*

*
Jelly, jelly so fine

Friday, February 4, 2011

Taken to the cleaners

Leslie and I just came back from a quick jaunt up to Napa and back with a few friends. It was absolutely gorgeous, about 15 degrees warmer than chilly San Diego, surprisingly. We had a marvelous couple of days, with great traveling companions that we are very comfortable with.

Any long time reader of the Blue Heron Blast would probably surmise that we were hunting good food and wine this week, an elusive quarry and pursuit that motivates much of our time. You would not be wrong.


We left on our northern quest a few minutes after six in the morning, in a rented Navigator. All of our possessions had been distilled into the smallest suitcases imaginable. Which would have been fine if we had not brought so much food for the trip. Bags of baguettes and crackers, cheeses and truffle butter, soppressata and salami from Venissimo, we were loaded for bear. I hate to imagine how much weight I have gained in a mere three days, something probably exacerbated by the prednisone I have been taking lately.
Leslie had brought a nice selection of music along and we segued nicely from Beeethoven to early Rolling Stones. We actually rolled into Napa at about 2:45 in the afternoon. Time passes quicker in a car with good conversation.


We had our reservations for the French Laundry on Wednesday night and discussed our collective desire to arrive there hungry and fairly sober. We stopped at our only winery of the trip, a scoot over to Chandon, Renée having a slight sulfite allergy as I do, and champagne tending not to hurt one too much.
The champagne was alright, nothing extraordinary. The Pinot Noir reserve wasn't bad. We had to pay about $20.00 for the tasting, which tells you how long it has been since I have been to Napa, since I don't recall ever paying for booze before. The server was a bit irritating and over forward and I ensconced myself on a high table far away from him in order to keep everything in the happy zone.



After our tasting we checked into our hotel, the Bardessono, an absolutely fantastic new boutique hotel with every amenity and state of the art furnishings. Totally green, Leed platinum certified. The rooms, which were upgraded for us, had steam rooms, hi- tech whirlpools, outdoor showers, private decks, electric shutters and just could not have been nicer. The foyer was decorated with long trails of tillandsia or air plants. The architecture was a nice cross between bauhaus and zen. The toilets not only talked to you, but they spritzed, shampooed and gave your most private real estate a lovely coiffure.

When we left, the affable General Manager Jim Treadway came out and thanked us. A first class guy and a first class hotel.


We were thinking about the culinary adventure that awaited us the next day and thought that we should eat simple and relaxed the first night. We settled on an old reliable outside of Napa, Bistro Don Giovanni. Situated in a vineyard, always loud, always packed, the last time I was there I had fantastic sand dabs, which were now unfortunately off the menu.
I had one of those ubiquitous walnut, pear, blue cheese salads, which was good but a bit heavy on the dressing. I ordered short rib risotto fritters for the table that were terrific. For my entree I had strongly spiced lamb meatballs that tasted a bit greek or mediterranean. Lots of oregano and bursting with flavor. All of us enjoyed our dinners, which tended to northern italian. A smaller, scaled down menu than I remember, but one that still delivered. R. had a nice short rib on risotto. Leslie had a duck confit salad and a potato, celery root, artichoke soup.
We returned to our hotel and retired for the night. Slept the sleep of the dead, Ren said that she got 7 hours in for the first time in memory. I got up about 6:30 and headed over to Bouchon Bakery for out of this world almond croissants and coffee. Then a trip back to the hotel lobby where I got to indulge in a full reading of the Financial Times, New York Times, Wall Street Journal and San Francisco Chronicle.
We piled into the car for a scenic trip around Rutherford and towards Lake Berryessa and eventually made it to another foodie heaven, Dean and Deluca. We were all so transfixed with the great selection of everything, from wine to exotic salts and condiments. Murderer's row of prosciutto. Spent a small fortune.
Renée's son and his girlfriend drove up and had lunch with us at our hotel. We had the large table in the dining room to ourselves. D. and I had swordfish sandwiches on Brioche. All very tasty fare. After lunch Renée decided to stick around and hang out with her baby Chris and Justine. 
Leslie, R and D and I drove up to Calistoga and received mudbath's at the little Golden Haven Resort. It was our friends' first slide into the molten goo and they loved it. Leslie said that I fell asleep on the table and started snoring as did D. After the mud you shower off and get in the mineral water hot tub. Then you shower again and make sure that you have freed all of your orifices from unwanted sediment. Then you get blanket wrapped in a dark candlelit room with a cool towel on your forehead and proceed to zoom off into space. Great way to banish all the sniggling aches and pains and the stress of real life.


We drove back to Yountville and stopped and walked through the French Laundry gardens, looking at the prospective vegetables that might be gracing our plates later that evening. We finally went back to the hotel and chilled, with a lot of nervous conversation on my part regarding the evening ahead. This was going to be big. 

***


 At approximately 6:10 we started walking towards the French Laundry. The trellis of the old stone building was covered with old vegetation and I noticed immaculately raked side yards. The building was originally built by a Scotsman at the turn of the century and housed a saloon. A law was subsequently passed that you could not serve alcohol within 1000 feet of the house of a veteran and in the twenties it became a french steam laundry. Thomas Keller bought the restaurant in 1994. It was named best restaurant in the world in 2003 and 2004. It has won multitudes of awards, a third Michelin Star and it's chefs have gone on to great things around the country. As you probably know.


We were quickly seated at 6:30 at a good table. One of my fellow diners remarked that it was nice to not be squeezed in to a too small table. Everybody in the restaurant seemed very well dressed, my companions no exception. There were a lot of asian people in the restaurant. An asian gent at the next table tried to take his sport coat off and was quickly and gently remonstrated.
I have somehow misplaced my copy of the menu and will have to recount the meal from memory.  But let me say that it was one of the most incredible eating experiences of my life. Not the best, not the most pleasurable, but definitely the most complex. In fact, I am still processing my adventure, trying to make sense of the whole thing. Because this one had me on the ropes, maybe unmasked as a charlatan and definitely begging for mercy at one point.


Our server/liaison Brian briefed us on the meal and the two nine course menus, one meat oriented and one mainly vegetables with some meat. He asked us about any known food allergies and Leslie and I begged off on the caviar and oyster first course, Sabayon of Pearl Tapioca with Malpeque Oysters and Ossetra, having developed some sort of weird reactions to the mollusks in the last several years. We then ordered, all going left side menu except for Renée who went the vegetable route. D ordered a 2007 Hirsch Pinot Noir, which was delicious and practically the first alcohol of the day.

The menu was a bit florid. I noticed an item on the vegetable side titled Jidori hen egg and couldn't suppress the urge to ask Brian if the Jidori roosters were in the habit of laying eggs as well. My query was met with a cool but professional smile.

Our meal started with gougéres, little puff pastries of gruyere that literally melted in our mouths. I could have powered twenty or thirty of these little guys without a problem. This course gave way to the famous salmon tartare cones that are probably one of the restaurant's signature dishes. The amusebouche of all amusebouches. Absolutely delicious. The comfort food portion of the meal was now officially over and we hadn't even eaten our first true course. 
Leslie and I started with ossetra caviar over some sort of saki infused ice for our substitution. I really liked it, she thought that it was too simple for her taste. The danger you run into when substituting, I suppose.


The next offering was a moulard duck pate de fois gras au torchon on an elaborate base of flavors including pickled asian pear relish, celery, parsnip purée and vanilla scented sauternes reduction. It was very good and very rich and they brought out warm brioche to slather it onto.

It was at this point that I started checking out our fellow diners. At the next table was an elegant silver haired gentleman who I could swear was a famous writer or newsman. The rest of our room was mainly chinese. 
Anyone who has traveled in the last several years can attest that the chinese and russians seem to be the only folks left with any money. We had a foursome of chinese in front of us that were fascinating. Total barbarians. We watched in amazement as the man stabbed the brioche and attempted to put the whole thing in his mouth. He was also sucking his pate off the end of his dinner knife. It was like sharing a meal with Attila the hun or Ghengis Khan. No longer do I want to hear anything about my lack of table manners.

We were then treated to the butter poached lobster on the beet paint with a little potato chip hat like the dancing hippos in Fantasia. Perfect dish. Truly gorgeous artistically on the rich beet purple ground.
The next course was I think the cobia, an atlantic fish, on red pepper paint. R had the bouillabaisse. This was the moment in the meal where things started getting a little bit weird. There were so many disparate food tastes going off that my mouth was exploding like a firecracker, a pattern that continued throughout the rest of the meal. The fish itself was prepared wonderfully, and colorfully I might add, but it ventured into decidedly new turf with all the discordant flavors. Something they were trying to do.
I have had friends run screaming from the French Laundry. I had some say they left hungry, which I just can't believe. I have friends that absolutely love the place. I really don't know where I stand, honestly. This is definitely not comfort food, it is the most challenging fare I have ever eaten. I think that I have only eaten at a similar restaurant one time in my life. The food is so complex, the litmus test and demarcation line so far above "tastes good" that at times I felt like I was in a fifteen round prize fight, doing little rope a dopes in the corner, fighting for air. Sensory bombard the palette, the culinary equivalent of a major acid trip.

Fish gave way to kurobata pork belly, freaking divine, just the right amount of underlying fat. Pork was followed by beef, a succulent and perfectly cooked tenderloin strip and a small square of braised brisket, whose demiglaze was a bit too rich for me but something everybody else loved. Somehow another pinot got ordered, an El Molino of the same vintage.

I frankly don't know what the hell else I ate, since I started fading into the wainscoting. My friends said that I looked real quiet and weird for about three courses. They said that they have never seen me more at a loss for words. I was in lala land. Pretty close to shnockered. The service was a bit slow and I had to stifle a yawn several times as did my dinner mates. The server came by and I think I pleaded for him to make it stop but he kept saying "just one more course" and I acquiesced  and just kept eating so as not to embarrass my wife and sully my family honor.

Little food memories rise out of my altered state and present themselves now on the day after; a baby radish with top leaf that was practically translucent and with no bite, grapefruit seeds in the sorbet exploding in my mouth like a roman candle. It was frankly turning into a bit of an ordeal. Wonderful and terrible at the same time. Because we had been hit with everything short of the kitchen sink. Who in their right mind would have porkbelly, fish, lobster, beef, steak and moulard all in one meal? Not to mention all the bread I had stupidly slammed down, along with the two kinds of butter.  
I am taken by the artistry of Keller's plates and the subtle and sophisticated flavors in his food. But everything is pushed so far. I found myself fantasizing for just one simple course in the middle of this titanic effort. Something that was just well cooked and spoke for itself without reaching for the epicurean apogee. I have noticed some restaurants lately that try to push the food beyond good and make it difficult to eat, not necessarily this one. But I certainly felt challenged. Perhaps my clumsy palette has been affected by too many double cheeseburgers?
I wondered how many of the rich patrons were there for the food and how many who merely wanted to check the French Laundry off their birding list? Our hosts told me about once being seated at 9:30 and not getting out until 1:30 in the morning. I would definitely crack. Don't ever go and get seated after 7, whatever you do.
Back to the feast: I seem to recall a chocolate ganache dessert with a sour cherry that was trickier than it was delicious, then perfect tiny doughnuts, a sorbet and more snappy little chocolates. D had some beautiful pistachio ice affair. Coffee was served to those that requested it. The night was capped with delicious little cups of chocolate fondant, which helped us come back to earth. Shortbread cookies to go. We got a quick tour of the kitchen after the meal. Some very serious cooks. Very impressive, to say the least.
We had equipped ourselves well and survived the expedition. Made Fallbrook proud. I think that there were about twelve courses. I appreciate the invitation and kindness of my hosts. I don't know that I will ever be back. I have planted my flag on this mountain of gourmandise but like Hillary have "been there, done that" and may not need to do it again. Four or five courses would be fine but this gustatory exercise in pure excess sent my nervous system into full tilt. Sproing! The restaurant was everything they said it was and more. Herculean. I just may not have the huevos anymore to tackle such an epic meal.
I wonder about places like the French Laundry. Purportedly Thomas Keller runs a small empire with his various restaurants, Per Se, Ad Hoc, Bouchon, etc. that employs about a thousand people. It must be hard to love what you are doing when you are involved in serving that many plates, employing that many people and have become a culinary institution. Bet he wishes he was slinging hash in an anonymous diner some days.
***
I wish that I could say that we, being overstuffed, fasted on the way home. The reality is that we continued to gorge ourselves silly on a variety of foodstuffs that I am too embarrassed to recount. Ended up at my favorite armenian chicken place, Zankou Chicken in Pasadena for protein, pickled turnips, hummus and garlic paste. Then back to Fallbrook just after dark.
It was an amazing three days. There is more of me standing than there was last week, I estimate about 6 lbs. more. Guiltriddenly hauled my ass into the gym this morning. Many thanks to my friends, wife and fellow diners. A whirlwind but an absolute ton of fun. Quite a trip.









27 comments:

Anonymous said...

I really like the kitchen photo. I read somewhere that the vents above the stoves and grills are scrubbed out by hand every night. The place is tight. Good reporting Rob!

Brian v

Blue Heron said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Blue Heron said...

I am really happy with that photo as well, Brian - think it captured the commitment and intensity of the staff. I don't have your email or phone#. We are concocting a mushroom dinner in early March. Any chance you can help us?

Anonymous said...

Robert,

This is fabulous. Thank you so much. J We really enjoyed having you here. You promoted me from General Manager (and very sliver equity investor) to owner. Love that. Also, thought your sentence on our toilets was really fun (and true…..too.)

Best.

Jim

jim treadway l general manager | bardessono
chairman | mTm luxury lodging

Blue Heron said...

Sorry Jim, you've been demoted...

Robert

Blue Heron said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Robert
Loved your blog on eating, foods, dining, although I came away with an upset
stomach! a quick dump and all is well. I am in my airconditioned apartment with
my loving O my adorable Harper and we now have live-in help with everything girl
"Pu" from O's village. I have attached a few pictures of what you get when you
cross a White Irish with a Northern Thai girl.... Harper, Kicker, Pumpkinhead,
Jeena, Babygirl. Loved the pictures you took.
Best, Michael

Anonymous said...

Too late. I’m the owner now. J

Jim

jim treadway l general manager | bardessono
chairman | mTm luxury lodging

Anonymous said...

http://insidescoopsf.sfgate.com/paololucchesi/2011/02/04/the-french-laundry-emerges-from-winter-break-ups-price-to-270/

Melissa

Anonymous said...

wow.

Buzz

grumpy said...

all in all i think i'd rather sit down to a nice pot roast dinner..

Anonymous said...

Great blast Robert! Thanks for sharing your amazing trip and photos, I feel like I was there sharing in the culinary delights. While the French Laundry and mud baths sounded great (and I know they are), my favorite has to be the "talking toilet." I'm heading out to find one and to Escondido to see the Jade Buda.

Rest, digest!

Jerri

Anonymous said...

Thank you Robert. Your write up about the French Laundry was very informative and helpful. It convinced me that I don't think I want to eat there--even if someone else paid--which was how I used to eat when I was working and facilitating City of L.A. bond issues. The bankers who got paid by the city whenever city debt was created were very thankful to we city officials who helped them make money. But I could only take a lttlle bit of their hospitality; the other guys I was with in New York couldn't understand why I wanted to work out in the hotel fitness center rather than eat at Elaine's.

But I knew a long time ago that I am not a "gourmet food " fan. I like to eat too much to appreciate "paintings" on food.
Finally, there is an open invitation to visit us. Probably the only bad day will be Saturday, April 16--Picnic Day at U.C. Davis.
If you show up I will feed you some Northern California food--giant salads and great sour dough bread.

Uncle NORM

Anonymous said...

Rob

Im still getting hedgehogs. They should ship well. Some chefs prefer it to the chanterelle. It is more forgiving and more receptive to seasoning than the delicate chanterelle. I'm really looking for morels now. I have not yet found any. They are very difficult to see. I found some fluted black elfin saddles that look much like a morel and, I hope, the coveted black morel shares the same habitat and I may still get some! Let me know if you want the hedgehogs, they should continue to fruit thru spring. I know you want some morels and if I get em I'll be happy to share. I will email you soon with some pics of Buch and my tele etc...you can let me know zactly when your mushroom deal goes down.

Brian V

Blue Heron said...

A few of my dinner companions felt like my blog was a bit harsh. Renee and Leslie had no complaints with anything the entire night. I am told that I am a bit of a kvetcher. Maybe it is the fact that I am coming off antibiotics and prednisone, didn't have my "A" game.

Anonymous said...

I couldnt agree more about the French Laundry, although I had a much more negative experience, similar, but more exaggerated. I grew sick of the obsequious waiters unveiling dish after dish of over-elaborate and very fatty food, course after course after course. The food was precious and overdone, even vulgar in its ostentatiousness, really very Roman (read Trimalchio's Feast in Petronius Arbiter's Satyricon). I wouldnt have been surprised to have been served poached mice stuffed with hummingbird's tongues, a Roman delight. I literally couldnt take all the fat and over-flavored, inordinately complex food. I was the person that you referred to who "ran screaming from the place," a silent scream, but nonetheless a scream. The restaurant exists for the same reason Dom Perignon is made: to let rich people show to themselves and others just how rich they are. My favorite restaurant in the world is downstairs at Chez Panisse: pure, beautifully prepared, carefully flavored real food prepared with care and respect for the ingredients. At about 1/3 the price and truly wonderful and not the paradis d'artifice Keller has spun for the obscenely rich. Another truly great restaurant without all the fuss and feathers is L'Atlier de Joel Roubochon in Paris (also one in Vegas) where my family and I were treated with respect and honor and were served absolutely authentic and delicious food. One of my favorite wines is from the small village of Faugere in the hills of Languedoc: the sommelier at Roubochon was from the same village and grabbed me and hugged me and then served me a wonderful wine made by his cousin, and on the house for a fellow lover of Faugere.

I was ashamed to be an American as I sat in the garden of the French Laundry waiting for my friends to finish eating pig fat and fattened goose liver for the 15th time. It is the antithesis of all I believe about food: that it should nourish the soul as well as the body. The French Laundry is the dark side of luxury and the grease that eases the damned souls' slide down to the the level of Gluttony in Dante's Inferno.

Anonymous said...

Loved your write up on the Chinese oops French Laundry.You can add restaurant critic to your resume.
My friend has those toilets which were 5K.

I want one.


Best, Kim

Blue Heron said...

"poached mice stuffed with hummingbird's tongues" - now there's a meal.

Anonymous said...

Hi Robert,

Your piece on having your appetite laundered was fantastic in all regards; well done is an understatement.

I also liked your courageous response to pressure to lighten up on the liberal bias. Please keep on being you. I really disagree with so much of your attitude towards the conservative world but you do it so well..... We all have our perspectives and the likelihood of making major changes to ones mindset are slim. Nobody knows the art world any better than you. If I want political advice, I will likely go elsewhere. If I want a friend and an art professional, how could I do better.



Bill

Anonymous said...

to "anonymous" who commented at 3:33 p.m. on 2/5: right on, you hit the nail on the head; a "paradis d'artifice" indeed.

his faithful slave Pedro

Anonymous said...

Keep writing about food. They're some of the best meals I haven't had.

-K

Anonymous said...

"Let them eat cake....."

Anonymous said...

I love your food writing. Not sucked in by an hype, your honest assessments are great to read. A fantastic food experience.

We've eaten at a few of the "big show" places, most notably Alinea. I agree that it's too much too absorb. After 2 courses with the wine pairing I was pretty well shot. By the time the shrimp swinging on trapezes arrived, like you, we were screaming for mercy. And then you get the bill.

I really enjoyed your observations about your fellow diners too.

You might like reading in the New Yorker about Jordie Roca's dessert creation which attempts to duplicate the sensory experience of scoring a soccer goal. Someplace for you to go next.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/01/03/110103fa_fact_gopnik?currentPage=6

FoodSmarts

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

It seems to me that indulging on extravagant overpriced and undersized meals has become to the sixties generation the newest drug of choice. Places like the French Laundry substitute for Studio 54.

Blue Heron said...

Well, there's certainly less a chance of getting hepatitis or a sexually communicable disease. I remember a few major coke habits that a few unfortunate souls had back then. This food stuff is cheap entertainment, believe me.

Anonymous said...

I'm surprised that you didn't post a picture of your dump the next day.

M