<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type="text/css" media="screen" href="http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/themes/vip/newyorkobserver/stylesheets/rss.css"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Observer &#187; Dining Out</title>
	<atom:link href="http://observer.com/term/dining-out/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://observer.com</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 18:34:01 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language></language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.com/</generator>
<cloud domain='observer.com' port='80' path='/?rsscloud=notify' registerProcedure='' protocol='http-post' />
<image>
		<url>http://1.gravatar.com/blavatar/dac0f3722a48a53be75eb06c0c4f5119?s=96&#038;d=http%3A%2F%2Fs2.wp.com%2Fi%2Fbuttonw-com.png</url>
		<title>Observer &#187; Dining Out</title>
		<link>http://observer.com</link>
	</image>
	<atom:link rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" href="http://observer.com/osd.xml" title="Observer" />
	<atom:link rel='hub' href='http://observer.com/?pushpress=hub'/>
		<item>
				
		<title>DeGrezia Empire-Building on Third Avenue, Ashton&#8217;s Pub to Relocate</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2009/04/degrezia-empirebuilding-on-third-avenue-ashtons-pub-to-relocate/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 16:55:31 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2009/04/degrezia-empirebuilding-on-third-avenue-ashtons-pub-to-relocate/</link>
			<dc:creator>Dana Rubinstein</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2009/04/degrezia-empirebuilding-on-third-avenue-ashtons-pub-to-relocate/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/1degrezia-shanna-ravindra-via-nymag.jpg?w=300&h=201" />The owner of the well-regarded and well-heeled <span style="font-weight: bold"><a href="http://www.degreziaristorante.com/index2.htm" target="_blank">Ristorante DeGrezia</a></span> is, like any good New Yorker with capital and drive, empire-building. Joseph DeGrezia, owner of the Northern Italian boite at 231 East 50th Street, has signed a lease for 2,200 square feet just across the way at the ground floor of 805 Third Avenue, where <span style="font-weight: bold">Ashton's </span>pub is now located (the technical address of the restaurant is 208 East 50th Street). According to his broker, Mr. DeGrezia intends to&nbsp;build&nbsp;&nbsp;a more casual and eclectic version of his existing restaurant&mdash;the name as yet undetermined.</p>
<p>The new location is a smashing one, with a 31-story tenant base at the ground floor of the&nbsp;Emery Roth &amp; Sons&ndash;designed scraper owned by <a href="http://www.cohenbrothersrealty.com/#/commercial-properties/new-york-city/805-Third-Avenue/property-highlights/" target="_blank">Cohen Brothers Realty Corporation</a>.</p>
<p>"They will get the space in September and&nbsp;will redesign the whole place," said <span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px"><span style="font-weight: bold"><strong>Faith Hope Consolo</strong></span>, c<span style="font-size: 15px;line-height: 25px"><span class="c1">hairwoman of the retail leasing and sales division at</span>&nbsp;<span class="c2">Prudential Douglas Elliman<span style="font-weight: normal">, who</span>&nbsp;<span style="font-weight: normal">represented&nbsp;</span>Cohen Brothers Realty<span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;in negotiations with&nbsp;<span style="font-size: 12px;line-height: 18px">restaurateur<span style="color: #494949;font-family: Verdana;line-height: 20px">&nbsp;Mr.&nbsp;</span><span style="color: #494949;font-family: Verdana;line-height: 20px"><span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px">DeGrezia, who was represented by<span style="font-size: 15px;font-weight: bold;line-height: 25px"><span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;</span><span style="font-size: 12px;line-height: 18px">Jack Valensi</span><span style="font-size: 12px;font-weight: normal;line-height: 18px">, of&nbsp;<span style="font-weight: bold">Valensi Realty.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal">The asking rent for the 13-year lease came to about&nbsp;</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman';font-size: 16px"><span style="font-weight: normal">$275,000 per year (or $125 a square foot), according to &nbsp;Mr. Valensi, who said the taking rent was, not surprisingly, lower than the asking. Mr. DeGrezia could not be reached for comment, but </span><span style="font-family: Verdana;font-size: 12px"><span style="font-style: italic"><span style="font-weight: normal"><em>New York</em> </span></span><span style="font-weight: normal"><a href="http://nymag.com/listings/restaurant/ristorante-degrezia/" target="_blank">writes </a>that&nbsp;</span><span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-weight: normal">Ristorante DeGrezia</span></span><span style="color: #494949"><span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-weight: normal">'s</span></span><span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;"skillfully prepared" northern Italian food, with its use of butter instead of olive oil, and the below-street-level boite's "</span></span><span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px"><span style="font-weight: normal">formal elegance ... don't come cheap, but judging by the number of serious business meetings and restrained celebrations that take place here, it's a price many consider well worth paying."&nbsp;</span></span></span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold">Pat Heraty</span><span style="font-weight: normal">, owner Ashton&rsquo;s, said he was in negotiations for an even larger space, with a patio, at 825 Third Avenue. &nbsp;He said Ashton's has been at its current, and until now only, location since June 5, 1994.</span><span style="font-weight: normal"><br /></span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/1degrezia-shanna-ravindra-via-nymag.jpg?w=300&h=201" />The owner of the well-regarded and well-heeled <span style="font-weight: bold"><a href="http://www.degreziaristorante.com/index2.htm" target="_blank">Ristorante DeGrezia</a></span> is, like any good New Yorker with capital and drive, empire-building. Joseph DeGrezia, owner of the Northern Italian boite at 231 East 50th Street, has signed a lease for 2,200 square feet just across the way at the ground floor of 805 Third Avenue, where <span style="font-weight: bold">Ashton's </span>pub is now located (the technical address of the restaurant is 208 East 50th Street). According to his broker, Mr. DeGrezia intends to&nbsp;build&nbsp;&nbsp;a more casual and eclectic version of his existing restaurant&mdash;the name as yet undetermined.</p>
<p>The new location is a smashing one, with a 31-story tenant base at the ground floor of the&nbsp;Emery Roth &amp; Sons&ndash;designed scraper owned by <a href="http://www.cohenbrothersrealty.com/#/commercial-properties/new-york-city/805-Third-Avenue/property-highlights/" target="_blank">Cohen Brothers Realty Corporation</a>.</p>
<p>"They will get the space in September and&nbsp;will redesign the whole place," said <span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px"><span style="font-weight: bold"><strong>Faith Hope Consolo</strong></span>, c<span style="font-size: 15px;line-height: 25px"><span class="c1">hairwoman of the retail leasing and sales division at</span>&nbsp;<span class="c2">Prudential Douglas Elliman<span style="font-weight: normal">, who</span>&nbsp;<span style="font-weight: normal">represented&nbsp;</span>Cohen Brothers Realty<span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;in negotiations with&nbsp;<span style="font-size: 12px;line-height: 18px">restaurateur<span style="color: #494949;font-family: Verdana;line-height: 20px">&nbsp;Mr.&nbsp;</span><span style="color: #494949;font-family: Verdana;line-height: 20px"><span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px">DeGrezia, who was represented by<span style="font-size: 15px;font-weight: bold;line-height: 25px"><span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;</span><span style="font-size: 12px;line-height: 18px">Jack Valensi</span><span style="font-size: 12px;font-weight: normal;line-height: 18px">, of&nbsp;<span style="font-weight: bold">Valensi Realty.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal">The asking rent for the 13-year lease came to about&nbsp;</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman';font-size: 16px"><span style="font-weight: normal">$275,000 per year (or $125 a square foot), according to &nbsp;Mr. Valensi, who said the taking rent was, not surprisingly, lower than the asking. Mr. DeGrezia could not be reached for comment, but </span><span style="font-family: Verdana;font-size: 12px"><span style="font-style: italic"><span style="font-weight: normal"><em>New York</em> </span></span><span style="font-weight: normal"><a href="http://nymag.com/listings/restaurant/ristorante-degrezia/" target="_blank">writes </a>that&nbsp;</span><span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-weight: normal">Ristorante DeGrezia</span></span><span style="color: #494949"><span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-weight: normal">'s</span></span><span style="font-weight: normal">&nbsp;"skillfully prepared" northern Italian food, with its use of butter instead of olive oil, and the below-street-level boite's "</span></span><span style="color: #000000;font-family: Georgia;line-height: 18px"><span style="font-weight: normal">formal elegance ... don't come cheap, but judging by the number of serious business meetings and restrained celebrations that take place here, it's a price many consider well worth paying."&nbsp;</span></span></span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold">Pat Heraty</span><span style="font-weight: normal">, owner Ashton&rsquo;s, said he was in negotiations for an even larger space, with a patio, at 825 Third Avenue. &nbsp;He said Ashton's has been at its current, and until now only, location since June 5, 1994.</span><span style="font-weight: normal"><br /></span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2009/04/degrezia-empirebuilding-on-third-avenue-ashtons-pub-to-relocate/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/1degrezia-shanna-ravindra-via-nymag.jpg?w=300&#38;h=201" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>What I Ate That Was Great in 2008</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/12/what-i-ate-that-was-great-in-2008/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2008 17:24:15 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/12/what-i-ate-that-was-great-in-2008/</link>
			<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/12/what-i-ate-that-was-great-in-2008/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_9.jpg?w=300&h=223" />&ldquo;Dining out is a vice, a dissipation of spirit punished by remorse,&rdquo; wrote the literary critic Cyril Connolly in 1945. &ldquo;We eat, drink and talk a little too much, abuse all our friends, belch out our literary preferences and are egged on by accomplices in the audience to acts of mental exhibitionism. Such evenings cannot fail to diminish those who take part in them. They end up on Monkey Hill.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text">This was in The Unquiet Grave, a book of musings that made a deep and lasting impression on me as a teenager. Yet I ended up on Monkey Hill, I fear, since I have never tired of dining out.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Dining out is a vice, a dissipation of spirit punished by remorse,&rdquo; wrote the literary critic Cyril Connolly in 1945. &ldquo;We eat, drink and talk a little too much, abuse all our friends, belch out our literary preferences and are egged on by accomplices in the audience to acts of mental exhibitionism. Such evenings cannot fail to diminish those who take part in them. They end up on Monkey Hill.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text">This was in The Unquiet Grave, a book of musings that made a deep and lasting impression on me as a teenager. Yet I ended up on Monkey Hill, I fear, since I have never tired of dining out. And this year, despite the recession, has been a good one for interesting new restaurants.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">First, the bad news. A rent hike forced beloved late-night haunt </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Florent</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"> to close after nearly 23 years in the meatpacking district. The much anticipated </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Sheridan Square</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"> in Greenwich Village lasted only a few months, not long after the chef, Gary Robins, unexpectedly pulled out. Restaurant openings were down in New York, unlike in London, where, according to <em>The Evening Standard</em>, over 100 new ones have mushroomed in just the past three months. &ldquo;Surely this record-breaking cluster of launches will end in a series of kitchen nightmares to rouse even Mr. Ramsay from his woes,&rdquo; commented journalist Richard E. Rogers. I hope he&rsquo;s wrong. </span></p>
<p class="text">Meanwhile, here&rsquo;s my list of favorites from 2008. (David Chang&rsquo;s Momofuku Ko is missing because I&mdash;like every other person in New York City without a plutonium-powered Internet connection&mdash;have yet to obtain one of those coveted online reservations. The only place in the city harder to get into is Rao&rsquo;s.)</p>
<p class="text"><span>&nbsp;</span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">THE MOST EXCITING restaurant I ate in all year was </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Corton</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, opened in September by Drew Nieporent in the space that used to be Montrachet. Paul Liebrandt&rsquo;s food is nothing short of brilliant (my three favorite dishes being the sweetbreads topped with egg yolk, the squab with chestnut cream and truffles, and pastry chef Robert Truitt&rsquo;s caramel brioche with Stilton). Corton is expensive ($76 <em>prix fixe</em>), but not wildly so considering the complexity of the food, or if you take into account the 30 bottles under $50 on its substantial wine list.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">The best Italian food in the city is being cooked by Americans. And the best new Italian restaurant is Scott Conant&rsquo;s </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Scarpetta</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, in the meatpacking district. If you can&rsquo;t get a reservation, it&rsquo;s worth dropping in: There are unreserved tables near the bar. Conant&rsquo;s polenta with truffled mushrooms is the stuff of legend, along with his famous spaghetti with tomato and basil. L&rsquo;Impero in Tudor City, where Mr. Conant used to cook, is now </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Convivio</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, another great restaurant, where Michael White is turning out first-rate interpretations of Italian classics, including exceptional pasta.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">In 2008, the Upper  West Side finally laid to rest its reputation as a culinary no man&rsquo;s land. At </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Eighty One</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, near the north side of the Natural History Museum, Ed Brown&rsquo;s deceptively simple cuisine is designed to show off the very best ingredients he can buy (even the peppercorns are hand-picked). Given Mr. Brown&rsquo;s years at the Seagrill, you&rsquo;d expect the fish here to be superior, and it is. Nearby, </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Dovetail</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, in a townhouse one block from the south side of the Natural History Museum, Jon Fraser&rsquo;s carefully crafted, complex dishes are like works of art. (For winter, please bring back that smoky clam chowder with chorizo.)</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Alain Ducasse refused to give up on New York, where, like Gordon Ramsay, he has been treated less than kindly. This time around he opened </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Adour</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, in the St.  Regis Hotel, a restaurant much less stiff and formal than his previous place, but with terrific food (including a tongue-in-cheek bagel &lsquo;Dubarry&rsquo; topped with cauliflower and Comt&eacute; cheese) and a wine list of around 600 bottles, 70 of which are under $50.</span></p>
<p class="text">In Chelsea, another French chef, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Alain</span></strong> <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Allegretti</span></strong>, who is from Nice and formerly worked at Le Cirque, is serving a Proven&ccedil;al menu at his sleek eponymous restaurant, reinventing familiar regional classics.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">There were hopes of a restaurant revival on West Eighth   Street as its tacky shoe shops closed one after another. Perhaps it&rsquo;s the times, but so far the only noteworthy new place to open is </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Elettaria</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, where I found good cocktails and food with an Indian accent. Further west, at </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Commerce</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, I loved Harold Moore&rsquo;s three-star cooking, served in a setting strong on patina&mdash;Art Deco bar and wooden booths&mdash;but I couldn&rsquo;t stand the noise. Go there very early or very late or not at all.</span></p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage--><strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Matsugen</span></strong>, Jean Georges&rsquo; new venture in Tribeca, serves soba in a minimalist setting, and a dish you must not miss: uni with yuzu jelly. Nearby, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Chanterelle</span></strong> is celebrating its 20th year. The meal I had proved the restaurant is as good as ever&mdash;and David Waltuck&rsquo;s famous seafood sausage was still on the menu.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The most fun I had was at </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Yerba Buena</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, a pan Latin restaurant on Avenue A. It looks like a dive in Old Havana and serves wonderful cocktails, paella and short ribs. Every time I came here it felt like a party.</span></p>
<p class="text">This year I also made a couple of serendipitous discoveries through friends. <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Zenkichi</span></strong> in Williamsburg is a quirky Japanese restaurant that looks like a set for a Kurosawa movie, with an unmarked front door, a maze of private curtained mahogany booths along narrow passageways, and an enticing omakase menu. On the Upper East Side, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Shalizar</span></strong>, at Third Avenue between 80th and 81st Streets, is a charming, inexpensive Persian restaurant serving pilafs, kebabs and khoresh fesenjan (a stew made with chicken, walnuts, saffron and pomegranate).</p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">SPEAKING OF INEXPENSIVE, since 2009 will doubtless be a frugal year for dining out, here are some money saving tips.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Eat at the fancy restaurants at lunch.</span></em> Jean Georges offers a bargain&mdash;two courses for $28, another $14 if you add a third. Gramercy Tavern is serving a $14 lunch&mdash;soup and sandwich.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Eat two first courses and skip the main.</span></em> They are often more interesting.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Dine at the bar.</span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> Near Lincoln  Center, you can drop in to Picholine for small bites at the wine bar, or to Bar Boulud, which has great charcuterie.</span></p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Dine out on Sunday.</span></em> Some restaurants, among them Dovetail and Eighty One, serve inexpensive Sunday night suppers.</p>
<p class="text"><em>Tell the sommelier upfront how much you are willing to pay.</em> Many restaurants are now adding cheaper wines to their list; the sommelier has surely spent years looking for good deals from boutique vineyards and unexpected venues.</p>
<p class="text">And finally, a few things I don&rsquo;t want to see (or hear) in 2009:</p>
<p class="text">Kobe beef burgers</p>
<p class="text">Fake truffle oil</p>
<p class="text">Noisy restaurants<span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></p>
<p class="text">&ldquo;I&lsquo;m sorry&mdash;we can&rsquo;t seat you until your party&rsquo;s complete.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">&ldquo;How are we doing this evening?&rdquo;</span></p>
<p class="text">And once and for all, I never again want to be asked, &ldquo;Are you still working on that?&rdquo;</p>
<p class="Tagline">&nbsp;<br /><em><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt">Moira Hodgson&rsquo;s memoir, </span></em><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt;font-style: normal">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time</span><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt">, <em>will be published in January by Nan Talese/Doubleday</em></span><em>.</em></p>
<p class="Tagline"><em>mhodgson@observer.com&nbsp;</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_9.jpg?w=300&h=223" />&ldquo;Dining out is a vice, a dissipation of spirit punished by remorse,&rdquo; wrote the literary critic Cyril Connolly in 1945. &ldquo;We eat, drink and talk a little too much, abuse all our friends, belch out our literary preferences and are egged on by accomplices in the audience to acts of mental exhibitionism. Such evenings cannot fail to diminish those who take part in them. They end up on Monkey Hill.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text">This was in The Unquiet Grave, a book of musings that made a deep and lasting impression on me as a teenager. Yet I ended up on Monkey Hill, I fear, since I have never tired of dining out.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Dining out is a vice, a dissipation of spirit punished by remorse,&rdquo; wrote the literary critic Cyril Connolly in 1945. &ldquo;We eat, drink and talk a little too much, abuse all our friends, belch out our literary preferences and are egged on by accomplices in the audience to acts of mental exhibitionism. Such evenings cannot fail to diminish those who take part in them. They end up on Monkey Hill.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text">This was in The Unquiet Grave, a book of musings that made a deep and lasting impression on me as a teenager. Yet I ended up on Monkey Hill, I fear, since I have never tired of dining out. And this year, despite the recession, has been a good one for interesting new restaurants.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">First, the bad news. A rent hike forced beloved late-night haunt </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Florent</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"> to close after nearly 23 years in the meatpacking district. The much anticipated </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Sheridan Square</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"> in Greenwich Village lasted only a few months, not long after the chef, Gary Robins, unexpectedly pulled out. Restaurant openings were down in New York, unlike in London, where, according to <em>The Evening Standard</em>, over 100 new ones have mushroomed in just the past three months. &ldquo;Surely this record-breaking cluster of launches will end in a series of kitchen nightmares to rouse even Mr. Ramsay from his woes,&rdquo; commented journalist Richard E. Rogers. I hope he&rsquo;s wrong. </span></p>
<p class="text">Meanwhile, here&rsquo;s my list of favorites from 2008. (David Chang&rsquo;s Momofuku Ko is missing because I&mdash;like every other person in New York City without a plutonium-powered Internet connection&mdash;have yet to obtain one of those coveted online reservations. The only place in the city harder to get into is Rao&rsquo;s.)</p>
<p class="text"><span>&nbsp;</span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">THE MOST EXCITING restaurant I ate in all year was </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Corton</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, opened in September by Drew Nieporent in the space that used to be Montrachet. Paul Liebrandt&rsquo;s food is nothing short of brilliant (my three favorite dishes being the sweetbreads topped with egg yolk, the squab with chestnut cream and truffles, and pastry chef Robert Truitt&rsquo;s caramel brioche with Stilton). Corton is expensive ($76 <em>prix fixe</em>), but not wildly so considering the complexity of the food, or if you take into account the 30 bottles under $50 on its substantial wine list.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">The best Italian food in the city is being cooked by Americans. And the best new Italian restaurant is Scott Conant&rsquo;s </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Scarpetta</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, in the meatpacking district. If you can&rsquo;t get a reservation, it&rsquo;s worth dropping in: There are unreserved tables near the bar. Conant&rsquo;s polenta with truffled mushrooms is the stuff of legend, along with his famous spaghetti with tomato and basil. L&rsquo;Impero in Tudor City, where Mr. Conant used to cook, is now </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Convivio</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, another great restaurant, where Michael White is turning out first-rate interpretations of Italian classics, including exceptional pasta.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">In 2008, the Upper  West Side finally laid to rest its reputation as a culinary no man&rsquo;s land. At </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Eighty One</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, near the north side of the Natural History Museum, Ed Brown&rsquo;s deceptively simple cuisine is designed to show off the very best ingredients he can buy (even the peppercorns are hand-picked). Given Mr. Brown&rsquo;s years at the Seagrill, you&rsquo;d expect the fish here to be superior, and it is. Nearby, </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Dovetail</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, in a townhouse one block from the south side of the Natural History Museum, Jon Fraser&rsquo;s carefully crafted, complex dishes are like works of art. (For winter, please bring back that smoky clam chowder with chorizo.)</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Alain Ducasse refused to give up on New York, where, like Gordon Ramsay, he has been treated less than kindly. This time around he opened </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Adour</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, in the St.  Regis Hotel, a restaurant much less stiff and formal than his previous place, but with terrific food (including a tongue-in-cheek bagel &lsquo;Dubarry&rsquo; topped with cauliflower and Comt&eacute; cheese) and a wine list of around 600 bottles, 70 of which are under $50.</span></p>
<p class="text">In Chelsea, another French chef, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Alain</span></strong> <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Allegretti</span></strong>, who is from Nice and formerly worked at Le Cirque, is serving a Proven&ccedil;al menu at his sleek eponymous restaurant, reinventing familiar regional classics.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">There were hopes of a restaurant revival on West Eighth   Street as its tacky shoe shops closed one after another. Perhaps it&rsquo;s the times, but so far the only noteworthy new place to open is </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Elettaria</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, where I found good cocktails and food with an Indian accent. Further west, at </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Commerce</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">, I loved Harold Moore&rsquo;s three-star cooking, served in a setting strong on patina&mdash;Art Deco bar and wooden booths&mdash;but I couldn&rsquo;t stand the noise. Go there very early or very late or not at all.</span></p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage--><strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Matsugen</span></strong>, Jean Georges&rsquo; new venture in Tribeca, serves soba in a minimalist setting, and a dish you must not miss: uni with yuzu jelly. Nearby, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Chanterelle</span></strong> is celebrating its 20th year. The meal I had proved the restaurant is as good as ever&mdash;and David Waltuck&rsquo;s famous seafood sausage was still on the menu.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The most fun I had was at </span><strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Yerba Buena</span></strong><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, a pan Latin restaurant on Avenue A. It looks like a dive in Old Havana and serves wonderful cocktails, paella and short ribs. Every time I came here it felt like a party.</span></p>
<p class="text">This year I also made a couple of serendipitous discoveries through friends. <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Zenkichi</span></strong> in Williamsburg is a quirky Japanese restaurant that looks like a set for a Kurosawa movie, with an unmarked front door, a maze of private curtained mahogany booths along narrow passageways, and an enticing omakase menu. On the Upper East Side, <strong><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Bold'">Shalizar</span></strong>, at Third Avenue between 80th and 81st Streets, is a charming, inexpensive Persian restaurant serving pilafs, kebabs and khoresh fesenjan (a stew made with chicken, walnuts, saffron and pomegranate).</p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">SPEAKING OF INEXPENSIVE, since 2009 will doubtless be a frugal year for dining out, here are some money saving tips.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Eat at the fancy restaurants at lunch.</span></em> Jean Georges offers a bargain&mdash;two courses for $28, another $14 if you add a third. Gramercy Tavern is serving a $14 lunch&mdash;soup and sandwich.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Eat two first courses and skip the main.</span></em> They are often more interesting.</p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt;font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Dine at the bar.</span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> Near Lincoln  Center, you can drop in to Picholine for small bites at the wine bar, or to Bar Boulud, which has great charcuterie.</span></p>
<p class="text"><em><span style="font-family: 'Exchange Text Semibold'">Dine out on Sunday.</span></em> Some restaurants, among them Dovetail and Eighty One, serve inexpensive Sunday night suppers.</p>
<p class="text"><em>Tell the sommelier upfront how much you are willing to pay.</em> Many restaurants are now adding cheaper wines to their list; the sommelier has surely spent years looking for good deals from boutique vineyards and unexpected venues.</p>
<p class="text">And finally, a few things I don&rsquo;t want to see (or hear) in 2009:</p>
<p class="text">Kobe beef burgers</p>
<p class="text">Fake truffle oil</p>
<p class="text">Noisy restaurants<span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></p>
<p class="text">&ldquo;I&lsquo;m sorry&mdash;we can&rsquo;t seat you until your party&rsquo;s complete.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">&ldquo;How are we doing this evening?&rdquo;</span></p>
<p class="text">And once and for all, I never again want to be asked, &ldquo;Are you still working on that?&rdquo;</p>
<p class="Tagline">&nbsp;<br /><em><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt">Moira Hodgson&rsquo;s memoir, </span></em><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt;font-style: normal">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time</span><span style="font-size: 7pt;letter-spacing: -0.2pt">, <em>will be published in January by Nan Talese/Doubleday</em></span><em>.</em></p>
<p class="Tagline"><em>mhodgson@observer.com&nbsp;</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/12/what-i-ate-that-was-great-in-2008/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_9.jpg?w=300&#38;h=223" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>The Woman With the Buona Forchetta</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/11/the-woman-with-the-ibuona-forchettai/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 17:10:03 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/11/the-woman-with-the-ibuona-forchettai/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/11/the-woman-with-the-ibuona-forchettai/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_8.jpg?w=232&h=300" />The first year I came to New  York from my native England, I had Thanksgiving dinner with an Italian-American family in Queens. I was used to frugal Britain, where my mother would wash out plastic bags and pin them up to dry, and a leg of lamb was eked out for three consecutive meals, ending up as shepherd’s pie. We ate turkey only at Christmas, a week-long marathon that lasted until the bird made its final appearance diced in a thick white sauce with carrots and onions.<span>  </span>So the amount of food that was consumed in just one afternoon in Queens came as a shock.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">We began with hot antipasti (baked clams, scampi and stuffed mushrooms) and cold antipasti (prosciutto, several kinds of salami, sardines and salads). Then, a pasta course: tortellini with cream sauce. I was full by the time the turkey arrived, along with dishes that were new to me at the time: sweet potatoes (topped, to my horror, with marshmallows), cornbread and cranberry sauce. Unfortunately, I was sitting next to the patriarch of the family. He kept heaping my plate with more and more food. Since I had been brought up with the notion that leaving food on your plate was a crime, I made quite an impression as the young English woman with a <em>buona forchetta</em>.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">After the turkey, there was cheese, because why not? Then pumpkin pies, pecan tarts and chocolate cake, followed by slabs of hot cheesecake. By this point, I was close to tears. No sooner had we started on the cheesecake, however, than the patriarch, who was in his 80s, turned to his wife with a stricken cry.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">“Maria! You forgot the stuffed artichokes!” The diners put down their forks and pushed their half-eaten plates aside. They fell upon the artichokes, which were the biggest I’d ever seen, their jumbo-size leaves overflowing with bread crumbs, chopped anchovies and a great deal of garlic. Then we went back to our dessert. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><span> </span></span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">SINCE THAT DAY I’ve eaten many a Thanksgiving feast, but never one of quite such excess. I also learned that Americans find it not only acceptable but in some circles even good manners to leave some food on their dinner plates. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">There was food left on the dinner plates, alas, the year I cooked a wild turkey at my house in Connecticut. A flock of wild turkeys used to parade across the garden into the woods, but one afternoon a dog ran out of the bushes and attacked one of the birds, ripping out its throat. Minutes later the owner arrived, full of apologies. Since the turkey was dead, he said, we might as well eat it. </span></p>
<p class="text">“Think of the money you’ll save!” </p>
<p class="text">He insisted on plucking the bird for me and spent the afternoon singeing turkey feathers in the backyard. It was all for naught. The bird emerged from the oven with a beautiful burnished skin, but when we tried to carve the meat, it was as tough as a rancher’s saddle. </p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><!--nextpage--><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">ALSO IN CONNECTICUT, I encountered the most unusual Thanksgiving turkey I have ever seen. It was served at Arthur Miller’s house, in Litchfield  County. His wife, the photographer Inge Morath, was a vegetarian. She’d lived in France, where one year, she told me, she decided to surprise American friends who were celebrating Thanksgiving in Paris. She created a turkey <em>pièce montée</em>, built out of fruits and vegetables. She said she got the idea from looking at composite paintings of animals and birds. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Using a couple of loaves of bread as the base, she put goose feathers in the end of one of the loaves to form the turkey’s tail. She sliced off the end of a corn cob, stuck a toothpick in it and speared it in the other end of the loaf to make the neck. The head was made from a small eggplant nailed by toothpick to the corn; the wattles were large, dried red chili peppers. Quails’ eggs made a spine, and the bird’s chest puffed up nicely as red cabbage and radicchio leaves were pinned to the bread and hung with red grapes. The eyes were made from two slices of radish with raisins in the center. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">She added apples, pears, stuffed vine leaves, cherry tomatoes, kumquats, dates, figs, prunes, broccoli, pieces of cheese, black and green grapes, niçoise olives and all manner of vegetables and fruit threaded on skewers or toothpicks like little shish kebabs. With the turkey, she served a selection of dips: bagna cauda, yogurt with fresh horseradish, dill vinaigrette and curry mayonnaise. Eating this, who’d miss the real thing? </span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">THE TROUBLE WITH real turkeys, as anyone who has roasted one knows, is that they get dry. But then a newspaper article claimed that for optimum juiciness, turkeys were best roasted at 500 degrees. The Litchfield County Fire Department had the busiest day in its history that year as smoke alarms sprang into action. Deep-frying is supposed to work—done out of doors, of course—but I’ve yet to try it. </span></p>
<p class="text">Brining, however, is foolproof. Almost. After soaking his 20-pounder overnight in a tub of salted water, stuffing and trussing it, a friend put the bird in the oven in the morning. “You don’t even have to baste it!” </p>
<p class="text">The guests arrived by late afternoon and we sat around, stomachs rumbling, trying not to fill up on cheese and crackers. After an hour, he went to take the turkey out of the oven. He returned moments later, his face in a ferment. His wife, flustered with all the preparations, had meant to turn the oven up. Instead, she’d turned it off. </p>
<p class="Tagline"><em> <br /><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-style: normal">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time</span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, <em>will be published by Nan Talese/Doubleday in January.</em> </span></p>
<p class="Tagline"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_8.jpg?w=232&h=300" />The first year I came to New  York from my native England, I had Thanksgiving dinner with an Italian-American family in Queens. I was used to frugal Britain, where my mother would wash out plastic bags and pin them up to dry, and a leg of lamb was eked out for three consecutive meals, ending up as shepherd’s pie. We ate turkey only at Christmas, a week-long marathon that lasted until the bird made its final appearance diced in a thick white sauce with carrots and onions.<span>  </span>So the amount of food that was consumed in just one afternoon in Queens came as a shock.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">We began with hot antipasti (baked clams, scampi and stuffed mushrooms) and cold antipasti (prosciutto, several kinds of salami, sardines and salads). Then, a pasta course: tortellini with cream sauce. I was full by the time the turkey arrived, along with dishes that were new to me at the time: sweet potatoes (topped, to my horror, with marshmallows), cornbread and cranberry sauce. Unfortunately, I was sitting next to the patriarch of the family. He kept heaping my plate with more and more food. Since I had been brought up with the notion that leaving food on your plate was a crime, I made quite an impression as the young English woman with a <em>buona forchetta</em>.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">After the turkey, there was cheese, because why not? Then pumpkin pies, pecan tarts and chocolate cake, followed by slabs of hot cheesecake. By this point, I was close to tears. No sooner had we started on the cheesecake, however, than the patriarch, who was in his 80s, turned to his wife with a stricken cry.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">“Maria! You forgot the stuffed artichokes!” The diners put down their forks and pushed their half-eaten plates aside. They fell upon the artichokes, which were the biggest I’d ever seen, their jumbo-size leaves overflowing with bread crumbs, chopped anchovies and a great deal of garlic. Then we went back to our dessert. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><span> </span></span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">SINCE THAT DAY I’ve eaten many a Thanksgiving feast, but never one of quite such excess. I also learned that Americans find it not only acceptable but in some circles even good manners to leave some food on their dinner plates. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">There was food left on the dinner plates, alas, the year I cooked a wild turkey at my house in Connecticut. A flock of wild turkeys used to parade across the garden into the woods, but one afternoon a dog ran out of the bushes and attacked one of the birds, ripping out its throat. Minutes later the owner arrived, full of apologies. Since the turkey was dead, he said, we might as well eat it. </span></p>
<p class="text">“Think of the money you’ll save!” </p>
<p class="text">He insisted on plucking the bird for me and spent the afternoon singeing turkey feathers in the backyard. It was all for naught. The bird emerged from the oven with a beautiful burnished skin, but when we tried to carve the meat, it was as tough as a rancher’s saddle. </p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><!--nextpage--><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">ALSO IN CONNECTICUT, I encountered the most unusual Thanksgiving turkey I have ever seen. It was served at Arthur Miller’s house, in Litchfield  County. His wife, the photographer Inge Morath, was a vegetarian. She’d lived in France, where one year, she told me, she decided to surprise American friends who were celebrating Thanksgiving in Paris. She created a turkey <em>pièce montée</em>, built out of fruits and vegetables. She said she got the idea from looking at composite paintings of animals and birds. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Using a couple of loaves of bread as the base, she put goose feathers in the end of one of the loaves to form the turkey’s tail. She sliced off the end of a corn cob, stuck a toothpick in it and speared it in the other end of the loaf to make the neck. The head was made from a small eggplant nailed by toothpick to the corn; the wattles were large, dried red chili peppers. Quails’ eggs made a spine, and the bird’s chest puffed up nicely as red cabbage and radicchio leaves were pinned to the bread and hung with red grapes. The eyes were made from two slices of radish with raisins in the center. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">She added apples, pears, stuffed vine leaves, cherry tomatoes, kumquats, dates, figs, prunes, broccoli, pieces of cheese, black and green grapes, niçoise olives and all manner of vegetables and fruit threaded on skewers or toothpicks like little shish kebabs. With the turkey, she served a selection of dips: bagna cauda, yogurt with fresh horseradish, dill vinaigrette and curry mayonnaise. Eating this, who’d miss the real thing? </span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">THE TROUBLE WITH real turkeys, as anyone who has roasted one knows, is that they get dry. But then a newspaper article claimed that for optimum juiciness, turkeys were best roasted at 500 degrees. The Litchfield County Fire Department had the busiest day in its history that year as smoke alarms sprang into action. Deep-frying is supposed to work—done out of doors, of course—but I’ve yet to try it. </span></p>
<p class="text">Brining, however, is foolproof. Almost. After soaking his 20-pounder overnight in a tub of salted water, stuffing and trussing it, a friend put the bird in the oven in the morning. “You don’t even have to baste it!” </p>
<p class="text">The guests arrived by late afternoon and we sat around, stomachs rumbling, trying not to fill up on cheese and crackers. After an hour, he went to take the turkey out of the oven. He returned moments later, his face in a ferment. His wife, flustered with all the preparations, had meant to turn the oven up. Instead, she’d turned it off. </p>
<p class="Tagline"><em> <br /><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt;font-style: normal">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time</span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">, <em>will be published by Nan Talese/Doubleday in January.</em> </span></p>
<p class="Tagline"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/11/the-woman-with-the-ibuona-forchettai/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_8.jpg?w=232&#38;h=300" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Mais Où Est Montrachet?</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/11/imais-o-esti-montrachet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2008 16:48:53 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/11/imais-o-esti-montrachet/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/11/imais-o-esti-montrachet/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_7.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/a_moirabox_0.jpg" align="right" />When Drew Nieporent opened Montrachet on these premises in 1985, he turned New Yorkers’ idea of a fancy French restaurant on its head. The setting was a stark industrial space, with tin ceilings and overhanging pipes, in a desolate neighborhood of cast-iron buildings and scruffy warehouses. Instead of elderly French waiters in black tie, there was a young staff dressed entirely in black; the menu was in English, not French, and the wine list gave American vintages equal billing. The chef was an unknown named David Bouley.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Montrachet established a cool downtown style that has been widely imitated ever since. But by the summer of 2006, many of its customers felt that the restaurant had lost its edge. Mr. Nieporent, vague about his plans for renovations, quietly closed it down. <span>         </span></span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Now it has reopened as Corton—named for another great Burgundy that none of us can afford.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">The new look is one of understated elegance—chartreuse banquettes, sloping cream-colored walls delicately embossed with gold leaves and vines—with clean, spare lines. In the front, white wine bottles are stacked behind glass in refrigerated rows, and clusters of lights hang in straight poles from the ceiling, like modernistic icicles. Through a long, narrow window in the back of the dining room, you can catch a glimpse of the kitchen and the chef (and partner), Paul Liebrandt. </span></p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt, who is British, worked with many big names—Marco Pierre White at his three-star restaurant in London; Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir Au Quat’Saisons in Oxford; and Pierre Gagnaire at his eponymous three-star Michelin restaurant in Paris—before coming to New York, where he has at times taken his diners on a wild ride.</p>
<p class="text">I last had his food seven years ago, at Atlas, where he served bacon sorbet, rabbit with squid ink sauce and lentils, and shrimp soup with white chocolate. I appreciated the audacity, but I wasn’t convinced. Nor, it appears, was the midtown business crowd at Gilt in the Vuillard House, where he cooked next.</p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">CORTON IS another story. Mr. Liebrandt has moved beyond zany experiments with molecular gastronomy and the avant-garde, forging his own style. His cooking, while still adventurous, is rooted in traditional French cuisine. The meals I had at Corton were extraordinary, putting him in a realm with the city’s greatest chefs. </p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">There are two menus, a $76 three-course <em>prix fixe</em> and a tasting menu for $110. When you sit down, references to the classic and the new are made right away: puff pastry goujons filled with mornay sauce (classic), and soft checker-counter rounds of salty olive oil sponge bread (new). There are two butters—one plain and salted, the other made with seaweed—served with first-rate breads, and an <em>amuse-bouche</em> of a Beau Soleil oyster sprinkled with crunchy buckwheat.</span></p>
<p class="text">After we had ordered our food, a waitress appeared holding a basket of pastel-colored eggs, looking like Little Red Riding Hood. “From Violet Hill Farm,” she said winsomely. “For the sweetbreads.” </p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">A bit too winsome, perhaps, but wait until you try those amazing sweetbreads, caramelized with argan oil and pieces of smoked bacon, and topped with a melting egg yolk. (In southwestern Morocco, where the oil comes from, you can see the surreal image of goats perched on high branches of argan trees, cracking the nuts to get to the oil-rich seeds inside.) </span></p>
<p class="text">There wasn’t a single loser among all the dishes I tried at Corton, from the delicate scallops with saffron-colored uni cream and marcona almonds, to the melting cobia, which was slightly too salty one night, but still very good. </p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt uses beets to add an earthy dimension to foie gras, which is wrapped in a paper-thin layer of hibiscus-beet borscht gelée. A beet sauce instead of the usual red wine reduction comes with the black angus filet, with fondant potatoes redolent of black truffle.</p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage-->Roast chicken for two is not carved table-side. The breast, a jucy wedge with a burnished skin, arrives on a platter with artichoke barigoule and a sumptuous brown bread-oyster jus. </p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt may have been tamed since his Atlas days, but his is still food of the “If you can’t remember what you ordered, you’ll never guess what it is when it arrives” school. </p>
<p class="text">The squab is not bird-shaped, but consists of two exquisite dark-pink rounds wrapped in bacon, served with chestnut cream topped with a shaving of truffles, and a foam of spiced milk. There’s foam, too, on the beautifully composed vegetables topped with a translucent cabbage leaf. (How does he manage to bring out so much flavor from a potato or an onion soubise?) </p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">FOR A FANCY restaurant, Corton’s mainly French wine list offers many reasonably priced choices, including around 30 “country wines” under $55 (some good and some not so hot). There are 18 bottles of Corton red and white, priced from $90 to $735. There is also a reserve list available online of wines that must be ordered in advance.</span></p>
<p class="text">Desserts by pastry chef Robert Truitt (El Bulli, Room 4 Dessert) end the meal on an appropriately high note. A light mousselike round of gianduja chocolate is topped with a white swirl of yuzu paste that adds the perfect note of acidity. The salted caramel brioche is outstanding, a daring interplay of flavors: passion fruit curd, banana and, the <em>pièce de résistance</em>, a small square  of Stilton cheese (when it comes to cheese, the selection on the artisanal platter is excellent).</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Corton manages to be grown-up and hip at the same time. There is no music, and although it can get loud, the room has good acoustics, so your evening isn’t shattered by high-pitched shrieks from the next table.</span></p>
<p class="text">Of course, a recession is not a great time to open an expensive restaurant. On the plus side, my father used to joke that by going to three-star restaurants in France, he actually saved money, because for the next three days all he could eat was plain yogurt. So stock up on yogurt and head over to Corton. It’s the most important restaurant to open in the city this fall.</p>
<p class="text"> <em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><br />Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time<em>, will be published in January by Nan Talese/Doubleday. </em></span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_7.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/a_moirabox_0.jpg" align="right" />When Drew Nieporent opened Montrachet on these premises in 1985, he turned New Yorkers’ idea of a fancy French restaurant on its head. The setting was a stark industrial space, with tin ceilings and overhanging pipes, in a desolate neighborhood of cast-iron buildings and scruffy warehouses. Instead of elderly French waiters in black tie, there was a young staff dressed entirely in black; the menu was in English, not French, and the wine list gave American vintages equal billing. The chef was an unknown named David Bouley.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Montrachet established a cool downtown style that has been widely imitated ever since. But by the summer of 2006, many of its customers felt that the restaurant had lost its edge. Mr. Nieporent, vague about his plans for renovations, quietly closed it down. <span>         </span></span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Now it has reopened as Corton—named for another great Burgundy that none of us can afford.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">The new look is one of understated elegance—chartreuse banquettes, sloping cream-colored walls delicately embossed with gold leaves and vines—with clean, spare lines. In the front, white wine bottles are stacked behind glass in refrigerated rows, and clusters of lights hang in straight poles from the ceiling, like modernistic icicles. Through a long, narrow window in the back of the dining room, you can catch a glimpse of the kitchen and the chef (and partner), Paul Liebrandt. </span></p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt, who is British, worked with many big names—Marco Pierre White at his three-star restaurant in London; Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir Au Quat’Saisons in Oxford; and Pierre Gagnaire at his eponymous three-star Michelin restaurant in Paris—before coming to New York, where he has at times taken his diners on a wild ride.</p>
<p class="text">I last had his food seven years ago, at Atlas, where he served bacon sorbet, rabbit with squid ink sauce and lentils, and shrimp soup with white chocolate. I appreciated the audacity, but I wasn’t convinced. Nor, it appears, was the midtown business crowd at Gilt in the Vuillard House, where he cooked next.</p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">CORTON IS another story. Mr. Liebrandt has moved beyond zany experiments with molecular gastronomy and the avant-garde, forging his own style. His cooking, while still adventurous, is rooted in traditional French cuisine. The meals I had at Corton were extraordinary, putting him in a realm with the city’s greatest chefs. </p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">There are two menus, a $76 three-course <em>prix fixe</em> and a tasting menu for $110. When you sit down, references to the classic and the new are made right away: puff pastry goujons filled with mornay sauce (classic), and soft checker-counter rounds of salty olive oil sponge bread (new). There are two butters—one plain and salted, the other made with seaweed—served with first-rate breads, and an <em>amuse-bouche</em> of a Beau Soleil oyster sprinkled with crunchy buckwheat.</span></p>
<p class="text">After we had ordered our food, a waitress appeared holding a basket of pastel-colored eggs, looking like Little Red Riding Hood. “From Violet Hill Farm,” she said winsomely. “For the sweetbreads.” </p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">A bit too winsome, perhaps, but wait until you try those amazing sweetbreads, caramelized with argan oil and pieces of smoked bacon, and topped with a melting egg yolk. (In southwestern Morocco, where the oil comes from, you can see the surreal image of goats perched on high branches of argan trees, cracking the nuts to get to the oil-rich seeds inside.) </span></p>
<p class="text">There wasn’t a single loser among all the dishes I tried at Corton, from the delicate scallops with saffron-colored uni cream and marcona almonds, to the melting cobia, which was slightly too salty one night, but still very good. </p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt uses beets to add an earthy dimension to foie gras, which is wrapped in a paper-thin layer of hibiscus-beet borscht gelée. A beet sauce instead of the usual red wine reduction comes with the black angus filet, with fondant potatoes redolent of black truffle.</p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage-->Roast chicken for two is not carved table-side. The breast, a jucy wedge with a burnished skin, arrives on a platter with artichoke barigoule and a sumptuous brown bread-oyster jus. </p>
<p class="text">Mr. Liebrandt may have been tamed since his Atlas days, but his is still food of the “If you can’t remember what you ordered, you’ll never guess what it is when it arrives” school. </p>
<p class="text">The squab is not bird-shaped, but consists of two exquisite dark-pink rounds wrapped in bacon, served with chestnut cream topped with a shaving of truffles, and a foam of spiced milk. There’s foam, too, on the beautifully composed vegetables topped with a translucent cabbage leaf. (How does he manage to bring out so much flavor from a potato or an onion soubise?) </p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">FOR A FANCY restaurant, Corton’s mainly French wine list offers many reasonably priced choices, including around 30 “country wines” under $55 (some good and some not so hot). There are 18 bottles of Corton red and white, priced from $90 to $735. There is also a reserve list available online of wines that must be ordered in advance.</span></p>
<p class="text">Desserts by pastry chef Robert Truitt (El Bulli, Room 4 Dessert) end the meal on an appropriately high note. A light mousselike round of gianduja chocolate is topped with a white swirl of yuzu paste that adds the perfect note of acidity. The salted caramel brioche is outstanding, a daring interplay of flavors: passion fruit curd, banana and, the <em>pièce de résistance</em>, a small square  of Stilton cheese (when it comes to cheese, the selection on the artisanal platter is excellent).</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Corton manages to be grown-up and hip at the same time. There is no music, and although it can get loud, the room has good acoustics, so your evening isn’t shattered by high-pitched shrieks from the next table.</span></p>
<p class="text">Of course, a recession is not a great time to open an expensive restaurant. On the plus side, my father used to joke that by going to three-star restaurants in France, he actually saved money, because for the next three days all he could eat was plain yogurt. So stock up on yogurt and head over to Corton. It’s the most important restaurant to open in the city this fall.</p>
<p class="text"> <em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><br />Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time<em>, will be published in January by Nan Talese/Doubleday. </em></span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/11/imais-o-esti-montrachet/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_7.jpg?w=300&#38;h=152" medium="image" />

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/a_moirabox_0.jpg" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Havana Have What She’s Having!</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/10/havana-have-what-shes-having/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 15:34:22 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/10/havana-have-what-shes-having/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/10/havana-have-what-shes-having/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_6.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/a_moirabox.jpg" align="right" />“The Ancient South American Secret Is Now Yours,” read the label on a mysterious package delivered to my door last week. “Drink. Think. Live. Love. Top Leaf Maté.”
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">It was a selection of teas sent by a Chilean friend who lives in Oregon. He had added a note: “Maté is pretty good with bourbon too.”</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt">Maté is a tea made from yerba </span><span style="letter-spacing: 0.45pt">buena, a mintlike herb believed, </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">among other things, to boost the immune system, soothe digestion and calm nerves. I didn’t try it with bourbon (never having acquired much of a taste for that whiskey), but I discovered that it was pretty good with pisco, a grape brandy. At Yerba Buena in the East Village, it comes in a cocktail, made with Chilean pisco, lime and grapefruit cordials, called a “Boludo Yerba Maté.” </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.7pt">The restaurant, on a grungy </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">stretch of Avenue A just above Houston Street, looks like a dive in Old Havana. The lofty wood-paneled bar, back-lit in turquoise and lime green, is hung with smoked-glass wrought-iron lamps and flanked by palm fronds. A blown-up photograph of a street in Cuba dominated by a 1959 Chevy BelAir hangs on the opposite wall. The sound system pumps out a mix of salsa, Latin jazz and Afro-Cuban music, but the loudest noise is the rattling of the cocktail shaker. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Behind the bar, dressed in a dark shirt and vest, Artemio Vasquez mixes the restaurant’s drinks. No girly cocktails here. He previously worked at Pegu Club and PDT and his Latin concoctions, made with fresh juices, are as much of a draw as the food. The Pisco Sour is served in a goblet, topped with beaten egg whites decorated with a swirl of angostura bitters in a lotus leaf pattern. The Yerba Buena Mojito—not too sweet—is made with mint leaves steeped in yerba buena, squeezed through a strainer into the rum over ice cubes. You can also start the evening off with a caipirinha or something more esoteric, such as a Desert Rose: rose-infused gin, prickly pear purée and lemon juice.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt"> </span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.25pt">YERBA BUENA'S pan-Latin </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">menu is overseen by Julian Medina, chef, owner and partner; Mr. Medina also owns Toloache, a Mexican restaurant in midtown. Partner and general manager Giovanny Campos devised the wine list, which has a wide selection of Latin, California and Spanish choices at reasonable prices. (Kudos to our charming French waiter, who when asked which of three albariños he recommended steered us to his favorite, which also happened to be the cheapest, a smoky Martin Codax from Spain at $30.) </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The small, low-lit dining room, manned by an affable staff dressed in black, seats just 50 on white leather chairs and banquettes. Plain wooden tables are set with votive candles, and through the louvered shutters at the back of the room, you can catch glimpses of the kitchen. Long, narrow mirrors are tilted along the walls, which are covered in white flock paper; the mirrors allow people facing in from the room to see the action.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">And there is plenty of it. Every time I came here there were birthdays, duly noted and celebrated by the staff with sparkler-topped desserts, singing and general applause. (One of my friends, carried away by it all, even inquired about renting the place for New Year’s Eve.) </span></p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage-->The menu is designed for snacking with cocktails or for a full meal. Calamari crusted with blue cornmeal, served with plantains and a tamarind vinaigrette, was a perfect match for a Pisco Sour, as were the crisp potato mushroom croquettes with truffle jalapeño sauce. The spinach and cheese empanadas turned out to be surprisingly leathery, but were somewhat redeemed by a lovely salad of ripe figs. I was disappointed with the guacamole, which was thin and overmixed. But I loved the chunky salad of jicama, avocado, orange and tomato tossed in a citrus vinaigrette, and the ceviche made with thick pieces of hamachi marinated in chilies and lime juice.<span>                </span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">MATÉ MAKES AN appearance in the kitchen, mixed with pomegranate juice as a glaze for the beef short ribs. The ribs were one of the best dishes on the menu, rich and unctuous, served with a pile of crisp hand-cut shoestring fries and chimichurri sauce.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The pulled suckling pig was also very good, tender pieces in an orange garlic sauce with yucca purée, topped with a piece of chicharrón, the Latin version of crackling. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Twice, we had to wait an inordinately long time for the main courses to arrive. One evening the manager apologized; he said they were a man short and he took the drinks off the bill. Another night we were told the baked rice dishes took 30 minutes. Whatever. But those casseroles cooked in earthenware dishes were worth the wait. The fideua was a mix of prawns, cockles, calamari and chorizo in deep saffron sauce with macaroni and aioli (on another night, there was a version with coconut rice). The arroz con pollo delivered a golden piece of chicken on a pink bed of chaufa, a Latin take on Chinese fried rice, laced with scallions and piquillo peppers.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Desserts included a Latin favorite, churros, with dulce de leche and chocolate dipping sauces, and a rich coconut cake steeped in tres leches, topped with grilled pineapple salsa—very nice with a fizzy glass of moscato. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Which is probably why I began writing this review with a headache. But then I made myself a cup of yerba maté. Is it wishful thinking, or do I feel better already? </span></p>
<p style="text-indent: 0in" class="text"><em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time<em>, will be published in January by Nan A. Talese/Doubleday. <br /></em></span></p>
<p style="text-indent: 0in" class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_6.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/a_moirabox.jpg" align="right" />“The Ancient South American Secret Is Now Yours,” read the label on a mysterious package delivered to my door last week. “Drink. Think. Live. Love. Top Leaf Maté.”
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">It was a selection of teas sent by a Chilean friend who lives in Oregon. He had added a note: “Maté is pretty good with bourbon too.”</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt">Maté is a tea made from yerba </span><span style="letter-spacing: 0.45pt">buena, a mintlike herb believed, </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">among other things, to boost the immune system, soothe digestion and calm nerves. I didn’t try it with bourbon (never having acquired much of a taste for that whiskey), but I discovered that it was pretty good with pisco, a grape brandy. At Yerba Buena in the East Village, it comes in a cocktail, made with Chilean pisco, lime and grapefruit cordials, called a “Boludo Yerba Maté.” </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.7pt">The restaurant, on a grungy </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">stretch of Avenue A just above Houston Street, looks like a dive in Old Havana. The lofty wood-paneled bar, back-lit in turquoise and lime green, is hung with smoked-glass wrought-iron lamps and flanked by palm fronds. A blown-up photograph of a street in Cuba dominated by a 1959 Chevy BelAir hangs on the opposite wall. The sound system pumps out a mix of salsa, Latin jazz and Afro-Cuban music, but the loudest noise is the rattling of the cocktail shaker. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Behind the bar, dressed in a dark shirt and vest, Artemio Vasquez mixes the restaurant’s drinks. No girly cocktails here. He previously worked at Pegu Club and PDT and his Latin concoctions, made with fresh juices, are as much of a draw as the food. The Pisco Sour is served in a goblet, topped with beaten egg whites decorated with a swirl of angostura bitters in a lotus leaf pattern. The Yerba Buena Mojito—not too sweet—is made with mint leaves steeped in yerba buena, squeezed through a strainer into the rum over ice cubes. You can also start the evening off with a caipirinha or something more esoteric, such as a Desert Rose: rose-infused gin, prickly pear purée and lemon juice.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt"> </span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.25pt">YERBA BUENA'S pan-Latin </span><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">menu is overseen by Julian Medina, chef, owner and partner; Mr. Medina also owns Toloache, a Mexican restaurant in midtown. Partner and general manager Giovanny Campos devised the wine list, which has a wide selection of Latin, California and Spanish choices at reasonable prices. (Kudos to our charming French waiter, who when asked which of three albariños he recommended steered us to his favorite, which also happened to be the cheapest, a smoky Martin Codax from Spain at $30.) </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The small, low-lit dining room, manned by an affable staff dressed in black, seats just 50 on white leather chairs and banquettes. Plain wooden tables are set with votive candles, and through the louvered shutters at the back of the room, you can catch glimpses of the kitchen. Long, narrow mirrors are tilted along the walls, which are covered in white flock paper; the mirrors allow people facing in from the room to see the action.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">And there is plenty of it. Every time I came here there were birthdays, duly noted and celebrated by the staff with sparkler-topped desserts, singing and general applause. (One of my friends, carried away by it all, even inquired about renting the place for New Year’s Eve.) </span></p>
<p class="text"><!--nextpage-->The menu is designed for snacking with cocktails or for a full meal. Calamari crusted with blue cornmeal, served with plantains and a tamarind vinaigrette, was a perfect match for a Pisco Sour, as were the crisp potato mushroom croquettes with truffle jalapeño sauce. The spinach and cheese empanadas turned out to be surprisingly leathery, but were somewhat redeemed by a lovely salad of ripe figs. I was disappointed with the guacamole, which was thin and overmixed. But I loved the chunky salad of jicama, avocado, orange and tomato tossed in a citrus vinaigrette, and the ceviche made with thick pieces of hamachi marinated in chilies and lime juice.<span>                </span></p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">MATÉ MAKES AN appearance in the kitchen, mixed with pomegranate juice as a glaze for the beef short ribs. The ribs were one of the best dishes on the menu, rich and unctuous, served with a pile of crisp hand-cut shoestring fries and chimichurri sauce.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">The pulled suckling pig was also very good, tender pieces in an orange garlic sauce with yucca purée, topped with a piece of chicharrón, the Latin version of crackling. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Twice, we had to wait an inordinately long time for the main courses to arrive. One evening the manager apologized; he said they were a man short and he took the drinks off the bill. Another night we were told the baked rice dishes took 30 minutes. Whatever. But those casseroles cooked in earthenware dishes were worth the wait. The fideua was a mix of prawns, cockles, calamari and chorizo in deep saffron sauce with macaroni and aioli (on another night, there was a version with coconut rice). The arroz con pollo delivered a golden piece of chicken on a pink bed of chaufa, a Latin take on Chinese fried rice, laced with scallions and piquillo peppers.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Desserts included a Latin favorite, churros, with dulce de leche and chocolate dipping sauces, and a rich coconut cake steeped in tres leches, topped with grilled pineapple salsa—very nice with a fizzy glass of moscato. </span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Which is probably why I began writing this review with a headache. But then I made myself a cup of yerba maté. Is it wishful thinking, or do I feel better already? </span></p>
<p style="text-indent: 0in" class="text"><em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">Moira Hodgson’s memoir, </span></em><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time<em>, will be published in January by Nan A. Talese/Doubleday. <br /></em></span></p>
<p style="text-indent: 0in" class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com.</em></span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/10/havana-have-what-shes-having/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_6.jpg?w=300&#38;h=152" medium="image" />

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/a_moirabox.jpg" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>What’s That Buzz?</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/10/whats-that-buzz/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 22:27:19 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/10/whats-that-buzz/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/10/whats-that-buzz/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/hodgson.jpg?w=300&h=200" />I remember an old ditty from my childhood:
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>I eat my peas with honey</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>I’ve done it all my life</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>It makes the peas taste funny</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>But it keeps them on the knife</em>  </p>
<p class="text">There’s plenty of time to recall your own ditties at the ostensibly honey-themed Apiary, in the East Village, while waiting for your drinks. One night we sat empty-handed for nearly half an hour, even though the place was gearing up for dinner and there were plenty of waiters and waitresses milling around—deftly managing not to catch our eye. Once our server established herself, she was helpful and nice. But another night, service was distracted. Apiary could do with a strong presence in the dining room, a host or hostess on patrol.</p>
<p class="text">Noise is an issue, too. Despite the restaurant’s name, the sound level here does not exactly bring to mind Tennyson’s “murmuring of innumerable bees.” It’s more aviary, in fact, the din punctuated by the occasional high-pitched screech of some exotic jungle bird in impossibly high heels. Maybe Ligne Roset—the French company that designed and furnished the restaurant—could come up with a carpet.</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">GIVE APIARY POINTS  for bravery, though, planted as it is on Third Avenue just below 14th Street—a stretch better known for its profusion of funky sports bars and pubs catering to hipsters and N.Y.U. students. The local diners are more accustomed to getting their steak with a bottle of A1, not romesco aioli and chimichurri. </p>
<p class="text">The restaurant’s front window is decorated with two silvery-blue cobra-shaped poles topped with tiny bright pinpoints. They look like creatures from outer space. They are, in fact, reading lamps, a curious window display for a restaurant—especially one with a name that suggests bees and honey. (Ligne Roset also provided the lamps.)</p>
<p class="text">Lamp shades decorated with cut-outs of ancestral chandeliers hang from the low ceiling, and cut-out Lucite sconces project enormous shadows onto the plain white walls. The long, narrow room has a sleek, bare-bones look: polished ebony wood tables and geometric armchairs upholstered in soothing shades of wine red, aubergine and chocolate brown.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt">Apiary sets out to combine neighborhood coziness with style and elegance, and the team behind it is impressive. Chef and partner Neil Manacle cooked for 16 years with Bobby Flay at Mesa Grill, Bolo and Bar Americain. Owner Jenny Moon, who left her native Korea to study in the United States when she was just 15, started out on Wall Street before heading uptown to Daniel as Boulud’s assistant. Later she moved to Tabla and, more recently, worked as maitre d’ at Ed Brown’s new Eighty One. Nick Mautone, a managing partner of Gramercy Tavern, put together the well-rounded wine list, which includes a section of 30 New York State vintages. There are also 30 wines by the glass and 24 microbrews. The restaurant serves house-made sangrias and cocktails, such as a lively concoction made of prosecco with dried apricots and mint.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt"><span class="3lineDropCap">MR..MANACLE'S SELF-DESCRIBED </span>“new American cuisine” heartily embraces the tastes of Spain, Morocco and the Middle East. His cooking isn’t fussy (“no more than four or five seasonal ingredients,” he says), and he goes for bright colors, decorating his gorgeous plates like a painter. </span></p>
<p class="text">I l<span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">ike the way this chef uses fruits with savory dishes. The brined roast pork loin is a standout, sliced in rosy pieces, its skin burnished a deep mahogany color from a mustard, fig and smoked paprika glaze. It comes with green beans sprinkled with butter-fried bread crumbs and hazelnuts. Beautifully spiced Moroccan chicken is accompanied by light, fluffy couscous laced with dried apricots and mint. Lamb chops crusted with fennel, mustard seed and cumin are matched with a sweet and sour fruit sauce made with currants and apricots, along with a crisp cake of fried hummus.</span></p>
<p class="text">The first courses are generally excellent. The roast peaches with serrano ham and goat cheese are probably no longer on the menu, alas, but they were so good I hope to see them back next year. A subtly spiced squash soup with curried yogurt replaces summer’s tomato soup, and slivered beets topped with toasted pistachios, goat cheese crème and a sprinkling of microgreens make for a fine fall starter.</p>
<p class="text">The kitchen is less sure-footed when it leaves land. Skip the mediocre halibut crudo, the doughy calamari (although my companion liked them fine, especially with the spicy lemon aioli) and the rubbery, under-seasoned octopus. </p>
<p class="text">And what of those bees? Artisanal honeys are served with the cheese plate, and make their way into several desserts. The goat cheese cake is flavored with honey and comes with a swath of blueberry compote on the plate, but it’s gummy. A pleasant honey ice cream comes with a naked crepe, topped with raw strawberries, and with the peach crisp, which packed more flavor than the pear crisp on the current menu. But the hands-down winner is the creamy chocolate cashew brownie tart in a feathery pastry shell with cashew ice cream. Whenever I get my dessert wine, I’ll tell you what to pair it with.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/hodgson.jpg?w=300&h=200" />I remember an old ditty from my childhood:
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>I eat my peas with honey</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>I’ve done it all my life</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>It makes the peas taste funny</em></p>
<p style="text-indent: 16.55pt" class="text"><em>But it keeps them on the knife</em>  </p>
<p class="text">There’s plenty of time to recall your own ditties at the ostensibly honey-themed Apiary, in the East Village, while waiting for your drinks. One night we sat empty-handed for nearly half an hour, even though the place was gearing up for dinner and there were plenty of waiters and waitresses milling around—deftly managing not to catch our eye. Once our server established herself, she was helpful and nice. But another night, service was distracted. Apiary could do with a strong presence in the dining room, a host or hostess on patrol.</p>
<p class="text">Noise is an issue, too. Despite the restaurant’s name, the sound level here does not exactly bring to mind Tennyson’s “murmuring of innumerable bees.” It’s more aviary, in fact, the din punctuated by the occasional high-pitched screech of some exotic jungle bird in impossibly high heels. Maybe Ligne Roset—the French company that designed and furnished the restaurant—could come up with a carpet.</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">GIVE APIARY POINTS  for bravery, though, planted as it is on Third Avenue just below 14th Street—a stretch better known for its profusion of funky sports bars and pubs catering to hipsters and N.Y.U. students. The local diners are more accustomed to getting their steak with a bottle of A1, not romesco aioli and chimichurri. </p>
<p class="text">The restaurant’s front window is decorated with two silvery-blue cobra-shaped poles topped with tiny bright pinpoints. They look like creatures from outer space. They are, in fact, reading lamps, a curious window display for a restaurant—especially one with a name that suggests bees and honey. (Ligne Roset also provided the lamps.)</p>
<p class="text">Lamp shades decorated with cut-outs of ancestral chandeliers hang from the low ceiling, and cut-out Lucite sconces project enormous shadows onto the plain white walls. The long, narrow room has a sleek, bare-bones look: polished ebony wood tables and geometric armchairs upholstered in soothing shades of wine red, aubergine and chocolate brown.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt">Apiary sets out to combine neighborhood coziness with style and elegance, and the team behind it is impressive. Chef and partner Neil Manacle cooked for 16 years with Bobby Flay at Mesa Grill, Bolo and Bar Americain. Owner Jenny Moon, who left her native Korea to study in the United States when she was just 15, started out on Wall Street before heading uptown to Daniel as Boulud’s assistant. Later she moved to Tabla and, more recently, worked as maitre d’ at Ed Brown’s new Eighty One. Nick Mautone, a managing partner of Gramercy Tavern, put together the well-rounded wine list, which includes a section of 30 New York State vintages. There are also 30 wines by the glass and 24 microbrews. The restaurant serves house-made sangrias and cocktails, such as a lively concoction made of prosecco with dried apricots and mint.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.1pt"><span class="3lineDropCap">MR..MANACLE'S SELF-DESCRIBED </span>“new American cuisine” heartily embraces the tastes of Spain, Morocco and the Middle East. His cooking isn’t fussy (“no more than four or five seasonal ingredients,” he says), and he goes for bright colors, decorating his gorgeous plates like a painter. </span></p>
<p class="text">I l<span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">ike the way this chef uses fruits with savory dishes. The brined roast pork loin is a standout, sliced in rosy pieces, its skin burnished a deep mahogany color from a mustard, fig and smoked paprika glaze. It comes with green beans sprinkled with butter-fried bread crumbs and hazelnuts. Beautifully spiced Moroccan chicken is accompanied by light, fluffy couscous laced with dried apricots and mint. Lamb chops crusted with fennel, mustard seed and cumin are matched with a sweet and sour fruit sauce made with currants and apricots, along with a crisp cake of fried hummus.</span></p>
<p class="text">The first courses are generally excellent. The roast peaches with serrano ham and goat cheese are probably no longer on the menu, alas, but they were so good I hope to see them back next year. A subtly spiced squash soup with curried yogurt replaces summer’s tomato soup, and slivered beets topped with toasted pistachios, goat cheese crème and a sprinkling of microgreens make for a fine fall starter.</p>
<p class="text">The kitchen is less sure-footed when it leaves land. Skip the mediocre halibut crudo, the doughy calamari (although my companion liked them fine, especially with the spicy lemon aioli) and the rubbery, under-seasoned octopus. </p>
<p class="text">And what of those bees? Artisanal honeys are served with the cheese plate, and make their way into several desserts. The goat cheese cake is flavored with honey and comes with a swath of blueberry compote on the plate, but it’s gummy. A pleasant honey ice cream comes with a naked crepe, topped with raw strawberries, and with the peach crisp, which packed more flavor than the pear crisp on the current menu. But the hands-down winner is the creamy chocolate cashew brownie tart in a feathery pastry shell with cashew ice cream. Whenever I get my dessert wine, I’ll tell you what to pair it with.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/10/whats-that-buzz/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/hodgson.jpg?w=300&#38;h=200" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Battered Manhattan Sinks into Pillows of Gnocchi</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/09/battered-manhattan-sinks-into-pillows-of-gnocchi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Sep 2008 15:30:02 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/09/battered-manhattan-sinks-into-pillows-of-gnocchi/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/09/battered-manhattan-sinks-into-pillows-of-gnocchi/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_5.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/moiraboxCROP.jpg" align="right" />On my way into Allegretti the other night, I passed a young woman who was shouting into her cell phone. “Everyone I know in New York is, like, on suicide watch!” But the financial meltdown hadn’t made much of a dent in the number of customers dining at the new French restaurant, just west of the Flatiron district. Many of them looked as though they had come here for the occasion (I counted six men in striped shirts), and appeared undeterred by the prices ($38 for halibut, $36 for veal steak). They seemed right at home.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">And why not? The small dining room, with its teak blue bar, navy banquettes, low ceiling and white-paneled walls, feels like the inside of a yacht.</span></p>
<p class="text">Chef and co-owner Alain Allegretti comes from Nice—whose denizens, M. F. K. Fisher once remarked, know how to eat and drink better than any of us. Mr. Allegretti’s menu is, naturally, from Provence, but this restaurant is no casual corner bistro. He takes a classic, well-trodden dish and transforms it.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">“Is it too boring of me to order the roast chicken?” asked my companion as we looked at the menu. The chicken, tender enough to eat with a spoon, came with mozzarella wrapped in eggplant, potatoes fondant, roasted tomato and a marvelous lemony chicken jus with white wine, capers and parsley. So much for boring.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">In Mr. Allegretti’s hands, a Niçoise salad was no clunky bistro version, either, but looked as though it had been made by a team of elves, with baby vegetables arranged on the plate garnished with a hard-boiled quail egg and rare tuna. (The tuna would have given Julia Child pause; she firmly believed a true Niçoise should be made only with canned.) The ravioli was stuffed with oxtail, and came on a bed of glazed swiss chard in a beef jus. A sprinkling of candied orange peel brought the whole dish together, the way a painter might put a dab of red on a landscape.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">IN WHAT SOUNDS like an idyllic childhood, Mr. Allegretti grew up on his family’s farm, where he learned to cook with his grandmother, making fresh pasta, prosciutto and wine and pressing olive oil. He went on to work at Jacques Maximin’s Le Chantecler, at Chez Chapel in Mionnay and at Alain Ducasse’s Le Louis XV in Monte   Carlo. In 2001 he came to New York as co-executive chef at Le Cirque 2000, and most recently was the executive chef at Atelier at the Ritz-Carlton. The food at his restaurant reflects the pedigree of the haute cuisine establishments he’s worked in, but it’s also robust and earthy.</p>
<p class="text">You can begin dinner with a Niçoise favorite, Perugina sausage, in a rich stew of sweet pepper and onions topped with crisp, lacy panisses, the town’s famous chickpea fritters. Pillows of gnocchi are coated with a spicy lamb ragout, slivered baby artichokes and pecorino cheese; spinach gnocchi accompanies juicy, rare lamb, along with favas, tomato confit and fennel gratinée, a lovely end-of-summer combo. The milk-fed veal “rumstek,” three thick pink wedges on a Gorgonzola and veal jus scented with rosemary, stands to become a classic.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Since he was raised on the French Riviera, Mr. Allegretti knows his fish, but he garnishes it in unusual ways. Perfectly cooked rouget fillets are placed on a bed of paper-thin rounds of zucchini with pine nuts, red peppers and fried parsley. A waiter pours on a saffron mariniere sauce at the table so the fillets retain their crisp skin. A ceviche of bay scallops in a subtle citrus and gazpacho marinade is laced with small chunks of avocado. Diver scallops, with fennel, potatoes and Niçoise olives, are served on a green tomato and a basil broth and sprinkled with almonds.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">THERE WERE SOME disappointments, but they were few: overcooked dorade, a watery Provençal fish soup. The pistou, on the other hand, was superb, with summer vegetables and a poached egg. I also loved the restaurant’s small sourdough olive and pesto rolls that were brought around at frequent intervals.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Allegretti has a first-rate wine list, with selections from new, lesser-known winemakers and from regions such as Provence, Languedoc and Corsica, many at very good prices. </span></p>
<p class="text">Desserts include grappa chocolate fondant, which is a dome of dark chocolate mousse under a layer of chocolate, served with ricotta ice cream studded with slivered almonds, and a wonderful lemon brioche with lemon chibouste. The panna cotta is flavored with licorice and served with sautéed pineapple; the crème brûlée is made with lavender honey. Meringues and anise-scented biscotti arrive with the bill.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.35pt">I like the understated elegance of the restaurant: Its van Gogh palette of yellow and blue, the thin-stemmed wineglasses and the polished new mirrors along one wall that make the room feel larger. In the corner there is a limestone-clad wood-burning brick oven, which will be fired up later in the fall.</span></p>
<p class="text">The staff (and numerous busboys) are welcoming and anxious to please. The only caveat is noise. The dining room has hardwood floors, and the tables for two are long. When the room is crowded, it is hard to hear across them.</p>
<p class="text">The prices here are high and they add up. But this could become a neighborhood restaurant for some. A large apartment building by Rem Koolhaas is going up on the next block. Meltdown? What meltdown?</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_5.jpg?w=300&h=152" /><img src="/files/moiraboxCROP.jpg" align="right" />On my way into Allegretti the other night, I passed a young woman who was shouting into her cell phone. “Everyone I know in New York is, like, on suicide watch!” But the financial meltdown hadn’t made much of a dent in the number of customers dining at the new French restaurant, just west of the Flatiron district. Many of them looked as though they had come here for the occasion (I counted six men in striped shirts), and appeared undeterred by the prices ($38 for halibut, $36 for veal steak). They seemed right at home.
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">And why not? The small dining room, with its teak blue bar, navy banquettes, low ceiling and white-paneled walls, feels like the inside of a yacht.</span></p>
<p class="text">Chef and co-owner Alain Allegretti comes from Nice—whose denizens, M. F. K. Fisher once remarked, know how to eat and drink better than any of us. Mr. Allegretti’s menu is, naturally, from Provence, but this restaurant is no casual corner bistro. He takes a classic, well-trodden dish and transforms it.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">“Is it too boring of me to order the roast chicken?” asked my companion as we looked at the menu. The chicken, tender enough to eat with a spoon, came with mozzarella wrapped in eggplant, potatoes fondant, roasted tomato and a marvelous lemony chicken jus with white wine, capers and parsley. So much for boring.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">In Mr. Allegretti’s hands, a Niçoise salad was no clunky bistro version, either, but looked as though it had been made by a team of elves, with baby vegetables arranged on the plate garnished with a hard-boiled quail egg and rare tuna. (The tuna would have given Julia Child pause; she firmly believed a true Niçoise should be made only with canned.) The ravioli was stuffed with oxtail, and came on a bed of glazed swiss chard in a beef jus. A sprinkling of candied orange peel brought the whole dish together, the way a painter might put a dab of red on a landscape.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">IN WHAT SOUNDS like an idyllic childhood, Mr. Allegretti grew up on his family’s farm, where he learned to cook with his grandmother, making fresh pasta, prosciutto and wine and pressing olive oil. He went on to work at Jacques Maximin’s Le Chantecler, at Chez Chapel in Mionnay and at Alain Ducasse’s Le Louis XV in Monte   Carlo. In 2001 he came to New York as co-executive chef at Le Cirque 2000, and most recently was the executive chef at Atelier at the Ritz-Carlton. The food at his restaurant reflects the pedigree of the haute cuisine establishments he’s worked in, but it’s also robust and earthy.</p>
<p class="text">You can begin dinner with a Niçoise favorite, Perugina sausage, in a rich stew of sweet pepper and onions topped with crisp, lacy panisses, the town’s famous chickpea fritters. Pillows of gnocchi are coated with a spicy lamb ragout, slivered baby artichokes and pecorino cheese; spinach gnocchi accompanies juicy, rare lamb, along with favas, tomato confit and fennel gratinée, a lovely end-of-summer combo. The milk-fed veal “rumstek,” three thick pink wedges on a Gorgonzola and veal jus scented with rosemary, stands to become a classic.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Since he was raised on the French Riviera, Mr. Allegretti knows his fish, but he garnishes it in unusual ways. Perfectly cooked rouget fillets are placed on a bed of paper-thin rounds of zucchini with pine nuts, red peppers and fried parsley. A waiter pours on a saffron mariniere sauce at the table so the fillets retain their crisp skin. A ceviche of bay scallops in a subtle citrus and gazpacho marinade is laced with small chunks of avocado. Diver scallops, with fennel, potatoes and Niçoise olives, are served on a green tomato and a basil broth and sprinkled with almonds.</span></p>
<p class="text">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">THERE WERE SOME disappointments, but they were few: overcooked dorade, a watery Provençal fish soup. The pistou, on the other hand, was superb, with summer vegetables and a poached egg. I also loved the restaurant’s small sourdough olive and pesto rolls that were brought around at frequent intervals.</span></p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Allegretti has a first-rate wine list, with selections from new, lesser-known winemakers and from regions such as Provence, Languedoc and Corsica, many at very good prices. </span></p>
<p class="text">Desserts include grappa chocolate fondant, which is a dome of dark chocolate mousse under a layer of chocolate, served with ricotta ice cream studded with slivered almonds, and a wonderful lemon brioche with lemon chibouste. The panna cotta is flavored with licorice and served with sautéed pineapple; the crème brûlée is made with lavender honey. Meringues and anise-scented biscotti arrive with the bill.</p>
<p class="text"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.35pt">I like the understated elegance of the restaurant: Its van Gogh palette of yellow and blue, the thin-stemmed wineglasses and the polished new mirrors along one wall that make the room feel larger. In the corner there is a limestone-clad wood-burning brick oven, which will be fired up later in the fall.</span></p>
<p class="text">The staff (and numerous busboys) are welcoming and anxious to please. The only caveat is noise. The dining room has hardwood floors, and the tables for two are long. When the room is crowded, it is hard to hear across them.</p>
<p class="text">The prices here are high and they add up. But this could become a neighborhood restaurant for some. A large apartment building by Rem Koolhaas is going up on the next block. Meltdown? What meltdown?</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/09/battered-manhattan-sinks-into-pillows-of-gnocchi/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_5.jpg?w=300&#38;h=152" medium="image" />

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/moiraboxCROP.jpg" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>The Downtown Elaine’s Charges, And Charges Ahead</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/09/the-downtown-elaines-charges-and-charges-ahead/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Sep 2008 15:47:38 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/09/the-downtown-elaines-charges-and-charges-ahead/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/09/the-downtown-elaines-charges-and-charges-ahead/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_4.jpg?w=300&h=152" />It was bad news for Silvano Marchetto when Graydon Carter decided to go into the restaurant business. For over 30 years, Da Silvano was something of a downtown Elaine’s, with celebrities, artists, writers, and gallery owners packing its noisy rooms for lunch and dinner. But when the Waverly Inn opened, Mr. Marchetto lost not only his best customer, but many of his boldface names as well.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Still, the restaurant is hardly empty, even at the end of summer. On a warm evening, the east side of Sixth Avenue between Bleecker and Houston feels like an Italian piazza. Da Silvano’s linen-topped tables and chrome chairs spread out over the wide sidewalk; further up are the tables of its neighbor, Bar Pitti. People loiter in the street, lounge on the benches, or stop to chat with friends having dinner. A yellow Ferrari draws up to the curb and is immediately surrounded by an enthusiastic crowd of young Italians, including the waiters, who wear light blue shirts and neckties. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Meanwhile, Mr. Marchetto is on patrol, wending his way among the tables. Silver-haired, bespectacled, and rotund, he is dressed in a white sweatshirt, beige pants, and white leather thong sandals decorated with Chinese dragons. His toenails are painted black. The silver two-seater Smart car he owns is parked in front of the restaurant, wedged in behind a black SUV the size of a hearse.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Tonight there is a gallery owner, a film director, and a Hollywood screenwriter, none of them household names. At a table for eight, an Italian patriarch with a face from a Roman coin presides over his family of three generations. He has a napkin tied around his neck and watches, bemused, as his small granddaughter plays a computer game. Next to me, a suburban couple has an argument. “Stop saying ‘<em>me and you!</em>’” the woman scolds her husband, who is eating a boiled artichoke. “It’s you and<em> I!</em>”</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">MR. MARCHETTO, who is from Florence, opened Da Silvano in 1975, when Italian restaurants in the city had Mount Vesuvius posters on the walls, candles in Chianti bottles, and the tautology “shrimp scampi” on the menu. But Mr. Marchetto painted his walls yellow and served New Yorkers such novelties as radicchio, risotto, and chicken liver crostini. Da Silvano spawned a slew of Tuscan restaurants (the first of which, Il Cantinori, was opened by his former busboy, Pino Luongo, who absconded with his staff). While many Northern Italian places have come and gone, Da Silvano has endured. Mr. Marchetto’s face graces the house line of oils and vinegars and even the bottles of water. But there is better Tuscan food to be found elsewhere these days, and for less money. So what is the secret of Da Silvano’s mystique? </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The restaurant has high energy combined with gruff charm. The welcome is unequivocal, and as far as getting a coveted table, such as one outside, there seems to be no pecking order. As people table-hop, it feels like a party. You always run into someone you know.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">But the price ratcheting is annoying. When I asked our friendly Italian waiter for a glass of white wine, he didn’t mention that the Gavi di Gavi he’d suggested (black label, it turned out) cost $26. Other white wines by the glass are around $16—hardly a steal. As for bottles, the list is Italian, predictable, and ludicrously expensive, with few choices under $65. But if you’ve made a killing in the art market, who cares?</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">WHEN I FIRST used to come to Da Silvano, the waiters would recite a long list of specials as customers glazed over. Now the specials number more than 30 and are pinned to the menu. I asked the waiter what he recommended as a first course. “Taglierini with black truffles,” he replied without missing a beat. (It’s $45.50.) “Lobster gnocchi.” (A relative bargain at $32.50.)<span>  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Instead, we began with a salad made with tender pieces of octopus sprinkled with herbs, and a platter of merguez with gorgonzola sauce, a combination that oddly worked, the tang of the cheese providing a foil for the spiciness of the sausage. Squash blossoms arrived in a batter that was too thick, but they were hot and crisp. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">As for the grilled seppie (cuttlefish) rolled in bread crumbs, it seemed to have made a brief passage under little more than a heat lamp before being brought to the table. The crumbs were soggy, the fish raw and gummy inside.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">In contrast, the pasta dishes were very good, although the ravioli with fried sage leaves swam in butter. I loved the taglierini contadina, fresh thin noodles tossed with crumbled hot and sweet sausage and peas in a subtle tomato sauce; and the tagliatelle, which came in a rich, creamy sauce laced with pieces of crab. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Whole branzini, perfectly cooked, was accompanied by slices of squeaky fresh fried zucchini and roast potatoes. But the salmon tasted like a leftover: The fish was flaky, mixed in with cannelli beans, greens, and tomatoes, the sort of thing you’d put together yourself for a perfectly respectable meal after rooting around in the refrigerator—not for a price tag of $35. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The steak fiorentine for two is an immense piece of meat big enough for four. The “vertically roasted” duck, falling off the bone but still juicy, was terrific, redolent of rosemary and with a taut, crisp skin.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The desserts are ordinary; they include a pleasant tiramisu, a serviceable panna cotta, and sorbets—among them a lovely deep blackberry flavor, but the scoop of strawberry was iced from too long in the refrigerator.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">So at least some things in the Village never change: Da Silvano remains overpriced and the food is hit or miss, and yet it’s still fun. Now Mr. Marchetto, with his daughter, will be opening Scuderia, a restaurant across the street. Too bad the neighbors wouldn’t allow another sidewalk café. Everything tastes better outdoors. Doesn’t it?</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_4.jpg?w=300&h=152" />It was bad news for Silvano Marchetto when Graydon Carter decided to go into the restaurant business. For over 30 years, Da Silvano was something of a downtown Elaine’s, with celebrities, artists, writers, and gallery owners packing its noisy rooms for lunch and dinner. But when the Waverly Inn opened, Mr. Marchetto lost not only his best customer, but many of his boldface names as well.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Still, the restaurant is hardly empty, even at the end of summer. On a warm evening, the east side of Sixth Avenue between Bleecker and Houston feels like an Italian piazza. Da Silvano’s linen-topped tables and chrome chairs spread out over the wide sidewalk; further up are the tables of its neighbor, Bar Pitti. People loiter in the street, lounge on the benches, or stop to chat with friends having dinner. A yellow Ferrari draws up to the curb and is immediately surrounded by an enthusiastic crowd of young Italians, including the waiters, who wear light blue shirts and neckties. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Meanwhile, Mr. Marchetto is on patrol, wending his way among the tables. Silver-haired, bespectacled, and rotund, he is dressed in a white sweatshirt, beige pants, and white leather thong sandals decorated with Chinese dragons. His toenails are painted black. The silver two-seater Smart car he owns is parked in front of the restaurant, wedged in behind a black SUV the size of a hearse.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Tonight there is a gallery owner, a film director, and a Hollywood screenwriter, none of them household names. At a table for eight, an Italian patriarch with a face from a Roman coin presides over his family of three generations. He has a napkin tied around his neck and watches, bemused, as his small granddaughter plays a computer game. Next to me, a suburban couple has an argument. “Stop saying ‘<em>me and you!</em>’” the woman scolds her husband, who is eating a boiled artichoke. “It’s you and<em> I!</em>”</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">MR. MARCHETTO, who is from Florence, opened Da Silvano in 1975, when Italian restaurants in the city had Mount Vesuvius posters on the walls, candles in Chianti bottles, and the tautology “shrimp scampi” on the menu. But Mr. Marchetto painted his walls yellow and served New Yorkers such novelties as radicchio, risotto, and chicken liver crostini. Da Silvano spawned a slew of Tuscan restaurants (the first of which, Il Cantinori, was opened by his former busboy, Pino Luongo, who absconded with his staff). While many Northern Italian places have come and gone, Da Silvano has endured. Mr. Marchetto’s face graces the house line of oils and vinegars and even the bottles of water. But there is better Tuscan food to be found elsewhere these days, and for less money. So what is the secret of Da Silvano’s mystique? </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The restaurant has high energy combined with gruff charm. The welcome is unequivocal, and as far as getting a coveted table, such as one outside, there seems to be no pecking order. As people table-hop, it feels like a party. You always run into someone you know.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">But the price ratcheting is annoying. When I asked our friendly Italian waiter for a glass of white wine, he didn’t mention that the Gavi di Gavi he’d suggested (black label, it turned out) cost $26. Other white wines by the glass are around $16—hardly a steal. As for bottles, the list is Italian, predictable, and ludicrously expensive, with few choices under $65. But if you’ve made a killing in the art market, who cares?</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">WHEN I FIRST used to come to Da Silvano, the waiters would recite a long list of specials as customers glazed over. Now the specials number more than 30 and are pinned to the menu. I asked the waiter what he recommended as a first course. “Taglierini with black truffles,” he replied without missing a beat. (It’s $45.50.) “Lobster gnocchi.” (A relative bargain at $32.50.)<span>  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Instead, we began with a salad made with tender pieces of octopus sprinkled with herbs, and a platter of merguez with gorgonzola sauce, a combination that oddly worked, the tang of the cheese providing a foil for the spiciness of the sausage. Squash blossoms arrived in a batter that was too thick, but they were hot and crisp. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">As for the grilled seppie (cuttlefish) rolled in bread crumbs, it seemed to have made a brief passage under little more than a heat lamp before being brought to the table. The crumbs were soggy, the fish raw and gummy inside.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">In contrast, the pasta dishes were very good, although the ravioli with fried sage leaves swam in butter. I loved the taglierini contadina, fresh thin noodles tossed with crumbled hot and sweet sausage and peas in a subtle tomato sauce; and the tagliatelle, which came in a rich, creamy sauce laced with pieces of crab. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Whole branzini, perfectly cooked, was accompanied by slices of squeaky fresh fried zucchini and roast potatoes. But the salmon tasted like a leftover: The fish was flaky, mixed in with cannelli beans, greens, and tomatoes, the sort of thing you’d put together yourself for a perfectly respectable meal after rooting around in the refrigerator—not for a price tag of $35. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The steak fiorentine for two is an immense piece of meat big enough for four. The “vertically roasted” duck, falling off the bone but still juicy, was terrific, redolent of rosemary and with a taut, crisp skin.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The desserts are ordinary; they include a pleasant tiramisu, a serviceable panna cotta, and sorbets—among them a lovely deep blackberry flavor, but the scoop of strawberry was iced from too long in the refrigerator.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">So at least some things in the Village never change: Da Silvano remains overpriced and the food is hit or miss, and yet it’s still fun. Now Mr. Marchetto, with his daughter, will be opening Scuderia, a restaurant across the street. Too bad the neighbors wouldn’t allow another sidewalk café. Everything tastes better outdoors. Doesn’t it?</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/09/the-downtown-elaines-charges-and-charges-ahead/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_4.jpg?w=300&#38;h=152" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>No Soba for You!</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/08/no-soba-for-you/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 15:18:15 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/08/no-soba-for-you/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/08/no-soba-for-you/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_3.jpg?w=300&h=200" />“Where’s the noodle man?”
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">When my son was a boy, he loved to watch the noodle man at Honmura An, the only authentic soba restaurant in the city. The noodle man worked in a glass booth in the dining room, where he’d pummel the dough, toss it in the air and roll it out, never once making a hole. Then, using an enormous carving knife, he’d slice the dough into perfect, foot-long strands that he hung up to dry.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Honmura An closed last year, leaving its fans bereft. But now soba cuisine has returned with Matsugen, Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s new Japanese restaurant in Tribeca. Alas, there is no noodle man on display here. He is hidden backstage, where a special mill has been installed to grind the buckwheat kernels into flour for the dough made daily. If it’s not fresh, it’s not soba.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Mr. Vongerichten opened Matsugen in partnership with the Matsushita brothers, Taka, Masa and Yoshi, who have branches of the restaurant in Tokyo and Honolulu. For once, he is not doing any cooking (his sole contribution to the menu is his molten chocolate cake, the most imitated dessert in town—if not the world—which gets a Japanese accent from a dollop of green-tea ice cream). Yoshi runs the kitchen, while his brother Taka and, on all of my visits, Mr. Vongerichten himself greet customers in the front of the house, which is run by the latter’s staff. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">LIKW HONMURA AN, Matsugen has a pared-down Japanese aesthetic, both in the food and the design. It’s not a blockbuster show with a dripping ice Buddha, like Megu down the block. The stark white Richard Meier décor of the premises that used to be 66 is now gray, and the smaller rooms, which have bare wood tables, frosted paneling and stainless steel wire mesh walls, are minimal bordering on grim. Up front there is a sleek lounge area with a sunken sushi bar and an appetizer bar. The jolly communal table from 66 has been retained, along with the four tanks of tropical fish that provide theater in the rear dining room and separate it from the kitchen.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Although this is a downtown restaurant, Matsugen’s clientele—among them many Japanese—is a cross-section of hipsters, older couples, businessmen and families with kids (including a small boy equipped for an evening of social intercourse with both a computer game and earphones). Across the way one night, a corpulent figure out of a drawing by George Grosz sat back in anticipation as a waiter set down an array of metal equipment for the most expensive dish on the menu: shabu shabu with wagyu rib eye (at $160, beyond my budget). I hope he didn’t overcook it.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Matsugen’s enormous menu covers all the bases, from sushi and tempura to more than a dozen appetizers, soups, grilled meat and salads. There are rice dishes cooked in an earthenware pot, one of which, made with sweet, delicate crabmeat and Japanese mushrooms, provoked sighs of rapture at my table. There’s even a version of the ubiquitous black cod with miso, a thick, buttery wedge cut in three browned chunks, and deliciously fatty grilled pork belly, served on a black lava rock from Mount Fuji.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Skip the boring prawn tempura, which is not worth $22. (I know, the prawns are huge, flown in from Japan and all that, but they were overcooked and no better than I’ve had in dozens of other restaurants.) Instead, order the shrimp cake: four juicy wedges variously topped with a piece of green pepper or a mushroom under a jellied glaze, displayed like jewels in a box. The lobster salad, a dish I ordinarily would not order in a Japanese restaurant, was outstanding, not just because of the pristine ingredients, but for the light, citrusy carrot dressing that comes on the side. It’s nothing like the cloying versions you find in other places.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">But there is one dish you must not miss at Matsugen: uni with yuzu jelly. I’ve never tasted anything like it. The sea urchin roe is spread out in a glistening line in what looks like a miniature wooden boat. Because it comes from Japan—not California, as in most Japanese restaurants here—the uni has a pronounced funky taste redolent of the sea, the yuzu adding a subtle note of citrus. Uni also comes on scallops topped with caviar, and even on soba noodles.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">SOBA, our waiter explained, traditionally winds up the meal (before dessert, of course). There are three kinds of noodle, the lightest of which is like angel hair. Seiro noodles, smooth and of medium husk, are served cold in a house special with a mind-boggling array of stuff—scallions, bonito, yam, sesame, okra, wasabi, cucumber, shiso and nori—topped with a raw egg yolk you swirl in with your chopsticks. It was a thrillingly complex bombardment of tastes, but so rich we couldn’t finish it (perhaps because we’d kicked off dinner with that jellied uni). Hot seiro soba with duck and scallions was also terrific, with a rich earthy broth. Afterward you are brought a teapot of the liquid the noodles were cooked in—very nourishing, I’m told, but an acquired taste.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Desserts include a popular Japanese specialty new to me, warabi mochi. It’s made of bracken (a type of fern) and arrives in a wedge that looks as though it has been dug up from an Irish bog. It was strange, but I quite liked its nutty taste. My favorite, though, is made of red beads of grapefruit combined with yuzu jelly and served in wedges of grapefruit skin, the way you get pieces of orange after dinner in Chinese restaurants.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Depending on what you order, you can have a stellar meal at Matsugen or an ordinary one, an expensive or a reasonable one. (But the prices do tend to add up.) On each visit, however, I discovered not only a new dish, but one I’d go back for.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">That’s the excitement of this restaurant. It’s uncompromising, delivering an authentic experience of Japanese cuisine. And if you want to take it out for a test drive before committing, try the goma dare, a coarse-grained inaka soba served cold with sesame sauce. At $14 it’s one of the cheapest dishes on the menu, and it’s Mr. Vongerichten’s favorite.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></span></p>
<p>  </span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_3.jpg?w=300&h=200" />“Where’s the noodle man?”
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.25pt">When my son was a boy, he loved to watch the noodle man at Honmura An, the only authentic soba restaurant in the city. The noodle man worked in a glass booth in the dining room, where he’d pummel the dough, toss it in the air and roll it out, never once making a hole. Then, using an enormous carving knife, he’d slice the dough into perfect, foot-long strands that he hung up to dry.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Honmura An closed last year, leaving its fans bereft. But now soba cuisine has returned with Matsugen, Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s new Japanese restaurant in Tribeca. Alas, there is no noodle man on display here. He is hidden backstage, where a special mill has been installed to grind the buckwheat kernels into flour for the dough made daily. If it’s not fresh, it’s not soba.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Mr. Vongerichten opened Matsugen in partnership with the Matsushita brothers, Taka, Masa and Yoshi, who have branches of the restaurant in Tokyo and Honolulu. For once, he is not doing any cooking (his sole contribution to the menu is his molten chocolate cake, the most imitated dessert in town—if not the world—which gets a Japanese accent from a dollop of green-tea ice cream). Yoshi runs the kitchen, while his brother Taka and, on all of my visits, Mr. Vongerichten himself greet customers in the front of the house, which is run by the latter’s staff. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">LIKW HONMURA AN, Matsugen has a pared-down Japanese aesthetic, both in the food and the design. It’s not a blockbuster show with a dripping ice Buddha, like Megu down the block. The stark white Richard Meier décor of the premises that used to be 66 is now gray, and the smaller rooms, which have bare wood tables, frosted paneling and stainless steel wire mesh walls, are minimal bordering on grim. Up front there is a sleek lounge area with a sunken sushi bar and an appetizer bar. The jolly communal table from 66 has been retained, along with the four tanks of tropical fish that provide theater in the rear dining room and separate it from the kitchen.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Although this is a downtown restaurant, Matsugen’s clientele—among them many Japanese—is a cross-section of hipsters, older couples, businessmen and families with kids (including a small boy equipped for an evening of social intercourse with both a computer game and earphones). Across the way one night, a corpulent figure out of a drawing by George Grosz sat back in anticipation as a waiter set down an array of metal equipment for the most expensive dish on the menu: shabu shabu with wagyu rib eye (at $160, beyond my budget). I hope he didn’t overcook it.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Matsugen’s enormous menu covers all the bases, from sushi and tempura to more than a dozen appetizers, soups, grilled meat and salads. There are rice dishes cooked in an earthenware pot, one of which, made with sweet, delicate crabmeat and Japanese mushrooms, provoked sighs of rapture at my table. There’s even a version of the ubiquitous black cod with miso, a thick, buttery wedge cut in three browned chunks, and deliciously fatty grilled pork belly, served on a black lava rock from Mount Fuji.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">Skip the boring prawn tempura, which is not worth $22. (I know, the prawns are huge, flown in from Japan and all that, but they were overcooked and no better than I’ve had in dozens of other restaurants.) Instead, order the shrimp cake: four juicy wedges variously topped with a piece of green pepper or a mushroom under a jellied glaze, displayed like jewels in a box. The lobster salad, a dish I ordinarily would not order in a Japanese restaurant, was outstanding, not just because of the pristine ingredients, but for the light, citrusy carrot dressing that comes on the side. It’s nothing like the cloying versions you find in other places.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">But there is one dish you must not miss at Matsugen: uni with yuzu jelly. I’ve never tasted anything like it. The sea urchin roe is spread out in a glistening line in what looks like a miniature wooden boat. Because it comes from Japan—not California, as in most Japanese restaurants here—the uni has a pronounced funky taste redolent of the sea, the yuzu adding a subtle note of citrus. Uni also comes on scallops topped with caviar, and even on soba noodles.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"> </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="CULTURE3linedrop" align="left">SOBA, our waiter explained, traditionally winds up the meal (before dessert, of course). There are three kinds of noodle, the lightest of which is like angel hair. Seiro noodles, smooth and of medium husk, are served cold in a house special with a mind-boggling array of stuff—scallions, bonito, yam, sesame, okra, wasabi, cucumber, shiso and nori—topped with a raw egg yolk you swirl in with your chopsticks. It was a thrillingly complex bombardment of tastes, but so rich we couldn’t finish it (perhaps because we’d kicked off dinner with that jellied uni). Hot seiro soba with duck and scallions was also terrific, with a rich earthy broth. Afterward you are brought a teapot of the liquid the noodles were cooked in—very nourishing, I’m told, but an acquired taste.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Desserts include a popular Japanese specialty new to me, warabi mochi. It’s made of bracken (a type of fern) and arrives in a wedge that looks as though it has been dug up from an Irish bog. It was strange, but I quite liked its nutty taste. My favorite, though, is made of red beads of grapefruit combined with yuzu jelly and served in wedges of grapefruit skin, the way you get pieces of orange after dinner in Chinese restaurants.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">Depending on what you order, you can have a stellar meal at Matsugen or an ordinary one, an expensive or a reasonable one. (But the prices do tend to add up.) On each visit, however, I discovered not only a new dish, but one I’d go back for.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">That’s the excitement of this restaurant. It’s uncompromising, delivering an authentic experience of Japanese cuisine. And if you want to take it out for a test drive before committing, try the goma dare, a coarse-grained inaka soba served cold with sesame sauce. At $14 it’s one of the cheapest dishes on the menu, and it’s Mr. Vongerichten’s favorite.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></span></p>
<p>  </span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/08/no-soba-for-you/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_3.jpg?w=300&#38;h=200" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Soho Suffers for Succotash</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/08/soho-suffers-for-succotash/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Aug 2008 16:20:52 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/08/soho-suffers-for-succotash/</link>
			<dc:creator>Moira Hodgson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/08/soho-suffers-for-succotash/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_2.jpg?w=300&h=152" />When the owners of the restaurant Provence, which had been a Soho fixture for over 20 years, changed its name to Hundred Acres, I wondered if they were being sardonic. A century ago this area was known as Hell’s Hundred Acres because the wooden floors of its factories and warehouses kept catching fire. Today, many longtime residents feel that Soho is worthy of the name once again, but for a different reason: crowds.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">When the tourists and suburban shoppers aren’t in Prada or Louis Vuitton, they’re on the street buying T-shirts, jewelry, film scripts, designer handbag knockoffs and, since they’re in Soho, “art.” Leaning against the black Hummer that’s parked outside my front door each day is a display of huge spattered canvases in monolithic colors (the Kate Moss series, the Brooklyn  Bridge series) manned by guys in baggy jeans. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">How’s business? I ask. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">“Great!” </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">So, when Provence reopened last May as an American restaurant, it seemed that another vestige of the old Soho had been lost. In more than two decades of existence, Provence had provided a romantic setting for many a date and marriage proposal. I even had my wedding dinner there. But two years ago it was taken over by Marc Meyer and Vicki Freeman, the owners of Cookshop and Five Points (the latter named for the notorious mid-19th-century slum that is now Foley Square). They revamped the décor (without sacrificing the old restaurant’s romantic charm) and they reinvigorated the French menu. I liked the new incarnation at first, but the food was inconsistent.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Now they’ve turned Provence into a genuinely American restaurant where the theme is—what else?—the farm.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Instead of escargots and bouillabaisse, there are fried green tomatoes with paprika aioli, and buttery steamed littleneck clams seasoned with chili and oregano. Instead of hanger steak, there’s a hamburger made from grass-fed beef topped with a sharp Amish cheddar and accompanied by french fries and a Vidalia onion aioli. It’s first rate. And at lunch one day, two of us dined on crunchy fried soft-shell crabs with succotash laced with fresh corn and fava beans from the greenmarket.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Simple food. And much of the time, the kitchen gets it right (the prices are right, too, with nothing over $24).</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Hundred Acres is on a mercifully quiet block between Prince and Houston. The entrance has been moved to a better spot, and communal tables have been installed, so the place is more casual and accessible to walk-ins (a.k.a. those shopping-bag-toting tourists).</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Provence’s signature blue and yellow colors have been abandoned in favor of perfectly nice cream walls and dark wood. Gone are the mirrors and the Pierre Deux striped silk banquettes. The middle room is hung with gorgeous blown-up photographs of an old Pennsylvania farmhouse taken by Christopher Hirsheimer, who co-designed the restaurant with Melissa Hamilton. The covered garden in the back now feels like a greenhouse, with potted plants instead of elaborate flower arrangements. You half expect to see tomatoes on the vine.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">The casual sensibility extends to the kitchen, which is run by Meyer with Joel Hough, chef de cuisine of Cookshop. Their rustic American menu, which has around 15 dishes, changes daily, based on what’s available in the market. The food is unpretentious and straightforward, and it’s served by a friendly, affable staff.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">One dish I’d go back for is a tone-perfect salad of cucumber and delfino cilantro (a herb with fernlike leaves) tossed in a cumin-lime dressing and laced with crispy nuggets of bacon. You can also begin with beguiling open-face “tea” sandwiches made with buttered multigrain bread covered with thin slices of tongue and pickled ramps. A trio of toasts served on a wooden board are variously topped with smoked fish, chicken livers with pickled beets, and a delicate mousselike purée of favas. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The food may be simple, but the dishes are well conceived. Pollock (a white fish that in England is known as poor man’s cod) is served with a fines herbes butter and a generous helping of English peas. It was beautifully cooked. The grilled bluefish, which I only like when it’s really fresh, was also terrific, garnished with a salad of raw carrots and cucumber with lime.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Plates get interesting little touches, such as a lamb duet—roast leg and a chop—served with grilled turnips, sugar snap peas and pickled cherries. Rabbit, accompanied by German fingerling potato salad, is wrapped in bacon, which keeps it from drying out.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The desserts are mixed. A crostade of peaches turned out to be a soggy strudel filled with tasteless white peaches. The cherry shortcake was pleasant, although cold from the refrigerator. But I loved the big wedge of chocolate cake made with a feather-light sponge.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The restaurant’s major shortcoming—a distressingly common one these days—is the noise level. Forget the romance of Provence. The front room was always loud, but now it’s deafening thanks to the subway tiles on the walls.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">One night two of us were seated at a table by the french doors, which were open onto the tree-lined street. The rain was coming down in buckets. No, don’t close the doors! Our legs were getting spattered but we didn’t care. At least we could hear each other. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_2.jpg?w=300&h=152" />When the owners of the restaurant Provence, which had been a Soho fixture for over 20 years, changed its name to Hundred Acres, I wondered if they were being sardonic. A century ago this area was known as Hell’s Hundred Acres because the wooden floors of its factories and warehouses kept catching fire. Today, many longtime residents feel that Soho is worthy of the name once again, but for a different reason: crowds.
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.1pt">When the tourists and suburban shoppers aren’t in Prada or Louis Vuitton, they’re on the street buying T-shirts, jewelry, film scripts, designer handbag knockoffs and, since they’re in Soho, “art.” Leaning against the black Hummer that’s parked outside my front door each day is a display of huge spattered canvases in monolithic colors (the Kate Moss series, the Brooklyn  Bridge series) manned by guys in baggy jeans. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">How’s business? I ask. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">“Great!” </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">So, when Provence reopened last May as an American restaurant, it seemed that another vestige of the old Soho had been lost. In more than two decades of existence, Provence had provided a romantic setting for many a date and marriage proposal. I even had my wedding dinner there. But two years ago it was taken over by Marc Meyer and Vicki Freeman, the owners of Cookshop and Five Points (the latter named for the notorious mid-19th-century slum that is now Foley Square). They revamped the décor (without sacrificing the old restaurant’s romantic charm) and they reinvigorated the French menu. I liked the new incarnation at first, but the food was inconsistent.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Now they’ve turned Provence into a genuinely American restaurant where the theme is—what else?—the farm.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Instead of escargots and bouillabaisse, there are fried green tomatoes with paprika aioli, and buttery steamed littleneck clams seasoned with chili and oregano. Instead of hanger steak, there’s a hamburger made from grass-fed beef topped with a sharp Amish cheddar and accompanied by french fries and a Vidalia onion aioli. It’s first rate. And at lunch one day, two of us dined on crunchy fried soft-shell crabs with succotash laced with fresh corn and fava beans from the greenmarket.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Simple food. And much of the time, the kitchen gets it right (the prices are right, too, with nothing over $24).</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Hundred Acres is on a mercifully quiet block between Prince and Houston. The entrance has been moved to a better spot, and communal tables have been installed, so the place is more casual and accessible to walk-ins (a.k.a. those shopping-bag-toting tourists).</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Provence’s signature blue and yellow colors have been abandoned in favor of perfectly nice cream walls and dark wood. Gone are the mirrors and the Pierre Deux striped silk banquettes. The middle room is hung with gorgeous blown-up photographs of an old Pennsylvania farmhouse taken by Christopher Hirsheimer, who co-designed the restaurant with Melissa Hamilton. The covered garden in the back now feels like a greenhouse, with potted plants instead of elaborate flower arrangements. You half expect to see tomatoes on the vine.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">The casual sensibility extends to the kitchen, which is run by Meyer with Joel Hough, chef de cuisine of Cookshop. Their rustic American menu, which has around 15 dishes, changes daily, based on what’s available in the market. The food is unpretentious and straightforward, and it’s served by a friendly, affable staff.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">One dish I’d go back for is a tone-perfect salad of cucumber and delfino cilantro (a herb with fernlike leaves) tossed in a cumin-lime dressing and laced with crispy nuggets of bacon. You can also begin with beguiling open-face “tea” sandwiches made with buttered multigrain bread covered with thin slices of tongue and pickled ramps. A trio of toasts served on a wooden board are variously topped with smoked fish, chicken livers with pickled beets, and a delicate mousselike purée of favas. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The food may be simple, but the dishes are well conceived. Pollock (a white fish that in England is known as poor man’s cod) is served with a fines herbes butter and a generous helping of English peas. It was beautifully cooked. The grilled bluefish, which I only like when it’s really fresh, was also terrific, garnished with a salad of raw carrots and cucumber with lime.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">Plates get interesting little touches, such as a lamb duet—roast leg and a chop—served with grilled turnips, sugar snap peas and pickled cherries. Rabbit, accompanied by German fingerling potato salad, is wrapped in bacon, which keeps it from drying out.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The desserts are mixed. A crostade of peaches turned out to be a soggy strudel filled with tasteless white peaches. The cherry shortcake was pleasant, although cold from the refrigerator. But I loved the big wedge of chocolate cake made with a feather-light sponge.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">The restaurant’s major shortcoming—a distressingly common one these days—is the noise level. Forget the romance of Provence. The front room was always loud, but now it’s deafening thanks to the subway tiles on the walls.</p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="text" align="left">One night two of us were seated at a table by the french doors, which were open onto the tree-lined street. The rain was coming down in buckets. No, don’t close the doors! Our legs were getting spattered but we didn’t care. At least we could hear each other. </p>
<p style="text-align: left" class="emailtagline" align="left"><em>mhodgson@observer.com</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2008/08/soho-suffers-for-succotash/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/moira_2.jpg?w=300&#38;h=152" medium="image" />
	</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
