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MARIANI’S
Virtual Gourmet
November 6, 2005
NEWSLETTER

Fantastical painting by Giuseppe
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In
This Issue
WHAT'S NEW IN
ATLANTA? by John Mariani
and Suzanne Wright
NEW YORK CORNER: Piano Due by
John Mariani
QUICK
BYTES
OH,
ATLANTA!
by John Mariani and Suzanne
Wright
Like
any big city its size, Atlanta is
always seeing the coming and going of new restaurants trying to
capitalize on a young, affluent crowd eager to find the next big
thing. Here are two reports on where you may find them.
Globe
(75 Fifth Street NW; 404-541-1487 ; www.globeatlanta.com)
is one of those
rare restaurants whose ambitions fall short of its very high quality.
Here is a smart, handsome, sleek restaurant, with tall ceilings, gauze
curtains,
a
terrific zinc bar, Formica tables, and colorful shelves full of green San Pellegrino bottles, that seems to have
achieved exactly what owner Govantez Lowndes wanted—a casual place for
the
local
crowd with a menu of easy items well made. All
of which is wholly commendable.
The problem is that Chef Joshua Laban
Perkins cooks at such a high level of excellence that I would like to
see a
more sophisticated menu of dishes I suspect would be among the best in
Atlanta. Indeed, you might well be
persuaded by the simple one-page menu of starters, “main plates,”
sandwiches,
and desserts that Globe is an attempt to compete with the city’s famous
and still
very
popular Buckhead Diner for primo prole food honors. And it does. I just have a strong feeling that Perkins is
capable of much, much more. And the wine
list needs a whole lot of improvement.
Nevertheless, taken on its own terms, The
Globe is impressive from start to finish. I began with a truly fine
chilled
gazpacho—not the watery kind with chunks of raw vegetables floating
around but
a real broth of tomato and pureed vegetables with the sprightly
addition of a
scoop of green apple sorbet. White Gulf shrimp cakes with corn were quickly sautéed to stay juicy
inside and
marvelously crisp outside, served with a mango salsa. Very tasty indeed
was a
finger food item of chorizo croquettes given the bright taste of sage. “Belgian fries” came in a cone, and, while
the potatoes themselves had flavor, they lacked the requisite crispness.
For main courses I was amazed by the
simple but direct savoriness of a plate of spaghettini dressed with
crispy
pancetta, red onion, and tomatoes, one of those dishes that remind you
of what
a delicate balance of impeccable ingredients you need to bring off the
simple
goodness of an Italian pasta.
As
someone who has scallops served to him
relentlessly, I applauded The Globe’s rendition—sliced sea scallops
cooked
just to
translucence on the inside, with arugula, dried berries, and a syrupy
balsamic
caramel. Herbaceous, slow-roasted
chicken with mashed potatoes and roasted garlic sauce could not have
been
better.
When
desserts came, everyone at my table
dove in, for the food looked, and tasted, irresistible, from a very
southern strawberry
shortcake with as much fresh-from-the-oven and fresh berries aroma as
it had
perfect texture. A mixed berry cobbler was warm and gooey delicious,
and
rum-glazed pineapple upside down cake with vanilla ice cream was
scrumptious
in the way the best southern desserts can be at their best.
The Globe is aiming at a certain
mid-level of casual dining, which it does with enormous panache. I hope
that
they will aim even higher, perhaps at dinner, put tablecloths on the
Formica,
improve the wine list, and let Perkins really fly.
The guy shows great talent.
Prices for starters
run from $4 to $7, sandwiches $7 to $8, and main plates $12-$19.
Often
overlooked in the shadow of glory
garnered by the Ritz-Carlton Dining Room in Buckhead, the downtown
Ritz’s Atlanta
Grill (181
Peachtree
Street; 404-221-6550.
click here) does not aim for the culinary sublime but
neither is it
typical
of the kind of all-day, three-meal restaurants so many hotel
restaurants are
forced to maintain. For while there is a
definite dinnertime nod to the steak-and-potatoes crowd, Chef de cuisine Jean-Luc Mongodin and exec chef
Eric Damidot are doing some really marvelous dishes that fall outside
the
mainstream here.
The
room itself has a clubbish feel, with
big wide booths, lots of fine wood accents, even an intimate “Cheater’s
Room,”
curtained off in the tradition of those days under Prohibition when
Atlantans
could only get a drink in a sequestered space in a restaurant’s
premises. There are also exceptionally
fine murals of
people dining out, by California artists.
The
service at the AG could hardly be more
southern in its hospitality, from your first greeting by the hostess to
your
reception at the table by a young waitress. (If you think you’re seeing
double,
one hostess and one waitress are twins.)
The wine list is pretty fair, and lunch
pricing constitutes a real bargain, with a two-course
“Corporate
Lunch” available at $18 or $23, with
a wide choice
of items, from excellent she-crab soup to a lobster club
sandwich. At dinner
things get pricier,
with appetizers from $8-$21 (for foie gras terrine with poached apple)
and
main courses from $27-$42. The beef is
certified Black Angus, with a filet at $36 and a NY strip at $37.
A simple but delicious Atlanta Grill salad
was a good portion of greens with Maytag blue cheese, spiced pecans and
grapes,
and tuna tartare made for a fine starter, couched on thin slices of
dressed
cucumber. A Thai shrimp soup was thin
and needed spark.
Very
juicy chicken breast came with BBQ
roast potatoes and a very fine reduction of pan juices, though a filet
mignon
(8 ounces) had a faintly liverish flavor. Best
of all the entrees I tried was a “catch of the day”—a
superb piece
of red snapper filet of marvelous succulence, served with delightful
fresh
chanterelles and peas, again in a Port wine reduction that spoke
volumes about
French precision.
Desserts offer a “southern
dessert sampler” I urge you to try, which might include bread pudding,
crème
brûlée with blueberries, a lovely little baba au rhum, and chocolate
items, all
worth a bite or two, or three.
The
long-awaited Quinones
(1198 Howell Mill Road; 404-365-0140),
from Anne Quatrano and Clifford Harrison, who gave Atlanta the truly
superb
Bacchanalia, have tried to go upscale in a frippity way with a
multi-course menu concept that might be amusing were it not for the
dreary, low-lighted ambiance of the place, which is located in an odd,
industrial-looking courtyard site where Bacchanalia has long
been. Named after a dear, departed friend who'd worked at
Bacchanalia,
Quinones has just 38 seats within a very formal brown dining room (left) of Venetian glass
chandeliers and sconces, antique mirrors, and wood paneling--which is
in total contrast to the light airiness of Bacchanalia, with its lovely
sheer curtains and bright modern art.
There is no à la carte menu at
Quinones, whose chef de cuisine, Drew Belline, offers only lengthy
tasting menus at $75-$95, depending on the ingredients of the
season, with wines, $120-$160. You will be served at least 10
courses, not counting amuse gueules
like a tempura-fried white anchovy or a demi-tasse of tomato
soup. What followed for me when I dined there in mid-summer was
an array of very finely tuned dishes, from superb cured wild Yukon
salmon with local pickling cucumbers and dill, to very well-rendered
seared foie gras with eggplant and Tupelo honey. There was also a
delicious herb custard with summer truffle butter, and my favorite dish
of the evening, loup de mer
with heirloom squash and its
blossoms. An Alaskan King crab salad with summer beans was
pleasing if not right for mid-way through the meal, and roast leg of
lamb with chanterelles was a bit dry and came tepid to the table that
evening.
There was also a cheese course composed
of teeny cubes and a tomato-grape salad with basil that overpowered
them. The two desserts that followed--roasted peach with
chamomile ice cream and local blackberries with crème
fraîche blancmange showed beautifully, finishing off with
cinnamon basil truffles, which did not: Basil may be minty, but it's not mint. .
My applause for much of the food at
Quinones was tempered by the atmosphere, which was tellingly
quiet and lifeless, with certain pretensions of service that always
seem a part of a lengthy tasting menu where everything seems to require
a lengthy description by the waiter. If they brightened the place
and perhaps changed the banquet-room style of decor (those chairs have
to go!), I think that Quinones would take its place among the most
exciting culinary
experiences in Atlanta right now.
--John
Mariani
You
gotta love the slogan of Taurus
(1745
Peachtree Road, Atlanta, 30309;
404-214-0641; www.taurusrestaurant.com; dinner only): "Great Food. No
Bull."
This is a modern chop house with a sexy supper-club ambiance. Prior to
opening
Taurus (named for the chef’s zodiac sign), Gary Mennie spent ten years
in Atlanta helming
Canoe and also worked with Guenter
Seeger.
Taurus is located above the Viking Culinary Center in a shopping plaza on the
edge of Buckhead, yet it is
undeniably swank to be whisked up by private elevator after
surrendering your
car to the valet. The room (left)
is ravishing and appropriate
for idle canoodling, its allure courtesy of textured red velour fabrics
that evoke
a 1960s clubby feel, with elevated central seating area (which is
supposed to evoke a
bullring), soft lighting, dark wood, and lots of curves to give the
place a
female feel. A 60-seat patio wrapped
around the perimeter with living room-like seating recalls venues in Los Angeles and Miami. Both indoors
and outdoors have commanding views
of the midtown and downtown skylines.
The
wine list has 90
bottles in price tiers of $26, $36, $46, and 30 wittily named cocktails. Sadly, my favorite gin was not
available, nor was my next favorite, so I settled for
Beefeater. Disappointingly, I had to
send the martini back—it lacked a steely edge. Things improved when we
asked
for wine pairings with our meal, but a couple of choices were still a
bit
off for
my taste buds. Let’s just call the bar
young
and hope for some tweaking from the sommelier in the months
ahead.
The
food, however, was close to impeccable, including the perfect
pretzel bread before the culinary parade began.
We
sampled the oak-roasted veal rack served on African
squash, a veg that turned up again in a velvety soup with roasted
apples,
peekytoe crab and
a hint of nutmeg. Crispy quail came with apple jam, while steak tartare
was punctuated with
capers and G-1 sauce (Mennie’s answer to A-1) and a rich cauliflower
gratin. Grilled
lamb t-bones were accented with bacon, and superb, briny oysters were
prepared two ways--à la Rockefeller and
in an onion mignonette.
I
predict Atlanta will be bullish on Taurus.
Prices run from $4 appetizers to $28 for
entrees.
Hugging
Kevin Rathbun is like snuggling into a mountain; I like it. In addition to giving great hugs, Rathbun
gives great food. Krog Bar (112
Krog Street;
404-524-1618; www.krogbar.com), opened in late September with
his partners Cliff Bramble
and Kirk Parks,
the g-m and pastry chef, respectively, only makes me like him
more.
Adjacent
to his smash-hit Rathbun’s (one of Esquire’s
top new restaurants for 2004), the snug Krog Bar features a menu of Mediterranean-style cold small plates and
communal
dining. Tapas, sadly, is a term that has
been bastardized in the U.S., wrongly applied to almost anything served
on a
saucer. I brought along a friend, who just
returned from three weeks in Northern Spain and who lived in Madrid for seven years, to vet the
legitimacy of
the concept. Rathbun gets it right, in
both look and cuisine. Seating is on soft cabernet leather bar stools or you can
stand at the
bar rails. On the gray and white marble
bar, which stretches the length of the room, are plates of fig bread,
bowls of olives
and a jar of Marcona almonds. Amber globe pendants warmly illuminate
the space,
as does the beautifully seamed cypress paneling and chocolate brown
walls. Custom-made iron wine racks line the walls and a glass garage
door
opens onto a bricked patio.
The compact menu (which
Rathbun plans to expand by 10 or so items over the next month or two)
features antipasti, crudi, carne,
tramezzini (crustless
finger sandwiches) and cheeses;
the vino is
from Italy, Spain and France. Staffers
like knowledgeable Erin will happily provide sips,
recommend pairings (with such
descriptions as “barnyard funk” for an Italian Chardonnay) and pop a
bottle for
those willing to spring for two glasses. Best
of all, nearly all the dishes hover
around $8 or less, so an evening out is within reach of everyone in Inman Park, from established
professionals to
students.
Rathbun took
time—and
a recent tour of the three-state region he is paying homage
to—sourcing and
buying top-notch ingredients he respects, teasing out their
authenticity with minimum tinkering. A
fat Serrano ham perched on the bar (my pal calls it the “ham clamp”) is
the
restaurant’s perky pink mascot, waiting to yield satiny
slices. A new discovery for me is lomo,
paprika-cured pork loin, in gossamer
thin rounds dribbled with good olive oil to amp up the pronounced
seasoning. The couple at the end of the
table (both in the food business) offered us translucent
slices of mojama, sea salt
cured tuna.
What follows is a parade of
excellent
dishes, with not a false note in the bunch: silky
chicken liver-truffle pâté served with springy
bread (Conde de
Valdemar, a rioja reserve stands up to the rich flavor);
bright basil pesto
and tetilla
sandwiches cut
into dainty quarters; idiazabal cheese,
a lightly smoked, semi-hard sheep’s
milk cheese and cabrales
blue; meaty yellow tail crudo
with piquillo peppers;
fennel with sun-dried tomato; and perfect boquerones, white anchovy filets
kissed with lemon. Gelati are
created daily, but we opted for the dark chocolate
bruschetta with its sprinkle of sea salt and a leathery Bellum
Monastrell Dulce
“stickie” for dessert.
It was a blissfully simple,
satisfying meal—and I left with the phone number of new friends, which
is
exactly the environment Rathbun wanted to create with this intimate
neighborhood eatery. With food this
true and this affordable, I see myself as a regular.
I've
heard a lot of kvetching about the interiors at Table 1280 (1280
Peachtree St., Atlanta 30309;
404-897-1280; click
here), which is owned by New York-based Restaurant
Associates,
operators of eateries at Guggenheim and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Seems people were divided on the minimalist
interiors,
which I find are in concert with its fellow tenants, the Richard Meier-designed High Museum and the sleek new Woodruff Arts Center.
The
generous space is divided into a lounge serving tapas (what else?) and
two dining
rooms on either side of the open kitchen. The
space is largely comprised of white, high-ceilinged
walls, undecorated
except for mirrored discs that remind me of shiny hubcaps of yesteryear
and a horizontal
lighting fixture (left) that
spans the length of one long wall and evokes Pez
candy
memories (neither of the artists mentions either of these objects as
inspiration) and wine bottles encased in glass. The
wait staff wears slate gray with red accents that
coordinate with
the seating upholstery. The tables are
frosted acrylic, the floors are polished wood and the noise level rises
as the
room fills. It’s all high-concept, but though
some have termed it austere, I find it wholly appropriate, given the
setting. I am happy we finally have a
dining option
for the city’s preeminent cultural facility—and even happier to report
it
stellar, for such a striking setting requires equally assured food.
Chef
Sean Doty, who sold his Mid-City Cuisine, has assembled a fine,
well-edited
menu that offers enough contemporary culinary conceits (foams, artisan
products) without edging into pretentiousness. The
daily menu offers eight or so starters and mains with
a couple of
sides. We let Doty choreograph our meal
(there’s also a $28 prix fixe pre-theater dinner) and we were mightily
pleased
with the results.
The
lineup included an autumnal squash soup with chestnut foam and pumpkin
seed oil,
the vegetal creaminess of the squash subtle and satisfying, but not
filling;
Maine razor clams with fired garlic, beautifully presented in their
slender
shell; snails with soft poached egg and fried parsley, crisp and
succulent—the comfort food your mother never made; poached lobster
nesting on a
dice of creamed porcini
mushrooms, the earthiness of the seafood beautifully
matched with the woody fungi; garnet-hued blue fin tuna with salsa verde and
tapenade; roasted foie gras with poached sickle pear and orange cumin
sauce, a
brilliant interplay of lingering, rich notes; pork
chop with acorn squash and cranberries, just a tad
tough in some
spots; artisanal cheeses with raisin brioche; the tart tease of Meyer
lemon bar
with 40 miniature toasted meringue peaks and warm sugar donuts with
three
sauces (I’d like to see a very bitter chocolate variety offered).
The
artistry doesn’t come too cheap--appetizers run $9-$16, main courses
$18-$34--but like a fine symphony, every note is
perfectly
tuned at Table 1280. Bravo.
Piebar (2160
Monroe Drive, Atlanta, 30324; 404-815-1605; www.piebar.com;
lunch and dinner) is the latest offering from restaurant
impresario Bob Amick
and partner Todd Rushing, the team behind One Midtown Kitchen, Two
Urban
Licks, and the forthcoming Trois (got the naming trend?), who seem to
have
an
unfailing knack for reading the city’s fickle culinary pulse. The gimmick here? It’s
in an ultra-cool circular building and
nothing on the extensive menu tops $14. Melissa Fedroko, formerly of
the Cloister
at Sea Island, is chef.
Located
in an abandoned 1962 bank building visible from I-85, the structure was
on the 2003
list of endangered building compiled by Atlanta Preservation Center. The fabulous (and I mean that in the positive,
exclamatory way that interior decorators use the term) design
compliments the
mid-century modern building. A 50-foot
sign catches the eyes of interstate commuters; inside there are white
chairs
with blue seats and black stone bar, and outdoor rooftop seating under
Denver
airport-like blue tensile “teats” (my description, not in the
official
press release.) Originally, the pod-shaped landing was designed to
cover the teller’s
drive-through windows. Now, you can
cruise the drive-through for a pizza and bottle of wine to go.
Amick’s
eateries are happenings that attract well-garbed modsters, from single Sex and the City-type gals on the prowl
(distinguished by low-cut tops in bright shades and matching purses and
shoes)
and the middle-aged, khaki-clad men who chase them (note to said men: kneecaps are not appropriate in fine dining
establishments; keep your khakis full length unless you are at a
backyard
barbecue) to Georgia Tech students and the gamut of humanity in-between. Need I mention that the city’s gay population
looked the most effortless? I thought it
was odd that the Braves were on the plasma TV; in fact, I thought a TV
was unnecessary,
given that the place was packed and wicked loud, sound reverberating
off
the curved
walls. Kudos to an observant manager
who, noting my companion had left his chair to join me on the banquette
so we
could converse, swiftly moved our table from the vertical to horizontal
position.
There
are washcloths for napkins and drinks are served in plastic glasses. Wines are value-priced (all reds go for $7 a
glass/$28 bottle; whites for $5/20). We
each ordered a suntini, rather like a Long Island iced tea with a
refreshing
spike of basil, a ideal drink to counteract the dog days of Hotlanta’s
summer.
The waiter apologized that there were no limes to garnish our
drinks—they had
run out (there’s a 600- seat capacity).
The
menu is described as “sun food,” from the warm climate regions of
Mediterranean:
pizzas, antipasti, crudi and
“micro” plates for sharing. Piebar
boasts the largest pizza oven in Southeast, evident the July night I
visited,
since the place was roasting (they have since boosted the AC output). You can build your own thin crust pie with
offbeat ingredients like caviar or quails eggs, or stick with a
ready-made
pizza. I ordered the wild
mushroom, goat cheese, onion and white
truffle pie and thought it tasted . . . well, like paste. Far superior
was the
sausage,
tomato and fennel pollen pie. The duck
confit, balsamic onion, blue cheese and grape pie had one too many
ingredients (the
grapes pushed it over the edge for me), but otherwise I liked the
melding of
the flavors, and the crust was crispy without being burned. At these prices you can risk the occasional
misstep without breaking the bank.
Almost
opalescent, the sea scallops with citrus, olive oil and sea salt was
ceviche-like and brackishly good. Stuffed
clams with chorizo, green apple and parmesan served in their shells
were
presented on uncooked yellow grits served on a silver tray. In addition to looking gorgeous, the flavors
were well-balanced, with nothing predominating. The
antipasti tray was a bit of a let down (the mozzarella
bland, the
bresaola not pronounced enough) but the “accessories” (the menu term)
such as
the warm honey eggplant and cold, pickled saffron cauliflower were
inspired.
All are served atop granite stands that are like statuary—and whisked
away
rather too quickly (is there a shortage of them?).
For
dessert, there’s a choice of housemade gelati such as olive oil black
pepper,
coffee cardamom or Nutella lollipop made by pastry chef Jennifer
Atchison (who
has since returned to Buckhead Life Group’s Pricci, to work her wonders
on the
dessert menu). We opted for a peppermint
chocolate chip ice cream sandwich, which had real mint flavor and a
sugary
chocolate crust. Yum.
Prices
at Piebar run from $4-$14.
Since it opened
in 2002, what’s
new about Woodfire
Grill (1782 Cheshire
Bridge Road NE, Atlanta, 30324; 404-347-9055; www.woodfiregrill.com)? The
addition of 40, no-reservations
seats at The
Café at Woodfire,
utilizing the warm and inviting front room of the restaurant where
diners
formerly waited for their tables.
Although you can order off
the main menu, which changes daily based with what inspires chef-owner
Michael Tuohy, the Café has its own tightly focused menu
of light
fare such as house-cured and artisan salami and meats, olives, panini, soups, pizzas,
salads and
burgers.
I sampled the cheese plate of some
unusual American varieties: Great Hill
Blue, a dry and crumbly cow’s milk from Massachusetts; Everona Dairy Piedmont, a salty, tangy,
buttery raw
sheep’s milk from Virginia; and Cypress Grove Humboldt fog, a creamy
aged raw
goat’s milk from California. The cured meat plate included prosciutto cotto, sopressata
and salame Calabrese, all
whisper-thin, ranging from blush to deep reddish-purple on the plate. The
bowl of
assorted glistening olives, ranging from the size of my pinky nail
to
my thumb, some green, some black, were all mingled with shaved fennel.
I’ll
know next time to order the
"Painted Hills
burger" rare next time; I asked for medium, and dryness leached some
of the flavor from it. But pommes
frites
were unimpeachable and the accompanying pickles were a revelation,
spiked with cinnamon and star anise.
A
peach-colored Basque
tuna salad with roasted potatoes and capers was like a fresh breeze off
the ocean, and I could smell the Margherita pizza with buffalo
mozzarella,
tomato and basil and garlic before it appeared on the table, its crust
well balanced, salty and chewy, and
not too
thick.
Upside-down peach cake in
a balsamic reduction served with lavender ice cream had an expected
grilled
flavor that enriched the fruit without the cloying sweetness. I capped the meal
off with an ice-cold limoncello
from Italy. Service
was confident, polished and attentive.
Prices run from $4-12.
--Suzanne Wright
NEW
YORK CORNER
by John Mariani
PIANO DUE
151 West 51st Street
212-399-9400
For years now the two-level space that once housed
the revolutionary Italian ristorante
Palio has been vacant, including the downstairs bar with its
spectacular 1985 mural of Siena's Palio horse race by Sandro Chia (left). Happily that is no
longer the case, and the refreshed mural has never looked
better. Upstairs Piano Due
("second floor") has opened under Chef-owner Michael Cetrulo, whose
work I was very impressed by when he took over the old Bouley space in TriBeCa in
2000 and refitted it as Scalini
Fedeli, whose polished, vaulted ceilings are repeated as a motif here
in midtown (in the same building as Le Bernardin and Café
Americain). Still, Piano Due's dining room color scheme lacks the
warmth of Scalini Fedeli and the high sophistication of
Palio. The colors here are pale--gray and beige, with some
welcome touches of deep red. Nevertheless, it is a 100-seat dining room
(below) with generous space
between tables, lovely banquettes, and a very fine service eager to
make you a regular, whether you're on business at lunch or in for a
leisurely dinner.
You can always tell when a chef cooks with
passion and personality, for while there are many classic Italian
dishes on the menu, each gets the Cetrullo treatment, while others are
wholly new renderings of modern Italian ideas sprung wholly from his
talent for balancing flavors and textures with just enough spark
to make them memorable.
Ecuadorian shrimp are grilled with
fresh rosemary, with a tomato-white bean sauce over bright green,
bitter-salty escarole, then sweetened with pignoli and raisins. Brioche
pastry is layered with smoked salmon and buffalo mozzarella in a
roasted red pepper sauce.
Italian
restaurants always shine brightest with their pastas, and Piano Due is
no exception, especially with dishes like risotto alla pescatora that
provides the right equilibrium between tender, spiced Italian rice and
shellfish. So, too, the heartiness of a wild game ragù
cooked
with barolo wine is toned down with a little cream as the sauce for
fresh pappardelle. Torsione
alla bolognese is pasta with braised
veal shank with its marrow, zested up with orange, lemon, and the
enrichment of mascarpone--a heavy but sublime dish.
Fat langoustines might have had fewer items
accompanying them, from a mustard-basil broth over glazed figs with
buffalo mozzarella and prosciutto, and there is a tendency to pile on
side dishes and condiments. But usually the whole plate works in
texture and balance. Thus, Colorado lamb chops come over farro with onions, pancetta, tomato, and sweet frutta di cremona. A veal chop is tinged with sage with
pancetta jus over asparagus that have been glazed with parmigiano and
shavings of black truffles. Pork shank is braised slowly and
served with its own juices, spiked with pepperoncini and mushrooms over
a saffron-yellow pea risotto.
There is no stinting on the desserts, which
are all imaginatively conceived, from a praline of Gianduja
and crispy meringue topped with white chocolate
mousse to a caramelized peach torta on phyllo with
almond cream and amaretto gelato.
For those who cannot bear an Italian meal without cheesecake, Piano Due
does one with both Italian and
American cream cheese, baked with a ginger-almond crust and served with blood orange
sorbet.
Piano Due's list is a strong one, with
sufficient bottlings below $50 of good quality to ease the budget.
Prices for antipasti run
$11-$16, pastas a very reasonable $15-$18, and main courses $26-$38.
The restaurant is open for lunch (Mon.-Fri.) and dinner, closed Sunday.
FOOD
WRITING 101: EARLY JOAN DIDION DIVISION 
"Foam green and jagged, the
Wiltern building on the corner of Western and Wilshire looks like a
block of crystallized magma that has erupted from the sea. Even though
its office tower is only 12 stories, the 74-year-old building has an
epic scale. Like Bullocks Wilshire to the east, the Wiltern is a
reminder of Wilshire Boulevard's early days, when it surged with a neon
rush, ran for miles through open country, and finally established that
the unfenced West could also be urban. Today the sight of these
buildings conjures Los Angeles at its most romantic. Juxtaposed
with the soulless, airtight structures that followed, they suggest the
frosted-glass door, the chipped gold-stenciled investigator's name, the
heavy black rotary phone ringing with the breathless clue. Their
art promontoires and weathered capstones transport us to a city of
fedora and pumps. One glimpse and you're in two eras at
once."--Opening paragraph of a review of Opus Restaurant in "Mid
City Modern" by Patrick Kuh, Los Angeles Magazine (July 2005).

WHY
THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND
London's The
National Trust launched a campaign on Thursday to find the country's
ugliest vegetable. Gardeners were encouraged to submit
anything "from two legged
carrots to corkscrew runner beans, which often taste great but are
rejected because of their looks." The Trust, which looks
after many of the country's historic
gardens, said it hoped the campaign would counter a trend among
retailers for stocking perfect-looking fruit and veg, regardless of its
taste. Entrants have nearly a year to produce something
ugly.
QUICK BYTES
*
From Nov. 11-13 the Hotel Bel-Air in L.A. invites guests
to a weekend of wine and food with food and wine critic, Anthony Dias
Blue, incl. an Italian dinner on Nov. 11 hosted by
Blue and Italian winemaker Michele Chiarlo ($95 pp); a wine
paired
dinner on Nov. 12 featuring great wines from the Piedmont region ($150
pp).; and on Sunday, a traditional Tuscan
Wine
Brunch ($75 pp). The hotel is offering the Italian
Weekend Package, with two nights in
a Deluxe Room and two tickets to
each of the weekend’s events, at $1,500 per couple. Call 310-943-6742.
* Washington
DC Chef José Andrés will hold three
special dinners to celebrate the publication of his new cookbook, Tapas: A Taste of Spain in America, at
all three Jaleo locations: Nov. 10
at Jaleo Crystal City
(703-413-8181); Nov. 14 at Jaleo Downtown (202-628-7949);
Nov. 15 at Jaleo Bethesda (301-913-0003). $85 pp, which
includes an autographed copy of his cookbook,
with 10% donated to DC Central Kitchen.
* On Nov. 15 NYC’s Fleur de Sel
celebrates its 5th
anniversary with a 6 course Anniversary Dinner by Chef/Owner Cyril
Renaud. with 50% of
the proceeds donated
to the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Pediatric Cancer Center. $125 pp. Call 212-460-9100.
* From November 16-20, Poggio
in Sausalito, CA, will celebrate the 1st Annual "5 Nights of Truffles," in
honor of Italy's Festa del Tartufo, featuring a menu
showcasing the
best of white truffles by Chef Chris Fernandez. Call 415-332-7771
or
visit www.poggiotrattoria.com.
* On Nov. 16 U.
of South Carolina alumni Mark Smith and Craig
Whitney, creators of Longfellow
wines, are headed back to Charleston for a special dinner
highlighting their wines at Circa
1886, featuring 4 courses prepared by
Executive Chef Marc Collins. Call
843-853-7828
or visit www.circa1886.com.
*
On Nov. 18 & 19 in Chicago. John Hart, Michael Davis and Paul Hart, of Hart Davis Hart Wine Co.
(hdhwine.com) will hold its
November auction at
the Chicago Athletic Association, with a pre-auction estimate at a
staggering $2.1-$3.2
million. For info call 312-482-9996.
* On Nov. 19 Chillingsworth
in Brewster, Mass, will celebrate the arrival of the Beaujolais
Nouveau, with dinner
and the wines of Georges DuBouef. $105 pp.
* On Nov. 19 &
20 in Woodinville,
WA, Woodinville Women and Wine and
Willows Lodge present “Girlfriends’ Weekend,” a celebration of
food,
champagne and holiday spirit, incl. a reception, seminars
on creating festive decorations for
the home and a holiday luncheon, a 6-course dinner with enjoy
Boizel Champagnes prepared by Barking Frog
executive chef Bobby Moore. Sunday morning, Christina Longo, pastry
chef at the
Barking Frog, will present holiday chocolates and desserts. Call 425-424-3900 or visit
www.willowslodge.com. From $340 pp.
*
On Nov. 19 San
Francisco’s
Farallon, in association
with 51 of the West
Coast’s top pinot noir producers, will hold its PinotFest
2005. $85. Call
415-956-.6969 or visit www.farallonrestaurant.com.
* The Hilton Head
Marriott Beach & Golf Resort’s offers a “Dine
Around” Package, from only $169 per room, per night, incl. dinner at
one of
seven of the finest island restaurants, incl. Antonio’s,
Frankie Bones, Boathouse II,
Harbourmaster’s Ocean Grill, CQ’s, Marley’s and Old Fort Pub. Call 843-686-8400, or visit www.HiltonHeadMarriott.com.
*
From Nov. 19-20 a “Parent and Child Cooking
Class” will be held at Sofitel
New
York,
with Master
Pastry Chef Vincent Mary from the world-renowned Lenôtre
Cooking
School
in Paris.
The all-day event is priced at $75 pp,
incl. lunch and dinner. Participants will receive personalized shirts
and
aprons, souvenir pictures of the class, and a signed copy of Chef
Vincent
Mary’s new children’s cookbook. Call 212-782-3029.
* From
Nov. 25-27 the 23rd
annual Wine
Country Thanksgiving will be held to give visitors a chance to explore the scenic beauty of
the Willamette Valley and taste everything from Pinot Noir to
Riesling and
Pinot Gris from 137 member wineries and tasting rooms. For information
on all
the wineries open during this weekend, or to order a touring map with
winery
listings, lodging and dining, visit www.willamettewines.com
or call 503-646-2985.
*
El Bizcocho at Rancho Bernardo Inn in San Diego offers a Thanksgiving
the "Eat Up, Tee Up and Wind
Down" package for two people at $798. incl. accommodations for two
nights, Thanksgiving Dinner incl.
wine pairings, Pumpkin Body Exfoliating
Treatment and Massage, one round of golf, Turkey-A-Go-Go for two upon
departure. visit www.ranchobernardoinn.com
or
call (800) 770-7329.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MARIANI'S VIRTUAL GOURMET NEWSLETTER is published weekly. Editor/Publisher:
John Mariani. Contributing Writers: Robert Mariani, Naomi
Kooker, Kirsten Skogerson, Edward Brivio, Mort
Hochstein, Lucy Gordan, Suzanne Wright. Contributing
Photographers: Galina Stepanoff-Dargery, Bobby Pirillo. Technical
Advisor: Gerry McLoughlin.
John Mariani is a columnist for Esquire, Wine Spectator, Bloomberg News and
Radio, and Diversion.
He is author of The Encyclopedia
of American Food & Drink (Lebhar-Friedman), The Dictionary
of Italian Food and Drink (Broadway), and, with his wife Galina, the
award-winning new Italian-American Cookbook (Harvard Common
Press).
Any of John Mariani's books below
may be ordered from amazon.com by clicking on the cover image.
copyright John Mariani 2005
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