricane and never reopened. Sadly, Gerard Crozier passed away recently around October, 2009.

Crozier’s was exposed in the middle of a dingy strip mall next to a mail box rental place and it looks terribly out of place.  This restaurant’s façade, and for that matter its interior, was nothing to look at although, what you found after you were comfortably seated, was straightforward, old-fashioned classic French cooking. Dishes such as Chateaubriand with Bearnaise Sauce (on this occasion tomato puree was added, so, it was actually a Sauce Choron) may seem outdated, but the owner uses the best possible ingredients and the dishes are presented with perfectly concocted sauces and everything is prepared with caring effort.
A perfect small appetizer of crayfish tails sautéed in garlic was followed by a light salad followed by the above mentioned Chateaubriand for two. Other old standbys included Coq au Vin, Filet au Poivre, and Escargots.

THE CREOLE RESTAURANTS  (IF YOU MUST AND YOU PROBABLY WILL)

Arnaud's, New Orleans (photo credit: Arnaud's)Arnaud’s
Haute Creole
813 Bienville St. (between Bourbon & Dauphine Steets)
504-523-5433
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive-Very Expensive

Arnaud’s, since 1918 the Grande Dame of Haute Creole, has many ventures along one side of Bienville Street. Arnaud’s French 75 Bar, Arnaud’s Jazz Bistro and Arnaud’s Dining Room stand side by side. Inside Arnaud’s dining room the service staff strut around dressed in stiff, penguin-like garb and the walls are wood paneled—they give an air of elegance.
Unfortunately, the food was disappointing. Things began badly with one of their signature dishes, Crawfish O’Connor, a salty, dry, bowl of crayfish barely moistened by an over-reduced sauce and a Shrimp Bisque containing rubbery bits of shrimp in an overly salty, floury soup.  Pompano Duarte with shrimp, tomatoes, garlic, fresh herbs and crushed chili peppers fared better but a Seafood Gumbo was heavy and pasty. On the brighter side a Sazerac cocktail (Peychard’s bitters, Angostura bitters, rye whiskey, dash absinthe substitute and lemon peel) was made properly, and not too sweet as encountered elsewhere in the city.

Brennan's, New Orleans (File Photo: Brennan's)Brennan’s
Creole
417 Royal St. (between Conti & St Louis Streets)
504-525-9713

The original Brennan’s restaurant, and still a charmer, set in a typical French Quarter, two-story building with high ceilings and oversized doors and balconies with fancy iron railings.
The best, ice-cold, Ramos Fizz imaginable (gin, white of egg, half & half or cream, lime juice, lemon juice, sugar, orange flower water, vanilla extract) can be found here although, a Mint Julip (muddled mint, sugar syrup, bourbon and shaved ice) was so sweet as to render it undrinkable.
The service is painstakingly slow and the waiter forgot some items ordered. Their signature dish, Eggs Sardou, was made with salty, canned spinach and canned artichoke hearts and Eggs Benedict were sitting on top of an inedible round of dried, salty pressed meat of unknown origin. And both of these eggs dishes cost an outrageous $24 each.
The famous and widely copied Bananas Foster (bananas and brown sugar, flamed with rum and served with vanilla ice cream) was first made for Richard Foster, a friend of restaurateur Owen E. Brennan, in 1976.

Dooky Chase
Creole
2301 Orleans Ave. (Miro St.)
504-821-0600
Now only open for lunch Tues-Fri., and as they have odd opening hours I would advise a telephone call to see if they are open.
This Creole restaurant was opened in 1941 by Edgar “Dooky” Chase Sr. and is now operated by his son “Dooky” Chase Jr. and wife, Leah Chase. It has become an important institution in the black community, and has an extensive collection of primitive black art that decorates the walls and a brightly colored glass mural behind the lunch buffet.
Dooky Chase is probably one of the best places in the city to sample Creole food at its best and a stop here is almost mandatory.
Red Fish Filet cooked in a Court Bouillon with tomatoes, Green Peppers, seasonings and served with steamed rice; Breast of Chicken a la Dooky stuffed with Oyster Dressing and baked slowly in Marchand du Vin Sauce; Jambalaya and Creole Gumbo.

Emiril’s
Creole/New World
800 Tchoupitoulas St. (Julia St.)
504-528-9393
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

I considered myself extremely fortunate to be able to pull two of the ten or so seats at the Chefs Bar in Emiril Lagasse’s cold—and even colder temperature—converted warehouse. The amusement of watching the chefs “do their thing” in front of the line, just a couple of feet from our seat, is exciting at the onset, although as time progresses it becomes difficult to determine which dishes correspond to the written descriptions on the menu. Therefore, confusion sets in, and, it is difficult to find the name of the dish that looked so good as it was being prepared. After being covered with Cajun spices or heavily paneed it is almost impossible to tell meat from fish or pork from veal. All ingredients are piled onto the plate in huge heaps. My companion’s heap of Andouille Crusted Texas Redfish with Shoestring Potatoes, arrived by way of the line in the large kitchen to the rear, looking sad and wilted. The rare steak that I had ordered was delivered medium and glazed with a poor quality blue cheese and thrown onto a pile of sour cream mashed potatoes.
This is one of the “hottest” restaurants in New Orleans and it is really difficult to obtain a reservation, but in all fairness, the food comes off a factory assembly line and the result is clearly “commercial fodder”. I paid the bill, we left the food; we left the restaurant, and went on to greener pastures!

BARS

Arnaud’s French 75 Bar
813 Bienville Street

Sazarac Cocktail

Much of the carousing in New Orleans involves wandering around Bourbon Street sipping a Hurricane from Pat O’Brien’s, which you might do once. However, it is a must at some point to retreat to Arnaud’s French 75 for the city’s official cocktail: The Sazerac. This famous drink was developed in the mid-1800s at a French Quarter coffeehouse of the same name; it was originally made from absinthe, brandy and a smidge of Peychaud’s bitters, but due to a later brandy shortage, rye whiskey was substituted. The herbal concoction is heavy on anise, slightly medicinal and borne from a complicated preparation: a chilled glass of rye, bitters and simple syrup is strained into another chilled glass coated with a swirl of absinthe, recently legalized again in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Windsor Court Hotel Bar
300 Gravier St.
504-523-6000

The Windsor Court Hotel, the best hotel in New Orleans, has an extraordinary bar located on the second floor that is an elegant and fun place to have a drink at cocktail time and features a piano player.  Another option is the lobby bar on the ground floor.

Pat O’Brien’s
624 Bourbon St.
504-561-1200

Granted, it is as commercial as it gets, but it has been part of the New Orleans scene since 1933, home of the world-famous Hurricane and is touted to do more volume for its size than any other bar in the world.

JAZZ

Donna’s
800 N. Rampart St., New Orleans, LA 70116
504-940-5442
Donna Poniatowski Sims & Charles Sims own a jazz club featuring many interesting artists throughout the year. Of interest to the hygienically minded do try to avoid the loos, but after all it is all in the spirit of things.

Snug Harbor, Jazz Bistro
A small restaurant up front and the jazz club in the rear. Always good groups are booked here.

Preservation Hall
726 St. Peter St.
504-522-2841
Open 8pm
Admission: $5.00
You probably will have to stand in line and once inside it is standing room only. Check the papers for the program of who is playing. It is always guaranteed to be good.

House of Blues
225 Decateur St.
504-529-2583

A relatively new arrival on the scene and they are packing them in. Restaurant, VIP room, and many bars make this place one of the most comfortable place to hear good jazz in town.

Maxwell’s Jazz Cabaret
615 Toulouse St.
504-523-4207

PLANTATIONS

Oak Alley Plantation
One hour from New Orleans by I-10 to Gracercy, Exit #194
3645 Hwy. 18, Vacherie, LA
504-265-2151, 1-800-442-5539
Overnight Cottages
Restaurant daily from 9-3.
A National Historic Monument
An excellent example of Greek Revival Architecture built in 1837, by Jacque T. Roman, it is more famous for its alley of 28 evenly planted live oak trees that are at least 100 years older than the “Big House”. This is a most magnificent plantation in a spectacular setting and the best in the entire Mississippi Valley.

Houmas House Plantation and Gardens
One hour from New Orleans by I-10 to Sorrento, Exit #182 to Hwy. 44.
40136 Highway 942 Darrow, LA
504-473-7841 or 504-522-2262
Gift Shop
This magnificent Greek Revival mansion was built in 1840 and completely restored in 1940 it is furnished with period antiques and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. “Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte” was filmed here.

Valentino & Vin Bar, Open in Derek Hotel – Houston

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Valentino Fine Dining, Houston (photo courtesy: Debra Ford for Valentino, www.fordandcompany.com)Valentino & Vin Bar Houston
Hotel Derek, 2525 West Loop South, Houston, Texas 77027
For Reservations call: 713-850-9200
http://www.valentinorestaurant.com
Opening Hours: The Bistro at Valentino serves breakfast, lunch and dinner.  The fine dining room opens at 5:00 p.m. nightly and is available during the day for private functions seven days a week.
Complimentary valet parking
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Moderate – Expensive

Expect Piero Selvaggio, founder of Valentino, and partner and Executive Chef Luciano Pellegrini to present as many daily specials amalgamating local produce and specialties as possible. These will take the form of innovative dishes on a small plate or “primi” format and an ever-changing array of assorted cold crudo at the Italian raw bar; you might say similar to Italian sashimi.  Selvaggio and Pellegrini love to experiment with food, fusing authentic Italian cooking with the best that local food markets have to offer.  And, this is Houston after all, so no menu would be complete without beef—Italian style, of course.  Try Pellegrini’s favorite baby back ribs cooked slowly in a smoker and basted with an original Tuscan barbecue sauce.

Sebastiano Mazzucato, a veteran of the Houston dining scene, a charming and hospitable Italian who is experienced at handling the front of the house, has been chosen to serve as “Direttore” for the new Valentino Houston at the Hotel Derek.

Following is an interesting menu, their rendition of “Italian Sashimi”:

CRUDO BAR
ITALIAN SASHIMI
CHEFS DAILY PICK
TWO FOR $8.5-FOUR FOR $16.5-SIX FOR $25

VIN COTTO AHI TUNA, RADISH
$4.5

PASSION FRUIT WHITE TUNA, FENNEL
$4.5

RED SNAPPER, LEMON AIOLI
$4.5

GREEN APPLE SCALLOP, APPLE TARTARE
$4.5

BLOOD ORANGE LOBSTER TAIL, BABY ARUGULA
$MK

RASPBERRY VINEGAR OYSTERS, MICRO MUSTARD
$MK

SOUR GRAPE TASMANIAN SALMON
$4.5

CARPACCIO
SMOKED SWORDFISH, LEMON SAUCE
$5

STURGEON, CREN AIOLI
$5

BEEF CIPRIANI
$5

VENISON, MIXED BERRiES RAGU
$5

TARTARE
TUNA AGRUMATO, CAPERS & SHALLOTS
$7

BLUE MARLIN, WATERCRESS & GRAPEFRUIT
$7

WAGYU BEEF THE TRADITIONAL WAY
$9

SPICY SCALLOP WITH CUCUMBER
$7

EXECUTIVE CHEF:
CUNNINGHAME WEST

The Valentino Restaurant Group has under its umbrella: Valentino, the flagship restaurant founded in Santa Monica in 1972 by restaurateur Piero Selvaggio. Following this success, Selvaggio opened Valentino Las Vegas at the Venetian Hotel in 1999 and Giorgio, in the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino in 2004. He now has just opened Valentino Houston and Vin Bar in Houston’s chic Hotel Derek.

Taboo Restaurant – Palm Beach

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Taboo Restaurant, Palm Beach (image credit: Taboo, Palm Beach)221 Worth Ave
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Tel. (561) 835-3500
Opening Hours:
Lunch: 11:30am to 5:00pm
Dinner: 5:00pm-10:00pm weekdays; 8:00pm-11:00pm Fri., Sat.
Sunday Brunch: Served until 3pm
Dress Code: Dressy
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

Taboo is a legend on Worth Avenue that continues through the generations! It is an institution, try to overlook the inconsistencies in the cooking and stick to lighter dishes or seafood or maybe just imbibe in a few drinks. It is an experience to go to this the “grande dame” of restaurants in Palm Beach.

Taboo Restaurant (image credit: Taboo, Palm Beach)

Great Tastes of the Northwest – Seattle

Saturday, September 12th, 2009


The city of Seattle has many interesting restaurants especially if you enjoy Japanese cuisine. It seems that the city fathers are quite complacent in many ways and in some aspects may even be years behind their neighbor to the North, Vancouver. The downtown area is set between lovely Elliot Bay and magnificent surrounding lakes and mountains covered with evergreen trees. These features give the necessary geographical qualifications for the making of a beautiful city. Areas such as Belltown have sprung forth and offer a showcase for quaint shops and new restaurants, although many parts of the downtown area of the city are rundown and overrun with homeless people sitting on stoops, but what city is without these blights?

Pike Market is an interesting place to visit for both residents and tourists alike to pore over beautifully displayed fruit, vegetables and glimmering fish and many restaurants abound within, most with views of the bay. This market is the oldest continually working farmers market (since 1907) in the United States. If you are interested in things culinary, walk across the street and visit Sur le Table. This is a cooking equipment store extraordinaire and everyone should at least take a look at the thousands of different types of culinary equipment that they have on display, and chances are you will not be able to leave without buying something.

Seattle has many changes to make not the least among them to brighten up the seedier areas of downtown, while residents of this interesting city get ready for further expansion.

CAFÉ CAMPAGNE
86 Pine Street, Seattle
206‑728‑2800
Credit Cards: All Major
French Breakfast & Lunch only

Café Campagne is located directly below the Campagne Restaurant and is only open for breakfast and lunch while conversely, the more formal Campagne is open in the evenings. The café is smart and very French in feeling; a large counter‑bar splits the room in half and is the dominant feature of the restaurant. I prefer the feel of this lively place to the more staid upstairs restaurant. Excellent crusty bread and a good bistro menu with many choices of hard‑to‑find French country wines by the glass such as the charming Loire Valley white wine Quincy, Denis Jaumier and Aligoté, Francois Mikulski make this place an unusual find in Seattle. The cafe’s selections of French country wines are not to be found in other area restaurants.

CAMPAGNE
86 Pine Street, Seattle
206‑728‑2800
Credit Cards: All Major
French style Dinner only

Campagne has casual, country French decor and the glimmer of candles and soft lighting gives the room a very relaxed and romantic aura, with a wait staff that provides more than adequate service.
It is an interesting room with a small bar to one side and a view of the large red Pike Market sign. My first impression was that the feeling in the dining room is more uptight than comfortable and the small and limited menu finds one turning it over to look for more choices. I certainly felt better in the surroundings of the café downstairs.
Both Campagne and Café Campagne on the times I visited had the major flaw of using devastating amounts of salt and/or MSG, which had me quaffing bottles of water late into the night. I hope they have solved this problem as I am sure they must have!

SIAM
616 Broadway Ave. East, Seattle
206‑324‑0892
Credit Cards: All major
Thai – Lunch Mon‑Fri, Dinner Mon‑Sat

As it is with most good Thai restaurants, a woman controls the kitchen and Siam is no exception. This simple restaurant with its small open kitchen and a fish tank to guarantee the freshest seafood was one of the first Thai restaurants in Seattle and maintains its position as one of the best. It is patronized by many of the large Thai population that lives in and around the Seattle area as well as other locals.

CANLIS
2576 Aurora Avenue North, Seattle
206‑283‑3313
Credit Cards: All Major
American – Dinner only
This restaurant has had a recent ultra-modern makeover but long gone are the days when there was a Canlis Honolulu, though locals consider Canlis a fixture on the shore of Lake Union since its inception in the 1950s and it is always crowded. Canlis does turn out good steaks and offers a few fish dishes and fresh oysters that are always reliably delivered by waitresses in Japanese dress.
The restaurant is now run by the third generation of the Canlis family, brothers Mark and Brian.

LAMPREIA
2400 First Avenue, Seattle
Tel. 206-443-3301
Italian: Dinner Only
www.lampreiarestaurant.com
Opening Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 5:30pm, last seating 8:30
Bar: Full Bar, extensive wine list
Reservations: Essential
Parking: Nearby lots
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

The gold‑toned interior of this big‑city style restaurant in avant‑garde Belltown is the perfect metier for chef‑owner Scott Carsberg to present his well‑bred cuisine. Each month he produces a few featured entrees that get the attention of regulars who return often during the month to sample all of them. It is a smoothly run restaurant that guests would feel at ease in almost any city. Chef Carsberg does well with most dishes but goes the extra mile when dealing with the exquisite seafood of the northwest.

NISHINO

3130 E. Madison Street. Seattle
206‑322‑5800
Credit Cards: All major
Japanese – Lunch Mon‑Fri, Dinner Mon‑Sat

A long drive from downtown is required to find this Japanese restaurant. The fact that the restaurant covers almost all of the Japanese styles of dining is not really a huge incentive for the drive. It is clean and set in the middle of an upper‑middle‑class residential district in a small shopping area. A splashy, outrageous looking mural painted on several panels covers one wall and is the centerpiece of the decor. It portrays a few disconnected scenes. One bazaar panel in particular, shows over‑zealous bar girls trying to wave in a customer and another shows a girl huge‑in‑proportion to the miniature sailor she is playing around with. The cooking is sometimes inventive, although the main stays are sushi and other traditional Japanese dishes. Seafood is always fresh and is popular with visiting Japanese as well as with customers from the neighborhood.

MANEKI
304 6th Avenue South, Seattle
206‑622‑2631
No cards
Japanese – Lunch & Dinner

We set out specifically to sample one dish called Salmon Seiro made from salmon and salmon roe and steamed in a bamboo basket over a container of boiling water. Maneki, as it turned out, was a run‑down restaurant and bar located in a dismal area above the International Marketplace, and although the dish was well executed and the salmon and roe was of the highest quality, I have to say, the experience was diminished by the shabby dining room in which we had to consume it and more importantly the absence of the impeccable cleanliness usually found in Japanese restaurants.

ROVER’S
2808 E. Madison Street, Seattle
206‑325‑7442
Credit Cards: All Major
French – Dinner only Tues‑Sat

In a small, charming house girdled with beds bursting with fresh herbs and flowers, chef‑owner Thierry Rautureau spins French culinary magic for eager patrons that beat a path to his door each evening. Making good use of local Northwestern ingredients and transforming them into exotic creations, he especially does well with game items as pheasant, quail, venison and rabbit and also with more commonplace items such as salmon, crustaceans and shellfish, and presents to them to diners bathed in light, gossamer sauces. Chef Rautureau also has a talent for preparing various pasta concoctions although he tends to be overly generous with the portions. An eight‑course menu and a five course menu are featured daily as well as a vegetarian menu. The wine list is well balanced with selections of local and French wines.

WILD GINGER
1400 Western Avenue, Seattle
206‑623‑4450
Credit Cards: All Major
Lunch Mon‑Sat, Dinner Mon‑Sun
Asian

Wild Ginger is located near Pike Place Market and prepares a sampling of dishes from most of the well‑known Asian countries however, it must be noted that some dishes are executed better than others. The satay bar offers a variety of skewered meats and vegetables in addition to live crab. The wine list is fairly limited, but they have most of the local beers covered and the establishment stays open very late.

KITTO JAPANESE NOODLE HOUSE
614 Broadway East (Alercer St.), Seunle
206‑325‑8486
Credit Cards: VISA, MC
Japanese Noodle House – Lunch & Dinner daily

All the favorite Japanese noodle dishes are available in this compact sixty‑seat noodle house including soba and udon in a sometimes overly salty broth. Tempura, robata and teriyaki are also available. Any inconsistencies are probably due to the fact that it is not operated by Japanese management.

CUTTERS BAYSIDE
2001 Western Avenue, Seattle
206‑448‑4884
Credit cards: All Major
American – Lunch & Dinner daily

Cutters in years past was a large chain that operated multiple restaurants in Washington, California, Hawaii and various other states. It has now ceased operating other outlets to concentrate on its figurehead restaurant in Seattle. Although Cutters Bayside has a spectacular view of the bay, this it is not enough to outweigh inconsistencies in food, service and the lack of personal attention. When it is running well the fish is fresh with a good selection of oysters and crustaceans in season. The wine list contains many Northwest and California selections that pair well with the mainly seafood menu.

SHIRO’S
240 2nd Avenue. Seattle
206‑443‑ 9844
Credit cards: All Major
Japanese – Lunch Mon‑Fri, Dinner Mon‑Sat

Shiro Kashiba, educated Seattle to the art of sushi making when he headed the staff at the Nicco restaurant in the Westin Hotel. He eventually left Nicco to open his own place, which is located on a corner in the bohemian Belltown area of Seattle. You may expect an energetic sushi bar with a genial staff to serve you. The restaurant is decorated in black and white with a red marble counter on the sushi bar and accents of white pine. Venetian blind covered windows face onto the streets outside.

Fresh salmon roe dipped into soy sauce and sake was one of the outstanding offerings that day along with fresh salmon sushi, the best my Japanese wife, a seasoned diner, had ever eaten, and a king crab roll was delicate and balanced well with the crisp seaweed nori wrapper.

The Martini – Recipe

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Above: Mel Ramos, Martini Miss, 1993, oil on linen, 64 x 48 in., (Modernism Gallery, San Francisco)

The Classic Martini Recipe (there are many and this is mine):

3 oz. of the finest gin (classic) or vodka (your choice).

In America, I never put any vermouth in the drink, as customers would always complain that it was “not dry enough” with even the smallest addition of vermouth. Either wash out the glass with vermouth and discard it or just add a few drops of vermouth; this is probably the best compromise in these times where “dry” is so important even though, the original recipe called for a great deal more. Use your own judgment.

Pre-chill the glasses with ice and discarding it just previously to pouring the Martini Cocktail into them.

Fill a large glass container with the best quality ice as it will hold. (it means no tap water or ice-machine varieties; only ice made from pure water) I buy Japanese ice from Mount Fuji.

Stir using a long bar spoon and stir with a swirling motion as well as a swift upwards/downwards motion (this creates fragments of ice to break-off from the larger pieces of ice) and if you have accomplished this you will see tiny fragments of ice floating on the top of the drink when it is poured into the Martini glass.

You may use a small or large Martini glass, this is entirely up to you, but it must be the classic Martini glass.

Strain the mixture from the container into the chilled glass shaking vigorously to remove all fragments of ice into the drink.

Garnish with finest Italian green olives stuffed or not (preferably not), or a lemon twist this is up to your personal preference.

Cheers!

Following are some of my favorite Martini quotes:

Robert Benchley, a featured player was in and out of the water tank all day while filming the MGM classic China Seas, starring Clark Gable and Jean Harlow. When he was finally allowed to climb out of the tank he reputedly announced, “I must get out of these wet clothes and into a dry Martini.” Another rendition follows: Robert Benchley’s famous line delivered to Ginger Rogers in the film “The Major and the Minor”, “Why don’t you get out of that wet coat and into a dry martini?”

“One martini is all right. Two are too many, and three are not enough.”
James Thurber

I like to have a Martini

Two at the very most—

After three I’m under the table,

After four I’m under my host.

Dorothy Parker

“A Drink with Something in It”

There is something about a Martini,

A tingle remarkably pleasant,

A yellow, a mellow Martini;

I wish I had one at present.

There is something about a Martini,

Ere the dining and dancing begin,

And to tell you the truth,

It is not the vermouth—

I think that perhaps it’s the gin.

Ogden Nash

An Excerpt from  “To the Gibson and Beyond”

By M.F.K. Fisher

The first Martini I ever drank was strictly medicinal, for threatened seasickness, and in spite of a loyal enjoyment of them which may be increasing in direct ratio to my dwindling selectivity of palate, I must admit I still find them a sure prop to my flagging spirits, my tired or queasy body, even my over-timid social self. I think I know how many to drink, and when, and where, as well as why; and if I have acted properly and heeded all my physical and mental reactions to them, I have been the winner in many an otherwise lost bout with everything from boredom to plain funk. A well-made dry Martini or Gibson, correctly chilled and nicely served, has been more often my true friend than any two-legged creature.

RDG Grill, Bar Annie, BLVD Lounge – Houston

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

RDG Grill, Bar Annie and BLVD Lounge
1800 Post Oak Boulevard (at Ambassador Way)
Tel. 713-840-1111
Opening Hours:
BLVD Lounge:
Light Bites, Coffee, Cocktails & Hors D’oeuvres Daily
11:30AM – 10:00PM
Lunch Monday – Friday
Bar Annie + RDG Grill Room:
11:30AM – 2:00PM
Saturday “Blue Jean” 
Lunch & Sunday Brunch
Beginning September 12
Bar Annie + RDG Grill Room
 12:00PM – 3:00PM
Dinner Monday – Saturday
Bar Annie + RDG Grill Room
 6:00PM – 10:00PM
Sunday Dinner
RDG + Bar Annie
5:00PM – 9:00PM
Credit cards: All Major
Prices: Moderate – Expensive

Cafe Annie has closed! However, the good news is: three different venues have emerged from it and are now in place in a new location down the road. The company has come a long way since its days on Westheimer when Robert del Grande formed a “South of the Border” style cuisine with French overtones and then went on, along with others at the time, to create what is now considered Southwestern cuisine. It has developed into a multi-restaurant company under the corporate veil of Schiller Del Grande. Link to the old post on Cafe Annie


Hotel Derek Presents PS Valentino & Vin Bar Coming Soon – Houston, Texas

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

PS Valentino & Vin Bar
Hotel Derek
2525 West Loop S., Houston, TX 77027
Tel. 866-292-4100
Fax.713-297-4392

PS Valentino and the more casual and less-expensive Vin Bar will be taking over the Bistro Moderne space in the Hotel Derek sometime this fall. Piero Selvaggio of the famed Valentino Restaurant in Santa Monica, California, which it seems has been around for eons and with good reason, also more recently Las Vegas, is headed to Houston. Selvaggio and executive chef and partner Luciano Pellegrini will open PS Valentino Vin Bar in the trendy boutique Hotel Derek this fall, taking over the Bistro Moderne space. PS Valentino Vin Bar will house two dining experiences, an intimate fine dining restaurant serving Selvaggio’s inventive Italian cuisine and the more casual Vin Bar with a selection of innovative dishes in the now quite familiar “primi” or small plate format. PS Valentino Vin Bar,  no direct phone line available as yet, although you can dial the hotel. Stay tuned for the latest information as it becomes available.

Hotel Derek
The earthen colors chosen for the public areas are mostly caramel and coffee tones, while the genteel, guest rooms, up to 1200 square feet, include rain showers, spacious glass desks, high-speed Internet access, and cordless phones.  The outdoor swimming pool area is an interesting layout—it looks a bit barren at the moment, but with a bit more planted areas or potted greenery and given the Houston sun/humidity . . . it certainly should bush-out quickly. The mainly Texan and Californian inclination to stretch the gas-guzzling SUV making it even less green, is offered by the hotel for guests to shuttle them around the city.

L.A.: Models, Actresses Augment Income Parking Cars for Rich And Famous

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Valet Girls Parking Service www.valetgirls.com, sounds like “Valley Girls” doesn’t it, and maybe the pun is intended, in any case, they are using a new twist on an old trade, it is quite simple, they have ditched the pimple faced boys in red vests and swapped them for some flashy girls dressed in hot pink. The company claims that the sexy, although struggling models and actresses have been trained in vehicular safety and can perform as well as their male counterparts in style and service.
The potential employees are hired in a “casting call” type interview session as used in the film business and so far they have received a big turnout. Valet Girls will debut at Susan Feniger’s new STREET restaurant (www.eatatstreet.com) 742 North Highland Avenue, on March 30, 2009. Prepare to encounter all-female parking services to crop up in big cities all over the U.S.A.

The valet company’s goal: Leave a Good First and Last Impression, a key ingredient so important for restaurants in today’s uncertain economy.

Blue Door & Plat Bleu at the Delano Hotel – Miami

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

The Delano Hotel
1685 Collins Ave Miami Beach, Florida 33139
Tel. 305 672 2000; Fax. 305 532 0099
Reservations: US 800 697 1791
Reservations: International 00800 4969 1780
Website: www.delano-hotel.com

Blue Door Restaurant & Brasserie
1685 Collins Ave.
Tel. 305 674 6400
Website: http://www.delano-hotel.com/delano_hotel_blue_door.asp
Breakfast: 7am-11:30am Daily
Lunch: 11:30am-4pm Daily
Sunday Brunch: 10:30am-2:30pm
Prix Fixe Dinner: 7pm-11pm (reservations required)
A La Carte Dinner: 7pm-12am
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Very Expensive

Plat Bleu
Tel. 305 674 6400
Monday through Wednesday: 11 PM until 2 AM
Friday and Saturday: 11 PM until 4 AM
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

At the Delano Hotel in Miami the formal Phillipe Stark designed restaurant, Blue Door with its farcical Dali influenced scheme and lovely terrace for alfresco dining has opened another separate venue called Plat Bleu. It is located at the end of the lobby, and reveals a more subdued and austere design with lower lighting and a more “clubby” feel. Celebrity-Chef Claude Troisgros replaces former Blue Door’s co-owner Madonna as the impetus to dine there, and now the attraction is on the plate rather than on the air-kissing crowd that departed with the material girl. Although the Plat Bleu feels and is more casual; the prices do not follow. The menu is a melange of French cuisine and simple Brazilian cooking that has evolved over the period at Claude’s CT Brasserie, his new and popular hit restaurant in Rio de Janeiro. The kitchen is open late: until 2 a.m. on weekdays and 4 a.m. on weekends. That should be welcome news to Miami’s late club set!

The Mansion Restaurant at Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek – Dallas, Texas

Friday, February 13th, 2009


2821 Turtle Creek Blvd
Dallas, TX 75219
Tel. 214-559-2100
Website: www.mansionturtlecreek.com
Cuisine: Contemporary American
Dress Code: Dressy Casual (blue jeans are now permitted)
Credit Cards: All Major
Prices: Expensive

The Mansion on Turtle Creek, now managed by Rosewood Hotels, was built in the early 20th century by a local cotton magnate named Sheppard King. In the early 1980’s it was converted to a hotel and remains to be one of the top hotels in Dallas.
After longtime chef (over twenty years) Dean Fearing left to open a restaurant bearing his name at the Ritz Carlton Hotel he was replaced by well-known New York chef John Tesar and a complete redo of the dining room followed, converting the dining space into three distinctive sections: the main dining room featuring à la carte items, a more luxurious area with a choice of prix fixe menus, the Chefs’ table where Tesar cooks what he fancies on any given evening (six persons only). Blue jeans, a Texas staple, are now finally permitted; and we especially enjoyed seeing them on the young, local Dallas women that tend to congregate here in the evenings.