Archive for the Restaurant Review Category

Peter Chang China Grill

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

Peter Chang China Grill

During a recent visit to Charlottesville, I had the opportunity to try Peter Chang’s for lunch. We tried three things, and enjoyed each.

  • Eggplant and Chicken Lunch Casserole
  • Bamboo Fish
  • Soupy Dumplings

The eggplant dish was probably the most typical; it had great flavor and was very satisfying. The bamboo fish was fried crispy in a delicious coating; it was coated in spices and salt and had a particular flavor with heat. I can’t put my finger on the exact combination of spices, but it was outstanding. The texture was perfect and the heat added with fried chilies was great.

The soupy dumplings came last, despite being advertised as an appetizer. Thankfully they told us which dishes took longer to prepare. These were large; larger than what we’ve encountered in New York or San Francisco. And while they weren’t the best we’ve had, they were still good and something I’d order again.

I’d heard interesting things about this restaurant, and now I can confirm… quite exciting and delicious treats may be had here! It’s located in the Barracks Rd. Shopping Center, closest to exit 124 if you’re coming west from Richmond.

Hand someone a cookbook…

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

Since my parents have been visiting, I handed my mom Keller’s Bouchon cookbook and asked her “to pick something for dinner.” When I returned, she picked two classics.

To those I added a third “course,” a little recipe of my own invention. My dad bought white asparagus at the supermarket. He does not eat any asparagus. So, I had to come up with a way to cook it (not my favorite, as it snaps easily and requires peeling). So first, we had this salad.

White Asparagus Salad with Mushrooms and Bacon

On top of herbed greens, I placed cooked, and “pickled” white asparagus. After cooking in salted water, I let them rest (without an ice bath) in a lemony vinegar. It soaks it up, making a quick pickle of the vegetable.

The greens were tossed with a dijon-based dressing made with some bacon fat. Bacon lardons covered everything, along with some sautéed mushrooms. Topped with chives.

The onion soup by Keller takes a long time; you cook down your onions until they are very dark brown, like weak coffee.

French Onion Soup

I went all out and made the mornay sauce and used the fried egg on top to make a croque madame.

Croque Madame

Inside I amped the fat level by using Saint André cheese instead of plain swiss.

Bouchon Soup and Salad

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

It wasn’t too long ago that I added Bouchon to my cookbook collection - named after Thomas Keller’s interpretation of a French bistro. The original is in Yountville, down the street from the French Laundry (in one direction) and Ad Hoc (in the other).

The recipes are simpler than those in The French Laundry, and tonight I made

Nothing extraordinary, except the little extra touches that make Keller’s recipes sublime.

Vinegary shallots made the salad great; the brown butter swirled into the soup was the right touch, along with the scent and aroma of sage leaves and fresh nutmeg-spiced crème fraïche in the center of the soup.

Zinc - Charlottesville

Friday, September 9th, 2011

With the gift of time, I recently traveled to Charlottesville to try le comptoir Zinc. They emphasize local ingredients, and I love how “locavore” or “localvore” cuisine is showing up more and more. I wouldn’t call this a strictly “French” restaurant, but it has that as their foundation, in a very fresh and light way.

Mussels

We tried the mussels in a simple preparation with a wine and Pernod-based broth. Traditional. Delicious.

The heirloom tomato and feta salad was delicious and light; the only thing I didn’t care for were the hand-placed herbs on top.

Heirloom and Feta Salad

My partner in most things wasn’t happy about having to open the fish and “fish around” for the meat amid bones in this whole fish preparation. Yet, by the end, he was very happy. Delicious, moist, and flesh that was easily acquired.

Bronzino Fish

I went for the chicken with Parisian-style gnocchi (the kind you squeeze out of a bag into boiling water). If they can’t do chicken right, then… forgetabbouit.

Chicken

It was delicious. Yum! Good skin, good flavor, and again, nice light cuisine. I love my chicken at home with butter. This lacked the fat but still managed to satisfy. (Not that I will be giving up my Thomas Keller version with butter.)

Since we drove all the way to C’Ville, we had dessert. Profiteroles and a panna cotta.

Profiteroles

Panna Cotta with Orange

Having tried both, the panna cotta was the better dessert. The choux-paste shells tasted… maybe a tad stale. The panna cotta was light and giggly, the way it ought to be, with accents of fruit, including an orange foamy sauce.

The restaurant is in a converted service garage. I liked it. I’d be back soon if I lived in C’Ville. Since I don’t, I hope I find myself there again soon.

Kitchen through Mirror

Simple Yet Sublime

Sunday, August 21st, 2011

Filet of Beef with Mushrooms

Plated Dish

Cooking a steak is a simple meal preparation, and in this case, I matched it with French green beans and mushrooms. The star ingredient is a sauce, which helped glaze the mushrooms and in a further reduction, mounted with butter, the steak.

Ingredients

  • shallots
  • garlic
  • herb (terragon)
  • peppercorns/salt
  • cabernet wine
  • beef stock
  • EVOO, butter
  • 2 mushrooms (crimini, porcini)

The sauce starts with 40/60 beef stock and red wine. Reduce! When it’s mid-way through, we add some aromatics, like black peppercorn, some of the rehydrated porcini mushrooms (I only found the dried variety), a garlic clove, mashed, and an herb of choice. Strain this when you reach the desired consistency. From the picture, you can see the almost-stickyness of this sauce, which had been mixed with a little butter at the end.

The green beans get parboiled in salted water before cooking at the end in butter, shallots, and garlic. I added some aged balsamic sea salt. The mushrooms get sautéed with the same shallots and garlic, but are cooked until they burnish with color, and then I added a lighter-mixture of the reduction sauce. I reduced it with the mushrooms until it was sticky, and seasoned the ‘shrooms with pepper and salt.

It was a delicious preparation, without having to buy/make a demi-glace or do much except start the cooking process with making a reduction.