Sacha all time great value
#1
Posted 14 June 2004 - 08:54 AM
Sacha first opened about thirty five years ago, and was initially run by Sacha’s parents, Carlos Hormaechea and Pitila Mosquera, a very peculiar couple who converted their restaurant in the place of reunion for the less official gourmets and night owls... After her husband’s death, Pitila entirely run the business almost until she passed away a few years ago, when she was already helped by her soon Sacha.
If you ask Sacha what is his profession, he’ll probably tell you that he’s a photographer. And even though he hasn’t taken any culinary studies, he’s grown up in a kitchen and has a terrific traditional gastronomy basis, the heritage of both Galician and Catalonian rots.
I would consider Sacha as a great cook whose biggest virtue is to know what he’s doing and what he wants to do. His cookery is very much out of the latest craze, what doesn’t mean it’s stuck. And tries to maintain in our days a lot of traditional recipes without renouncing to introduce some new ideas under that traditional basis.
I think that Sacha represents the restaurant that any of us would be looking for in the next years. The culinary scene will move again, in my opinion, to this kind of places, “family restaurants” (in the same way of the “family doctors”) where the client and not the cook plays the leading role.
In my last visits I’ve enjoyed tremendous dishes as (I need some help here with the translation) as guiso de butifarra con colmenillas, caldeiro de morcillo del Valle del Esla, risotto de perrechicos o ensalada de pulpo.
Well, I would consider Sacha as a must visit in Madrid.
#2
Posted 14 June 2004 - 09:31 AM
Quote
Butifarra sausage with morels stew, Leg bone fleshy part of Valle del Esla's veal, Calocybe gambosa risotto or octopus salad.
#3
Posted 14 June 2004 - 09:43 AM
Rogelio, on Jun 14 2004, 04:31 PM, said:
Quote
Butifarra sausage with morels stew, Leg bone fleshy part of Valle del Esla's veal, Calocybe gambosa risotto or octopus salad.
Calocybe gambosa being St. George's mushrooms in English, just in case somebody thinks they are prawns
Chloe
Ponte de Lima
#4
Posted 14 June 2004 - 11:31 AM
Eduardo, on Jun 14 2004, 08:54 AM, said:
That well could be the case. There's a risk that at some point in time the current trends lead to a major disconnection between patrons and cooks. The cooking becoming so complex that only cooks could appreciate it. There are examples of similar patterns in other fields. Free jazz immediately comes to my mind: music for musicians (basically).
Technique has to obey a superior goal. Taste. Naturally, IMHO.
#5
Posted 14 June 2004 - 02:31 PM
WorldTable
Recent WorldTable posts include: comments about reporting on Michelin stars in The NY Times, the NJ proposal to ban foie gras, Michael Ruhlman's comments in blogs about the NJ proposal and Bill Buford's New Yorker article on the Food Network.
My mailbox is full. You may contact me via worldtable.com.
#6
Posted 14 June 2004 - 05:18 PM
I would agree, though, that top level restaurants have a force that probably in the end would lead them to balance: economic success.
#7
Posted 14 June 2004 - 08:25 PM
(Note to non-Spanish eGulleters: local joke here...)
#8
Posted 02 July 2006 - 01:34 AM
Sacha cooks eclectic recipes with a galician touch but always with a deep gourmet feeling. From the simplest cockles perfectly cooked in Vapoonde (a vapor microwave oven) with olive oil and ground pepper to the absoltely must marbled tuna belly with jabugo fat and miso sauce all the dishes are tasty, perfectly cooked always with a surprising twist.
Highlights apart from the above mentioned were a renewed empanada de xoubas now a sardines mille feuilles or a lobster with escalibada (roasted vegetables) essence.
And you can try here the delicious and almost impossible to find Emilio Rojo Ribeiro.
All i all a delicious experience that is sometimes overlooked here and deserves more than a visit a year. Mainly in the summer when they open the romantic terrace. (this year it's been delayed due to some street works).
#9
Posted 02 July 2006 - 04:24 AM
It's pretty clear in my mind that Sacha is now even better than 20 years ago. Sacha's mother was a wonderful cook, but he's added the extra dimension of modernity and originality to the dishes. In this category of 'friendly bistros with great, ambitious food' there's only Arce that will compete with Sacha in Madrid. And it's not a category that's chock-full of members in Spain or even in Europe!
#11
Posted 04 July 2006 - 06:33 AM
We ordered berberechos, with a touch of olive oil and lemon. Fabulous, huge pieces, extremely fresh, no sand, and cooked to perfection.
Our second starter was "fake lasagna of txangurro", which was basically a very thin crepe filled with a good amount of txangurro and a sauce on top. Superb.
A little dissapointment came when ordering our main dish. We heard that steak tartare and solomillo are two classics from the menu, so I asked about them. The waiter said that that day he wouldn´t recomend neither of them. He told us to order "chuleton" instead. We did and it was good, but just not as good as it can be in Asador Pelotari or Julian de Tolosa. The taste not as good and a bit taugher than in these 2 places, but still good. I thought it was original that they served it with a baked potato and gravy sauce on the side.
2 desserts and a bottle of Campillo reserva 98 and mineral water came to 116 euros. Overall highly recommended.
#12
Posted 05 July 2006 - 08:29 AM
Paco, on Jul 4 2006, 03:33 PM, said:
Paco, are you sure it was "chuleton" what they offered you?? (no bad intentions on my question). I go quite often there and I have never seen it on the menu. I wonder if it was “chuleta de ternera del Valle del Esla” (veal from Valle del Esla), which some days is included on the menu, but has not much to do with what we consider a “chuleton”.
#14
Posted 06 July 2006 - 01:02 AM
pedro, on Jul 5 2006, 09:13 PM, said:
Yes, I thought of that after posting my comments. I’ve never asked Sacha about it, but I think that what he serves as Villagodio is more “lomo bajo” (low loin??) than “lomo alto”.
I’m going there for dinner tonight, so I’ll try to find out about this and also about the terrace, that, as far as I know, it should be ready by this week.
#15
Posted 02 March 2007 - 10:42 AM
Escabeche oyster.

Vapoonde cooked cockles with olive oil and ground pepper.

Skate with vinagrette.

Changurro (crab meat stew) with sea urchin.

Lobster with little octopus stewed.

Old style cooked potatoes with marrow and leek cream and truffles.

Pigeon and mushrooms rice.

Steak tartare.

Black and white. Ice cream with coffee sorbet.

Pictures talk by themselves.

Sign In
Register
Help

Reply
