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restaurant reports

November 10, 2006

Thoughts week ending 11/10/06

… I just assume diners know that real Kobe is back in America after a hiatus. But Meg recently linked this rather fluffy piece in the Post so I figured I would offer my experience with it here. I became aware of the embargo’s end shortly before I had what I assumed was real Kobe on my second L’Atelier visit. I didn’t ask so I can’t swear it was authentic, what I can say is it was exponentially better than all the other meat I have been served around town that was branded as Kobe or Waygu (don’t know if you have been to Old Homestead but little in New York food is as pathetic as their offerings).

When I had this discussion with my friend Mark, the Chef De Cuisine at Morimoto, he explained that to truly appreciate the finest Kobe it should be prepared Shabu Shabu. In a nutshell, you quickly swish very thinly sliced Kobe through a hot, flavored liquid and pair it to differing vegetables and dipping sauces. Absolutely convinced that Mark had gone insane from too much Japanese exposure and that meat with that kind of fat content could not be better boiled than seared, I accepted his challenge, leading to my first ever full meal at Morimoto not at the Omakase bar.

The meal left me feeling three things: that Mark is a very good chef producing very cool food from the Morimoto kitchen, that I am a bad friend for confining my dining at his restaurant to the Omakase bar with which he is not involved, and that I was totally wrong – Shabu Shabu is indeed the superior manner for Kobe preparation.

Grilled/seared/roasted and all other high heat methods scorch the predominant and flavorful fats, while with Shabu Shabu the flavored broth heated by an incredibly hot rock releases and encourages them to bloom, offering more of a slightly melted silky texture. Words like rich, buttery, and unctuous describe fast high heat preparations of Kobe and they are indeed special. However, I have no words to describe the sensation of this dish. I will tell you it ended a headache that I had in my temples and I spent most of the rest of the evening with the aromas running through my head in rather blissful contemplation.

There are many reasons to be into trying Kobe and it is an amazing ingredient. If your inspiration is that you are into flavor contemplation and you have an opportunity to try it as Shabu Shabu I think it is well worth taking.

Not sure why I never posted a report on the meal; maybe because I didn’t keep good enough notes, or didn’t want to concede my wrongness to Mark. Either way it was an exceptional meal. I did shoot it, though. Here are the pics of the Kobe Shabu Shabu course:
Mori_shabu10
Mori_shabu12
Mori_shabu14

November 03, 2006

Thoughts week ending 11/03/06

…Because I see it as such a simple reality that the trans-fat ban is stupid and will in the long run hurt the cause of American health more than help I haven’t really paid attention to it much, but this article in the Motley Fool has forced my hand. To learn the lesson of why a trans-fat ban is stupid you need look no further than the origins of the problem.


At some point some genius decided that butter (a component of the human diet for a very long time) was bad for you and said we shouldn’t eat it, giving the American population the belief that butter = bad. Then some other genius invented a way to make non-animal products behave and seem somewhat like animal products, and for some reason believed and got others to believe that a substance with zero equivalents in nature was better nutrition for humans than milk that had been stirred a lot. Americans got the message that margarine was fine and began consuming more of it than they ever did butter. Later, the truth that science does not make better food but alternate food became obvious, and the fact that the created food item was bad for you was probably also apparent but not necessarily admitted to.


So now here we are. Turns out the alternate food is basically poison to some degree or other, but rather than learn from past mistakes and put energy into teaching Americans the nature of fats and that natural fats used appropriately are far better for you than any other possible substitute, big business has created a new food, this time from a plant they created that has a resistance to poison added to its genetic make up, and Americans are getting the message that fried chicken at KFC is not as bad for you as it used to be.

Rather than go back to the naturally occurring lipids that were doing little if any harm originally, the solution is a new synthetic food. The article notes:

"In an interesting aside, the company that provides the Vistive brand of low-linolenic soybeans is none other than biotech giant Monsanto (NYSE: MON). Monsanto put out a press release applauding KFC's move, while KFC said it is working with several possible suppliers, including Monsanto, to secure its oil. Known for genetically modified agricultural products, Monsanto says that Vistive soybeans are grown through conventional breeding techniques, but critics say that's a bit misleading because they still contain the Roundup Ready trait.

Connections to GM foods make this an issue that could, at some point, become controversial, since some people believe that GM foods might prove dangerous in their own right. Of course, it seems unlikely that the people who police their diet against GM foods are the same consumers who frequent fast-food establishments such as KFC, Wendy's, and McDonald's. (In a news conference, KFC President Gregg Dedrick said he didn't know whether the oil would contain GM soybeans). "

Nevertheless, the trans-fat ban will equate in the American conscience to “they made fried chicken safe” and our culture will take one more step toward ill health, particularly in the lower income populations that are the predominant consumers the of offerings of YUM brands.

I know there is no reason to believe me, I am an anonymous, credential-less guy with a website about food, but I hold these truths self evident none the less:


  • Fried chicken is one of the greatest foods of all time and should be eaten in its proper place in a balanced diet
  • Because you can’t eat fried chicken all the time you should try to eat the best when you do.
  • There is a local place making better fried chicken than KFC in every town in America
  • KFC is never in the running for good fried chicken.
  • Oil made from a plant bred from genetically altered parents to resist one of the most thorough poisons known at the moment will definitely be shown to be bad for you and will be banned at some point after this has been discovered, just like the current laboratory fats.

So get some lard and a flavorful bird raised on a farm, not in a warehouse, bread it and fry it in a cast-iron pan. Even if you do it every day it is better for you than KFC, but if you do it right it will be just what it should be: comfort food perfect for good times…


…Just like some time in the future I will get to say “I told you so” about frying your food in factory-produced oil from poison plants, I now get to say I told you so, good wine and good food should always go hand in hand and just can’t be bad for you

August 25, 2006

Thoughts week ending 8/25/06

…. Had dinner at Hearth this week and was discussing with Marco how interested I was in having the food of a guy famous for his mashed potatoes (Robuchon). I joked it would be like having a favorite restaurant with a chef famous for his gnocchi. In turn, with our entrées Marco sent out some of his mashed potatoes. All I can say is try them, they are seriously fantastic. I would say more but I was well served by the time I tried them and it could just be the Pinot talking…

…Went back to Intent this week and had the amazing curry Crab Napoleon again. This time it was far more about the curry than the crab. What had been a fantastic dish about the flavor of crab and butter accented by a touch of curry and the crunch of potato was this time an interesting curry dish…

The Times has an article about foie civil disobedience going on in Chicago, begging the question what will happen when this already ridiculous situation gets taken to a new level by Joe Morre (the genius alderman with such a clear understanding of the current food situations and ethics in the world and Chicagoland that he saw fit to outlaw one of the few positive products produced by American farmers) if he tries to punish these civic-minded people standing up for their civil liberties? Who will be the Bill Kunstler for this Chicago Sevenish???

…Speaking of civil disobedience and stupid laws, USA Today has an article about raw milk, and how safe or unsafe it is. I seek out raw cheese whenever possible, and regularly drink raw cows’ milk. I don’t drink it because I believe it to be a miracle cure or because I know that, thanks to the current situation of most farming in America, commercially sold pasteurized milk is so loaded with hormones and antibiotics that it is probably dangerous. I drink it because it tastes better, and because I am the kind of guy who geeks out on the changing flavor it shows through the seasons of the year. If you are interested, go to the Weston A. Price foundation’s website or realmilk.com and figure out how to get it. If you are concerned about its healthfulness, read Ron Schmid’s book “The Untold Story of Milk” and all the studies made in the interests of factory farming the USDA and CDC are very happy to pass along. I will testify that, although my experimental food lifestyle has given me many of the illnesses the government warns you about (I have never considered them very bothersome I just keep Lomotil in the medicine Cabinet), I have never been made sick by fresh raw milk from grass-fed cows on a small certified farm, and have no doubt the supposed risk is worth the actual reward…

The Times also has an article on how to make Zak Pelaccio’s Cubano. Just like any drug, the subsequent trips are never as good as the first so I will simply say if you decide to play along you will know you have made it right if you have good sensations in non-food places, as I did the first time I had it back in ’03 at Chickenbone (still the only thing that ever got me to Brooklyn six consecutive times; they now serve it at 5 Ninth)…

…Just when you think Coke may be becoming the new McDonald’s as far as the ire of ethically conscious consumers goes, McDonald’s starts an awesome campaign giving Hummers to children. Usually I am not a guy to protect children from companies (let them learn like I did through slow poisoning), but on this site you get to write dirty words on the McD sign and it’s fun for a couple minutes (yes I signed the petition)…

August 11, 2006

In response to Erin

Dear Erin,

 

Thank you for your call to arms regarding Frank’s blog post “Out of Season,” but let me warn you ahead of time that in this case I see no need to call Frank a boob, or his behavior buffoonish, rather in this case I find I may be of assistance in translating Frank. I see why this post is confusing; since he is one of the key food writers at The New York Times and since Frank primarily writes about food you should be safe assuming he has a basic understanding of food and the verbiage regarding it. But you must realize that he writes for the Dining & Wine part of the Style section.

 

So, sadly our assumptions have made posteriors of us. Frank’s reviews are quintessentially about current style and the way it makes him feel. Think of Jack from Will & Grace, there is no need for accuracy or comprehension on his part as long as at the end you understand whether Frank and his cohorts were shown a good time or not. Food has the smallest amount to do with it, which is fine as long as we keep in mind that this section is called Dining & Wine, not Food & Wine. Frank says as much in his recent Le Cirque review. If you read what he wrote, it is clearly not a two-star place, but since he was the restaurant reviewer for the Times and the restaurant’s behavior around him changed accordingly each time they figured it out, it gets two stars because,On the right night, for the right diner, it can muster a magnificent performance.” Frank neither reports as an everyman, nor bases reviews on his perceptions of the food, unless two stars means one good dish for every bad -- “It does a superb foie gras terrine, a sorry risotto Milanese. Its ethereal Dover sole meunière makes you believe that this fish was put into the seas to await its appointment with butter and lemon. Its drab lobster salad makes you question the crustacean’s gastronomic calling” -- rather than the published definition “Very good.”

 

Trust me and take for granted that Frank cares little and knows less about food, and that it is not germane to his position. If you want to read about food in the Times read Fabricant, or Pollan, or the other writers learning and living as they go through the process. When Michael Pollan wants to write about GMO potatoes he gets some and grows them in his home garden and it is in the Times Magazine; when Frank wants to do some investigative journalism he pops in the car for a road trip to Atlantic City or a tour of burger outlets in America, and it is in the Style Section. It is probably all best summed up when you wrap your head around the fact that on the third day of Diner’s Journal, Frank’s blog, he used his new freedom in this interactive forum to let us all know how good Hooters really is.


In the case of your referenced entry in Frank’s blog “Out of Season” I see where you might get confused, because in three simple steps Frank moves from his declared topic to talking about something almost like his declared topic:

 

First step: “If there’s an adjective that appears more often than any other in the press releases I get, it’s “seasonal.” Here Frank is establishing what trend he will be addressing, which is why it is his purview and not that of a food writer.

 

Second step: “Chef X is reaping the seasonal fruits of the Greenmarket. Chef Y is doing a seasonal menu. Chef Z is cooking dishes that use only the freshest seasonal ingredients. All are proclaimed deities of seasonality. The betting seems to be that this religion plays especially well with discriminating diners.” Here Frank is letting us know that it can be very pesky writing about food trends for the paper of record, especially when the kids not currently deemed hip are vying for your attention, the woes of being the popular kid with final say on who is in or out. He hints that if it is your job to promote restaurants you should be careful how much you pester Frank because you, too, may receive misguided wrath in the future. If he has just had a bad science class, or feels yucky about the way he looks that day, you may just get branded un-cool while Frank lives out his lifelong dream of being a Heather. More than anything else, though, he separates himself from those that are “discriminating.”

 

Third step: “And then there were the menu items whose heaviness seemed at odds with these long, steamy, sticky days: grilled German sausages; pieces of toast slathered with smooth chicken liver; a hanger steak with not only a rectangle of concentrated marrow atop it but also, on the side, a creamy horseradish dip and a potato gratin.” Here Frank’s emotions take over his accuracy: he is not discussing seasonal ingredients, he is discussing seasonal fare.

You see sausages have no season and neither do chicken livers or beef. As far as horseradish, it is one of the last things harvested in late fall and is cherished for its preserve-ability and use throughout the year. As for potatoes and milk (for the gratin) a short trip to the greenmarket will let you know if they are currently seasonal (they are).

You see what Frank means by “eating out of season” is eating un-seasonal fare rather than un-seasonal ingredients. Sure he starts you off by talking about the greenmarket and that is confusing, but if you put young Jack from Will & Grace back in your head you will see what he means is he is being naughty and eating hearty winter-type foods in the summer.

 

Of course what the chefs and the publicists that keep sending Frank all the news are suggesting is that seasonal food in season tastes better, and they are right. Because Frank has taken a contrary tone you are thinking Frank is suggesting tomatoes taste good in January. (That’s not what he means look at his rave reviews of these out of season meals: “Those sausages were flabby, and dull in flavor” and “Most of it was satisfying in its way — no doubt about that”). What Frank is suggesting is that because there are foods that fare well through the non-prolific seasons and we tend to eat them in the winter, he is assuming them out of season in the summer, autumn, or spring, when of course what makes them winter food is that they are not seasonal at all.



I am sure that if the Times thought their customers wanted a guy who could truly evaluate food and its preparation writing about restaurants and their service they would hire one (ahem). But as long as what the consumer wants is the simplicity of stars to decipher what is being written, the writer seems unimportant. As long as they do not encourage tackling topics like estrogens in soy, and keep the focus on whether or not people on an expense account (I have read the position affords low six figures a year) can have fun at said place, Frank seems the best man for the job. Just go to Chinatown Brassiere and see how “a stylish new uniform for General Tso” makes you feel, just keep in mind that while it is “slightly chewy” the important thing to remember is,
with dining as with so much else, knowledge is not always pleasure’s friend.”

 

Best,



Augieland

August 07, 2006

Meatball sandwich

It's summer and I am lazy. For today's post I will simply ask, who has a better meatball sandwich than Little Owl? I had the meatball sliders again last night and I am pretty sure at this point they should be filed as the best.

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