Park Avenue Spring Brunch Review

This restaurant continues to impress me with the dawn of each new season. Two years ago it was Park Avenue Winter's black pepper-crusted, seared-to-perfection ahi tuna which won my heart. This time it is Park Avenue Spring's generous brunch prix fixe, to which I raise a stiff mint julep. Stephanie, my dining companion on both occassions, initially introduced me to the restaurant and it was on my recommendation that we try their brunch.  

We arrived on a warm Saturday and were immediately seated in their cherry blossom adorned dining room (if you hadn't guessed, the restaurant theme, including name, decor and food, changes with the seasons).

Fresh pastries - enough to make a meal - were presented along with raspberry jam and apple butter.  Please bear with me while I digress for a moment. Apple butter is one of my most favorite childhood food memories.  My babysitter, Mamaw - a 75-year-old salt-of-the-earth West Virginian (her husband, a coal miner, died of "black lung" before I can ever remember meeting him) - was raised with an apple butter-making tradition.  She had an old copper kettle, passed down for generations, big enough that two of me could have fit into it and blackened on the outside from many years of sitting over an open fire.  Each autumn we would pick the apples in her orchard and we'd spend days peeling, slicing, spicing, cooking, stirring and ultimately jarring the apple butter, which would be stored in her cellar to be brought out for a special treat every so often.  I don't eat apple butter often as an adult, but when I do, it is always a pleasant trip down memory lane.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled program...The pastries marched down the plate: a berry muffin, banana bread, pistachio loaf, cinnamon bun, sugared doughnut. We quickly realized we needed to sample only a quarter of each pastry, lest we fill up before the next two courses.

   

As it was Kentucky Derby Day, we really had no choice but to indulge in mint juleps:

Our appetizers were exact opposites: Stephanie enjoyed a salmon tartare while I had Greek yogurt with a drizzle of honey, granola and dried fruit. The yogurt and accoutrements were presented beautifully in their own individual serving dishes on a marble plate:


As our entree choices, Stephanie went with a rich breakfast risotto teeming with sliced sausage, mushrooms and a fried egg on top. The dish was incredibly flavorful albeit heavy for a warm Spring day. I kept with the Southern theme in ordering a fried chicken 'n waffles sandwich. This was not the highlight of the meal: the chicken a far cry from the crispy goodness I've become accustomed to in the South (or places like The Redhed) and the waffles a bland, too soft afterthought of the dish. The sandwich wasn't bad by any means; it simply wasn't the highlight.

It should be noted that this brunch is expensive.  The prix fixe alone is $35, not including drinks, so the addition of mint juleps brought the price up to $50/person.  This is a great option for a special occasion brunch, such as for a birthday, Mother's Day or some other celebration.

Clams in Cherry Tomato Garlic Sauce

A recent post-Sunday football meal: cherrystone clams steamed in a cherry tomato, white wine and garlic sauce

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Inoteca Liquori Restaurant Review

Bar Milano rebranded itself as another 'inoteca few months ago so DG and I had to go back to see how it measured up. Design-wise the place is the same: marble-paneled walls, formal dining room, casual lounge/bar area (where we ate), etc. The menu, however, is a closer cousin to the original 'inoteca located in the Lower East Side, with an assortment of affordable plates. The rebrand seems to be working well so far as evidenced by the steady crowd of patrons, both diners and drinkers.

Our meal consisted of three shared dishes: pasta with pork ragu, a panini with bresaola (air-cured salted beef), arugula, grana (like parmigiano-regiano) and lemon oil and roasted chicken with bread stew. Each dish was delicious in its own right - the pork ragu had large, tender chunks of pork, the bresaola was flavorful with a hint of lemon and the chicken carried a warm punch of flavor (perfect for the rainy night). Our only complaint was that all three dishes were served at once, making the meal feel rushed.

For dessert we had a velvety chocolate mousse topped with cream.

Add on a bottle of wine and our total bill came out to around $110, much more palatable than what we would have gotten at Bar Milano.

Perfect Breakfast Bran Muffin

 

After channeling Paula Deen's Butter Love (PDBL) in my last post, I thought I'd make a batch of healthier muffins, versatile enough to handle different kinds of mix-ins and flavorful enough to simply stand on their own.  

This bran muffin recipe comes from one of the most health conscious people I know.  Fortunately, this girl also loves good food, good wine and thinks developing new flavors for Ben & Jerry's would be a dream job.  So you can be assured these muffins will achieve two goals: good nutrition and good taste!

I made three versions with this most recent batch - plain, with chocolate chips and with currants.  You could also include nuts or raisins to add a little protein and different flavors.  As with the PDBL Pecan Pie Muffins, I froze the leftovers for easy weekday breakfast options.

Ingredients:
1.5 c bran cereal (not flakes - I used Fiber One)
1.5 c Bran flakes
1/3 c unsweeted apple sauce
1 c hot water
2 eggs
1 c whole wheat flour
1.5c reg. flour
1 c sugar (I go lighter on this and they still taste great)
2 Tb canola oil
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 Tb + 1/2 tsp. baking soda
2 c lowfat buttermilk (or, mix 1 T vinegar with ~ 1c skim milk) 
2 Tb cinnamon

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350.  Lightly coat muffin tin with oil.  Place all ingredients in large mixing bowl and stir until blended - don't overmix.  Fill tins 1/2 to 3/4 full, bake for 25 min.  Allow to cool a little for easier removal.  Batter will keep in fridge up to 1 month.

Yield: 24 muffins  


 

Pecan Pie Muffin Recipe

My friend Danielle made these pecan pie muffins for me and a group of girlfriends over the summer and I fell in love at first bite.  Served warm, they were slightly crisp on the outside and gooey on the inside, just like a pecan pie should be.  I recently made a batch, served a few for dessert with vanilla ice cream and put the rest in the freezer for an on-the-go weekday breakfast option.  I substituted almonds and walnuts in part of the batch because I ran out of pecans and they turned out just as good.

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees
Bake for 25 minutes
Yield: 6-8 muffins

Ingredients:
1 cup chopped pecans
1 cup brown sugar (firmly packed)
1/2 cup flour
2 larges eggs (beaten until foamy)
1/2 cup butter (melted)

Directions:
Mix pecans, brown sugar and flour together is a large bowl
Make a well in the mixture
Whip eggs with a whisk until foamy
Add room temperature melted butter to eggs
Pour liquid mixture into the well in your dry ingredients and mix until just combined
Fill muffin cups almost to the top (muffins do not rise very much in oven)

CLOSED - Civetta Restaurant Review

My foodie friend, Steph, and I went down to Soho to check out the newest expansion of Sfoglia, one of the Upper East Side's most highly-rated Italian restaurants. The decor was rustic Italian with thick wooden tables, owl statues (the "mascot" of the region in Italy by the same name as the restaurant), marble-topped bars and serving stations and iron chandeliers. It was a nice fall evening so the floor-to-ceiling windows were open onto the street - we were even able to catch a glimpse of the San Gennaro festival happening a block away.

Because the restaurant is family-style, we ordered three appetizers from their expansive list and one pasta course. The appetizers included an escarole and crab salad (seemed more like a Caesar salad - could barely taste the crab), grilled stone fruit with ricotta (delicious with a hint of smoke flavor from the grill) and mussels with a fantastic tomato broth and slivers of salami. We had the rigatoni alla bolognese as our pasta dish which was also quite delicious and creamy (in a no-cream-added sort of way).

For dessert we had bombolini (doughnuts) with either a cream or fruit filling, rolled in sugar and topped with warm chocolate. These were delicious and sinful.

Before leaving we snuck downstairs to the closed bar area. It was a very cool space with brick walls, a fireplace and red velvet seating. It felt cozy and decadent. This would be a good room for a private party in the winter.

Although the reviews have been mixed for this restaurant, I enjoyed it and would recommend it to friends. One thing to note, however, you can hear/feel the 6 train every time it rumbles underground.

April 1, 2010 Update - Kenmare Restaurant took over this space - it's on my list of places to check out!

The North Fork Table & Inn

We went to the North Fork Table & Inn for our third anniversary. It was nothing short of perfect (except that the bartender didn't want to give us a taste of their homemade bacon-infused vodka).

The restaurant itself is very romantic with a small bar up front, wood plank floors and a series of intimaterooms.

We started the meal with a North Fork rosé (I think from One Woman Winery) and a beautiful salad with an assortment of greens and bleu cheese. Our main courses included a paella with halibut, Gulf shrimp and housemade chorizo and a roasted pork tenderloin over a parmesan risotto. For dessert we had "Bees Needs Honey-Pinenut Tart" complete with honey-ricotta ice cream and red wine poached figs.

This meal was exquisite! The dishes were simply prepared and each flavor stood on its own.

44 1/2 Review

Date: July 21,2009 Adjectives: pink, gay men, chic atmosphere, garden What I ate: fried calamari (with two dipping sauces), a turkey burger and champagne (to celebrate LR's birthday) Would I go back?: Definitely. The food, atmospere and service were nice and unfussy. Although it was raining, the garden looked beautiful. The major drawback is location (for me)

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