Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Basement Bistro - Earlton, NY


jauster

Recommended Posts

My husband managed to get us a reservation next week at the Basement Bistro in Earlton. Has anyone here been? What to expect? All I've read has been rave reviews from some very prominent sources. I am very excited!

And, on a lesser note, how do people dress?

Jennie Auster aka "GIT"

Gastronome in Training

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

Your visit has long since passed, and I'm sure you had a wonderful meal. I did, too, this past weekend, and I'd like to share the pics. I just put it on my own (non-food) blog; my article in full can be found here. But I'll include the images of the meal I had, as well as the descriptions (to the best of my ability) below:

Bread:

2919410644_506a3548f2_o.jpg

Housemade bread: A focaccia-style bread made with basil flowers, and a sort of "everything bread" made with homemade onion powder, among other things. Served with freshly-churned butter and olive oil imported from a customer's olive farm in Greece.

First Course:

2919429224_32539226e7_o.jpg

Charcuterie (all cured in-house, clockwise from top):

Goose "salami"

Icelandic lamb cured with coriander

Grass-fed beef brasaola

Kurobuta (Berkshire) pork "speck"

Small bites (from top):

Nasturtium flower, coated in rice flour and baked, served on a sunchoke puree*

Baby green beans wrapped in lamb prosciutto with heirloom carrot puree

Heirloom tomato with swiss chard and spinach powder

Cheeses (all made in-house, clockwise from top):

Blue cheese with sage

Camembert-style cheese

(unknown variety with fried parsley)

Earlton cheese (chef's own recipe)

Goat chevre with apple and nectarine confit

* It should be noted that most of his purees and sauces use a rutabaga stock at various reductions instead of cream or butter. It's amazing how much of a creamy texture this method gives a sauce without adding extra fat

Second Course:

2918580977_47506b1432_o.jpg

Savory Cones: Parsley-oil "cones" with pureed purple bush beans, green eggplant, and green sunflower seeds

Third Course:

2919425152_75eb1a2623_o.jpg

Salmon "BLT": Peachwood-smoked salmon, basil, heirloom tomato, lavender and marjoram aioli

Fourth Course:

2918577071_4255e1e299_o.jpg

Seafood course* (from left to right):

Peekytoe crab with squash blossom puree and cauliflower powder

Oyster poached in tomato water with heirloom carrot salad and squash seeds

Salt and pepper prawn with saffron cabbage "slaw"

* All seafood is provided by a vendor from Maine, who makes the Basement Bistro the first stop on the way to New York City

Fifth Course:

2918566315_afc0c4ed40_o.jpg

Puffball "Soup": Puffball mushroom puree with applewood smoked corn, watermelon radish flower

Sixth Course:

2919408216_43b56bf454_o.jpg

Frozen duo*:

Wild pink current sorbet

Oven-roasted peach gelato

* Instead of using sugar or another sweetener, he uses unripened grape juice to sweeten his frozen confections

Seventh Course:

2919406430_3408dd6a01_o.jpg

Bronze basil ice cream served atop an apple cucumber, with celery root slaw, icicle radish salad, beet powder, heirloom tomato powder, fried basil leaf

Eighth Course:

2919404762_74584f0316_o.jpg

Meat course (from left to right):

Sous-vide pork sirloin wrapped in venison bacon, silver shallot, delicato/buttercup squash puree, kohlrabi puree

Boiled "Kobe" (Wagyu) eye round, heirloom carrot and onions, pureed potatoes with swiss chard stems, candied swiss chard stem

Olive oil-cured duck confit with sumac, sea salt, butter turnip and wild burdock puree

Ninth Course:

2918556741_d97129b696_o.jpg

Gamay Noir grape granita

Tenth Course:

2918552599_3fed297af5_o.jpg

2918554283_d2ec8e9485_o.jpg

Cheese plate:

Roquefort-style blue cheese

unknown "fluffy" cheese

Maplewood-smoked pecorino-style cheese

Apples, grapes, plums, nectarines, air-dried and fresh blueberries

Chocolate "pudding": Tempered Valrhona chocolate with skim milk and blackberry

Eleventh Course:

2919458306_be2436f90f_o.jpg

Mulberry and blackberry sorbet

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This place has only recently come across my radar. Thanks for the report and the photos.

John Sconzo, M.D. aka "docsconz"

"Remember that a very good sardine is always preferable to a not that good lobster."

- Ferran Adria on eGullet 12/16/2004.

Docsconz - Musings on Food and Life

Slow Food Saratoga Region - Co-Founder

Twitter - @docsconz

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...