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Drinking Eating Experiences Food The Chef Travel Wine

My kind of town…Chicago is…

On a recent trip to Chicago, I was more than pleasantly surprised to find a food, beer and wine destination thriving with culinary excellence, with some restaurants even more exciting than the scene in New York City.  On past trips to Chicago, I have explored steak houses and deep dish pizza joints, street hot dogs, great Mexican fare and solid pubs.

But the focus was on the new and noteworthy this time around, and I have added three new restos to my expanding list of Chicago eateries and bars.

On Friday night, I snatched an early table at Publican in the West Loop, essentially a beer hall with gastro fare.  Large paintings of plump pigs adorn the walls, wooden stable doors enclose the booths, surrounding long communal wooden seating and central standing room only bar, flanked by the open kitchen, attractive and engaging.  The crowd is hip, the ambiance ebullient, the staff knowledgeable and laid back.

Start off with the oysters, pristine and paired perfectly with the extensive beer list.  On to crudo and pork rinds, which if were sold in Harlem would cause a riot, fluffy, puffy, piment d’esplette accented – they are my latest obsession and addiction.

The next beer was a Flemish offering called Monk’s Cafe, an eye opener and versatile for the courses to follow.  The highlight is a ham chop in hay, thrice cooked via sous vide and open fire.  I am not sure what hay tastes like, but the smoky, meaty chop had a woodsy aroma and was succulent, decadent and dreamy.  I had tickets to see Carmen at the Lyric, otherwise I would never have left my table until I’d sampled all the beers.

The next night was a follow upscale sleek temple called Blackbird, a multiple James Beard award winner helmed by chef Paul Kahan.  At the bar, I sipped a perfect Manhattan and bourbon sidecar, then sat down to the tight row seating thrilled by the menu at hand.

I chose a versatile wine with the help of Christopher Nostvick, the sommelier, who shared with me that he would be adding Italian wines to the French and American dominated wine list. Les Heritiers de Comte Lafon Macon-Mully Lamartine 2007 was up to the task.  Garbanzo bean soup with falafel, pickled asian pear, caramelized egg yolk and sumac was the starter, a hint of Chef Kahan’s style, great ingredients, superbly presented and cooked with scintillating accents seemingly out of left field.  The garbanzos were creamy, make that double creamy with the egg yolk, the falafel playfully crunchy.  The whole time sumac lingers causing pasue for thought and discovery.

Coffee-scented fluke tartare with lemon cucumber, saffron, and bread sauce was up next, cooling the news that the Yankees were getting beat up, again showing a creative hand using coffee and saffron, an unusually thought provoking affair.

Roasted hudson valley foie gras with charred green garlic, black garlic, preserved plums and shrimp salt followed, the two garlics misleading me into thinking I had never tasted foie gras before.

The main courses were solid but less interesting, an aged peking duck breast with illinois chanterelles (who knew?), haricots verts and brown butter worcestershire  and a classic grilled berkshire pork loin with caramelized white chocolate, beets, plums and sea beans.   This was washed down nicely with a towering glass of  Bressy Rasteau 2005.

Some local cheeses to follow and an espresso for the next leg of the evening.

A cab ride to the Violet Hour, Chicago version speakeasy, with a line and much hullabaloo at the door.  I spoke to George the doorman and scored a table towards the rear.  It felt more lounge than speakeasy, with spacious ceilings and seating areas, soft hues and cool music.  I went for classics, mint julep, sidecar etc. and before I knew it 3 am rolled around and I had been lost in time.  I contemplated the Wiener Circle for some good old fashioned abuse, but was rerouted by sleep and a dream of brucnh at Bongo Bongo.

The line for Bongo was an hour wait, and if not for Bears tickets, I would have queued up.  Instead I settled for a trattoria, stadium beers and a healthy anticipation for my final destination before my flight back to the Empire state, the Girl and the Goat.

After a bit of schlepping, back to the hotel, bag retrieval, ride to the restaurant, etc.  we sat down at the bar at 4:30 pm because the place was booked solid at five.  The Girl and the Goat is captained by the only female Top Chef Season 4 winner Stephanie Izard, who was actually there managing the kitchen on a Sunday!

Situated in the West Loop, an apparent hub for new and hip restaurants, this enormous space is dark, almost Gothic in tone.  At the rear is the open kitchen, half staffed by female cooks.  All were young and hip looking, operating seriously and orderly.

After some more delicious local beer, we opted for a Nigl Gruner Veltliner, a great producer and expression of the grape.  The menu is divided into three sections, meat, vegetable, and fish and all plates are meant to be shared.

The meal began with ethereal pretzel bread, and fried watch hills atop egg salad and capers.  Then hiramasu crudo and green beans in fish sauce.

We ended with goat, pork and veal sugo pappardelle, falling off the bone tender, laced  with goose berries popping with each bite.  Then a sort of breakfast dish of wood oven roasted pig face, a mishmash of pig face parts formed into a patty, draped by a  sunny side egg, spiced with tamarind and cilantro with a side of  potato stix.  I’ll have to come back for the goat loin, beef tongue, and lamb shank.

The restaurant reminds me of Momufuku and Ssam bar of NYC, in terms of menu design and concept, except that the star is the goat, and the service and ambience is friendly, minus the attitude.  The food is quite good, although sometimes heavy on the sauces.  I feel chef is still finding her way, but I appreciate the direction she is going.  I look forward to checking in on the Goat on my next visit.

Blue line to O’Hare, the inevitable two hour delay, then the rerouting of our plane to JFK, as well as the dreams of pork rinds sure to haunt me for the rest of the week leading up to Halloween.  I can’t help thinking that the food scene there is just as alive as it is at home, maybe even brighter on the count of ingenuity.

Sing on Sinatra.

Categories
Drinking Eating Experiences Food The Chef Travel Wine

El Bulli

There are meals that transcend memory in one’s life, an experience that lingers and transports, leaving an indelible mark on one’s food soul.  The reverberations that ensue are subtle, then profound, then life-changing.

This past summer I was extremely blessed to be offered an invitation to El Bulli, a gastronomic mecca, a mathematical impossibility, a convergence of providence and good fortune, reinforcing the adage, “It’s who you know.”

So, as part of my yearly summer road trip in La Patria (Spain), El Bulli was to be the culinary crowning highlight.

The restaurant is located near the seaside town of Roses in northeastern Spain along the Costa Brava.  After a day of cloudbursting in the sunshine, a van arrived to pick up the party because driving to El Bulli is treacherous, even for the natives.

A very integral component to the dining experience of your lifetime is who is in attendance.  This aspect is almost more important than the actual food and wine.  Maria Jose of LDH, joined by her US business manager Monica, El Capitan (my road warrior), and DJ (an old time road warrior wine biz friend of El Cap) rounded out the crew.  All of us are in the industry, and appreciate the magnitude of the affair.

El Bulli sits high on the cliff facing the ocean.  After a trip to the kitchen and pictures with chef Ferran Adria and Jules Solner, we are led to a patio where I am transed by the sounds of crashing waves beneath us.  Sea air fills the skies, and the sun begins its natural descent.  We settle in, and all nervousness and excitement is met with a bottle of Gosset Grande Reserve Champagne – it was like drinking the foam from the restless waters.  The first two courses were some play on cocktails, fueling anticipation.  Then an enormous egg shell made out of gorgonzola arrives to the table, with fresh nutmeg shavings.  We are instructed to burst in with our hands, the egg shell cool to the touch and so mind-opening, truly we were a part of a circus of food, and what a wondrous show we were in for.  A few more courses and then the spherical green olives, not so much a dish as a concept, a turning of a pure food item on its head, a liquid orgasm of olive essence, a sphere that danced on the spoon and the tongue before conceding to internal pressure, liquefying in the mouth while exploding in the mind.  It was the only course that we received two of, the secondary olives were housed in a glass aquarium for us to fish.  I am still living in those olives.

I am not sure when, still in an olive daze, but we were ushered indoors, a hacienda like aerie with scarce twenty five patrons scattered about in privacy, soothing white walls and wooden beams with stony floors and vistas of the night blue sky.  We are seated at a table designed for a large party, exceptionally homey for five.  We move on to a Corton Les Vergennes Cuvee Paul Chanson 2005, a nice Grand Cru effort, begging the question on how we are going to pair wine with the extensive menu and myriad of flavors.  Maria Jose took care of this, generously gifting her wines from cellar, white and red, with the theme for selection based on birth years present at the table.  Vina Tondonia Gran Reserva ’57, ’61, & ’70 for white, ’47,’54,’64 for red (some Bosconia), throwing in 2000 (rosado), 2001 & 2005 (tinto) for tasting.  The elegance of these fine aged wines elevated the meal to a stratospherical level. There were intermittents, 1964 Oloroso by Gonzlez Byass and Hidalgo Pascada Pastrana manzanilla, and a finishing wine of PX Solera 1830 by Alvear.  You could imagine how many wine glasses we were surrounded by.

It was a real task to take a photo before eating every dish, and I managed admirably, only eating part of a gamba before snapping a shot.  Many dishes could serve as the highlight of any meal, and some begged bewilderment, puzzling analysis, and folly.  A baguette made out of meringue filled with angula (eel) liver is still on the tip of my tongue’s memory.  Tuna bonito broth French Pressed in a bodum, se anemone, sea urchin, and sea eel to name a few.  There were no meat courses, save for a hare broth, deep and intense.  There were 38 courses in all.

Morphings, a box of chocolates in a dizzying array of flavors and scents, accompanied by tea cut from fresh leaves brought tableside finalized the sweetness portion of the program, followed by a digestivo back on the patio where it all began.  A quick glance at the clock struck 3 am, time lost from a 9 pm start time.

What did we discuss? Friendship, love, generosity, and of course food and wine, the universal elements that binds us all, without which the world would be a less magical space.  Life holds in store for us moments, simple and grandiose, with dear friends and family, filling for us that space in our hearts, minds and stomachs.

canas:mojito - cipirinha
almendra-fizz con amarena-LYO
globo de gorgonzola
cereza umeboshi
galleta de tomate/profiterol de remolacha y yogur
aceitunas verdes sfericas-I
cacahuetes mimeticos
americano
tortilla de crustaceos
esponja de coco
galleta de te
canape de jamon y gengibre
crema de caviar con caviar de avellana y su tartaleta
langostino hervido
gambas dos cocciones
helado de parmegiano modena, albahaca y fresa-LYO
shabu shabu de pinones
tiramisu
ceviche de almeja y kalanchoe
atun
coctel de ceviche y almejas
taco de oaxaca
rosas alcachofas
tortilla de anemone
espardenas en sashimi con caviar de aceite
bocadillo de anguila
abalone con panceta
nem thai de pollo
jugo de liebre con gele-cru manzana al casis
estanque
hojaldre de pina
marshmallow de chocolate
rose de manzana
moluscos
morophings
te
Havana Club
wines of R.Lopez de Heredia

Categories
Drinking The Chef Travel Wine

Howard Roark Sipped

My travels this summer were rich with first time experiences. My premier visit to Bordeaux, time trial for the Tour de France, El Bulli (more on that later), many vignerons, great wine, plush landscapes, and fabulous meals – the classic road trip.  As a follow up to a recent NYT article on small family Bordeaux winemakers, the meeting of one Monsieur Jean-François Fillastre is one of my fondest summer memories.

After arriving from a beautiful drive to St. Julien, passing famous chateaux and estates, laced with breathtaking vines under vast blue skies and golden sunshine, is a sleepy town where Mr. Fillastre resides.  His house is difficult to find.  The house number is curiously skipped as if part of some plan to keep him from interruption from outsiders.

Looking like lost tourists, an older woman emerges and asks if she can help.   After announcing our intentions, she disappears, acting as a screener of sorts.  Another interested party opens her shutters and points to the rear of the alley, where perhaps the domicile is located.

Having sufficiently made it through two checkpoints, Mr. Fillastre reveals himself.  He is a tall man with impressive forearms, a sun-soaked visage and wry, discerning smile.  He is dressed in khakis, an Izod polo, and work shoes, sooted from fresh soil.

He leads us to a garage, thus truly defining the term “garagiste”, and the moldy frost and cobwebs on the walls reveal a room full of barrels and old bottles, a treasure trove of labor in the vineyards.

Mr. Fillastre seems a bit distracted and is not overly chatty.  His tone is measured and seemingly cryptic at first, as if he had yet to trust our motives.  But reading between the lines, there stood a man with great passion and sense of duty to the vines.  It seemed the only important virtue to him at all.

Domaine Jaugeret is a story about a family of winemaking tradition, an historic continuation of  viticulture and expression of terroir, a practical, agricultural labor of bringing the best out of the earth naturally.

Indeed, it is evident that Mr. Fillastre is concerned with making wine for himself and his own pleasure.

We taste wines from a few recent vintages using a pipette that he made for himself when he was a young man learning the glassblowing trade.

How about technology?

It is not bad, to a point.

I don’t demand of the wine, it demands of me.

Just before lunch, he asks us to choose two among three select bottles.  Standing side by side on a wine crate – ’82,’90, and 2001 vintages.  I sheepishly point to the ’82 first, and then the ’90, naturally.

As we sat at a nearby restaurant with classic Bordelaise fare, duck, gratin, veal kidneys, and cheese, Mr. Fillastre opened up, offering opinions under direct questioning, revealing more and more of the man behind the wine.

When you are not drinking your wines, what do you drink?

I like to drink my wines.

How about rosé?

That is not wine for me.

What about Champagne?

I love Champagne with oysters, a tiny bashful grin.

What type?

It doesn’t matter.

After tasting the ’82 and the ’90, we discussed its power and finesse.  Mr. Fillastre remarked at their purity, but did not let on if one was better than the other, only that the ’82 is more ready to drink.

I am a bit maniac.

True to form, Mr. Fillastre looked a bit mad at his admission.

But you have to, to be a winemaker.

Do you know that you are gaining popularity in the United States?

No.

Do you drink other Bordeaux?

Not really.

Do you collaborate with other winemakers?

Not really.

No man is an island, but Mr. Fillastre works the land without concern for anything or anyone but the vines and his duty.  The result is wine with such purity and soul, only a “maniac” could have achieved such great results.

Mr. Fillastre has no heirs, just a brother who he claims he wouldn’t let near a vine, and so Domaine du Jaugaret is certainly in danger of being snapped up by a large corporation, which would indeed be very sad.  Just as the mom and pop joints in New York City have turned into a Starbuck’s, bank or Duane Reade, Bordeaux will also be a lesser place if many of the small farmers fade into history.

After lunch, Mr. Fillastre had one more surprise for us, an unlabeled bottle of some age.  A 1943 offering, peak and pure St. Julien, a testament to his father’s skill in an unheralded vintage, his birth year.

We left Mr. Fillastre as we envision him, sipping on his wine, enjoying the fruits of his father’s labor, having sent us away in astonishing gratitude.

The guardian neighbor emerges from her porch to bid her farewell.

Do you understand how great a man he is?

Now I do.

Pipette
Dad's car 1927
Cellar
Dom. Jaugaret Cave
Le Coq
Le Coq
Domaine de Jaugaret
1982 & 1990
Foie Gras
Le canard
Gratin Dauphinois
Fromage
Official seal - Dom. Jaugaret
Monsieur Jean Francois Fillastre

Categories
Drinking Eating Experiences The Chef Travel Wine

Pais Vasco (Basque Country)

This is the second year that El Capitan and I have made a pilgrimage to Spain, in search of good food and wines.  Last summer, Galician culture in Ribeira Sacra, drinking delicious mencia and godello crafted from impossibly terraced vineyards along the Bibei river.  This time around donned our best berets to sample Basque culture along a breathtaking countryside surrounded by mountains and ocean vistas along the Cantabrian coastline. If not for the Spanish language, you would think you were in a different country altogether.  But the Basque share a love for food, wine and adventure too, a very Spanish, if not global virtue.

Visiting the bodegas that produce txakoli requires skilled driving and expert map skills, and we persevered by making most of our appointments with only a slight fender bender.  Anyone who has driven throughout Spain knows of its narrow streets and small jutting dividers, perilous for any driver.  But the long drives and wrong turns from time to time was well worth it.  If the view and winding turns are not enough incentives, then the thirst for txakoli during a hot and humid summer would serve as the reward for our efforts.

Txakoli is consumed mainly in the Basque country and is made up of hondarrabi zuri (white) and hondarrabi beltza (red).  The mostly white wine is meant to be consumed young, and often exhibit a slightly carbonic quality specific only to txakoli.  The wines are often tart, with racy acidity, and are quite a match for fresh seafood, although some Basque claim they drink txakoli with meat dishes as well.

Txomin and Ameztoi, in Getaria, are situated atop the mountains overlooking the beach, the water, and the French frontier.  Winemaking looks incredibly challenging, except for Bulb, the Txomin dog, who enjoys fetching sticks thrown over the rail into the abyss of vines, only to return shortly with tail wagging,  prize in mouth.   The style of txakoli in Getaria is decidedly more carbonated, and enhanced so by tall pours from high above the glass, to encourage further bubbles.  Young, tart, refreshing and delicious is the name of the game.  Txakoli is meant to be consumed within two years, and some wineries bottle to order to preserve freshness and peak drinkability.

In Bizkaiko, the style of txakoli vary considerably, and are not crafted for the sake of bubbles.  On the contrary, the aim is still to produce young tart wines, but with a bit more finesse, an attempt at a distinctive white wine without much carbonation. A good example can be found at vineyards such as Uriondo, which are located on more manageable hilltops, but have the benefit of being included in part of a natural ecosystem of other plants and animals.

Some projects are new, such as at Gurrutxaga, and are still honing a particular style.   At Doniene Gorrondona, they are branching out with a tinto (red) wine which is delicious and spicy.  Nextdoor neighbor to Txomin is Ameztoi, who produce the only rosado, and happens to be one of my favorites.  The contrast of styles from Arabako to Getaria to Bizkaiko are intriguing, but the result is definitely txakoli, and Basque in spirit.

Our home base was Bilbao, where, after glimpsing the Guggenheim and the famous dog, makes one hungry.  We sought out pintxos and txakolinas, as well as tippled aged Rioja which is on every wine list and reasonably priced.  At Casa Rufo, we enjoyed a LDH Blanco 1991 for 21 euros!  The real highlight meal was at Etxebarri, a renowned asador with masterful smoking techniques.  Located in the ancient town of Axpe, the restaurant is faced by a soaring mountain.  I am not a huge of fan of smoked foods because often the dishes are oversmoked, flavors of the ingredients lost in a sea of black char.  But at Etxebarri, each dish is masterfully misted with smoke, like a soft cloud enhancing the natural juices.

Txakoli has become quite accessible in New York City and other parts of the U.S., and I believe it is a great addition to any wine list, not just for Spanish restos.  At Pata Negra, I rotate producers every couple of months, as I feel txakoli can be consumed year round.  After all, it matches quite well with jamon iberico.

Next stop on the journey, Barcelona, where tapas is on the mind.  Please check out the feature on Txakoli in the NYTimes as well as the ensuing photo gallery for highlights.

Txakoli Vines
Uriondo Vines
Ameztoi Vines
View at Gurrutxaga
View of Txomin Extaniz
Bulb, Txomin mascot
Father at Uriondo
Uriondo Vines
Doniene Gorrondona distillery for Orujo
Txakoli at Getaria Port
Gambas at Getaria Port
Almejas at Getaria Port
Fish for two at Getaria Port

Smoked Spinach soup at Etxebarri
Smoked butter at Etxebarri
Smoked Sea Cucumber at Etxebarri
Smoked Belons at Etxebarri
Smoked Belons at Etxebarri
Smoked Mussels at Etxebarri
Smoked Gambas at Etxebarri
Smoked Rape ate Etxebarri
Smoked Beef at Etxebarri
Smoked Ice Cream
Smoked Salmon at Casa Rufo, Bilbao
'91 LDH Tondonia at Casa Rufo
Chuleton at Casa Rufo
Categories
Drinking Eating Food Wine

Spain Finale!

Now that team Espana is through to the World Cup Finals, be ready to celebrate in style with Spanish wine and food at Pata Negra for post celebration.  This is precisely the occasion for a nice plate of pata negra ham and a bottle of excellent Spanish white. Recommended wines from Pata Negra’s reserve list:

1998 Lopez de Heredia Gran Res. Rosado, Rioja

1999 LDH Gravonia, Rioja

2008 Emilio Rojo Treixadura Blend, Ribeiro

2008 A Coroa Godello, Valdeorras

2009 Ameztoi Txakoli Rosado, Pais Vasco

2008 Yunquera Albillo, VT Castilla y Leon

2008 Do Ferreiro Albarino, Rias Baixas