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Everything posted by John Talbott
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Host's Note Hi Folks. Let's confine the France Forum to restaurants and food in France and use the Japan Forum for discussion of the same there. Thanks.
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Tonight's TV news at 20h00 on 2 had a piece on wwoofing in France, so it exists. They say it's Anglosaxon in origin but spreading.
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Lobrano, Alexander. Hungry For Paris: The ultimate guide to the city’s 102 best restaurants. Random House, NY, 2008. Our member, Alexander Lobrano, has written a thoroughly delightful and personal guide to Paris places that should serve as a very helpful resource for those coming to Paris to eat. It’s sort of a cross between a food guide and a food book, that is, it describes how he found himself at 102 restaurants, what he ate and why you should go. While covering some of the great places, it also covers bistrots and brasseries, and is as generous in its praise as it is critical of those 12 places he omits, mentioning why for each one. I was surprised that it is as up to date as it is, covering such relatively new places as the Breizh Café, Chateaubriand and Hier & Aujourd’hui. On a personal note of my own, I found that I agreed with him most of the time, including of places, such as Helene Darroze, Allard and l’Ami Louis, he chose not to cover. I think it really will soon become a classic; I just hope that its publisher doesn’t take years to ask for the next edition.
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Holy Moly! And he is, too! ← It's kind of scary to see the meal go by again, even with a shakier camera.
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Despair not Raisa; Just last week, in Figaroscope’s Dossier, the team listed and described places under 30 €: Right Bank La Cotte Roti Le Temps au Temps M comme Martine O.J. Left Bank l’Epigramme L’Agassin Au Bon Accueil Near suburbs Le Georgeon Two others places received mention: Le Bistrot de Robert + Les Petites Sorcieres Myself, I would strongly endorse l'Epigramme, l'Agassin + Le Georgeon from among these and Le Clocher Pereire, l'Entetee + Opus Vins from the Cheap Eats topic. All pretty new and all pretty good.
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The Week of April 21st, 2008 In Sunday’s NYT there was a piece about Reader’s Picks that named Le Comptoir, l’As du Fallafel, le Bistro de la Muette + Le Hide as restaurants in Paris to go to. Monday in Le Fooding, Yves Nespoulous wrote about L’Endroit in Honfleur. Tuesday-Wednesday, in ANP, Jerome Berger wrote {yet another} article about Gordon Ramsay with no ratings. Wednesday, Richard Hesse in Paris Update reviewed the Thai Madame Shawn. Wednesday, in Figaroscope, Emmanuel Rubin awarded three hearts to the Le Squer/Ledoyen-directed ETC., 2, rue La Perouse in the 16th, 01.49.52.10.10, closed Saturday lunch and Sundays, costing 68 at lunch (with wine) and a la carte 80-100 € for a surf and turf “fantasy,” pigs feet and veal liver, entrecote, and caramel ice. Two hearts went to the reprised Chez Julien, 1, rue du Pont Louis-Philippe in the 4th, 01.42.78.31.64, open 7/7, costing 35-50 € for a terrine maison, steak with shallots and a cod brandade. One heart was awarded to the Paris brasserie/Manhattan diner Café Central, coordinates given before serving fish and chips and hamburgers etc for 25-30 €. Finally busted hearts went to Passage Saint-Roch, 15, rue des Pyramides in the 1st, 01.44.50.77.07, open 7/7 but serving food as sad as military rations and the Indian Saveurs des Indes, coordinates given before. This week, in Figaroscope’s Dossier, the team listed and described Tea Salons: Russian Kusmi tea Shop Food Bonpoint Film lovers Salon du Pantheon Boudoir The cool Institution Carette Garden side Café Medicis Neo T Charming tea time places Musee de la Vie Romantique, La Cocotte, 1728 + Les Ombres. Francois Simon in his Hache Menu went to the 1T Scribe, 1, rue Scribe in the 9th, 01.44.71.24.24, open 7/7 where he spent 54 € on tea plus a Caesar salad, éclair and “fingerfood.” He said go if you’re nearby but don’t go far. Wednesday-Thursday in Le Monde, Jean Claude Ribault reviewed places in the north, specifically: La Flamiche in Roye, A L'Huîtrière + Le Sébastopol in Lille and the Château de Montreuil in the town of that name. Thursday, in l’Express, François-Régis Gaudry reviewed l’Agape, coordinates given before, carefully detailing where the veal, lotte and pigeon come from and how (complicatedly and carefully) they are prepared. In addition, his colleague Pierrick Jégu, reviewed Le Quai in Tain l’Hermitage. Friday in Les Echos Jean Louis Galesne wrote a piece on restos that use seasonal products that one can now see in transition: Maxan, Au Vieux Comptoir, La Cagouille, Ze Kitchen Galerie + Mori Venice Bar . In Saturday’s Figaro Francois Simon and Alexandra Michot, in “Croque Notes” and two other articles wrote about the 50 Top Restaurant survey done in the UK magazine Restaurant. The header on Page One of the Section is entitled “Le Flop du Top 50.” Saturday/Sunday, in Bonjour Paris, Margaret Kemp had an article on l’Hostellerie Berard 45 minutes from Marseille and John Talbott had an article on “The Louvre is where we want to eat.” April’s WHERE had three restos reviewed by Alexander Lobrano – La Truffiere, La Bigarrade + l’Arome. Please post comments here and not in the Digest thread.
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In my post about Apr 08 restos I recounted meals at two places she and no one else "discovered," so I'm a loyal reader of her blog too.
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There are three stations, Rive Droite (SNCF that departs St Lazare) that's an easy walk down the Bvd de la Reine to the hotel/restaurant; Chateau/Rive Gauche (RER C from St Michel, Alma etc) that's slightly to the southeast of the Chateau and a longer walk to the hotel but ideal for the Chateau and Chantier (SNCF from Montparnasse) quite a hike to both the hotel and Chateau. Get your hands on a Michelin Red Guide and you'll see their locations.
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April 08 – Hide, Veraison, Rollin, Veranda, Grannie, Rollin, Opus Vins, Bis-Tro Vin Sobre, Sobane, Agapé, Enishi, Cottelettes, Petite Chaise Classic French by a cool Japanese chef. 7.0 Hide aka Koba’s Bistro, 10, rue de General Lanrezac in the 17th, 01.45.74.15.81, closed Saturday lunch and Sundays, menu 26 E for 3 courses, 29 E for 3 courses and 25 cl of wine and about 35 E a la carte. When I read Emmanuel Rubin et al’s 1 heart review in January I assumed (wrongly) that this was a Japanese place despite their statement that the cuisine was closer to Escoffier than Kobe and that 1 heart meant “no way.” But surprisingly, his colleague Francois Simon in today’s* “Dossier” of places under 30 E in Figaroscope called it the “deal of the month”; so of course I called and booked immediately – smart move John. It was quite, quite good and very, very affordable. I don’t know how Rubin et al could describe the food as classic, correct and familial and give it only 1 heart while M. Simon described the dishes as unctuous, in good shape and solid and conclude that one should add it to one’s list of “necessary places to go.” But back to the descriptor of the place – “traditional” – on the walls are hanging Willy Ronis’ photo of the kid and the baguette and George Brassens of the stairs in Montmartre – pretty French I’d say. While they have paper napkins and paper placemats (but get a demerit for no paper towels in the loo), it is a linen not a paper quality place. The service person was delightful and funny, the menu very large and varied, the bread crusty and tasty and the wine unusual (good). I ordered from the a la carte ardoise; starting with sautéed foie gras on the bed of mache perfectly dressed so the vinegar offset the natural fatty-sweet tone of the liver; then had a cote of veal undercooked as much as he could with mashed potatoes wonderfully flavored with parsley and something else I couldn’t put my finger on and forgot to ask about and an overkill side-dish of noodles and butter; and terminated with a coffee gourmand, all the rage in Paris this Spring (with Ethiopian coffee, crème brulee and salty coffee ice that was super.) My bill was 44 E but I suspect the 29 E deal would be pretty good. Go back? I cannot wait to test it out with my gang. *My last meal was April 16th, fully paid for. The perfect new local bistrot. 6.8 La Veraison, 64, rue de la Croix Nivert in the 15th, 01.45.32.39.39, closed Sundays and Mondays has menus with 2 courses at 22 or 3 at 26 and the wines are also reasonably priced, starting with glasses at a coupla Euros and 50 cl for 10 €. I went on a wonderfully sunny but still chilly day* and was startled on entering to find a guy cooking at a griddle facing the street window. He said hello, greeted me while turning shrimp and the Madame escorted me to a table 10 feet from him where I watched eagerly as he cooked – everything – alone. The place really reminds me of Spring, but with an outside sign like Ribouldingue, small (28 covers), nice selection of choices and good natural wines (he comes from Louis Vins). My sautéed gambas were perfectly cooked but not really tasteworthy, the salad with dressing adding a bit. But the magret de canard a la plancha was first-rate and sliced thin and almost raw (as ordered) with unnecessary potatoes and slices of spice bread (unnecessary because the duck alone was enough and stood on its own.) Then I had a tiramisu in a glass atop speculoos (see our friend Chocolate & Zucchini’s account with one speculoo(s) stuck in – delicious. It was wonderful to watch this chef (an ex-technician) work all alone supplying 15 customers on-time food without a bit of rush-rush (he embodied all the cool-cool, zen-zen, calme-calme that President Bling-Bling said he had but lacks.) The coffee came with a great moist gateau. Oh, and after serving everyone he stuck around and chatted me up or vice-versa in a most pleasant way. No quibbles? Sure, there were too many 2-3 € supplements – just bump the prices up 2-4 € Stephane. The bill should have been 42.50 € but they were out of the wine I ordered and thus it crept up a bit. Go back? Sure, when you’re in love, with a person or his/her food, you miss the flaws. *My last meal was April 17th, fully paid. Gordon Ramsay, in Paris, you’re kidding me, F*** D*** S*** C***? No, I’m not. 5.8 La Veranda at the Trianon Palace, 1 bvd de la Reine in Versailles, 01.30.84.55.55, open 7/7, opened to uniformly negative reviews all the way from a busted heart from Emmanuel Rubin in Figaroscope to Trish Deseine’s kids in Le Fooding saying the fish had “un arrière-goût de sang” and the “basil sorbet avait un goût bizarre.” Whoa! “Go there, not on your life,” said one of our pals when we invited him for a friendly Sunday lunch. In any case, five hearty souls ventured out of the city in a very easy-riding Alfa-Romeo provided by diner #4 (I’m numbering them as American waitfolk do, I’m told) and we arrived at this spectacular hotel palace on the edge of the Versailles gardens. We took a lot of photos, stumbled through the rain over unfinished walkways and entered a fairy land. The outré bar alone had about 15 tables where people (I assume) denied access to the inner sanctuary, were sipping, snacking and eating. We passed through a two-story bar stacked with glasses and bottles of wines, etc. facing Ramsay’s weekday show (featuring a 150 € tasting menu) and entered the much nicer veranda facing the gardens, again two stories tall. Wow! It’s good to be the King. Firsts: #1 and I had the stuffed calamar rings (coulda fooled me) with fried tentacles hidden under a salad, not bad; #2 a yummy Jerusalem and cauliflower and something else soup, #3 risotto with chorizo and parmesan (I’ll never be happy til I’m back in Modena, but this will serve well until then), and #4 a pasta with an incredible red sauce and a lobster atop that I deemed the “Best of Show.” Mains were for #1 a monkfish that was OK, #2 and 4 an unbelievable veal T-Bone – veal T-Bone, when have you seen that on a menu? – it was succulent, with a Bearnaise sauce and so-so potatoes that were sort of faux-Noirmoutier and a fine salad, #3 a piece of lamb with top-class (you won’t believe this) onions rings, and I had what I thought was the last horse in the race – a beef stew that was undistinguished but came with lardons of pancetta (very tasty) on a bed of spinach (good) and cream of celery (fabulous). The bread/rolls were warm and OK, the butter deemed nul by popular vote and the tiramisu OK. For dessert my wonderful French resulted in three of us having the moelleux that was not the usual flat round thing but a tall tower with a most marvelous crunchy exterior that we were instructed to cut the tops off; #3 had a cold but wonderfully tasty and moist crème brulee and #4 a pannacotta that was OK (but about which secretly I rejoiced they’d misheard me about). We had a Chateau Simeone Palette wine (very rare I was told, and very cher I discovered), 2 bottles of Chateldun and 5 coffees = 425 €. Oh yah, they forgot the before/with/after nummies until our assertive but most seductive #4 diner asked about (the only service gaffe if one ignores the waiters deaf ear to the difference between a café noisette and café crème.) Should you go? Yes, at least once. Come on, sometimes the French critics are operating as if Waterloo were yesterday. *My last meal was April 21st, fully paid for. Another French place with a Japanese chef. What’s up? 5.7 Grannie: Chez Naolo, 27, rue Pierre Leroux in the 7th, 01.47.34.94.14, closed Saturday noon and Sundays, is yet another place Francois Simon “found” that few others have reported on. March 9th he bemoaned the fact that the restaurant was nearly empty while he felt the food was quite good, inventive and creative while building on his Bardet and other training and he worried that the guy was earning less than the SMIC and might therefore return to Japan. I have little to add to that; same thing today, my neighbor and I were the only diners and the food was way above average. Like Simon, I cannot figure out why (my neighbor posited that it’s the old key to retail sales – location, location, location. It's tucked off way behind the Hopital Necker and Bon Marche.) In any case, the food is not only good it’s a bargain; 23 for 2-courses at lunch and 3 for 30 €, wines at 15 € a carafe. They started us off with those Japanese cocktail snacks that were no different than one gets in Asian stores, but still, it was a nice touch. My neighbor ordered a terrine of rabbit and eel that I thought was an incredibly strong pairing and delicious. I had an equally good risotto with shrimp – me who scoffs at any risotto made more that 50 km from Modena. Then she had morels with other vegetables whose sauce she found strange but I thought was great. I had a rollatine of rabbit stuffed with some sort of forcemeat and pistachios, again quite tasty. It came with incredibly wonderfully-full-tasting asparagus. Neither of us ordered dessert – me because I was truly stuffed and satisfied and why push our luck? We did have coffee, but no bottled water; thus two formulas and a carafe = 66 €. Go? I join Simon in imploring you to go so we don’t lose this fine talent because he can’t fill the place, although my dining partner chatted up the waitress and she said things were busier at night. *My last meal was April 22nd, fully paid for. Le Rollin - No different from a thousand others, or not? 5.5 Le Rollin, 92, av Ledru Rollin in the 11th, 01.48.06.51.92, was a place mentioned in the last paragraph of one of Francois Simon's ”Croque Notes" on Taillevent in which he contrasted it by saying how different it was - 360º (I think he meant 180º) - including the fact that the entire "menu" here was the price of two cups of coffee at Taillevent. It looks like a thousand other bistrots in Paris, why did Simon single it out so? I'll try to explain. When I arrived* my buddies were in the primo table by the window enjoying a kir and sausage very good). The ardoise is indeed very reasonable - 13 E for a plat and dessert and my one friend loved his soup amuse bouche, the red tuna and ratatouille and strawberries with ice cream. I had the "cappuccino" of mushrooms, with sautéed mushroom aside and a tart foam sauce, which I thought was great. Then the other two of us had the confit de canard and potatoes with ham chunks, the skin of the duck was not crisp but the product with a tad salt, was very good. Two of us finished with the mouelleux of chocolate which were fine but not runny enough for me. With 2 kirs, 1 liter of wine and three coffees, the bill was 89.00 Euros. At the end, at the door, our host asked our strange bunch of Romanian, French and American polyglot types who had called to reserve - "'twas I, I admitted." And how did you learn of us. "Francois Simon," said I. "Ah well, please come back at night when we have a more elaborate menu with the likes of scallops, risotto, etc." Go back? My friends intend to soon. * My last meal was April 18th, fully paid. Precious, simply precious; and good food and wine too. 5.5 Opus Vins, 72, rue Vasco de Gama in the 15th, 01.42.50.14.91, closed Saturday lunch, Sundays and Monday nights has a 20 € 3-course meal at lunch and with cheese at night it runs 30€. Except for Caroline Mignot and Hostelerie magazine, this place seems to have escaped everyone and that’s a shame, because it’s really quite good. I’d read about it in/on Mignot’s blog and kept waiting for confirmation from another source but finally gave up and went.* It appears tiny (20 covers in the front room and 10 in back – much like its neighbor Le Beurre Noisette) but it manages apparently. There’s a small ardoise for food (4, 4, 4) but an enormous wine list (vide the name). I started with a pasta with a Calabresi sauce that had capers and grated cheese and what I swear she said was dried fish eggs but they were sliced as if from a roll – delicious. Then I had a sizeable grilled whole bar (good product esp for the price - 12 €), with great sautéed mushrooms which really set the fine quality of the bar off (although the crushed/diced tomatoes and broccoli added nothing). I ended with an homage to Colette – a pre-prepared ile flottante, again delicious. The bread was so-so, the coffee superb – so why just 5.5? Well, I dunno, it’s unfair I suppose, but given the nearby competition – Beurre Noisette, Autour du Mont, l’Os a Moelle, etc, it’s got to compete against them for my heart. But it goes to the top of my list for back-packing relatives; think about it – 20 for 3 courses and a glass of wine for 3.80 = 23.80 €. Nice, good, affordable – what’s the hitch? None * My last meal was April 21st, fully paid. Another great “find”; how will this month end? 5.2* Le Bis-tro Vin Sobre**, the second such Vin Sobre in town, Bis-tro, get it, at 35, ave Duquesne in the 7th, open 7/7, took over the former Calmont space (some doors inside still recognize that) a while back and got rather good reviews right off the bat. I saw its awning saying wines by Bernard, which I thought was cool, but not knowing any Bernard except M. Pivot, proceeded with caution – but the awesome chalkboard of wines, which runs from 16-70 € and has the Saint-Nicolas de Bourgueil from my favorite wine couple in France – the Bretons - so, hey. The place is glowing and gleaming, full of polyglot UNESCO suit-types and serves up HUGE portions of food (the Cote de Boeuf ten feet away with frites and salad flowing off the plate put Durgin Park to shame). I started with the croustillant of jamboneau with red pepper and if I hadn’t ordered it myself I’d have thought it was a phyllo wrapped brik of shredded chicken with onions, it was so tasty. I had trouble finishing it and then I was confronted with the daily special – a cote de cochon – huge, with zucchini and sliced-thin red peppers mixed in with a thick sauce of beets – again very good. Good bread and an “’Antidote St Baume des Terres Promises” wine (any wine from the Promised Land sounds good to me) made the meal even better. Go? To another hellova meal, no and’s, if’s or but’s about it if I lived/worked nearby - you bet! *A word about my ratings: folks, including my precious wife, Colette, ask why I rave about a place and give it what she thinks is a mediocre mark – say a 5.x. Well I: - think a five is just fine. - have the scale in my head and however fickle, try to stick to it, and - am a hard grader, just ask my residents or authors or friends. ** What is the origin of a seeming oxymoron – Vin Sobres? Well, the website of the Village of Vinsobres says it “….probably originates from the Latin words "vin sobris" or "vin sobrio" meaning "wine and work" and indeed it is completely devoted to the making of wine.” *** My last meal was April 23rd and fully paid (I was recognized, spoken English to but not comp’d.) 3 Hearts for Korean with a 16.50 € 5-course "menu." 5.0 Sobane, 5, rue de la Tour d'Auvergne in the 9th, open 7/7, serving a 5-course lunch menu for 16.50 and wines starting at 19 € - got 3 hearts from Emmanuel Rubin last week - so it didn't take much to convince me to break my "no ethnic food in Paris" position. Plus, Rubin said they had a bulots salad and tripe soup and chocolate eclair - hunh? I got there* a tad before my eating partner and loved the simple, washed brown exterior and interior and golden chop sticks and spoon. We both ordered the lunch menu that consisted of (1) salad greens with caramelized zucchini, onions and red pepper as well as nuts and cold pear, apple and ginger dressing, (2) a brochette with two crispy fried chicken nuggets and two raviolis with sauce, (3) very generous portions of sliced sashimi-type salmon and some other fish, (4) different beef dishes (hers = sautéed, mine = stewed, both fine) with 4 accompaniments incl one kimchi and (5) a tiramisu and raspberry ice dessert. Our bill with one bottle of wine, no bottled water and two coffees (albeit her café noisette was double my serré ) was 54 €. Not three hearts in my book, but it was in hers and for a 7/7 it gets the price-quality of the year award. * Last meal April 19th, fully paid for. A whiff of Arpege, the resto not the perfume. 4.8 L'Agapé, 51, rue Jouffroy-d'Abbans in the 17th, 01.42.27.20.18, closed Sundays and Mondays, lunch menu at 39 euros, dinner 77 euros and “carte blanche” menu = 110 euros, and finally a la carte is about 70 euros. When Colette and I had cruised it a month ago, the plates listed on the lunch menu in the window (no longer so displayed) just didn’t appeal to us, but since then, all my friends and eGullet colleagues as well as food critics have gone and all, without exception, have loved it. As I’ve noted elsewhere, it is run by two l’Arpege refugees, Laurent Lapaire, ex-director in the front and Bertrand Grebaut at the piano. The produce comes from folks such as Alain Passard’s veggie source, Annie Bertin; meats from Hugo Desnoyer, etc. I truly entered with an open mind; my last three meals at l’Arpege were fine, full of talent, albeit too much salt, but fine. From the start, my friend sensed pressure. (Backstory: I had been warned by an eGullet loyal that in discussing me and the Society with the staff, they noted that I had reserved for today*, so maybe they were just trying hard.) We too had the 39 € lunch menu which has a fixed 1st, choice of fixed fish or meat, and choice of fixed cheese or fixed dessert. The veloutées served as an amuse bouche and 1st course were light and consisted of – let me see here in my notes – ah yes, fennel and orange, then parsley root. Both were light, or did I say that already?, airy and, is there another synonym for light – ah yes, ethereal. Then we shared a lamb cooked properly rare and a wild merlan cooked properly as well. The product was indeed excellent but halfway along, my friend said – “I don’t get what the fuss was all about, do you? It’s good product, nicely prepared but has no outstanding character.” No, I said, but there’s dessert. We again shared it: a cheese plate (fixed) Brilliant-Savarin, Tomme de Savoie and a Portuguese cheese I didn’t hear clearly and a blood orange ice on a bed of fresh chilled carrot. Our wine was recommended by the member of the staff my companion sensed pressure from, who went on and on about it, but was deemed by my wine-knowledgeable friend to be, once again, (you’ve got it) “light.” It was also, despite being young and unfiltered and un-needing aeration, decanted into a trophy glass decanter, which simply seemed pretentious and about which object the sommelier went on about at more length than necessary. In fact, in retrospect, my guest declared that the whole lunch seemed to be mainly about “show” rather than substance. We had no bottled water, pre or post dinner drinks or coffee; the bill was 105 €. * Last meal April 25th, fully paid for. Go? As my friend said “I don’t get what the fuss was all about?” A non-sushi exclusively Japanese place in Montmartre. 4.6 Enishi, 67, rue Labat in the 18th, 01 42 57 32 14, closed Wednesdays, is another place “discovered” by Caroline Mignot of, of course, “La Table a Decouvert.” It is within walking range of my apartment, so it constitutes a perfect “last night before the airplane/after the joint is clean” place. It was/is a wonderful warm (70º) evening, and I was seated looking out the window at the scene of couples passing hand-in-hand, many multi-ethnic, some male same-sex, no females same-sex, but all entranced in the late, sunny, early summer evening. (If one needs proof of this part of Montmartre’s “happening” status it is the new high-end Tunisian bakery and fresh and frozen VN-Thai-Japanese- Chinese-etc food emporium on the Rue Ramey.) The restos tables and chairs are stark black modern, only one woman appears to speak passable French (but hey, my Japanese, even after two months, is lessful.) I am in a position to watch the difference between folks coming in here vs the Tokyo across the street; bottom line, they were lining up here and not going in the other. The place has sushi, sashimi, tempura, etc., but I chose my old fave, the tonkatsu. It came with two “amuse bouches”, a salad with tasty cucumbers, tomatoes (yes) and seaweed, plus many herbs and Western lettuces; and a dish of pickled turnip (?) and green beans. Then came a cup of custard with fish stuff that was sublime. Finally they brought the tonkatsu with its sauce and an astonishingly good potato salad but there were several differences from its Japanese and American incarnations – the crust was crisp and almost like that of the 1970’s era KFC and the sauce was less thick but equally tasty. In addition, given the high price of rice today, the bowl presented was most generous. The soup was presented with the main – as it is in Japan not the States. The clientele initially was all Japanese or Japanese/French but later turned more French. With a glass of very reasonably priced wine (starting at 12 € a bottle) and the “menu” one easily got out for 30 €. Go? If in the 18th, with its days open, for sure *My last meal was April 25th, fully paid for. OK; they’re trying. 4.5 Les Cotelettes, 4, impasse Guemenee in the 4th, 01.42.72.08.45, closed Saturday lunch, Sundays and Mondays, serves a 15 € lunch formula (a la carte is 35-50 €). It’s a place recently taken over by the Benard group (Les Zingots + Que du Bon) and while I’ve had off and on experiences with them, I had heard good things from the RFC so one chilly April day* I went. The joint was jumping, all French despite its location in tourist heaven, Marais-division and it had an ultra modern kitchen with two young chefs working like the dickens but never hurrying. I started with what was described as crunchy queue de boeuf – it was a bit too fatty for me although it was offset somewhat by the dressing on the accompanying salad. Then I had an absolutely perfect large piece of veal liver, maybe not Chez Les Anges circa 1970 quality but not far from it, with fine accompanying vegetables. With wine and coffee but no dessert my bill was 53.50 € (I declined the “menu” because the oeufs mayo, veggie soup, potato and sausage starters; fish cassolette and sausage mains; and rice pudding and faisselle didn’t turn me on). Go? I’m not sure; maybe it needs more seasoning. *My last meal was April 15th, fully paid for. Had to eat around the Maison de Verre in the 7th. 4.2 A La Petite Chaise, 36, rue de Grenelle in the 7th, 01.42.22.13.35, open 7/7. My architectural historian friend and I had a 2 PM rendezvous at the Maison de Verre and so both of inquired about and I walked around places in the immediately vicinity. Oddly enough, Paris’s oldest (1680) restaurant was in none of the guides except Zagat which implied that it served French comfort food to annoying American tourists. Well, comfort food it may be, but there was no English being spoken, indeed the downstairs room was full of French geezers, so we fit right in. We both had the 3-course, 32 € menu (the 23 € one gives one 2 courses, 1 glass of wine and coffee). He started with grated celery that was not over-mayo’d with two types of ham; I had a salad nicely dressed with 4 leeks and proscuitto – both good product and production. Then he had the salmon unilaterale which came with a ton of vegetables and I had the joue de boeuf in an intense dark black sauce with potatoes that wasn’t the best I’ve ever had but neither was it the worst. Finally both of us had the special dessert of the day a banana entremet with dark chocolate sauce that was very good. Our bill (with 2 coffees included, plus ½ bottle of Bordeaux but no bottled water) was 78 €. *My last meal was April 24th, fully paid for. Go? If in the same circumstance, yes!.
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Correct, the Veranda facing the gardens and sheep fields to the West. Pas que je sache. Actually while quite posh, it's between the Veranda and the courtyard set of bar tables facing East and must be like sitting in a windowless office. But no, I know no one who's eaten there yet.
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I should probably stay out of this but I cannot help going back to one of my pet peeves, consistency vs lack thereof. I think whether you're in a 3-star or neighborhood dive, you should be able to count on the food that you order. Sure, there are electricity outs (vide J'Go Rive Gauche), train wrecks (vide Wadja), distractions (vide Les Socieres) and bursts of creativity vs boredom (vide Aizpitarte) but when I order a salade frisee or cote de boeuf or cafe serre, I know the standard and I expect at least that.
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Well February 20th, Wednesday, in Figaroscope, Emmanuel Rubin’s "C’est nouveau: awarded a broken heart to it sayingthat the new team has made an old place worse, pricey and pathetic.
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Hi Chef Zimm, I assume you've already checked out the 10 topics or so listed in our compendium on Stages and working in France. There's lots of wisdom there from folks who've come before. (BTW - if you find any broken links, please PM me so I can fix them.) Good luck in your search.
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Host's Note: this was posted by Frege on the UK site and from its wording see that it was meant for here. Much as I respect Felice's opinions, we disagee about Le Chateaubriand and Anaki and I personally agree with Frege.
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Knowing that everyone doesn't always check the Digest, here's today's news: This week, in Figaroscope’s Dossier, the team listed and described Tea Salons: Russian Kusmi tea Shop Food Bonpoint Film lovers Salon du Pantheon Boudoir The cool Institution Carette Garden side Café Medicis Neo T Charming tea time places Musee de la Vie Romantique, La Cocotte, 1728 + Les Ombres. Francois Simon in his Hache Menu went to the 1T Scribe, 1, rue Scribe in the 9th, 01.44.71.24.24, open 7/7 where he spent 54 € on tea plus a Caesar salad, éclair and “fingerfood.” He said go if you’re nearby but don’t go far.
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Alexander Lobrano in May's WHERE listed "The Best of Vegetarian Restaurants" as: Breakfast in America Le Conti's Orisotto Sapporo Japanese Chez Papa Noura Fajitas Villa Spicy l'As du Fallafel le Jardin des Cynges and desserts at: Laduree Pompei l'Espadon Restaurant de Ser Le Ciel de Paris.
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I had a meal (I swear) 3 days before the New York Times blew it - at Hide aka Koba’s Bistro, 10, rue de General Lanrezac in the 17th, 01.45.74.15.81, closed Saturday lunch and Sundays, menu 26 E for 3 courses, 29 E for 3 courses and 25 cl of wine and about 35 E a la carte that I rated a solid 7.0. My report will be filed this weekend but it was as they say "Pas mal."
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Restaurant Magazine's World's 50 Best '08
John Talbott replied to a topic in United Kingdom & Ireland: Dining
I am not surprised if most of the members haven’t even been to more than 10 restaurants on that list! ← I think it's fair to speculate that no one has eaten at more than 10 of these 100 top places (even in France) and like the Academy Awards there's much buzz/substance or like the Michelin, one person only has a visit every 2-5 years. Does one trust Newsweek's rating of colleges or (name a city)'s list of "Best Docs"? The science here is shaky; it's a popularity/reputation poll, no more no less. Look this is just food, just entertainment, just fun. Except for the poor restaurateurs who count on the ratings. -
Restaurant Magazine's World's 50 Best '08
John Talbott replied to a topic in United Kingdom & Ireland: Dining
The news piece on the survey results is here. Of interest is how each country's media spin the results. -
A shame, at least two meals I've had there would qualify for the "memorable" topic.
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Wonderful Braden. Question, I need a sandwich for a trip. Will it keep for 12 hours? Can I decontruct and then reconstruct it. I suspect if he grills it it wouldn't work but cold it might.
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Today's Figaro had a front page summary of an article by F. Simon announcing that the Opera Garnier concession will be taken over in July 2009 by Nicolas le Bec who runs the two-star resto of the same name in Lyon. In addition Figaro announced the Restaurant magazine best chef awards for this year: After Ferran Adria came the French chefs/restos as follows: 3. Pierre Gagnaire 7. Michel Bras 11. l'Astrance 14. l'Atelier de J.R. 15. Louis XV. Edited by John Talbott 4/23 to reflect correct number of stars for Nicolas le Bec which is two not three (Thanks to Cathy Ho).
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The revival of bread movement in France: Poilane
John Talbott replied to a topic in France: Cooking & Baking
Sadly, the Poilane saga (post-Lionel) goes on. After a remarkable Crimson piece about Apollonia's incredible succession and management at age 18 while attending school full-time in Cambridge, she's continued her father's war with uncle Max. Today's Figaro in the Business section no less, gives the gory details about the feud between the families of Max and Lionel, and says that last Friday the court found again that using one's patrinomial name did not in American terms violate a copyright. How about a taste-off - Max vs Apollonia's product? -
OK here's a new one for the back-packing relatives who show up next week - Opus Vins, 72, rue Vasco de Gama in the 15th, 01.42.50.14.91, closed Saturday lunch, Sundays and Monday nights which has a 20 € 3-course meal at lunch and with cheese at night it runs 30€; wines start at 3.80 a glass. My full report will be posted at the end of the week. It's quite good and has a wonderful wine list.
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The Week of April 14th, 2008 Tuesday-Wednesday, in ANP, Jerome Berger wrote a 3/5 review of l’Agapé , coordinates above, commenting on the parsley root soup, pigeon and banana dessert but regretting the prices; meanwhile, his colleague Philippe Toinard gave 4/5 to the Asian noodle place Les Pates Vivantes, in the 9th. Wednesday, Richard Hesse in Paris Update reviewed Flora, coordinates well-known, where he found everything but the kid, plate-scraping and his table placement very good. Wednesday as well, l’Express posted a review by Francois Regis Gaudry of Les Cotelettes, the offshoot of Ramulaud, coordinates given before, where he liked the andouillette and confit de canard and wine (carignan) {that ironically I had had earlier this week.} In addition, Yves Nespoulos reviewed the Asiatic noodle place, Les Pâtes vivantes. Wednesday, in Figaroscope, Emmanuel Rubin awarded two hearts to the Bis-tro Vin Sobre, 35 Av Duquesne in the 7th, 01.47.05.67.10, open 7/7, formerly the Calmont reprised by the team from the Mother-ship Vin Sobre on the rue des Feuillantines, costing about 40 € asparagus with hollandaise, rabbit stew and an almond biscuit with raspberries; he gave one heart each to: the new and fourth Bar a Huitres in the P. Goldenberg space, 69, av des Ternes in the 17th, 01.43.80.63.54, also open 7/7, serving you know what for a la carte 30-60 (lunch menu= 23 €) and the Indian Bollywood Lounge. Busted hearts went to the Shanghai 1930 Le China in the 12th and Japanese Generation Sushi in the 6th. This week, in Figaroscope’s Dossier, the team listed and described places under 30 €: Right Bank La Cotte Roti Le Temps au Temps M comme Martine O.J. Left Bank l’Epigramme L’Agassin Au Bon Accueil Near suburbs Le Georgeon Two others places received mention: Le Bistrot de Robert + Les Petites Sorcieres Francois Simon in his Hache Menu went to Hide, where two ate well on leeks, cod and a strawberry tart for 90 Euros and he says to go for sure, it’s a “necessary address” {which I fully agree with.} Wednesday-Thursday, Jean Claude Ribault in Le Monde wrote an article about sushi. Thursday, in ParisObs, Philippe Couderc reviewed the Trianon Palace, coordinates above, bottom line – why go and pay all this money when he isn’t even there – he gave it 15-60/20 for the food and 12/20 for price-quality. Then he mentions two bistrots on the Rue Broca in the 13th, the well known Ourcine that has a nice menu-carte at dinner for 30 € and gets a rating of 13/20 from him and less well known wine bar-bistro L'Affaire de la rue Broca, 69, rue Broca, 01-43-31-28-28, with lunch formulas at 14 and 17 € for honest fare like a terrine de campagne, a tapenade de boudin noir and chocolate mousse. Friday in Les Echos Jean Louis Galesne wrote a piece on restos in Honfleur mentioning: Sa.Qua.Na, Le Bréard, La Ferme Saint Siméon + L’Endroit. Jean Claude Hazera also has an article on Thierry Marx and his work on destructurization with a chemist named Jérôme Bibette, the results of which can be had at Le Laboratoire, 4, rue du Bouloi in the 1st, 01.78.09.49.50, open only Fridays to Mondays, where chocolate coffee is 6 and the complete menu with a glass of champagne = 27 €. In Saturday’s Figaro Francois Simon, still outside the city, wrote his “Croque Notes” about l’Auberge des Vieux Puits in Corbieres. Saturday/Sunday, in Bonjour Paris, John Talbott had an article on “Notre Dame is where we want to eat.” Sunday, in JDD, Aurelie Chaigneau discovered Yan (Au Comte de Gascogne) Duranceau’s favorites under 35 € in Paris: Le Clos Bourgignon + l’Olivier and Astrid T’Serclaes visited L’Idee + l’Accolade. Just a brief mention of Luc Dubanchet’s March oMni: Magazine Omnivore. It is impossible to “digest” since it covered chefs from all over, the Omnivore Food Festival and reviews of interesting books. But it’s a great read. May’s Travel & Leisure has several mentions of places to eat: in the Stylish Traveler Le Chat Botté on the Ile de Re, Chez Theresa, Nissa Socca, Le Comptoir + La Table du Marche on the Cote d’Azur, and among “Hidden Neighborhoods” - Montmartre, where they recommend Le Café Burq + La Mascotte. Please post comments here and not in the Digest thread.