Archive for the ‘Restaurant’ Category

Hoot! Hoot!

Filed Under: Food, Life, Restauranton November 12th, 2009

As a lifelong “sister” of Chi Omega sorority (yes, a sorority girl lies within me somewhere…), I spent most of my college years surrounded by owls or owl insignias. Creepy right? Well that was our mascot, so yes, owls galore. Rumor has it we were locked in coffins with dead owls for initiation … I’ll never tell …
Chi O Crest
So the idea, or look of owls never thrilled me. That is, until dinner on Tuesday night at the West Village’s, The Little Owl. Hoot! Hoot! me ANY day.

Having received tons of hype about a year ago when the economy tanked, this truly is the new New York restaurant. Or type of restaurant. It’s small, warm, homey, cheap(er), locally supplied, unpretentious, delicious and of course, hard as hell to get a table.
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Since my parents have recently joined the early-bird-special-crowd at the ripe young age of 49 … I decided our best bet for getting a table without a reservation (which I tried to get for weeks), was to show up at 5:30 PM … on the dot. That, and I smiled. What can I say except to use all tactics when needed? And it worked.

Not only did we love the ambience, the food (lamb shank is TO DIE FOR), the chef personally told my father the red snapper special was the best cut of meat he’s seen in years. The kitchen is the size of my Soho kitchen, and it impressively produces some of the best food in the city that I’ve had in years.

Beyond charming and delicious, The Little Owl is smart. Here are some few pointers that I’ll take with me when I open my own restaurant:

1. When a table orders a bunch of appetizers the chef plates each portion to each individual’s plate. Not only does this reduce clutter of sides plates for each person but prevents people from reaching, mangling, and digging into appetizers. This way everything you’d want to take a bite of it already prepared for you. Genius!

2. When you ask for a “doggy bag” the server holds it in the kitchen wrapped and warm so that it doesn’t sit at your table and look tacky, get cold, or clutter your surroundings. Again, so thoughtful and smart.

3. Checks arrive in a small journal where everyone can write comments, compliments, and (yes, I’m sure there are) complaints. A little hoot! for everyone to share. I personally spent the time look for signatures of famous people.

These, among many other small touches marked my meal at The Little Owl as one of the best I’ve had in a while. With the warmth and genuine wholesomeness of someplace like Gramercy Tavern, on a smaller scale, budget, and venue. Worth the time, money, and wait.

And that’s hard for three VERY critical diners to say. The owl flies on … hoot! hoot!
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Top 3 Recommended Dishes: sliders, lamb shank, fried chicken

90 Bedford St., NY, NY

My Mother vs. Ground Beef

Filed Under: Food, Life, Restauranton November 8th, 2009

There’s a “throw down” in the kitchen, and it doesn’t involve Bobby Flay. What it does involve though, is my mother, a grill, and an unlimited source of ground beef. I don’t think there’s a person in this world who loves burgers more than my mother. She’d eat them for breakfast, lunch, and dinner … everyday.

In my honest opinion, burgers are very “in” in the food world. It’s like what cupcakes are to the fad baking world. Vomit. Move on, on both accounts. Overdone, overemphasized, and reaching its fad peak super fast. If Rachael Ray makes one more burger book or another artisanal burger joint opens up on 7th Ave, I’m going to scream. What’s so great about a piece of ground beef?
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The thing is, and I believe it to be true about 99% of the time, a burger is just a piece of ground beef … unless its fabulous. And there’s one burger I find to be exceptionally fabulous as I’ve toured the city and dabbled in my mother’s interest. And let me preface this, I do NOT like eating burgers, getting burgers at restaurants, or even making them. It’s not my thing …

But damn girl, April Bloomfield’s got it going on. And so does her gastro-pug burger at The Spotted Pig. And yes, its so trendy it makes me nauseous, but its legit.

I’ve heard it so many times its almost deafening, “The Spotted Pig has the best burger in New York City,” It almost raised the bar too high. It’s like the hype of New Years Eve, all the talk, the planning, and then a sub-par night. Was this going to be a sub-par burger, like all the others I’d tasted in the city?

Absolutely not. In fact, I had to test it three times to make sure it wasn’t bad … Or that’s the excuse I used.

The sensation of eating is this: burger arrives, the rosemary and garlic infused fries overwhelm the plate, you sample one, amazing, just enough salt. Slice the burger in half, the juices flow, but not too much, no soggy bun here. In fact the bun is beautifully round and egg-washed, toasted lightly and not too bready. The burger itself entrances you to nirvana. It’s so warm and fresh you can’t help but eat incredibly fast to preserve the intensity of that first bite. Simply blissful. And the blue cheese – the perfect soul mate to red meat (medium rare, ideally), adds the kick. The pow. The cheese’s tang remains while the juiciness of the meat slides away.

Since that experience … tripled … I have tried burgers elsewhere in attempt to prove the hype wrong. I can’t. And quite honestly I’m done trying. There is no worse feeling than going to a hyped-burger place (high or low end) and realizing that you just spent $18 (and probably 600 or so calories) on a burger that doesn’t hold a flame to The Spotted Pig.

So there it is in a nut shell. After this profound discovery I took my mother, the lover all of things ground beef understood. It won’t stop her from eating or making other burgers, but it is a memory of hers that I hope stays with her. That I hope sets a new standard for what constitutes the best burger, not only of the city, but for the moment.
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The Down Side to Being Real

Filed Under: Life, Restauranton October 30th, 2009

One thing I would never do again, and by “never” I mean probably will do again … is go out on a school-night. It’s like saying you’re “never drinking again” after those rough nights at the bar. But inevitably you do drink again, and even more inevitably, you make the same mistake.

But I now understand the concept of your parents saying “no” to late night antics when you’re younger in school. Well today I belong on the short bus.

Thursday nights bring out the weekend in people. They’re sick of work, school, etc and need to get out and cut loose. They forget that work starts at the same time Friday, as it did Thursday.

But it is a chance to try a new spot … so that’s what we did.

After dressing my room-mate up, she’s a little more “yuppy Wall St” than “Soho chic,” we headed to Merc Bar on the corner of Mercer and Prince. It’s trendy, and it’s a scene. It’s the sister bar to the Mercer Kitchen restaurant, which is next door.

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Compliments of NYMag

Former models and D-list celebs. Last night in fact one of the girls from the MTV show “The City” was there? Not sure who she is or why she’d be there. Personally, I wanted to force feed her a piece of puff pastry rather than google at her, but that’s just me.

The bar scene is happening but snagging a table either in the front or back is even more pleasing for a crowd. Signature cocktails including “Love” are popular but don’t look for any late-night bar snacks on the menu.

Despite having been “around the block” and hip when it first opened, it hasn’t lost all its appeal. Still cozy and appropriate for a drink. Not a night. Chance it if you must, know you’ll enjoy a cocktail or two and maybe spot a reality-tv star, but don’t make a night of it …

I did and I’m paying.