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Wilfrid

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Everything posted by Wilfrid

  1. Let's just summarize where we are as the sun begins to set: Kettle of Fish, 8pm Friday night, February 22. Current definites: Yvonne and her Lurker Macrosan (although he did say Thursday, February 22, which I am hoping was a meaningless error) Myself Yes, but with various escape clauses attached: Liza Probably not, even at 6 o'clock: Mr and Mrs Tommy. Playing cards close to chests: Everyone else. Is there any chance people could check in yesterday and say if they are still planning to come? It is not too late, of course, to change the date in the hope of a bigger turn out. Of course, you've got the quality already.
  2. [Note: correct name and address of charcuterie now added to original post.] Here it is at last, a bit long, but I thought it worth doing properly if at all: This trip, planned long ago, was first postponed, then savagely truncated by other commitments. What I did not do, to my great regret, was experience some of the new cutting edge cooking which is plainly happening in Barcelona, and even if I'd had a chance to research vdelaserna's recommendations, I would have had little time to try them. So all I have are some comments on places concerned with retrieving and serving good Catalan cuisine - a movement which has been afoot for a number of years now, and has, of course, vast local significance because of the clampdown on Catalonian language and culture in all the years under Franco. My suggestions here really only represent one kind of eating you should do in Barcelona. If you are there longer, you will want to try the newer restaurants, and, in summer especially, indulge in some seafood around Barceloneta. I started with Bux's recommendation, Ca d'Isidre, on my first night in town (it's on the short street C. Les Flors which runs north from C. de Sant Pau just before you reach the big main street, Paral.lel). I was staying at the Hotel Oriente on the Ramblas - very plain, but clean and tranquil ($77 a night) - and Ca d'Isidre was only a short walk away, through the so-called Barri Xines, or Chinatown, which we are now told should be called "El Raval" (a bit like you're supposed to call hell's Kitchen "Clinton"). I was planning only to case the joint, but I was hungry, there were tables... Isidre turned out to be Isidre Girones, the very pleasant proprietor. He had the courtesy to converse with me in Spanish, which must be a painful experience for any native Spanish speaker. The restaurant was very quiet, and he told me that American trade had fallen off dramatically since last September. There were some Brits in the place, and sure enough the locals started wandering in for dinner, in true Barcelona style, around 11.30. Girones showed me a copy of last November's "Saveur", which featured his restauarnt heavily, and I was pleased to identify in the photos, along with Griones, the bushy-bearded figure of Senor Nunez, proprietor of El Ateneu - more later. He was pleased with my wine order, a 1992 Hacienda Monasterio Riserva from the Ribera del Duero. I picked this without hesitation, as I had drunk the wine (from a later year) in New York; I hadn't realised, until Girones told me, that it comes from the same stable as Pingus, the Ribera's vastly expensive bid for superstardom. It was $38 the bottle. I ordered an appetizer of angulas, tiny, whole baby eels, served over a salad of frisee lettuce and the delicate local judias - small fava beans. The nest of eels looked like julienned celeriac, or maybe cold spaghetti. On close inspecton, they had tiny little faces. My first few mouthfuls made me think - ah, texture food. The flavor was slow in coming, but it did arrive - sweet, very mild, nothing like the strong flavour of full-size eels. Not an explosive dish, but I liked it. Next, a boned pig's foot stuffed with foie gras and a diverting mixture of wild mushrooms, topped with some big slices of black truffle, in its own, sticky, truffle-specked juice. No accompanying vegetables or extraneous garnish, and I didn't expect any. Rich, satisfying, and you could have put up wallpaper with the gravy. The cheeses were a slight disappointment. I had spotted a trayful, with little plastic flags, as soon as I'd walked in. Surprisingly, it turned out to be a selection of well-kept boutique French cheeses, some of which were new to me, and I wondered why he didn't serve regional cheeses from La Boqueria market. No fireworks, but a subtle, serious, grown-up restaurant. Three courses with the wine, around $95 (obviously cheaper for two people sharing the wine) - and this was with luxury ingredients at a high end restaurant. Next thing I knew, I was enjoying a couple of glasses of cognac (Magno) in a new-looking bar full of people younger and arguably sexier than myself. Simple but stylish bars are everywhere around the old city: this one was just a bare room on the ground floor of a nineteenth century building. A big, steel bar. A few nice artworks on the wall. A dj playing pleasant and relatively quiet music. And beautiful people. The night moved on to Bar Pastis, an absinthe-ridden dive on a side street which was once patrolled by transvestite hookers who looked like they'd retired from the WWF. Just a word on safety. Bux mentioned that he'd been warned about the area around Ca d'Isidre after dark. As so often, I think one key thing is whether you look like a lost, well-off tourist or not. There is no real obstacle to patronising Ca d'Isidre after dark, because you can either approach it from the well-lit, busy (Paral.lel) end, or you can arrive and leave by taxi - they'll find one for you. I have no problem with the busier streets of the Barri Xines after dark, but then I do (usually) know where I'm going. You certainly do not want to get lost in the side streets - they are a creepy maze. I was amazed to see that some of the grotesque bar/brothels, relics of a distant, sad past, still exist. They will eventually be swept away by the re-building and modernisation going on in the area. Everywhere in Barcelona is plagued by petty, non-violent thievery now (and London is going the same way), so always keep your valuables hidden. Breakfast the next morning inside Barcelona's central food market, La Boqueria. There are about half a dozen full scale tapa bars dotted around the market floor, and most of them have had something of a refurb since I was last here. Artichoke tortilla and a glass of rose. Morning drinking is encouraged; the two old guys next to me were polishing off a bottle of cava for breakfast. One thing I've noticed in Barcelona over the last three or four years are new food stores/delicatessens which make the regional produce of Catalonia easily accessible. No longer do you have to know which bodega serves a particularly tasty sausage - you can go to stores which serve a whole range, along with cheeses and local wines. I pause now to kick myself, because I have lost the cards I picked up. Anyway, there is a huge craft shop on C. dels Escudellers, on the block after the old Los Caracoles restaurant as you head towards Las Ramblas. Hard to miss it, as the ground floor is a vast repository of regional Spanish ceramics - pots, tiles and so on. Look down through the windows in the floor, and you will see an equally vast cellar where they are aging hams, slicing all kinds of cold cuts and cheeses, and serving local wines by the glass or bottle. I took lunch on my second day at a newer charcuterie called Xaloc, only six months old, where a library of aging hams covers one wall. I watched the staff climbing ladders and dipping long prongs into the hams to check the aroma, and thus presumably their progress. You can order meats or cheeses individually, or eat a selection (and, of course, buy them to take away). I ate the assortment of Catalonian sausage, a big plate of hard salamis, soft slicing sausages, and sweet cooked hams; about $9 with a glass of cold beer. Xaloc is on one of the upmarket shopping streets in the upper part of the Barri Gotic, near the old Sant Pi church - C. de la Palla, 17. While eating, I flicked through a local magazine, managing to understand a little Catalan. Like another good omen, there was an article about Senor Nunez and his Ateneu restaurant. This revealed, as far as I could make out, that Nunez is an old-time anarchist radical, who was a publisher/bookseller before creating his restaurant. One of his interests was re-discovering the historical cuisine of Barcelona. A new dish on his menu, "Bacallo del Alquemista del Call" was an old moorish-accented dish which he had restored in order to celebrate the arrival of Islamic Bosnian immigrants in the city over the last few years. I took mental note. The evening began with cold beer at El Portalon, a dingy bar on Carrer dels Banys Nous in the Barri Gotic. El Portalon has a curved, ribbed brick ceiling, and you feel a little like you are drinking inside a barrel. I ate a light tapa of snails, stewed with salt pork, onion and garlic, and served in the resulting broth. Then it was dinner in the restaurant (as opposed to wine bar) at El Ateneu Gastronomic (http://www.ateneu.com/). I have been eating here since shortly after it opened, seven or eight years ago. It is a labor of love. The restaurant is quite Spartan; bare floor, hard chairs (take a sweater in winter), but with table cloths and uniformed staff. The menu used to be a lovely affair of deckled parchment, but is now plainer and plastic covered (it's in Catalan, Castilian and English). The menu is divided into plates para picar - essentially for picking at and sharing - cold and hot appetizers, and so on. I mention this because the prices are such that you would be crazy not to order a sharing plate followed by an appetizer and entree. You can pick at selections of sausage and cheese, or big slices of toasted country bread with various toppings. I chose a mixed foie gras plate. The ample portions of local foie gras came in two styles: the usual mi cuit, but with a firm, interesting texture and deep flavor which suggested home-made rather than mass produced; or a terrine with dashes of prunes and other dried fruit, soaked in a good sweet wine. The latter nearly made me cry. My appetizer was a rustic sort of dish I've ordered before: the sweet local fava beans, cooked to tenderness, then quickly sauteed with chunks of terrific dried ham, lightly dressed with olive oil and sprinkled with fresh mint. And it's a big plateful. I usually eat a meat dish next, with a red from the local producer Raimat, but mindful of my earlier history lesson, I ate the Alchemist's salt cod. Ungarnished, as is customary, the fish needed more vigorous flavoring; the mild crust of spices didn't really kick it out of blandness. It was topped with some bitter olives, which did add some drama. I drank a rose, Mas Comtal Rosat de Penedes, 2000 (I drink a lot of rose in Barcelona, where it is taken quite seriously, and is not a "pink confection"). For dessert, slices of fresh goat's cheese with a sweet tomato marmalade. I chose a mysterious dessert wine called "Hydromiel", which turned out to be a kind of honey eau-de-vie with some frightening sediment which eventually settled. I recommend the moscatels. The check? Embarrassing. Four courses, drinks, tip: about forty bucks. If I'd eaten meat, I would have drunk a more expensive wine, but it would really be hard to push the price much higher here. I don't know what it is about Barcelona, but after a stroll, I found myself refreshing my taste buds with a cool beer. Before I knew it was four in the morning in Bar Pastis again. Distinctly fragile as my last day began, I drank large quantities of coffee with skimmed milk in the sunshine. Eventually made it to the Bar del Pi, in the square outside the Sant Pi church, for a couple of heart starters. I breakfasted on montaditos, little slices of baguette with various toppings: smoked salmon and quail's egg, catalan (a pale, soft slicing sausage), ham and anchovy. After some more healing sleep, I planned a traditional tapas bar crawl for the evening, with a more modest alcohol intake. I started at El Portalon, eating bunuelos de bacalao - salt cod balls - and deep fried artichokes. I took an obvious tapas route down C. d'Avinyo: breaded crab claws in the Galician bar on C. Ample. Disappointingly vinegary empanadas in Bar Jarra opposite (where the speciality is a cooked Canaries ham, cut fresh from the bone and served with a few potatoes for a about $1.50 a plate). It was very quiet for a Saturday night. Then I realised there was a soccer game on TV. I watched the end of the match, drinking Guinness in Bar Thales on C. de Regomir. I was about to get an early night, but my walk back to the hotel took me past El Ateneu again. I stopped to read the menu. Then, as if possessed by higher powers, I found myself seated in the wine bar section, saying to myself "Only an entree." I ordered their tartaro de caballo, one of my favorite dishes. Yes, horse tartare, dark and rich. This one was a little underseasoned, but I corrected that myself. I thought a desset in order after all. Something was described as "Plum Cake" on the Catalan and Castilian, as well as the English, menus. When it arrived, there was no sign of plums. It was a light, lemony sponge with a few caraway seeds. "Flummery?" I asked myself, in the grips of another Nero Wolfe flashback. Then I realised with a shiver that, if I queried the dish, I would be told that the kitchen had run out of plum cake and had substituted authentic clouty dumpling flown in that morning from Scotland. For once, I decided to shut up and eat it, and the accompanying scoop of fresh yoghurt and home-made bitter orange marmalade were fine. In the interests of full disclosure, if someone told me I had to move to Barcelona tomorrow and live there the rest of my life, I would fall to my knees sobbing with gratitude. If you haven't been, this year is the 150th anniversary of their famous architect Gaudi, and as I write the Euro is still plummeting against the dollar (and doubtless the pound too). I may have to go back shortly.
  3. I am not inclined to eat at the movies either, but when my Beloved was pregnant she took to smuggling in all kinds of weird snacks. It would've been a surprise if anyone had minded. We have also taken picnics to Yankee stadium when we've had a number of hungry kids in tow. I am not averse to spending large sums on food (and that may be an understatement), but large sums on the various sorts of garbage on offer at sports stadiums is something else (yes, I do eat the hot dogs). To raise a new issue, though, what about airplanes? I travel too much, and I am constantly tempted to bring my food onto a plane, but usually don't get around to it. I am not sure whether airlines have rules about this or not - on the rare times I've done it, there has been no problem. I think this an example of a period in confinement where you really might need to eat something, and what's on offer is borderline toxic. I have considered the last statement, and do not regard it as an exaggeration. British Airways currently have a chicken with tarragon dish which tastes like medicine.
  4. Liza, I'm sorry. I often spell Winona Ryder's name wrong too, so please don't be offended.
  5. Wilfrid

    Dylan Prime

    I wonder if they would let you bring your own crust? I agree - the charge for the sauce - annoying, but that's life - the charge for cooking the steak to order - outrageous.
  6. I am keen to meet the Tommy's too. Realistically I could make it by around 6.30. And of course, we don't have to finish by 8.00! - although if we hate the bar we might want to move on. We could kick it back to the following Friday if that makes it easier for everyone. My prediction is that the site will crash some time Friday before we've made a final decision. Lisa? Macrosan? What do you say?
  7. Wilfrid

    Craft Bar

    Hey, I guess I'll ask again, as the topic is still twitching. Where "all over New York" can you get food as good as Craft? Below the 4 star level? Because, as I have probably said many times, I too dislike the concept/mission/gimmicks. Just think the food is better than an awful lot of places.
  8. I was hoping someone would ask that, as I have been toying with all sorts of silly ideas, such as printing out a page from the site and making a cut-out badge of the Wobbly Egullet Man. The Kettle of Fish is fairly small, and I have a feeling we'll detect each other. Yvonne and I will probably sound a bit Scottish and English, respectively. I am prepared to wear a splendidly over-the-top beret which I bought in Spain last week. I am also currently sporting a small, jazz-giant-like, lower lip goatee. Now, a beret and a goatee are not going to uniquely identify me in Greenwich Village, but it's a start. Anyone else prepared to reveal distinctive aspects of their physiognomy? I just noticed Tommy might not make it. If the numbers get too small, we can always pick another date. I guess we should see how it goes over the next day or two.
  9. I'll think about bars. I may not post much today or tomorrow as I am trapped by "real life", but I will be cogitating meantimes. Also have to finish my Barcelona "assignment" for Bux. The address: I just checked Shecky's guide, and they have 57. I'm sure you're right, though, Yvonne, and also about the Angelic Upstarts (please put the knife down). Anyway, we have narrowed it down. If anyone finds themselves in a fairly grubby bar on the same street with a live blues band setting up, you're probably in number 55 and therefore in the wrong place.
  10. OK. The Kettle of Fish at 57 Christopher Street between Waverley Place and 7th Avenue. It's down a short flight of stairs. I now recall that I did know it had become the Kettle of Fish - and there's a story to that I'll save for Friday. I shall enquire no further into the Smart Dicks phone message. I will not be eating first, because I find that a full stomach impairs my alcohol intake. Are we thinking of eating later or does that get too complex?
  11. Wilfrid

    Craft Bar

    Life is too short to read through this thread again, let alone its mother-thread. But I could have sworn someone claimed that, aside from the mission-claims and service gimmicks, the food at Craft - while maybe okay - was no better than could be had at all kinds of other places. Rather than just repeat my usual question, let me ask it a different way: unsatisfactory though rankings are, how would people rank Craft for food, as opposed to for the overall experience. Is it very roughly the same level as Gramercy Tavern or Cafe Boulud? Does it compare with Bid, Ouest or Blue Hill? Or is the quality comparable with slightly less ambitious bistros like Michael's, The Independent, The Harrison or JUdson Grill?* I ask because, for all the eloquence above, I really can't get a handle on what some of the people posting here really think about the quality of the food. *I know all these restaurants are different and hard to compare, thanks, - just trying to get a rough idea.
  12. Friday 22 seems to suit four of us. I'll bring my hearing trumpet. Doesn't preclude doing something different/more elaborate in March. I was going to suggest the Lion's Head/Monkey's Paw, but when I called the number just now to find out it's latest name, I was greeted by a voicemail welcoming me to Smart Dick's (or Dicks, who knows?). I think I would like more information before making that our base. Perhaps someone could suggest somewhere else in the area just as a kicking off point? And I would hazard that 8.00 might be a good time?
  13. My only objection to Fridays is that if we go anywhere at all appealing, we may not be able to move or hear each other. Of course, I know some unappealing places where that will be no problem. But I can be (all too easily) persuaded.
  14. Yeah, Top of the Beekman I had heard of (not been). The Place actually looks rather pleasant: http://theplace.citysearch.com/
  15. I have never heard of them!
  16. Okay, in order not to keep up with different threads on different Boards, I thought I'd start one for this as it now seems to taking on the inevitability I associate with all alcohol-related recreations. So far: I hope a consensus was building for avoiding Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights. One proposal was week commencing March 18, which would give us time to make a complicated plan. Possibly start in the Monkey's Paw or whatever it's now called, and hit some other places in the Village. Another option was forget the complicated plan and just pick a day this week. This morning, I was tending toward the former, but as the day wears on and I get thirstier, the latter has more appeal. So, anybody out there??? This is the closest emoticon I can find for "thirsty"
  17. Okay, along bistro lines, I like Le Gigot in Greenwich Village - small, friendly, regularly changing specials. Indded, very small, so reserve early. La Petite Auberge in Gramercy Park is a traditional place - onion soup, duck with orange sauce, etc - but solid enough. You should certainly be able to stay within budget at those places. I endorse Chez Josephine too (especially in the unlikely event you have a craving for blood sausage). To save my sore fingers, you can find addresses and phone numbers at www.zagat.com.
  18. Here's the web-site: http://www.citerestaurant.com/ Despite the name, Cite, and the marginally cheaper Cite Grill next door, are really steak-houses rather than French restaurants. Steak, lobster, salmon, crab-cakes, fries, etc. I would say they are okay rather than great. The wine dinner at Cite is a good deal if you want to drink a lot of wine - $59.50, for which you get a full meal, and they will pour sparkling wine, a white and two reds pretty generously for free - and given that it's free, the wine's not bad. But then, you will pay extra for vegetables, water, tax, tip and so on. I'm sorry, but this is an expensive city. As I was implying, if you're real upper limit is about $100 for the whole meal, everything included, please say, because the recommendations would be very different.
  19. Bayard's is in a beautiful historic building, and although I haven't been since the new chef arrived, I am sure it would be fine. What is key is the question about the price. You have obviously been to their web-site, and they list their prices on the menu. Many entrees are over thirty dollars. If you order an appetizer and an entree for a total of fifty dollars, drink, say, two glasses of $12 wine, split a bottle of water, and pay tax and gratuity, you will soon find yourself over $100 per head. Tempted by dessert, coffee? Bayard's is really a $150 per head restaurant. If you give us some idea of what the realistic upper limit of your budget is, more appropriate recommendations may be possible.
  20. Re Tommy on the UK board, yeah tomorrow's fine. (Just looked again and saw you actually meant tonight.) Any night this week is fine. Takes out the fiendishly detailed planning, but I can see an argument that says that's just as well. Where's Yvonne gone now? Like herding cats, isn't it?
  21. Doesn't shame some people, unofrtunately. Artillery Arms - wonderful pub. Thanks for the memories (I am stuck out here with the mean, indecisive New Yorkers).
  22. I would vote for a week night too, just because everywhere is too crowded at weekends (which includes Friday in my book). Week commencing March 18 is fine. If we get any of those moderators involved in the planning stage, they'll only start asking about fancy bar snacks. I would also vote for a crawl, as I am the fidgety type. The Village works fine, but then so do most areas! I am also in favor of detailed and anal planning of which bars to visit. The next paragraph may be dull for some readers: Yvonne, I was living in Bristol until 1987, but later lived in Soho and visited the Coach more often than I should've. I take it you mean either the table immediately to the right of the door at the lav end, or the table which sort of sits by itself immediately in front of the door. I assume you weren't sitting at the "top table" in front of the lavs, dominated by such luminaries as Pickles and Bernard himself. I always went for the bar stool nearest the divider at that end of the pub, so I could rest my back. I think it says a lot about the Coach and Horses that we can be pretty sure the furniture hasn't been moved in fifteen years. Although Norman did make the mistake, in my view, of giving away the the old fashioned wooden bar stools. I know what happened to them: they were on-stage in Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell! Added authenticity to the latter. I just thought of a clean anecdote, which also illustrates the atmosphere. Two innocent American tourists wander in one evening and ask Michael, the manager, if meals are served. Answer: "No, and we don't have beds for the night either, it's not a hotel." Charm city.
  23. Wilfrid

    Craft Bar

    I think that was Mr Plotnicki who wanted the de-boning done. I was the one complaining about the cold plates Speaking of Mr Plotnicki, I will not be lured into listing charcuterie creations by Escoffier, Point and their ilk and arguing about how many stars they should get. Just waiting to read your list of bistros! Yeah, here goes:
  24. Okay, I'll bite. I have far fewer cookbooks than general books about food, but these are some I use regularly: "French Family Cooking" by Philomene (long out of print, I'm sure; based on old French newspaper columns). "Larousse" US edition. "European Peasant Cookery" by Elisabeth Luard. "French Haute Cuisine" by Joseph Druot (not 100% sure on title there, or come to think of it spelling of author's name). "Sauces" by Michel Roux. "The Food of France" by Waverley Root (more descriptions than recipes). "Nose to Tail Cooking" by Fergus Henderson (of St John's in London). I also consult Elizabeth David frequently, but don't find her recipes that great.
  25. Thanks, Cats Eye, but the Cajun sausage has indeed evolved far away from the French sausage I am chasing. The characteristic thing about French andouille is that it is made from smoked chitterlings. Seems to me there is a clear gap in the New York food market for a serious importer of sausages (other than just Italian). If I am overlooking any place, please let me know.
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