About
travels for friends, food and wine - in exactly this order
From
San Sebastian, Spain
Born
July 21
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Restaurants
- Gerhard Huber added a new meal Late Ramen at さんぱち at さんぱち Sanpachi
The full Sapporo experience, a 1am ramen with locals in a tiny hole in the wall.
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- Gerhard Huber added a new meal Drinks at Bar Yamazaki at Bar Yamazaki
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- Gerhard Huber added a new meal Lunch at Pagu at Pagu
A very good casual fine dining place in Cambridge, MA. Chef Tracy Chang opened Pagu only in January 2017 and was awarded the Chef of the Year 2017 from the Boston Globe and various other publications.
The menu fuses her prior experience in Spain with Martin Bersategui and her Ramen pop-up into one which seems to be a mixture between an izakaya and... More
A very good casual fine dining place in Cambridge, MA. Chef Tracy Chang opened Pagu only in January 2017 and was awarded the Chef of the Year 2017 from the Boston Globe and various other publications.
The menu fuses her prior experience in Spain with Martin Bersategui and her Ramen pop-up into one which seems to be a mixture between an izakaya and a tapas bar. This sounds odd, but it does work and is very tasty.
A great place to have lunch (or breakfast or dinner), good value for money. Less
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- Gerhard Huber added a new meal Dinner at 温味 (Nukumi) at Nukumi (温味)
Wonderful start to the Japan skiing and foodie tour with a traditional Kaiseki meal at the new location of Masaki Yamamoto's restaurant in Sapporo.
Very light, fragrant, seasonal dishes in a hypermodern new building with one private room, one small counter for four and 2 tables.
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What a delightful scam!
Damen Baehrel runs a tiny restaurant in upstate New York. He calls his cuisine Native Harvest as he claims to source everything from his 12 acre property surrounding his small house which also includes in the basement his restaurant. He is a great guy, easy to talk to, a genuine host, obviously passionate about his work and... More
What a delightful scam!
Damen Baehrel runs a tiny restaurant in upstate New York. He calls his cuisine Native Harvest as he claims to source everything from his 12 acre property surrounding his small house which also includes in the basement his restaurant. He is a great guy, easy to talk to, a genuine host, obviously passionate about his work and regales his guest with great stories. A extraordinarily long meal goes by quickly. And you leave the place with a good feeling.
He is however a much better scammer than cook. Here are his claims
1. He cooks the 25-27 dishes all by himself for a table of 4 in 7 hours. At the same time he serves the dishes, pours the wine and cleans the plates.
2. He produces everything himself except the meat and the seafood or fish which he sources from various unnamed suppliers.
3. The process of producing flower out of acorn takes him up to 18 months.
4. For acidity he uses pin needles although he now had gotten his first harvest of small lemons from a tree he keeps somewhere in his house.
5. We started our meal at 4pm (and left shortly before midnight), he claimed that he had another party before us and had 40 minutes to clean and prepare for us.
6. He also claims to have thousands of requests for a reservation that he closed his reservation and waiting list in 2014.
So why do I think this is all a scam:
1. Why would somebody spend 18 months producing flower out of acorns just to produce a focaccia which taste like a normal focaccia which I can buy in the super market 3 miles down the road? His day must have 60 hours because each step takes forever and there numerous of them.
2. Every dish gets introduced with a 2 minute story about the production. All is completely differently but looks suspiciously similar. There is the pink, the orange and the green sauce. Clearly the very strict no photo/video and note policy comes in handy because with the exception of Le Wang nobody could possibly remember all the ingredients of the 2 minute speech of one dish, left alone 25 of them.
3. He claims to produce over 30 different cheeses of which we got served 13, not one of them memorable. I don’t even know an industrial cheese producer which produces that number of entirely different cheese, but this one man show can do it?
4. I turned up at 340pm, 20 minutes ahead of time and had to wait in front of the property gate. There was no car coming out and when I entered the dining room no smell of food or people, unlikely when somebody just feasted for 5 hours.
5. Damon lets nobody into the kitchen to look at it. We specially asked to see the prep kitchen in the adjacent building. This request was denied because his wife and disabled son would be there and we would disturb them. I was seated in a way that I could see the building all the time. During our 7 hour meal not one time was there a light in the entire building.
6. The wine gets served out of bottles. Interestingly whenever the wine is more expensive the wine bottles were already open. A half bottle of Veuve Cliqot (maybe $17) was opened while the magnum Coche Dury and the Chateau Yquem 1999 was all served from an already open bottle.
I would not want to go so far as to say that even his claims of food processing are false. They may be lies but even if there weren’t I simply don’t get the point of it. Why go to these lengths to produce food which when served blind in a nondescript restaurant would be certainly called mediocre?
I am however convinced that the story of his waiting list and his multiple meals per day are complete hyperboles designed entirely to make a remote restaurant a destination where he can charge $395 per person when down the road it would cost $50.
Don’t get me wrong, we had a great experience, lots of laughter and genuine interesting conversations.
I left feeling good, but then I always liked a good magic show.
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This was a truly exceptional meal at the 3* Michelin restaurant Le 1947 in Courchevel 1850 at the Cheval Blanc Hotel. A beautiful and very intimate dining room of just 12 covers when I dined. I believe they can seat 20. This is a Yannick Alléno restaurant of the famed Paris 3* Pavillon Ledoyen on the Champs Elysées. Although the day to day head chef... More
This was a truly exceptional meal at the 3* Michelin restaurant Le 1947 in Courchevel 1850 at the Cheval Blanc Hotel. A beautiful and very intimate dining room of just 12 covers when I dined. I believe they can seat 20. This is a Yannick Alléno restaurant of the famed Paris 3* Pavillon Ledoyen on the Champs Elysées. Although the day to day head chef is Gérard Barbin, a hugely talented and very personable chap who took a lot of time to engage me directly regarding the menu and cooking techniques. Aside from the outstanding cookery, the service was impeccable and it was nice to see all the lead service staff were female with just a male Sommelier and male bus boys. For me their expert knowledge of all the dishes and competent table side skills at finishing a lot of the dishes took the whole experience to the next level. This was a far cry from the snooty French service I experience sometimes in Paris. The only slight negative was the sommelier. The wine service made me feel as though it was maybe the main sommelier’s day off. Possible a language barrier but i would not expect that in any 3* restaurant. This restaurant is not for the faint of heart as the bill was an eye watering €700 for me alone. And I did not go particularly crazy on the wine. Everyone else in the dining room was clearly very wealthy and I detected quite a few Russian accents which should give you an idea of the type of clientele this place attracts. Indeed, one gentleman had booked a table just for himself not to eat any food but to spend the evening working his way through some of the incredible wines that the restaurant offer at a price per 1cl. These were bottles that were priced in the tens of thousands of euro in the wine list. All in all I loved it and will go back at the next given opportunity. An OAD must visit. Less
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Roister is a concept by Grant Achatz, intended to be a lively and loud dining experience. Customers can pre-book the option to sit at the counter and view the cooking action at the hearth. Downstairs is Highbrow, Low Country Boil, which is a southern, coastal seafood, family-style dinner, served out of the basement test kitchen.
CHEF: Andrew Brochu.... More
Roister is a concept by Grant Achatz, intended to be a lively and loud dining experience. Customers can pre-book the option to sit at the counter and view the cooking action at the hearth. Downstairs is Highbrow, Low Country Boil, which is a southern, coastal seafood, family-style dinner, served out of the basement test kitchen.
CHEF: Andrew Brochu.
BLOG https://loustejskal.com/2017/12/02/roister-4/ Less
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