United States of America

Ejo #69 – Drunk In….. Seattle

So David and I are on holiday in the US.  I hope you weren’t expecting an intellectual essay on something of any great significance.  No, of course you know better than that.  And so you shall be rewarded with a quick discussion of some of the places we visited on our three day trip to Seattle last week.  I bring you “Drunk In….. Seattle”.

First up, right after we dropped our bags off and checked in, we headed straight to Canon, a self-proclaimed “Whiskey & Bitters Emporium”.  It is, apparently, the sixth best bar in the world, but who the fuck comes up with these lists, right?  And what are they basing it on?  If you want my opinion, it’s a nice bar, with OK food.  But you should definitely drop in and have a lovely cocktail (and while you’re there you can admire their vast collection of booze).

6th best bar in the world

6th best bar in the world

Cocktails at Canon

Cocktails at Canon

So the food at Canon was OK, as I said, but we were still a bit peckish after we left so we headed around the corner and up a few blocks to the pumping Tavern Law.  There was only one reason we went there (though they also serve a great selection of cocktails too) – and that was their famous salt & pepper fried chicken.  Oh yeah baby, this is drunken food.  This chicken was AMAZING.  And it got served with a pretty banging potato slaw too, to cut through the friedness of it all.  Highly recommended. Be prepared to wait for a seat on a weekend night though – they are jam packed.

Amazing salt & pepper fried chicken at Tavern Law.

Amazing salt & pepper fried chicken at Tavern Law.

The next day we went to southern church-themed Witness Bar for brunch, and in particular we went for their Bloody Mary’s.  We are currently in a Bloody Mary phase and we wanted to try as many good ones in town as we could.  Witness proclaims that the ingredients in their Mary, Full Of Grace are: Vodka, Tomato Juice, Spice & Salvation.  We agreed.  We had two each.  The food ain’t bad either – Southern-inspired down-home cookin’.

Mushroom and sausage scramble

Mushroom and sausage scramble

Lamb hash with sunny side up eggs

Lamb hash with sunny side up eggs

Bloody Mary (secret ingredient: salvation!!)

Bloody Mary (secret ingredient: salvation!!)

So I mentioned that we are in a Bloody Mary chapter in our lives, but no matter what libation we are fixated on at any one time, our standard go-to drink is a margarita.  And we found some pretty good ones at La Cocina Oaxaqueña.  They also serve food but lets be honest, Seattle isn’t very close to Mexico, is it?  The margaritas are definitely worth a visit though. Simple, basic, good.

Great margaritas at La Cocina Oaxaqueña

Great margaritas at La Cocina Oaxaqueña

OK, so I reaaaaaaaaaaally don’t eat dessert much when we vacay,  I mean, I just don’t need it. There are a million wonderful things to eat out there in the world (and even more wonderful things to drink) so why waste calories on sweet, sickly stuff that’s going to clog my arteries and fill me up (and make me feel like a pogger afterwards)?  BUT…. having said that, we just HAD to try the pie at Pie Bar.  So late one night, after a very light dinner we made our way over to the Capitol Hill bar where they serve a bunch of different sweet pies, a couple of savoury ones and a few interesting cocktails.  We ordered a piece o’ pie each, despite our better judgement and just went for it.  To wash it down, we each tried one of their Pietinis – basically a pie in a glass.  Yes, my arteries hardened just writing that sentence.  Worth trying – but definitely share the pie, we couldn’t finish either of ours.

Pietinis. 0% necessary - still had to try them.

Pietinis. 0% necessary – still had to try them.

Coconut cream pie

Coconut cream pie

Chocolate peanut butter pie

Chocolate peanut butter pie

The next day we continued on our Bloody Mary quest.  This time we tried the brunch at Lost Lake Café & Lounge – a 24 hour diner not too far from where we were staying.  It had a really great vibe, wonderful servers and a pretty tasty Mary.  Again, we had two each (I’d say it was in the interests of research, but I know you know better – I don’t want to insult you).  The breakfast was also very tasty.

Bloody Mary's at Lost Lake Diner

Bloody Mary’s at Lost Lake Diner

Condiments

Condiments

Beef hash and eggs, sunny side up

Beef hash and eggs, sunny side up

Huevos rancheros

Huevos rancheros – looks like a mess, tastes YUM!

Our trip didn’t involve just eating and drinking.  We also organised a very educational tour of a small batch local distillery.  See, we’re cultured.  Having been recommended Oola gin by a gin loving friend, we just had to check out the distillery.  Plus, those of you who know me, know that Oola is basically my middle name.  How could I NOT go and check out their spirits.  So, apart from two types of gin, they also do a few vodkas and a bourbon.  We got to taste all seven varieties of spirits (being: gin, Waitsburg barrel-finished gin, Waitsburg bourbon whisky, vodka, chilli pepper vodka, rosemary vodka and citrus vodka).  Being a small operation (they only produce 2500 bottles a month), they infuse their spirits by hand which I think gives them a really special flavour.  We loved the tour and the tasting, and I’ll leave it up to you to figure out if we bought anything from their shop at the end of the tour.

Preparing the spirit tastings

Preparing the spirit tastings

The vodka still

The vodka still

Where the infusion magic happens. All natural ingredients.

Where the infusion magic happens. All natural ingredients.

Ready to ship. They make 2500 bottles a month.

Ready to ship. They make 2500 bottles a month.

Oola front of store. Spirits were purchased.

Oola front of store. Spirits were purchased.

Last, but most certainly not least we waited in line for half an hour at Salumi Artisan Cured Meats.  Granted, you might not want to wait half an hour for a sandwich when you’re hung over, but I will tell you right now, it’s an investment worth waiting for.  The benefits FAR outweigh the costs on this one.  The meats here are all cured in the shop by old school Italianos.  In fact, it’s one of Anthony Bourdain’s favourite shops whenever he’s in Seattle.  And I’ll tell you why.  They don’t do a lot, but what they do is just amazing.  Truly delicious, incredible quality sandwiches that just hit the spot.  We had a salami and fresh mozzarella, and one of their specialities – slow cooked porchetta, which is basically fatty, moist boneless pork roasted with stuffing over hot coals for hours until the meat just melts in your mouth. It’s something that needs to be experienced to be understood.  Must do, if you’re in Seattle.

Waiting in line at Salumi

Waiting in line at Salumi

The menu. Very basic but very fucking delicious.

The menu. Very basic but very fucking delicious.

Each sandwich is hand made to order.

Each sandwich is hand made to order.

Their home made salami ciabatta sandwich with fresh mozzarella.

Their home made salami ciabatta sandwich with fresh mozzarella.

Slow cooked porchetta sandwich with lots of juicy gravy in a baguette. Messy as hell to eat, but just blissful.

Slow cooked porchetta sandwich with lots of juicy gravy in a baguette. Messy as hell to eat, but just blissful.

So, some of you eagle-eyed readers out there might be wondering if this month’s ejo is being published late.  I am currently in Novato, California where the time is 11.30pm.  It might be September where you are, but it’s still August here bitches!!!!

Ejo #58 – In Search Of The Perfect Margarita

Hello, my name is Chryss, and I enjoy drinking alcohol. In fact, I really, really enjoy drinking alcohol. And I think that’s OK. I’m not ashamed. I won’t go so far as to claim (as a fabulous friend of mine once did) that “I just don’t trust people who don’t drink”. But c’mon, they’re certainly not as much fun! There is something to be said for the shared experience of enjoying a well-made tipple – whether it be a fine glass of wine, a nicely balanced cocktail or an ice-cold beer on a warm summer’s day.

It’s funny how certain drinks go in and out of style. Chardonnay spent many years in the wilderness, before making a fashionable comeback. Gin too is enjoying a very popular resurrection, while the Cosmopolitan is now considered a little bit daggy and retro (albeit still a classic).

In the spirit world, tequila has drawn what I think is an unfairly short straw. I guess the reason is that so many of us chalked up at least one bad tequila experience during our misspent youths. Usually it involved the kind of tequila that comes with a little red hat on the bottle. Ugh!!! I remember quite well the epic evening that caused me to exile tequila for two long (tumbleweed-strewn) decades. Actually, I don’t remember the evening at all – but I do clearly remember the aftermath. There was pain, there was vomit, there was shame. Don’t pretend you don’t know what I’m talking about. You’ve been there.

Shudder

Shudder

But tequila is not just a drink young people employ to get drunk. Just like the more respected beverages of whiskey and wine, tequila has a spectrum of quality that ranges from paintstripper to fine libations ripe for enjoyment and appreciation. And just like those other forms of alcohol, fine tequila takes on flavours and nuances from its terroir and from the aging process. For instance, Extra Añejo is aged for a minimum of 36 months in oak barrels, and this process tends to mellow it, making it an enjoyable drink to sip. Don’t you even think about lick-sip-sucking Extra Añejo. In fact, don’t “slam” tequila at all. Ever. OK? Show some respect, please.

Dangerous

Dangerous

Now, just because I have come to appreciate tequila for the fine liquor it is, doesn’t make me a tequila snob. Not in the least. Actually, some tequila snobs might look down their noses at me because my favourite way to drink it is mixed in a margarita. It was this humble (though much-abused) cocktail that lured me back to tequila, after so many years apart. And I admit that when I first started drinking margaritas, my long-held disdain for tequila led me to drink some pretty, pretty bad versions. Margaritas sweetened with sugar syrup. Margaritas made with pre-made sour mix. Flavoured margaritas. Even writing these words makes me gag. Blech! I might not be a tequila snob, but I sure as hell am a margarita snob. And I have Las Vegas to thank for that.

David and I first went to Vegas in 2007. We were young and naïve, so we did the silly tourist thing of walking around with giant yard glasses of unnaturally bright green, slushy “margaritas”. The memory makes me cringe. Thank god then, that the next time we went to Las Vegas, in 2011, we met George, the bartender at Mesa, a restaurant in Caesar’s Palace. George’s margaritas were an epiphany, and drinking them opened up the world of tequila in a whole new way to me. He used Partida, a quality silver tequila (this, youngest style of tequila, is also the crispest and cleanest which makes it ideal for mixing in cocktails). He squeezed fresh limes to order. He added a “secret” ingredient* to the shaker before agitating it. He served the drink in a chilled martini glass. Without ice. In short, George blew my fucking mind. What was this drink? It was like nothing I’d ever had before. And just like that, George turned me into a margarita snob. As a memento, he also gave me the silver emblem that wraps with a piece of leather around the neck of the bottle; aka the Partida Spirit Bird. I still have it.

The Partida Spirit Bird emblem.  I proudly wear this as a necklace.

The Partida Spirit Bird emblem. I proudly wear this as a necklace.

Wearing my Partida Spirit Bird.

Wearing my Partida Spirit Bird.

The lure of a quality margarita is so great, that when we went back to Vegas this year, we headed straight to Mesa looking for George. As luck would have it, he’d gone back behind the bar just a few days earlier, after spending the preceding three years working the floor of the restaurant. Perhaps there is a god. He made them for us and they were as good as we remember. The best margaritas. Ever.

The ultimate margarita.  Time and time again.  This one celebrated a poker tournament win.

The ultimate margarita. Time and time again. This one celebrated a poker tournament win.

At the beginning of this year’s USA holiday, David and I decided that we’d make it a Margarita Tour of California/Nevada. We enjoyed margaritas on 24 days of our 25 day holiday. And that ain’t bad (the one, dreadful, day we didn’t indulge was the result of the Curious Case Of The Misplaced Tequila Bottle while camping in the Nevada desert). During our holiday, we had some great margaritas, we had some average margaritas and we had some interesting margaritas. Margaritas, margaritas, margaritas!!!!

Mystery Haight Street Bar - This is what a margarita SHOULDN'T look like.  I mean, a mason jar???  Really????  The taste disappointed too.  We stuck to Mexican joints from then on.  Lesson learned.

Mystery Haight Street Bar – This is what a margarita SHOULDN’T look like. I mean, a mason jar??? Really???? The taste disappointed too. We stuck to Mexican joints from then on. Lesson learned.

Tommy's Mexican - we waited six years for this pitcher of Partida margarita.  And it was gooooooooood.

Tommy’s Mexican – we waited six years for this pitcher of Partida margarita. And it was gooooooooood.

Tacolicious - The bar, Mosto, was closed but the restaurant still served margaritas (thank god, right!!?).

Tacolicious – The bar, Mosto, was closed but the restaurant still served margaritas (thank god, right!!?).

Mosto - We went back the next day when the bar was open and had some margaritas.

Mosto – We went back the next day when the bar was open and had some margaritas.

Mosto - You can't make a margarita without fresh lime.  Not in my book anyway.

Mosto – You can’t make a margarita without fresh lime. Not in my book anyway.

Mosto - We also had some mezcal.  Very popular right now.  It was nice, but it wasn't a margarita.

Mosto – We also had some mezcal. Very popular right now. It was nice, but it wasn’t a margarita.

Lóló - quirky restaurant with quirky (but really good) margaritas.  Loved the chilli salt rim.

Lóló – quirky restaurant with quirky (but really good) margaritas. Loved the chilli salt rim.

La Rondalla - This was a recommendation from a friend.  They made the margaritas fresh (on request) and they made them good.

La Rondalla – This was a recommendation from a friend. They made the margaritas fresh (on request) and they made them good.

As a happy ending to this story, David and I actually bought some (rather elusive) Partida tequila whilst out one day in San Francisco (the fact that we lugged the five bottles, four strenuous miles home, up the vertical streets of San Francisco, just makes them even more special). Ever since learning from George how to make the perfect margarita three and a half years ago, we have enjoyed magnificent margaritas at home, usually made with Patrón or Don Julio (both very good tequilas). But now, people, NOW, we’ll be making them with Partida!!!! In any case, we will always have a toast to George!

 

 

* It’s a dash of water. Yup, a simple dash of water makes a world of difference to the final product. Try it sometime.

Ejo #18 – The French Laundry versus In-N-Out (And A Little Bit About Michelin Stars)

I consider myself a “foodie”.  Someone who appreciates fine food (and yes, eats lots of it, as evidenced by my ongoing battle with weight).  But I am by no means a food snob.  I can get just as much gastronomic pleasure from a well made shwarma as I do from delighting in the whimsical creations of a Michelin starred chef.

Ah, Michelin!  Growing up I always associated this name with a chubby man made of rubber tyres.  As I got older and started my passionate love affair with travelling, I realised that Michelin also made road maps and travel guides.  It made sense – those wheels had to go somewhere.  But I only became aware of Michelin as a rating system for fine dining restaurants after I graduated into a full blown foodie sometime in my mid-thirties (around the time I actually started being able to afford the type of food that can blow your mind).

My first Michelin star experience was with David in Paris, 2008.  It was a restaurant called Dominique Bouchet and it offered a “degustation” menu.  The word degustation derives from Latin and means “to taste or savour appreciatively”.  As such, restaurants use it to describe a set menu of several small dishes, each one created to tantalise and delight.  At Dominique Bouchet’s restaurant the degustation menu included “veal head” as one of the courses.  The sound of this neither tantalised, nor delighted us.  I imagined a baby cow’s head presented to us on a silver platter.   But, as the maitre’d explained, it was a roasted cut of veal cheek.  So we went ahead and ate it.  It was sublime.  It was our first demonstration of the kind of experimentation and envelope pushing that can occur in a Michelin starred kitchen.  We were hooked.

Since then we’ve been to a couple of other places deemed good enough to earn the coveted star or two, but we’d never had the chance to eat in a (highest rated) 3 star restaurant before.  That is, until our recent trip to the USA.  Six months in the planning gave us ample time to organise, and save for, a dinner at the famous “The French Laundry” in Napa Valley, California.  Following is a review of this restaurant – and to demonstrate that I am not at all a food snob, I have reviewed it alongside “In-N-Out”, a fast food burger outlet.

HISTORY

The French Laundry started life as a saloon bar in 1906 but when prohibition came along in the twenties, the building was sold and used to run a French steam laundry, hence the name.  The current owner and head chef, Thomas Keller, bought the restaurant in 1994 transforming it into one of the finest dining restaurants in the world.  In fact, Anthony Bourdain has called it “The best restaurant in the world, period!”

In-N-Out started life in Los Angeles in 1948 and was the first ever drive through burger stand.  It was (and still is) a relatively small, family run chain with the simple goal of providing their customers with the highest quality food possible – a credo they still operate to.  To this end, the chain has never frozen any of their produce or meat patties.  No In-N-Out is located more than a one day drive from their regional distribution centres.  Furthermore, to maintain the high quality, none of 258 stores located throughout the western states of the USA are franchised.

RESERVATIONS

To get a reservation at The French Laundry you must call them 60 days before the date you’d like to book.  And the tables go fast.  I was intent on bagging a reservation – no matter what – so two months before our holiday, with three minutes left until their Reservations Desk opened, I started dialling.  No answer.  At the exact moment their desk opened I dialled again – it was busy.  And it stayed busy for the next 45 minutes.  When I finally got through I was told that there were no tables left for that night.  There was nothing for it but to repeat this ridiculous rigmarole of sitting hunched over the phone, hitting the redial button over and over again for the next three evenings – and, eventually, I was rewarded with a reservation for 8.30pm on the 4th May 2011.  Yay!

In-N-Out, on the other hand, doesn’t take reservations.  That would be silly.  It is, however, not as easy to find an In-N-Out as, say, a McDonald’s or a Burger King.  That’s because there aren’t as many of them.  Quality over quantity.  So we found ourselves driving out of our way to dine there.  While it is slightly scarcer than other fast food outlets, getting a table at In-N-Out was a far simpler affair than The French Laundry.  Winner: In-N-Out

IMPRESSIONS

The building which houses The French Laundry looks like a French farmhouse set in a pretty, informal garden.  It’s rustic and provincial.  On entering, we were struck by the country chic interior and by the hushed, formal tone.  The restaurant was, of course, full – though this didn’t detract from, or negatively impact on, the level of service provided.  The servers themselves performed like a well-oiled machine, choreographed to unobtrusive, yet fully effective, perfection.  The service itself was friendly and playful, and not at all stuffy or snobby – which was nice.  The only negative was that when David asked if they would hang up his suit jacket, he was told that they would “prefer” it if he kept it on.  A quick glance around the dining room revealed that yep, all the men still had on their jackets.  Now, I’m completely on board with a formal dress code in a fancy restaurant but I think that not being able to take your jacket off is just stupid.  All it achieved was making all the men in the restaurant more uncomfortable than they needed to be.
Points deducted.

In-N-Out, naturally, doesn’t enforce a dress code.  Like The French Laundry, however, every time we visited (three) they were absolutely jam packed.  There were always at least ten cars in the drive through and at least six people in the queue at the registers.  This was, in no way, an indictment on the service.  Just like the fine dining restaurant, the service at In-N-Out ran like Swiss clockwork.  I recall one occasion when there were 50 orders ahead of ours; we both rolled our eyes, thinking we’d have to wait at least half an hour before we could eat.  Less than ten minutes later though, we had our meal.  Now, most fast food joints pre-prepare a lot of their food items – this isn’t the case at In-N-Out.  The kitchen is completely open and it was easy to see why the food was coming out so fast.  There was a lot of staff and they all worked well together.  Sure, the ambience of In-N-Out doesn’t come anywhere close to matching that of The French Laundry but both restaurants provided magnificent service – efficiently and with a smile.  Winner: Draw.

FOOD

The French Laundry serves two nine-course tasting menus that change daily (one is entirely vegetarian).  They pride themselves on no two dishes having the same ingredient.  Every dish here is an exercise in the mastery of food elevated to art.  This type of thing doesn’t appeal to everyone (it does, if you hadn’t already guessed, appeal to me).  For some, food is fuel.  At The French Laundry, food is theatre.  It is performance.  Each tiny dish, presented with a flourish, is designed to be consumed in three or four bites.  These dishes take hours to compose.  Some take days.  This is NOT food for fuel.  This is food for the senses, first to be devoured by the eyes and then by the mouth, each texture and taste precisely calculated to elicit a rapturous response in the diner.  On this occasion, whilst the food was absolutely lovely, it elicited no rapture.  The sum of the parts equalled, disappointingly, only the sum of the parts.  Perhaps the six months anticipation of dining at this revered culinary institution had inflated my expectations to a level where they could never be met.  Or, maybe it’s just an over-rated (and ridiculously over-priced) restaurant.  I’m glad we went, but I don’t think we’ll be in a hurry to return.

In-N-Out, whilst in a completely different league, also had high expectations to meet.  My favourite blogger, Michael K (www.dlisted.com), first brought the chain to my attention years ago by way of his ardent and avid loyalty to it (as well as the depth of his despair that it is not available in his adopted east coast home of New York City).  During our travels in the USA some very good friends (who, incidentally, are health freaks) insisted that if we were to indulge in fast food it had to be In-N-Out.  So, we did.  The menu is very simple and small – they offer Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers and Double-Doubles (double meat, double cheese).  They also have fries, three flavours of milkshakes and soft drinks.  That’s it!  So let’s talk about the quality of the food.  Every element was super fresh and extremely tasty.  The meat was juicy (but not greasy) and cooked to perfection.  The lettuce was green and crispy.  The tomato was red and actually tasted like tomato, and not cardboard.  Wow, imagine that!  The grilled cheese was melted just right – not like in McDonald’s where they often don’t cook (MICROWAVE!!) it enough.  When ordering, you are given the option of fresh or grilled onion with your burger.  The grilled version was absolutely delicious, caramelised to perfection and full of flavour.  And each burger has a special sauce called “Spread”.  I don’t know what it is (and it looks gross) but it’s yummy.  And just about the best thing of all for me was that if you don’t eat bread (which I don’t), you can simply ask for your burger “Protein Style” and they’ll serve it wrapped in lettuce.  Amazing.  Simply put, this was the best burger I’d ever eaten in my life!  And at just over three bucks, it was excellent value.  I have no doubt  whatsoever that we’ll eat there again – next time we’re in California.  Winner: In-N-Out

I know it seems childish and perhaps a little disrespectful to compare The French Laundry (winner of The Best Restaurant In The World Award in 2003 and 2004) to a family run burger joint – but the fact of the matter is that I walked away from In-N-Out extremely impressed and more than satisfied.  I walked out of The French Laundry feeling kind of… meh!  And ripped off.

Of course this hasn’t completely dampened my enthusiasm for Mr. Michelin and his stars.  But for now I feel like that box has been ticked and I doubt I’ll go out of my way again to eat at a restaurant simply because it has three stars.

If you’d like to compare the menus of the two restaurants (with blurry pictures), here’s the link:

https://ejochryss.wordpress.com/2011/06/24/ejo-18-the-french-laundry-versus-in-n-out-the-menus/