Country and the Café at Country under Chef Willis Loughhead
#1
Posted 02 April 2008 - 11:25 AM
Finally the official announcement that Willis Loughhhead has taken over at Country for Doug.
He's been there since the end of last year.
I worked with him at the Bar Room at the Modern and wish him the best. Great Chef!
I leave it up to the higher-ups to determine if perhaps a new thread is in order?
#2
Posted 02 April 2008 - 11:41 AM
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#3
Posted 02 April 2008 - 11:48 AM
oakapple, on Apr 2 2008, 11:41 AM, said:
That was almost two months ago. He'd also mentioned to me that he would probably revamp the Cafe menu first and gradually tackle the fine dining side second.
I will say I still haven't eaten there under either chef just visited the bar for drinks.
#4
Posted 12 May 2008 - 11:53 AM
http://gothamist.com...is_loughhea.php
I had the pleasure of being invited in by Willis this weekend to take what he called the "Charcuterie Challenge" in the cafe as I had been to Benoit recently and wanted to compare.
There is some EXCELLENT charcuterie being made in NYC these days and Country's is near the top. Most of the samplings were better than dishes I've had at Bar Boulud and as good as the platter currently at Benoit.
While I ended up having 3 courses of charcuterie at Country on Saturday I left feeling full but not ill as they are taking particular care to make excellent, rich dishes that aren't overpowering in their fattiness. Great balance.
Standouts were anything with lamb, the liverwurst, and some of the smoked hams.
#5
Posted 12 May 2008 - 02:07 PM
flinflon28, on May 12 2008, 11:53 AM, said:
http://gothamist.com...is_loughhea.php
This post has been edited by oakapple: 13 May 2008 - 09:38 AM
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#6
Posted 23 May 2008 - 05:04 PM
Still, you will find no mention of Willis in the three-star review of the Bar Room that ran in the New York Times in January of 2007. This is in part because Willis left before the review ran (though I presume the meals Frank Bruni based the review on were largely on Willis's watch) and in part because Kreuther, as the executive chef of the whole operation, gets credit and blame for whatever happens in the restaurant. Nonetheless, when you take into account the totality of the circumstances, you basically have a chef who earned three New York Times stars without ever having his name mentioned. So I'd have to say that earns Willis Loughhead the title of "Best Chef You've Never Heard Of."
The Bar Room may very well be back up to par, but I have no opinion on the matter. I haven't been back lately. But I did have the chance to visit with Willis today at Country as part of his low-key blogger-directed charm offensive. I don't think the restaurant really wants to push PR to print media, because it already holds three stars from the New York Times so a re-review has far more downside than upside potential.
I was there during the day so, after a tour of both kitchens and some discussion with Willis, I only sampled Cafe items. I tried five dishes, selected (and paid for, thanks) by Willis. Enough to get an idea of what's going on at Country. Enough to want to go back.
Anyway, here's what I tried:

That's the assortment of house-made sausages from the charcuterie section of the menu (called the "butcher block"): the light-colored fat one is pork sausage with raclette (cheese), the skinny ones are merguez (lamb) and the dark fat one is morcilla (aka blood sausage). All three were superb, and the morcilla and pork-with-raclette were the best examples of their kind I've had. There's also an arugula salad with pickled vegetables and a schmear of mustard on the plate, which is a swell looking Staub cast-iron tray. It's a lot of food, very high quality, and the retail on it is $21. One of Willis's goals is to give good value at the Cafe and, while Country will never be a cheap restaurant, I do think these dishes are very fairly priced all things considered.

This here is the hamachi crudo (raw yellowtail) served over a disc of caramelized watermelon, topped with avocado, greens and elderflower vinaigrette, and garnished with totally unnecessary out-of-season cherry tomatoes. Aside from the tomatoes, though, the dish is awesome. Excellent hamachi, and the watermelon (which is cooked under a weight on the plancha) is a real surprise. You might not even guess it was watermelon, it's so deeply caramelized and transformed by the cooking process. Actual retail price $15.

Grouper with chorizo, hearts of palm, tomato and asparagus. The winning pieces of this dish are the chorizo and the fish fumet that's the basis of the sauce. I like the combination of mild white fish and chorizo -- they used it to good effect at the Modern -- but I know from experience that this won't be everybody's favorite dish. I'd call it good not great. Fairly priced at $26.

This I thought was absolutely first rate: asparagus risotto with escargots. It's a massive portion of nice, loose, al dente risotto, served with spears of asparagus, escargots, braised endive and beef jus. This dish alone could be lunch, for $18. We chatted a little bit about the various schools of thought on risotto, and like me (my view on this has evolved over the years but this is where I am now) Willis prefers a looser, soupier texture. The rice is par-cooked before service, and finished on the pickup, but it comes out really well -- and you don't have to wait half an hour for the dish.

Finally, the Country burger, on a house-baked sesame bun (all the bread is baked in house) with pepper-and-onion relish. The remarkable thing about the hamburger is the deep beefy flavor, which comes from a huge assortment of parts of the cow being used in the mix. Country is buying whole cows from a farm in Rhinebeck, NY, using the premium cuts (filet, strip, etc.) in various dishes and grinding much of the rest into hamburger. I might prefer a coarser grind, but the flavor is great, as is the composition. It also comes with really nice, and nicely presented, fries, for a total of $18 -- note that the perspective in this photo makes the burger look way smaller than it is:

Here's Willis with some of the meats he's curing in the wine room:

And here's a really bad photo I took of the bar from a table in the Cafe. The reason I'm posting it is to give an idea of the soaring space one enjoys at Country.
Executive Director, eGullet Society, sshaw@egstaff.org
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#7
Posted 24 May 2008 - 05:45 AM
However, we did have dinner in the main dining room a few weeks ago (report here). The menu up there was a real snoozer, with none of the excitement Loughhead is producing in the Cafe, or that he did at the Bar Room. It was also too short a menu (not enough choices), and meat entrées were over-cooked on the Saturday night we were there.
We've been to Country four times since it opened. We love the room, and the service team is first-class — almost Danny Meyer-esque. They serve two amuses-bouches and have a petits-fours cart almost as good as Ducasse had at the Essex House. Oh, and I agree with FG about the risottos. The seafood risotto we had was a knockout.
But due to the overall lack of ambition on the upstairs menu, coupled with two entrées overcooked, we wouldn't be inclined to return to the main dining room, but for the fact that we've had so many wonderful meals there in the past. So we'll give it a few more months and then try again.
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#8
Posted 24 May 2008 - 07:39 AM
I do think there's still a transition in progress, and that it was perhaps a tactical error to keep the restaurant running straight through the transition. Even a week-long closing could have given the kitchen team the time needed to open with a full-on redesigned and vetted menu. I think the Cafe menu is also still a work in progress, but apparently farther along than the upstairs menu.
Executive Director, eGullet Society, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
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#9
Posted 24 May 2008 - 08:57 AM
It sounds like a monumental task to be running such an operation. I think there might be room service involved.
#10
Posted 24 May 2008 - 11:06 AM
overall, were the presentations well-done?
#11
Posted 24 May 2008 - 12:45 PM
Willis is responsible for room service and banquets as well as the two restaurants. I believe he's the executive chef of the hotel.
Executive Director, eGullet Society, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
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#13
Posted 25 May 2008 - 05:48 AM
flinflon28, on May 24 2008, 08:57 AM, said:
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#14
Posted 25 May 2008 - 06:05 AM
Sethro, I think that's a bit harsh. It's supposed to be a cafe. The plates in the formal dining room are, I'm sure, more formal.
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#15
Posted 25 May 2008 - 10:22 AM
Marc Shepherd
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#16
Posted 30 June 2008 - 09:52 AM
Geoffrey Zakarian told Grub Stree that, I've been trying to do a steakhouse concept for a while...." Methinks he protests too much.
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#17
Posted 25 August 2008 - 04:35 PM
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Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
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#19
Posted 26 August 2008 - 10:24 AM
DutchMuse, on Aug 26 2008, 10:04 AM, said:
What I can't assess is how much of this was Loughhead's fault. Was the dining room's decline his responsibility, or something that was happening before he came on board. Zakarian hasn't exactly been forthcoming. After Eater put Country on deathwatch, Zakarian protested that business was booming. Country Steak was announced very shortly thereafter. It clearly must have been already in the works when Zakarian made his earlier claim that the restaurant was in great shape. His explanation for the shift wasn't really believable.
Marc Shepherd
http://nyjournal.squarespace.com/
#20
Posted 26 August 2008 - 01:13 PM
I'll be the first to say I've worked with Willis in the past so my take maybe biased but some of my personal observations on his tenure are that the cafe was the most broken piece of the operation, probably the most inconsistant yet the revenue center of the enterprise aside from private dining which was also probably an afterthought. Fixing them was critical to the business and most likely provided the upstairs with enough funds to stay open as long as it did.
Running the Bar Room at the Modern is not the same scope as the entire hotel operation at Country but some of Willis's other ventures in Florida and at the Ritz show he certainly has the stones for the task but may not have been aware how troubled everything may have been when he went in.
I mean it's not like the previous chef had a reputation for running the tightest ship.
Front of house operations were also falling apart around the same time...can't be sure how much the chef would have to do with that.
This post has been edited by flinflon28: 26 August 2008 - 01:49 PM

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