• 02May

    In Northwest DC, summer has started creeping in little by little.   Signs to look for include the increased number of joggers, different local produce, and rooftop seating.  Masa 14 is one of the places taking advantage of the nicer weather.  Their newly remodeled rooftop has classy seating with lots of chic wood and elegant black fixtures.  For those interested in planning a special occasion, Masa 14 does rent either half or the whole rooftop.  If it’s bad weather, the bar has glass accordion doors that can fend off the precipitation.  The rooftop at Masa 14 is a great place to relax after work or enjoy lunch over the weekend.  Eating or drinking on the rooftop allows you to escape from DC without leaving the city.  The restaurant blends Latin and Asian flavors in a fun new way.  Their rooftop has its own specialty menu, which I was invited to taste last Tuesday.

    I began the tasting with a particularly good sangria.  The Pimm’s sangria consists of cucumber, sparkling wine, ginger, Pimm’s liqueur, and lemon.  Cucumber and the Pimm’s make this drink unique, and the ginger and lemon add a refreshing note.  I would recommend a Pimm’s sangria for those warm, humid nights DC tends to have.

    The Crunchy Rooftop Handroll arrived in a long wooden holder and the rolls resembled ice cream cones in shape.  The Latin flavor definitely found its way into this fusion food.  The nori cone gets a little sushi rice, topped by pico de gallo, shrimp, a tangy lemony aioli, and is finished with crunchy chili tortilla strips.  I really enjoyed the handroll and would order it without a doubt.

    Before going to Masa 14, I had never tasted a caipirinha.  Now that I’ve had one, I must admit I’ve been missing out.  The national drink of Brazil mixes sugar-cane rum, sugar and lime.  I had the Lemon-Basil version (using housemade lemon-basil syrup) and it was delicious.  The drink was sweet but not sugary, and the lemon and basil contrasted nicely with each other.  It’s the kind of drink you look for when you want to try something new and sophisticated.

    A couple of trays came around with hot dogs.  I tried the Rising Sun and El Tigre styles.  The Rising Sun is a Kobe beef hot dog, glazed with teriyaki.  Then the dog is topped with wasabi, furikake (sushi sprinkle), and fine-diced pickles.  Try this hot dog if you go to Masa 14; I promise it is way more delicious than I can explain here.  El Tigre is a chorizo link topped with pico de gallo, shoestring potatoes, and sriracha cream.  It’s definitely spicy, but it’s not 5-alarm.  People who enjoy spicy food would probably be pleased with this hot dog.  The flavor was very good overall.  These hot dogs are not the dinky little store-bought size.  They’d make a great lunch with a side dish and a drink.

    The very friendly bartenders noted my empty glass; I enjoyed a Spicy Cucumber Margarita shortly thereafter.  The spiciness is definitely “back of the throat” and adds something new to a drink.  Cucumber and agave syrup balanced the acidity of the lime, and the salt (optional) made my drink complete.  Masa 14 uses a housemade cucumber-fresno chile infused blanco tequila.  Try it and become a fan.

    Next, I tried the Spicy Shrimp Flatbread.  It tasted buttery, sweet, and hot all at once.  The flatbread was soft and the Oaxaca cheese was fresh.  The julienned jicama and crushed pineapple  balance the pickled fresno chiles.  The heat is a “back of your throat”variety, not a “fire in your mouth” type.  I would absolutely order this dish and not share.  The Mojito Especial was the perfect drink to enjoy with the flatbread.

    My last drink was the abovementioned Mojito Especial.  The requisite limes and mint were present, along with brown sugar and Patron Pyrat dark rum.  A faint licorice or anise flavor came through, balancing nicely with the brown sugar.  This drink is a refreshing twist on one of my favorite drinks.

    Finally, I tasted the Bay Scallop Ceviche.  Trays holding individual servings came around the room, and the visual appeal was evident.  Beautiful scallops had been combined with diced jicama, bright pineapple, and chopped red onion.  Then the mix had been tossed with a yuzu-sriracha vinaigrette, giving it heat and a citrus note.  I would definitely order this dish.  If you’re looking for a place that takes you out of the rat race, head for the rooftop of Masa 14.  The food is different from just about anything else you’ll find in DC, being Latin-Asian fusion, and the drinks are delicious.

    -TKW

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  • 02May

     

     

     

     

    I am hosting Food Blogger Happy Hour tonight (May 2nd) at Market Tavern! RSVP Here!

    And, our 9:30 Club (Sound Bites) Contest Closes Sunday Morning!

    -JAY

    ——

    Check out my friend Ami’s Costa Rica Tours and don’t forget to use the code “TOUCAN” to save money. He has some group tours that you can join.

    -JAY

     

     

  • 27Apr

    This is the 2nd article in a series– #1 (Dolce Veloce) is here.

    Restaurant kitchens come in all shapes and sizes, and after my last tour, I wanted to learn more about a big-time operation, a restaurant with an expansive dining room, a large crew of cooks and other staff, and at the eye of the storm, a talented chef managing the kitchen with aplomb.

    I was not disappointed.

    Wildfire Restaurant in Tysons Galleria is an outpost of a small chain based largely in the greater Chicagoland area.  Tucked away on the 3rd floor of the mall (though with its own dedicated elevator from the top level of the parking garage), Wildfire is a location I’d walked by several times when perusing the Galleria’s shops.  The restaurant is gently lit, a strong contrast to the bright lighting of the shopping mall, and is resplendent with dark wood and leather chairs throughout.  The dining room is sizable and abuts the open kitchen with the hybrid gas/wood-fired main oven, though the staff also works in a prep kitchen a bit further backstage.

    When I stopped by recently between lunch and dinner services, I found the Executive Chef, Eddie Ishaq, coolly directing his crew in the prep kitchen and slicing roasted sweet peppers for a special event the next evening (more to come on that in a subsequent post).  Chef Ishaq is a Chicago native who earned his culinary degree from Kendall College.  Having worked his way up the kitchen staff hierarchy at several Wildfire locations, Ishaq spent a short while away from the company at Smith & Wollensky Steakhouse in Chicago, but in January 2011, he accepted the appointment to the top job at Wildfire’s Virginia location.

    Ishaq manages a kitchen with massive output.  On a busy Saturday night, he said, his crew will push out more than 800 meals.  On Mother’s Day, they’ll serve about 1,800 people between lunch and dinner.  The kitchen remains open between lunch and dinner with 4-5 cooks manning their stations, but a busy night will require 12-15 cooks on the line.  Ishaq’s crew is 45 strong, but management told me that the cooks make up a little less than one-third of the location’s staff.  The Wildfire management team in McLean is transplanted from Chicago, but it takes more than 150 employees to run this 300-seat restaurant.  The chef was consistently proud of his cooks when I talked to him, but he also took a moment to praise the bottom rung of the culinary ladder:  “Dishwashers have the hardest job in the restaurant.  There are six of them.  Without them, we’ve got no plates, no silver, nothing.”

    Chef Ishaq described his restaurant’s menu proudly:  “Our specialty is as a steakhouse, but we have a little bit of everything to satisfy every palate.”  He explained that his cooks work especially hard to accommodate customers with allergies:  “We get allergy tickets left and right…but we’re here to satisfy – we don’t let people down.  If I can do it for them, I will.”  With even a small chain restaurant, the chef has a little less control over the menu than he might at a neighborhood store.  Chef Ishaq sends ideas up to his bosses quite a bit, but he gets to demonstrate his chops a bit with daily specials.  When conceptualizing specials, he said, the single biggest factor is the season, which governs what’s available and if he can get it fresh and cheap.  The restaurant also works hard to use local purveyors whenever possible – the chef mentioned a Pennsylvania farm that sends them fresh fruits and vegetables, and another purveyor who sells him “unbelievable” high-quality eggs that he usually moves during brunch in frittatas and sauces.  For Easter Sunday alone, he said, they restaurant had ordered 30 dozen eggs, and his staff went through 5 pitchers of Hollandaise sauce.

    He also gets a chance to show off at Wildfire’s special events, generally held monthly and described in more detail on the restaurant’s website.  He mentioned a recent Scotch tasting and dinner that garnered more than 60 attendees, and he’s currently thinking about some special cocktails and beer for football season.  The crew is also planning a pork dinner, with an organic Berkshire hog being raised especially for the restaurant.

    Ishaq explained that a day in his restaurant starts with prep lists.  His morning crew arrives between 8 and 8:30 – including one cook who spends several hours cutting and blanching potatoes for French fries – and begins the day’s prep lists, including an inventory of everything needed for the day’s service.  “We try to make everything fresh daily as much as possible,” the chef told me.  “If I have to make up half a batch, I’ll make half a batch.”  The menu at Wildfire is a fairly broad one, which demands that the open kitchen waste no space at all when storing cut and portioned fish, meats, garnishes, sauces, and the various other accoutrements of a professional kitchen.

    Lunch at Wildfire is, well, pretty wild.  Over the course of an hour and a half, tops, the crew will serve about 350 meals.  The Tysons Corner lunch crowd appears to be fairly corporate – witness all the office towers in the area – and the customers want to be in and out 30-45 minutes.  “It’s challenging when you’re only allowed to have a certain number of cooks on your schedule, but if we need to get our hands dirty, we jump in and knock it out.”  Tickets may come in fast and furious, but they go out like clockwork – his cooks are expected to get plates out in ten to fifteen minutes at the most.

    Between the lunch and dinner services, some customers will still be around, but his crew is generally working on transition.  The cooks are setting up for dinner, the chef is preparing for any private parties, and they’re all prepping for dinner service.  At about 4:00, his dinner cooks arrive, check their stations, and will work through dinner until about 11:00.  The dinner crowd usually arrives by about 6:30, and will stay until 9.  Chef Ishaq laughed as he described that difference from Chicago – the Wildfire locations there will be packed from 3:30 or 4:00 all the way until 9:00, but the Virginia crowd tends to work a little later.

    Yet despite the crowds, Chef Ishaq repeatedly told me that he thrives on the pressure.  He explained that he focuses even more closely on his plates when he’s busy:  “When it starts getting crazy, I want my eyes to see every single dish that goes out.  It gets crazy busy, but that doesn’t mean the quality of the food will go down.”

    The chef began assembling two of their most popular dishes for me while we talked – a macadamia-crusted Halibut filet served with asparagus, and their signature crab cakes.  The fish, cut and breaded during prep, is pan-roasted on an oiled cast-iron skillet in the main oven, which his staff keeps between 575 and 600 degrees.  After a bare few minutes and a turn, he added blanched asparagus to the skillet, and assembled the dish on a plate with a lemon-butter sauce.  The ease with which he moved, even having a stranger on the line next to him, was fascinating, and his crew’s movements around me that afternoon were seamless.  Whether assembling three-layer chocolate cakes with a light, chocolate mousse-style frosting (amazingly rich, yet light in texture), blanching potatoes, making sauces, or otherwise keeping up with the professional kitchen, not a one of his cooks blinked an eye while moving around me.  And their discipline doesn’t just extend to strangers in the kitchen:  “The key to a restaurant is portions – everything has to be consistent.  Working at a restaurant, your eyes have to be open all the time.”  Restaurants live and die on their customers’ satisfaction, obviously, and in my experience, a happy customer is one that comes back, orders their favorite dish, and gets it just the way they like it.

    The chef hit on another theme I’ve heard from pros in the business:  “Presentation is key.  If something doesn’t look appealing, there’s a very good chance that nobody’s going to touch it.”  The halibut, right out of the oven, was scorching hot and beautifully crisp, with a fantastic nutty flavor.  The sauce, a simple lemon beurre blanc, went perfectly with the fish.  The asparagus was tender, nicely seasoned, and plenty flavorful – even though it was simply prepared, the fresh produce he uses made a big difference.  His crab cakes were gorgeously seared and full of crab flavor, with just a hint of mustard in the sauce.  And he must be doing something right with those, because crab cakes Benedict is their most popular brunch dish – quite an achievement for this area, no?

    My impression of Chef Ishaq was that of a consummate, yet easygoing professional.  He gave orders to his crew during the afternoon prep without raising his voice, and he clearly enjoys his work.  Referring again to customers who ask for special dishes, he simply intoned with a smile, “…My job is to make them happy.”  In an operation this size, with a crew this large, with so many meals going out the kitchen door at once, it’s refreshing to know that the Executive Chef is that modest.

    And with his eye always on the customer, he’ll keep packing them in.

    Wildfire is located on the 3rd floor of the Tysons Galleria in McLean.

    -HML

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  • 24Apr

    If you’re in the Bethesda area, or just want some really good thin-crust pizza, stop by Haven Pizzeria on Wisconsin Avenue.  Last Tuesday, the owners of the pizzeria and Andréa — of The Bethesda Foodie fame — threw a little shindig at the self-proclaimed “pizzeria Napoletana.”  Though it started a bit late (7pm) for a mid-week happy hour and tasting, the food was delicious overall and the hospitality, impeccable.

    Mark, the manager, told us about the restaurant’s finer points.  He began with the twin 100,000 pound brick ovens heated with coal, which cooks the pizzas evenly and provides an authentic char on the bottom.  The fresh, organic, local produce and seasonal berries used for the salads, gelato, and pizza toppings are one of the points of pride for Haven.  The organic dairy products from Wisconsin create the delectable foundation for the artisan gelato, which is made in house daily.  Last but not least, Haven imports Italian cheeses, yeast cultures, and olive oil for that irreplaceable Mediterranean flavor.

    After making a few introductions amongst ourselves, we were turned loose upon the bar.  I sampled the Parducci Pinot Noir and instantly loved it.  The clear ruby red wine was fruity and bold with a smooth finish.  It’s a great red to pair with the tomato or mozzarella pie or the Romano salad.  During the food tasting later on, I tried a glass of the Orvieto — a white wine imported from Italy — and it went beautifully with the clam pizza, as well as the spinach and mushroom pizza.  But I’m getting ahead of myself…

    The first item brought out for us was something called the “potato chip”; essentially, it was a small pizza crust topped with garlic, olive oil, and pecorino-Romano.  It was crispy, salty, and cheesy — and did in fact taste similar to a potato chip.  The other appetizer served to us was the Haven White Clam Pie.  Fresh clams, olive oil, garlic, and cheese top the pizza.  Alas, I missed out on the appetizer version but redeemed myself during dinner.

    After a tour of the pizza ovens, wine bar, and gelato churn, it was time for dinner.  Mark sent out about six pizzas, and they were all delicious.  Two important notes about their pizzas: the first is that before going into the oven, each pie gets a drizzle of olive oil for moisture and flavor.  The second note is about the crust.  Haven pizzas have a thin, slightly crispy crust that gains flavor from the char added by the brick ovens.

    During round one, I tried a slice of the White Spinach & Mushroom Pie and a slice of the Tomato Pie.  The spinach and mushroom had sliced mozzarella rounds distributed over the toppings, and the pizza had no tomato sauce, hence “white.”  I appreciated the fresh mushrooms and the olive oil drizzled over the pizza.  I would order this pizza if I were in the mood for something a little fancy-tasting.  The Tomato Pie consists of freshly ground plum tomatoes and grated pecorino-Romano cheese, both imported from Italy.  If you’ve never had the pleasure of trying a tomato pizza, get one at Haven.  Their version has the char on the crust to contrast with the sweet tomatoes; it’s a beautiful thing.

    Mark brought out several bottles of Foxon Park pop, which he has trucked in from Connecticut.  Our table tried the Grape, Orange, and White Birch flavors.  Yes, White Birch really is a flavor; it’s very similar to root beer, but it’s clear.  The Grape was quite tart, while the Orange tasted bold.  None of the flavors were overly sweet, which I greatly appreciated.  I enjoyed the combination of the White Birch with the meat pizza, and the Grape with the Tomato Pie.

    For round two, I grabbed a slice of the Mozzarella Pie with meat, as well as a slice of the Haven White Clam Pie.  Liberally dressed with pepperoni and fennel sausage, the pizza’s tomatoes and mozzarella provided a tasty contrast to the meat.  Try this carnivore’s delight while enjoying one of the many beers Haven offers.  Then I was able to sink my teeth into the clam pizza.  Let me begin by stating that the dinner version was a combination of the Haven White Clam Pie and the Coal Oven Roasted Pepper — with bacon.  Nary a tomato was found on this pizza, but roasted red peppers, bacon, clams, garlic, oregano, mozzarella, and a healthy dose of olive oil completed the dish.  I highly recommend this pizza for those who want a really fresh and good meal.  The flavors went together incredibly well, and if Haven had thrown a few potato slices on it, it could have been called the Haven White Clam Chowder pizza.

    Finally, we were given huge scoops of gelato to finish the meal.  Haven makes five flavors; they’re all lower in fat and denser than ice cream, but the density makes the gelato taste creamier.  A couple of my tablemates mentioned that the pistachio flavor really tasted like the nuts.  I can personally vouch for the strawberry and coffee flavors tasting like the fresh ingredients used to create them.  Haven can also make milkshakes from their gelato.  After having tasted some their other foods and drinks, I can say with confidence that trying anything on the menu is a safe bet.  Haven does not disappoint.

    -TKW (Tiffany)

    Disclosure: From time to time, we are given free items, meals, or events.

    Haven Pizzeria Napoletana on Urbanspoon

  • 20Apr

    Normally, I would take a heavy editing hand to such prose, but my dear fellow native Washingtonian AJ is not only not wrong in her assessments, I think her admittedly ridiculous over-style is somehow appropriate for the inflated self-worth of ‘fancy’ fast food joints.

    -MAW

    —–
    AJ Says:

    I’m an admitted burger fiend. I grew up eating the things by the truckload at home and out (visits to the old Hamburger Hamlet were ever a demand foisted upon my parents’ weekends). But mostly, we ate them at home. Our burger consumption transcended all the various food and diet fads of the 80’s and 90’s – my mother, and later I, tried every one – through low fat to mid-fat to inexplicably 99% fat free beef, through turkey, through lamb, through veal and through chicken, our patties endured white buns and wheat buns, no buns and potato rolls, were eaten plain and smothered in ketchup, mustard, organic ketchup, mayo, Tabasco, Cholula and Marie Sharp’s, dipped in Kraft BBQ and home-made barbeque sauces, and mixed with onion soup mix, blue cheese, and whatever else – one thing, however, remained constant: each patty was grilled over open fire, just shy of medium-rare, with a nice charred crust all around. We ate a lot of burgers, and I’ll even cop to loving McDonalds’ through about age 14, when I discovered that my anti-corporatist streak could be more reasonably supported by liking a proper hamburger containing neither carrageenan, soy byproduct, nor griddle grease. My love of meat did (thank heaven!) stop me short of any teenage-girl notions about dieting or vegetarianism.

    This brings me to the relatively recent revival of burger joints in DC and elsewhere, and how much they piss me off. Five Guys was the first I noticed – bland, grey patties cooked on soggy white buns, served aside admittedly delicious fries and momentarily entertaining peanut shells to throw at people. The Shake Shack craze I understand even less. Blah on both counts, and I never understood why people get so excited about them, but at least they admit it’s fast food. But now we come to Black & Orange, formerly Rogue States. Intrigued by the concept (and gleefully in support of just about any attempt to push DC into a better late-night town), I decided to stop in the other day on my way home from work.

    To be as fair as possible, I eschewed the fancily dressed-up versions – as you may guess, I do love me some toppings – and went for the “Square One,” dressed simply with sea salt and black pepper, and topped with the ever-traditional lettuce, onion, tomato, and pickle. I excitedly dug in. And there, my excitement came to an abrupt and unsightly death.

    Which isn’t to say the burger wasn’t pretty: it was really picturesque as a whole, with the right proportions, for me, of mean, topping, and bun. But, upon taking a bite, I found the bun was sweet but otherwise insipid, and the patty itself bland and mushy in texture. It was, at least, properly pink inside, and the toppings were fresh (and the lettuce not iceburg!), giving it a leg up on the above-mentioned fast-fad burgers.

    I understand the limitations of indoor kitchens and the need for grill pans instead of grills, but seriously people: this is not a “gourmet” burger. This is a better-than-average fast-food burger. While again I do love the idea that the place is open till 5 AM, and I’ll probably stop in for some sweet potato fries and maybe even another burger after later shows at the Black Cat, by that point I’ll have had eleventeen vodka-cranberries and won’t care about much beyond “Foooooooood…nowwwwww.” For random I-need-dinner-on-the-way-home nights, however, I’ll stick to Fast Gourmet sandwiches, and just do burgers myself.

    – A guest post by AJ

    Black & Orange
    1931 14th St. NW,
    Washington, DC 20009
    202-450-5365

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  • 20Apr

    April’s Free Sample Day at Cocova (in Dupont) is this Saturday, April 21st, 3-6pm.

    “Stop on by for a delicious treat before you head  over to the “Dance in the Circle” and enjoy  some really wonderful chocolate at our  free sample day this Saturday afternoon.

    We will be featuring a special selection of bars  made from Caribean cocoa, plus a great  selection of bars from around the world.

    Bring your Family, Friends, and Co-workers.  All are welcome to this free event.

    Here is our Sampling List:

    We are featuring four selected Caribean bars ~ Amedei – Jamaica 70% Amedei – Trinidad 70% Amedei – Grenada 70% Bonnat – Cuba 75%

    Additional featured selections ~ Michel Cluizel – Ivoire Bar Askinosie – White w/ Pistachio Dolfin – Sencha Green Tea Michel Cluizel – Milk w/ Hazelnut Patric – Signature 70% Domori – Puertomar 75% Artisan du Chocolat – Espresso 70% Dolfin – 80% Dark Blend Recchiuti – Bittersweet Valrhona – Guanaja Grue 70% Zingermans – Zang Bar”

    May 19th, June 16th, and July 21st are the next few Sample Days.

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  • 20Apr

    In my inbox from Theodore Peck (Kate Faughnan and Mary Kong sent me something about this too). Last year’s theme was tacos.

    -JAY

    ———————————-

    I wanted to let you know that The Food Experiments is returning to DC and I could not be more excited. For the uninitiated, The Food Experiments is a series of amateur cook-offs that celebrate the home chef.

    We are excited to return to one of our favorite culinary destinations to present the DC Chinese Take-Out Experiment, an amateur cook-off involving Wash DC’s finest, most committed, passionate, and intense home chefs. Dishes will range from the savory to the sweet, from the Hot n’ Sour to Sweet n’ Sour to General Tso to Kung Pow to the humble Fortune Cookie and every possible experiment in between! Remember, there is always room for a little experimentation and one last bite. As long as it reminds you of those special times around the Lazy Susan, it can represent. You may never look at take-out the same way.

    By creating these events, my co-organizer and I have looked to develop a community of food and fun-loving people not only in our hometown of Brooklyn but also across the country. And now thanks to our presenting sponsor Brooklyn Brewery, The Food Experiments are going on the road for a second year!

    The DC Chinese Take Out Experiment will return to The Rock and Roll Hotel on Sunday April 22nd, from 12-3PM. Anyone can compete! All you have to do is sign up through our website. Anyone can win!  Anyone can attend! Tickets are $12 and include a Brooklyn Brewery Beer and over 20 samples of Chinese goodness. A portion of the event’s proceeds will go towards charities that promote sustainability and local culinary education for disadvantaged children and teens.

    I’d like to encourage you and your readers to enter or attend. The grand prize is a trip to Brooklyn (we take you out for some great food, and put you up in a seriously cool hotel) to eat and compete against all the cook-off winners from around the country. All DC chef-testants will be a provided with a $50 Harris Teeter gift certificate to help purchase ingredients for the competition.

    Both the audience and the judges will get to name their favorites. I am proud to announce on the esteemed judging panel will include Mary Kong of Girl Meets Food, and Lauren DeSantis of Capital Cooking.

    —————————–

    Check out my friend’s Costa Rica Tours and don’t forget to use the code “TOUCAN” to save money. He has some group tours that you can join.

    -JAY

     

  • 20Apr

    The good news is, some of us are over-employed (that’s good, right?). Some of us have even moved away from the DC area. (You know who you are). 🙂

    But the bad news is a dry spell for the FUD at the moment. So, to counteract this terrible state of affairs, we are looking for…..

    A FEW NEW WRITERS!! Were you annoyed by a restaurant? Do you have some random recipes to share? Have you discovered the best wine, restaurant, food truck, or (restaurant) restroom in DC? Do you want to write a comparison article for a particular item or dish? Need some hipster cred? Writing experience for your resume? Articles for your Portfolio? Passionate about food? Then we want you for DCFüd. Send writing samples to jay@dcfud.com, along with few ideas you’d like to write about. It’ll be crazy!

    -JAY

    ————

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  • 18Apr

     

    Salmon Filet.

    As a home cook, I’m fascinated by the hospitality industry.  To read Anthony Bourdain’s autobiography is to learn that a New York restaurant’s kitchen is often a loud, profane place, with cooks constantly engaging in vulgar banter as they prepare hundreds of dishes during each service.  Yet Bourdain freely admits that his kitchens are not necessarily typical, that some chefs (like the legendary Scott Bryan, formerly of Veritas in New York City and Falls Church’s own 2941) run kitchens like well-oiled machines, with exquisitely trained cooks assembling their world-renowned cuisine without a spare F-bomb for the expeditor.

    I wanted to know more about how professional chefs really work.  After all, as any longtime resident is wont to observe, DC is emphatically not New York City, and our restaurant scene, while maybe not quite as extensive as theirs, is assuredly nothing to sneeze at.  And best of all, I think, ours is not limited to the city center, as great cuisine can be found downtown, far out in the exurbs, and everywhere in between.

    Mise en Place.

    I got the chance recently to talk to Giuseppe Ricciardi (who goes by Joe), chef/owner of Dolce Veloce in Fairfax and its sister restaurant, Dolce Vita.  Joe is a longtime DC-area restaurateur who opened Dolce Vita in 1994.  The restaurant is exactly what you might expect from a non-franchised, neighborhood Italian restaurant– a relatively small kitchen crew, a cozy dining room, and a strong emphasis on high-quality pasta and fresh fish – but his new place next door is an entirely different concept, focusing on wine and cicchetti, or small plates.  Joe explained to me that Dolce Veloce is meant to bring in a crowd that wants to enjoy their wine, to try a few different dishes, to talk and socialize rather than sit down to a full Italian dinner.  The cuisine is lighter than what you’d find next door, including pizza cones and Panini plates priced at $6.99, all the way up to bowls of risotto and seared salmon dishes selling for $10.99 each.

    Dolce Veloce Kitchen.

    When I asked what makes professionals’ cooking different, Joe’s answer was simple:  “The difference between a trained chef and an untrained chef is the fact that a trained chef recognizes certain flavors, has a palate for certain flavors.”  I got the distinct impression that a longtime restaurant professional like Joe holds himself to much higher standards than I ever do at home.  And presentation matters!  “As far as presentations are concerned, your eyes eat before your stomach, so you want to make it pleasant looking – you don’t want to burn the fish, you don’t want to cut the fish into triangles!  There are certain things you do to make the dish appealing.” 

    I was greatly intrigued by his cicchetti concept – after all, tapas restaurants are quite popular – but translating Italian cuisine (or, at least, American-style Italian, with its heavy sauces and cheesy pastas) into small plates seemed like a challenge.  Wine pairings, too, seemed like a bit of a challenge with a relatively expansive menu.  But Joe, a trained sommelier as well as a chef, explained that when he wrote the menu, he tried to pair at least a couple of different wines with each dish.  The plates at Dolce Veloce, he told me, are meant to include at least three different flavors each, which also allows his customers to try out many different wines with the food.  He confessed a taste for higher-end wines, noting that understanding the complexity of good wine makes one appreciate them even more.  And his restaurant is unique in my experience in at least one way:  with a take-away license, the restaurant can sell wine for customers to take home.  That is, they sell restaurant quality wines without the restaurant markup.  If nothing else, the dining room itself should tell you how seriously Joe takes his wine:  everything from the plate glass on the storefront to the stone tile throughout the dining room is designed to keep the hundreds of bottles of wine displayed there at the proper temperature.

    Working Skillets.

    Chef Joe was kind enough to show me around his kitchen that afternoon, and it’s a bit different than I expected.  It’s a cramped space through a door behind the bar at Dolce Veloce, but two cooks are easily able to work the six-burner stove, deep fryer, and oven during service.  The economy of space is especially interesting:  the kitchen is equipped with reach-in refrigerators, cutting boards, and prep trays behind the cooks as they work the hot line, and not a square foot is wasted.  It’s clichéd to observe that “time is money,” but with cooks ready to prepare any of more than three dozen dishes (by my count from the menu) in just a few minutes, the efficiency is assuredly an asset.

    Joe’s team had prepped a fresh salmon filet and set out a plate of spices and ingredients.  After rubbing the fish with spices and seasoning and heating some oil on the stove, Joe dropped the filet into a ready pan and began searing it.  When making the dish during service, he said, his cooks will finish the fish and sauce in the oven:  “These dishes are meant to be fast, easy, without headaches.”  When cooking three or four plates at once, he said, his cooks use the oven as much as possible.  With gentler heat than on the stove, the sauce “never gets bitter, never gets overcooked.”  Without missing a beat as the fish cooked, he pulled out another skillet, quickly heated some oil and garlic, and tossed a plate of fresh spinach leaves in to wilt.  Joe explained as the spinach cooked that he prefers to serve his vegetables with “their natural flavors,” so he sautéed the bed of spinach for just a couple of minutes before plating.  The dish was finished with 25-year old raspberry balsamic vinegar, artfully drizzled around the fish.  It’s that artistic touch that seems to differentiate the professional eye from my own.

    Plated Dish.

    And his attention to detail was superb.  A moment’s distraction while he cooked the fish (my fault; I was asking questions the whole time) resulted in a couple of darker edges on the cooked salmon filet.  Joe was quick to point them out as the filet came out of the pan – he wouldn’t serve it in the dining room – and explained that the higher heat in the skillet demands more care from the cooks than finishing the dish in the oven.  I’ve committed worse culinary crimes than a slightly overcooked fish filet, but his standards are higher.  Joe is ready to suggest wines to pair with any of his plates – as he prepared the salmon that afternoon, he suggested a dry California Chardonnay to go with the fish and its accompanying sauce.  With the lighter fish and heavier sauce, he told me, a few different wines are possibilities.

    Joe explained to me repeatedly that he works hard to treat his staff well, a policy that exhibits itself in many ways at his restaurants.  His kitchen crew at Dolce Vita was relaxing in between the lunch and dinner service hours when I walked through, a rare luxury in an age of restaurants with extended operating hours.  His cooks, he said, often start out as dishwashers, and stay with him for years.  His kitchens, he said, don’t reverberate with screaming because he wants his food to reflect his staff’s attitudes.  That’s a stunning revelation from a working chef – you can’t shake a stick without finding an angry chef on TV these days – and it’s fascinating to me that his crew can drill out high-quality food, including special orders from regulars who will ask for something unique, without cursing a blue streak or otherwise losing control.

    Ultimately, Joe explained, Dolce Veloce is about slowing down and enjoying wine, food, and company.  “People are always in a rush.  They’re always worried about the next dollar.  They’re always worried about, ‘Can I buy another Mercedes?’  We’ve forgotten some of the important things:  friends and family, and the good times we have together.”  His customers, he said, like the “lightness” of the Dolce Veloce cuisine.  The place, he noted, is very popular with female customers and with the younger set, and he works hard to cater to people who don’t know much about wine just as much as those who have a few thousand bottles in a cellar.

    To me, Joe’s kitchen at Dolce Veloce reflects his enthusiasm for the tactile pleasures of food and wine.  With economy of space and a well-trained staff, he produces superbly professional food.  With a wall of wine in his dining room, he trades in bottles both economical and lavish – and though I might not be able to match his cooks’ professionalism, I’ll keep trying to perfect the easy cooking skill and practiced eye for presentation he showed me.

    Dolce Veloce is located at 10826 Fairfax Boulevard in Fairfax, west of Route 123 and next door to Dolce Vita.

    -HML (H. Michael)

    Dolce Veloce Cicchetti Wine Bar on Urbanspoon

  • 14Apr

    My wife and I recently took a cruise out of Baltimore to the Caribbean.  When we started planning it last year, I was pleasantly surprised to find that cruise ships sail out of the port in Charm City – after all, that means we DC-area residents don’t have to fly down to Florida, nor pay for a hotel room the night before departure.  And that meant no checked baggage fees!

    Eating is a major part of any cruise vacation, and this voyage was no exception.  Along with the main dining room aboard, the ship offered complimentary room service, a casual buffet restaurant open most hours of the day, and assorted snacks and late night eats throughout the ship.  At dinner each night in the main dining room, the wait staff became notorious at our 8-top table for bringing out multiple dishes during every course.  Seriously, by just asking if we should order one entree or another, they’d bring both!  We were on the second seating, which I’m pretty sure meant they were trying to clear out their inventory each night, but I wasn’t complaining.  Overall, the food was good – and there was plenty of it! – though I think it’s fair to call the food above average overall rather than great.  When cooking for 2,000+ guests at a time, even when spread out over two seatings, I imagine it’s virtually impossible to cook a la carte or spend too much time on any one plate.

    Not that I’m complaining, of course; I greatly enjoyed the vacation.  While I’m studiously avoiding any product placement here, I think it’s a great option for you local food lovers, especially if you want to try out a cruise without the added complexity of flying.  The escargot served one night were better than I ever remembered sampling with my father years ago, and the braised lamb shank served on an Italian-themed night was fall-apart tender and not at all overpowering.  The desserts were quite nice as well – several of us tried a flourless chocolate cake one night that was so texturally smooth and filled with chocolate flavor that my tablemates decided it was more like fudge than anything resembling a cake.  Their tiramisu was excellent, with a strong coffee flavor and the liqueur managed not to completely overpower the dish.

    We had a slight challenge when we returned home, though.  Aside from the inner-ear confusion that made me think my couch was experiencing some pitching and rolling, we had barely anything in the house to eat when we arrived, and I had little inclination to cook much of anything.  Yet I also didn’t really want to go out to eat – we’d functionally been eating out for the past seven days, and I think I craved a meal that I could put together at home.  And when I finally got to the grocery store, I was inspired by a dish I’d seen at dinner one evening on board the ship.  My wife had ordered Parmesan-crusted turkey tenderloin and found it to be superb, and I wondered if I could recreate anything similar at home.

    I made up the following recipe as I went along, and as I so often do, I placed a high premium on minimizing my labor.  I had this dish prepped and in the oven in less than 10 minutes, meaning it’s just barely a 30-minute meal with the cooking time.  And it turned out quite nicely, even given its relative amateurism.  Look, I know well that I’m not going to open a restaurant with this recipe, but this came together quickly and was surprisingly good.  I think this could be good with any number of other herbs and spices – I think chopped rosemary or sage would go really nicely with the Parmesan – so if you try it out, I’d love to hear from you about any variations.

    Parmesan-crusted Chicken Cutlets

    2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts

    2 eggs

    1 cup grated Parmesan cheese (plus more if needed to coat chicken cutlets)

    Dried Italian herbs or other herbs/spices as preferred

    Line a sheet pan with foil, then set a cooling rack inside.  Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

    Beat the eggs with a tablespoon of water for a few strokes until the mixture is generally uniform in color.  Lay each chicken breast flat on a cutting board and carefully hold them down, one at a time, with your spare hand, while you slice through them parallel to the cutting board.  You should end up with four cutlets of relatively even thickness, and if you’re so inclined, you can even pound them with a kitchen mallet.

    Dunk the chicken cutlets in the egg wash, roll them in the grated Parmesan, then set on the prepared cooling rack.  The cheese won’t stick quite as firmly as breadcrumbs would, so feel free to sprinkle more cheese on the cutlets once they’re on the rack.

    Top each cutlet with a dash of kosher salt and a generous sprinkling of dried herbs.  I used dried Italian herbs from my pantry, and they went very well with the Parmesan.  Make sure to cover the whole top of the cutlet evenly – you don’t want to drown it in herbs, but they’ll taste better if you get the cheese and the herbs in every bite.

    Cook for 15-20 minutes depending on the size of your cutlets – the chicken breasts I’d bought were from DelMarVa and were quite large, so I went for 20 minutes.  Then set your oven to broil for 3-4 minutes to brown the tops.  Keep an eye on them here, but make sure the cutlets are fully browned – I found that the best flavor was in the cutlets with well-browned tops and plenty of herbs.

    Serve with a vegetable – and rejoice in a 30-minute dinner.

    Enjoy!

    -HML

    —————————

    Check out my friend’s Costa Rica Tours and don’t forget to use the code “TOUCAN” to save money. He has some group tours that you can join.

    -JAY

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