Showing posts with label Restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Restaurant. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Restaurant: The French Laundry

The French Laundry
Chef's Tasting Menu
May 14, 2016

Amuse Bouche:
Salmon Tartare and Creme Fraiche "Cone"
Amuse Bouche:
Gougeres

---------------
"Oysters and Pearls"
"Sabayon" of Pearl Tapioca with Island Creek Oysters
and White Sturgeon Caviar

---------------
Sacramento Delta Asparagus Salad
Hard Boiled Bantam Hen Egg, Green Tomato Relish, Garden Lettuces
and Brokaw Avocado Mousse

OR
Hudson Valley Moulard Duck Foie Gras "Terrine"
"Mara de Bois" Strawberries, Marcona Almonds, Nasturtium Leaves
and Riesling "Gelee"
served with 6 different salts
(supplement)

---------------
"Clam Chowder"
Stonington Maine Halibut, Manila Clams, La Ratte Potato Confit, 
Celery Branch Salad and "Chowder" Sauce

---------------
Alaskan King Crab "Poelee"
Cracked Rice and White Corn "Porridge," Chanterelle Mushrooms,
Wilted Ramps and Daylilies

---------------
Cornbread Stuffed Griggstown Farm Pheasant
Garden Blackberries, Roasted Ruby Beets, Shiso Britton
and Foie Gras "Mignonette"

---------------
Herb Roasted Elysian Fields Farm Lamb
Crispy Chickpea "Panisse," Cerignola Olives, Garden Basil
and Spiced Tomato Conserva

OR
100 Day Dry Aged Beef "Tournedo"
Bone Barrow "Panade," Braised Brisket Stuffed Morel Mushrooms,
Garden Snow Peas and "Sauce Bordelaise"
(supplement)

---------------
Nettle Meadow Farm "Kunik"
Devin Knell's 3 Year Aged Mangalitsa Ham, Wild Oregon Cepes
and Pearson Farm Pecans

---------------
Assortment of Desserts
Descriptions below are in our words. . . 
Macarons, Cocoa Macadamia Nuts, Coffee Semifreddo with
Warm Donut Holes, Dark and Milk Chocolate Logs
Cherry Dr Pepper Gel/Pastry in a Boat
and Layered Take on a Petit Four
Floral Meringues filled with Yuzu Cream
Chocolate Truffles
(flavors included S'mores, PB&J, Korean Gochujang, Salted Caramel, etc.)

Wines Enjoyed:
  • Krug, "Grand Cuvee," Reims
  • Carl von Schubert, Riesling, "Maximin Grunhauser Herrenberg," Kabinett, Mosel
  • A Chateauneuf-du-Pape 

A Few Notes, Memories and Impressions. . .
  • Overall, the experience was good but didn't blow our socks off.
  • Food was more traditional and less inventive than we expected.
  • Nice touch that they printed Happy Anniversary with our names at the top of the menu!
  • Think we would have enjoyed sitting upstairs where it was brighter and livelier.  Downstairs, it was very austere especially before the dining room filled up.  It was so quiet at the beginning of our meal.
  • Surprised that there wasn't a wine pairing for the tasting. 
  • The dessert course completely wow'd us.



Thursday, January 14, 2016

Restaurant: J&G Grill at the St. Regis in Deer Valley

J&G Grill at the St. Regis in Deer Valley, Utah


7452 Mary (Bloody Mary)
Brioche Bread Pudding with Roasted Pineapple
and Condensed Milk Ice Cream
This was my first dining experience at a Jean-Georges Vongerichten restaurant, and it did not disappoint.  Even though we didn't have a full sit-down meal (we sat at the bar), I'd rate this in my top 5 dining experiences in my lifetime.

It's rare when I dine at a restaurant and enjoy every single item I ordered and where service is flawless.  To help me remember our amazing experience, here is what we enjoyed:

Drinks:
  • 7452 Mary:  At 7,452 feet, Deer Valley's signature Bloody Mary is topped off with a wasabi and celery espuma, cayenne pepper and black lava salt.  
    • It was served with a pipette of Worcestershire sauce (fun!).  It's the best Bloody Mary I've ever had in my life.  Super fresh, spicy, unique with the wasabi/celery/green apple foam and the slightly sweet black lava salt.
  • Smoke & Fire:  Don Julio Reposado Tequila, High West Campfire Whiskey, Lemon, Spiced Hibiscus, Orange
    • Who would've thought to put tequila and whiskey in a drink together?  Smooth and balanced with lots of complexity.  Loved this.
Appetizer:  
  • Tuna Tartare with Avocado, Spicy Radish and a Ginger Marinade
    • Amazingly fresh;  I could've eaten 3 of this app since it was small; would've been perfect with crostini.
Entree:
  • Sichuan Pepper Crusted Yellowfin Tuna
    • It was served with 2 Shishito peppers and a soy-miso mustard sauce.  Ordered it rare, and it was amazing just like the app -- suprisingly not spicy even though it had the Sichuan peppers on the outside crust.  I must find Jean-Georges' recipe for the soy-miso mustard sauce!  
Dessert:
  • Brioche Bread Pudding with Roasted Pineapple and Condensed Milk Ice Cream
    • This is what bread pudding should always be like -- moist and decadent with every single bite.  It was topped with a thinly sliced dried piece of pineapple.  A lovely end to our meal.

Regarding drinks, I think their cocktail list was one of the best I've seen.  I wanted to try all of them!
Here was their specialty cocktail  menu:


I'd HIGHLY recommend dining at J&G grill or going there for apres-ski!  (Apparently, there is a way to ski down to the bar!)  Note that we took a nice finicular ride from the bottom to get to the hotel that's mid-mountain.


Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Restaurant: High West Distillery & Saloon in Park City, Utah


High West Distillery & Saloon in Park City, Utah

Fun, apres-ski hangout.
Creative strong cocktails.
Comfortable bar with knowledgeable bartenders.
Will definitely be back.

We ordered:
  • Le Bouvier:  American Prairie Bourbon, Yellow Chartreuse, Cognac, Fino Sherry
  • The Grand Duel:  Double Rye!, Amaro Nonino, Aperol, St. Elizabeth Allspice Dram, Lagavulin 16
  • Pretzel & Beer Cheese:  House Pretzel, Whiskey Whipped Beer Cheese, Mustard Dip & Pickles

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Dallas Restaurant: Chino Chinatown


Chino Chinatown
Trinity Groves in Dallas
3 stars

As with most restaurants in Dallas, Chino Chinatown's food was ok.  Average.  Not outstanding or so amazing that I need to go back.  (And note that I didn't go in with high expectations. . .)

  • Duck Fat Fries:  Our favorite thing that we ordered.  Yucca can be stringy, but these fries were great -- I think it was pureed yucca that was formed and then fried.
  • Steam Buns:  Fine, like the buns I've had everywhere else
  • YellowTail Hamachi:  Fine, nothing amazing about it
  • Duck Fat Fried Rice:  Fine, nothing to write home about
  • Drunken Noodles:  Probably the most disappointing food item we ordered.  The noodles didn't seem to take on the flavor of everything else in the dish.  I've had similar dishes that were better at most hole-in-the-wall Thai restaurants.
  • Vietnamese Iced Coffee:  The worst Vietnamese iced coffee we've had -- not strong enough; tasted like watered down coffee with a strange aftertaste.
  • Evita Peron Cocktail (Broker's Gin, Genepy des Alpes, jalapeno oleo, lime):  Not too sweet and good balance of flavors, but not worth $11
  • The Good, The Bad, The Weird Cocktail (Sauza 901 tequila, Pu Ehr tea, lime, aguardiente): Same as above

Sunday, September 14, 2014

NYC Restaurant: the bar downstairs



old fashioned and
cellar door cocktails
rock shrimp ceviche
(they were out of striped bass ceviche)
octopus a la plancha

the bar downstairs
hip.  cool.  dark.  inconspicuous.  trendy.

I thoroughly enjoyed the atmosphere, drinks, food and of course, company.  And it wasn't too loud like other bars.
(Note: I was so excited to eat the chicken and chorizo paella that I forgot to take a photo!)

The cellar door cocktail I had was really good, balanced.  I should try to make it, but it involves too many ingredients we don't have:
pimms no.1, lemon, bergamot syrup, sailor jerry spiced rum, st. elizabeth allspice dram

will go back. one day.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

NYC Restaurant: Buddakan

Drinks to start off!
Edamame Dumplings
Roast Duck Noodles
King Crab Hot Pot

Lovely meal, ok, meal-that-exceeded-my-expectations at Buddkan in NYC near Chelsea Market.  Super cool vibe and lounge. Service was amazing.  Worth every penny.

Drinks
BENEVOLENCE - belvedere, watermelon, pavan, Thai basil
(pavan is a grape liqueur)

RIESLING


Food
EDAMAME DUMPLINGS - shallot-Sauternes broth
(rich, flavorful, perfect)

KING CRAB HOT POT - scallops, shrimp crackers
(2 huge scallops, 4 pieces of king crab, bok choy, Chinese root vegetables?; fried shrimp crackers, white rice, cilantro)

ROAST DUCK NOODLES - superior broth, duck wontons
(salty but flavorful broth, slices of duck cooked perfectly, duck shu mai, Thai red chiles, pickled ginger)

Thursday, September 11, 2014

NYC Restaurant: Momofuku Ma Peche

the dessert cart
crack pie
and
candy bar pie (in the background)


Ever since I learned about David Chang and his Momofuku empire, I've wanted to dine at one of his restaurants, and I got the chance to do so on Saturday.  Momofuku Ma Peche is Chang's largest and newest restaurant -- and allows reservations via OpenTable.  (Note:  Ma Peche means "mother peach.")

Interestingly, the service is like dim sum -- carts come around with small plates and then you also have the ability to order larger plates to share.  With just two of us, we ordered 1 large shared plate, the fried chicken habanero-style.  It was the best, most tender (and fresh-tasting) fried chicken I've ever had.

My only 2 complaints of the evening:  we asked the server to box up our fried chicken which she didn't (must've forgotten), and the dim sum cart with cold plates never came to our table.  We ended up eating a lot of fried food from the hot small plates that evening.

Also, I'd heard MUCH fanfare about the crack pie which was just ok.

Here is what we ordered:

Cocktails
  • seven spice sour - sake, lime, yuzu, togarashi
  • mountainside - japanese whiskey, fennel, bitters

Dim Sum Cart
  • pork bun
  • trout bun
  • cod fritters
  • shrimp balls
  • spicy rice cakes

Chef's Specials
  • fried chicken - habanero

Dessert
  • crack pie
  • candy bar pie
  • decaf coffee

All good food. However, I don't have a need to go back to ma peche; next time I would like to try Chang's noodle bar or ssam bar.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Restaurant: Lark on the Park


Lark on the Park
2 stars

What a huge disappointment.  Great location, hip/contemporary interior, good drink menu, BUT . . .
  • The worst service I've had in a long time.  
    • The restaurant was more than half empty on a Tuesday night, and yet it took over an hour to get our entrees.  Note:  We were a 4-top, not a large party.  Our dining experience was 2 hours and 45 min.
    • The server was unenthused;  he didn't acknowledge me when I was seated (while waiting for the rest of the party) and wasn't helpful giving recommendations.


  • The food is average and overpriced for what it is.  Nothing was amazing.  Flavors are all one-dimensional, bland.  Plus:
    • Two of us ordered scallops which had sand in them.
    • One ordered the gnocchi which was underwhelming, and the peppercorn she bit into burned her throat.

  • And don't fall for the Valhrona Dark Chocolate Frozen Souffle which we thought was going to be the highlight at the end of the meal.
    • First of all, it should be spelled "macarons" -- I don't even remember seeing macarons on the dessert.
    • We expected the dish to look or be presented like a souffle.  It was basically a chocolate semifreddo cut into 2 triangles -- "souffle" is a complete misnomer.

Usually, I'll a try a restaurant three times before I say I'll never go back.  Every restaurant can have a "bad" night;  however, I'm going to pass on  going back to this one.  Too many elements were off that night.

Here is what we ordered:

  • Antipasto Board:  burrata, Prosciutto di Parma, roasted apricots, pistachios  13
  • Curry Pillows:  potato, onion, cilantro-ginger, radish    10
  • Johnson's Farms Lettuces:  fennel, radish, lemon, arbequina  8
  • Seared Scallops:  corn sformato, heirloom cherry tomatoes, pistou, opal basil  29
  • Gnocchi alla Norma:  roasted Japanese egglplant, heirloom tomatoes, garlic, ricotta salata 23
  • Grilled Texas Hanger Steak:  Homestead Mills blue polenta, oven roasted tomatoes, peperonata, poached egg 29
  • Butterscotch Blondie Coupe:  vanilla bean ice cream, blondies, butterscotch, chocolate sauce, toffee  9
  • Valrhona Dark Chocolate Frozen Souffle:  graham cracker macaroons, toasted marshmallow fluff, hot fudge  9



Tuesday, July 15, 2014

What 3 restaurants would you like to dine at?

The question posed at dinner was, "If money were no object, what 3 restaurants would you love to dine at besides The French Laundry?"

Me: 

If I could add on to this, I'd also say:  Momofuku and Tompolobampo.


Blog contributor the grandcruman's choices:
  • Alinea
  • Le Bernadin
  • Joel Robuchon
  • Sukiyabashi Jiro (the 10-seat sushi restaurant in a Tokyo subway station documented in Jiro Dreams of Sushi)

And you?  What would your choices be?


Sunday, March 2, 2014

benjy's in Houston


We had dinner last night at benjy's in the Rice Village area in Houston.  It was GREAT!!!!  I haven't enjoyed a restaurant meal like that in while ( . . . because something always isn't right -- the food isn't flavorful or is over/undercooked or is too pricey for what it is, or the service isn't up to par)!

Last night was perfect.

The atmosphere was modern, hip and energetic -- not too loud so that we could hear ourselves.  

The service was excellent.  Great recos, and the friendly server even brought us potstickers (on the house!) that we considered for an appetizer but didn't order.  Pace was really good.

Food and drinks were TASTY!  benjy's has a very varied and eclectic menu, and the Asian dishes that I ordered had bold and complementary flavors (I was surprised how good it was).

I will definitely return and would highly recommend the restaurant.

--------
Here are some of the items we ordered that I tasted:

Lemon Basil Gimlet
Enchanted Rock vodka + basil and lemon juice + basil-ginger syrup

2011 Argyle Reserve Pinot Noir
Willamette Valley

BHR Pork Potstickers
lemograss-orange ponzu

Yangnyeom Crispy Chicken
korean red chili + kimchi

Hay Smoked Duck (duck was cooked perfectly!)
soba noodles + soy milk-ramen broth + shiitake mushrooms + bok choy

Dr Pepper Braised Short Rib 
heirloom grits + pipian + taqueria vegetables



Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Beano's Cabin

If you're in Beaver Creek and desire a unique mountain dining experience that includes a 15 min open-air sleigh ride (pulled by a snowcat) and a wonderful 5-course meal with almost impeccable service, head to Beano's Cabin

The 5-course meal currently runs $115 per person (not including alcohol or tip) and includes the sleigh ride and live entertainment -- the night we went, it was a one-man show, a guy who covered pop music from the 80s to songs popular today, singing and playing his acoustic guitar.

A few tips:
  • Reservations are required so call or make a reservation using OpenTable.
  • Request a table that's by a window or in the middle of the dining room.  Our table had a sight line to the door, so every time the door opened, we felt a slight cold draft.
  • If you're going in the winter, wear your ski jacket & pants over your clothes, otherwise, you will be COLD during the sleigh ride.  There are open cubbies for you to hang/store your clothes once you get to the restaurant.  We even changed shoes so our feet wouldn't freeze in our dress shoes.  Note: The dress code is mountain casual; almost everyone was wearing jeans.
  • On the sleigh, sit as close as you can to the front of the snowcat.  We sat at the very back (last row), and all the snow that the snowcat kicked up (as well as the smell of diesel) wafted our way.

The sleigh pulled by the snowcat
(you can't see the snowcat in this photo)

As a reminder to us of what we dined on (aka - our food journal):

Today’s Cabin Made Soup… 
Butternut Squash Soup

Salad
Baby Iceberg Wedge 
tender belly bacon, Maytag blue, cherry tomatoes, scallion vinaigrette 

Appetizers
Oysters 
finger limes, whiskey gelée, lemon 

Pork Belly
[don't have the description]

Entrees
Duo of Colorado Lamb 
lamb leg and loin, braised French beans, fig confit, olive lemon gremolata

Whiskey Glazed Berkshire Pork Porterhouse 
creamy Anson Mills grits, honey glazed carrots, apple preserves 

Desserts
Bourbon Roasted Pear 
crème Fraiche ice cream, chestnut lace cookie 

Caramel Apple Pie
with spruce ice cream


Saturday, November 30, 2013

A 22-Course Meal in 22 Settings

Watch this 4-minute video on YouTube from The New York Times.  So wish I could experience this -- at Ultraviolet Restaurant in Shanghai.  Chef Paul Pairet has transformed the dining experience into an amazing theatrical production.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Best Airport Eats

According to Urbanspoon, here are the Best U.S. Airport Eats.  Check them out while you're traveling this holiday season. . .

Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport (ATL) • One Flew South • Atlanta Braves Allstar Grill • Cafe Intermezzo • Sweetwater Brewing Company
Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) • In-N-Out Burger • Pink's Hot Dogs • La Brea Bakery
John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) • Brasserie La Vie • Shake Shack • Deep Blue Sushi • Uptown Brasserie
San Francisco International Airport (SFO) • Ebisu • PIQ • Cat Cora's Kitchen • Andale Mexican Restaurant
Seattle Tacoma International Airport (SEA) • Vino Volo • Beecher's Handmade Cheese • Anthony's Restaurant & Fish Bar • Dish D'Lish
Chicago O'Hare International Airport (ORD) • Tortas Frontera • Wicker Park Seafood & Sushi • Gaslight Club • Garrett Popcorn Shop

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Yogurtland's Holiday Flavors


12 flavors. 6 toppings.

Each week for the next six weeks, two new holiday flavors will be introduced. Also, for Yogurtland Real Rewards members, purchases made on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday through December 31 will earn double points toward free yogurt!
Week 1:
  • Spiced Apple Cider Sorbet, a dairy-free sorbet made with apple juices, cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove
  • Salted Caramel Pecan, made with caramel, dulce de leche, Yogurtland’s exclusive pecan butter, and a hint of salt
Week 2:
  • Chocolate Mocha, a no-sugar-added frozen yogurt with Sumatran coffee and a blend of cocoa
  • Sticky Toffee Pudding, made with sweet sponge cake and chopped dates and covered with butter toffee
Week 3:
  • Cranberry Orange Tart, made with New England cranberries and Florida orange juice
  • Butterscotch
Week 4:
  • Chocolate Mousse Pie
  • Egg Nog
Week 5:
  • Vanilla Custard
  • Cinnamon Roll
Week 6:
  • White Chocolate Peppermint
  • Raspberry Pomegranate Tart

Holiday toppings include:

  • Chocolate Espresso Beans
  • Chocolate Nonpareils
  • Chocolate Heath Bar
  • Oreo Disks
  • Cheesecake Chips
  • Peppermint Bark

We will be stopping by our local Yogurtland soon.  Very soon.


Friday, March 15, 2013

Restaurant: Bones in Denver

Pork Belly Steamed Buns
 
 
Udon:
Slow Cooked Pork Shoulder, Plum-Soy Broth,
Poached Egg, Scallion
 Yakisoba:
Crispy Chicken Thigh, Chinese Long Bean,
Jalapeño, Spicy Lemongrass Broth, Cilantro
Added a Poached Egg

One of my favorite restaurants in Denver is Bones.  The name doesn't sound appealing, but this 40ish seat restaurant is a gem in downtown Denver.  (I think the area it's in is actually Uptown.)  The restaurant is an Asian fusion noodle house, and the 3 times I've dined there, I've sat at the Chef's counter and watched the action unfold as orders are placed and the three cooks effortlessly coordinate and plate and garnish the orders.  The restaurant is small, very small and yet is interestingly quiet with the open kitchen being right there.
 
I'm craving the Pork Buns and the noodle bowls right now.  I've had their Ramen (Poached Lobster, Edamame, Beurre Blanc, Miso Lobster Broth, Scallion), but decided to try something new this time.  The Yakisoba and Udon didn't disappoint and were delicious.
 
The Asian-inspired drinks are really interesting (see below for some of the drinks from their menu).  Lost in Translation was one of the smoothest Manhattan-type drinks I've tasted, and I want to go back to try some of the others.  Alas, the next time I'm in Denver. . . .

---------------------------------

Lost in Translation Unique, (like the movie), stylized Manhattan: Suntory’s Yamazaki 12yr Whisky, Sweet Vermouth, House Orange bitters & a Colorado cherry.

Tsunami Simple, Surprising, Refreshing: Tozai Typhoon Sake, ginger beer & Leopold Blackberry Liqueur. Tall, Rocks.
 
Green Tea Classic Press House Infused Green Tea SKYY Vodka, Canton Ginger, splash of soda & ginger beer. Rocks.

Almond Blossom White Tea Infused Flor de Cana Rum, Leopold American Orange Liqueur, Orgeat, Lime, Rocks. 
 
Lychee Sidecar Espolon Tequila Blanco, Lychee Sour, Up. 
 
 
 

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Restaurant: Sweet Basil in Vail

French Toast Dessert
For dinner in Vail, definitely go to Sweet Basil and be sure to make a reservation as soon as you know you're headed to the ski town.  You won't be disappointed by the atmosphere, apres ski drinks, wine list, service, and of course, food.  (Oh, and the people watching at the bar.)  
Check out their accolades.

We had some of the best appetizers ever.  For instance . . .

Saffron Gnocchi “Paella” Laughing Bird Shrimp, Razor Clams, Baby Octopus, Iberico Chorizo, Chorizo Spice, Grilled Fennel

Roasted Beet Salad Riesling Poached Apple, Citrus Blue Cheese Espuma, Arugula, Pistachio Vinaigrette

For my entree, I had by far the best pork chop I've ever had in my life.  It was served with a ricotta cornbread pudding, mustard greens and King Trumpet mushrooms.

And make sure to save room for dessert.  My French toast with carmelized bananas, cocoa puffs and cereal milk ice cream was good, but not as good as the sumptuous Sticky Toffee Pudding which is their signature dessert.

After a day of skiing, dinner here makes for a perfect day.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Bistro 31's Cocktails


If you're in Dallas, check out the upstairs bar at Bistro 31 in Highland Park Village.  The cocktail list is extensive -- it's always hard to choose what to try! (Note: The menus haven't been updated on their website.)

The ones pictured above are:

Hadleigh's Punch
10 can rum, fresh blueberries, lychee syrup, lemon juice, garnished with basil

Chocolate Bullet
bulleit bourbon, licor 43, aztec chocolate bitters, garnished with fresh orange slice


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Chipotle testing a new vegetarian menu item "Sofritas"

Chiptole plans to test a new vegetarian menu item called "Sofritas" in seven San Francisco Bay Area restaurants starting today:
  • 525 Market in San Francisco
  • 121 Fourth St. in San Francisco
  • 126 New Montgomery in San Francisco
  • 2019 Chess Drive in San Mateo
  • 251 East 3rd Ave. in San Mateo
  • 180 El Camino Real in Palo Alto
  • 135 El Camino Real in Millbrae.
What are Sofritas?  They're shredded tofu braised with chipotle chilis, roasted poblanos and a blend of aromatic spices made with organic, non-GMO tofu from Oakland's Hodo Soy.

Sofritas will be available in burritos, tacos, burrito bowls and salads and can be combined with other signature ingredients, including white or brown cilantro-lime rice, pinto beans or vegetarian black beans, house-made salsas and guacamole, and cheese or sour cream.

The test may be expanded to additional markets in the future.

I'm curious to taste these so-called Sofritas.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Starbucks in Hong Kong

Check out the Starbucks at Tsim Sha Tsui in Hong Kong.  It's decorated like a gingerbread house with a humongous red cup outside!  I love this Starbucks overlooking the water -- hubby and I took a coffee break here when we visited HK a few years ago, so it brings back lots of memories.

http://eater.com/archives/2012/12/19/check-out-the-insane-christmas-decorations-on-a-hong-kong-starbucks.php



Monday, December 17, 2012

Guest Post (FoodFiend): Villa-O - as in OMG that was Fantastic!

I am never so pleased as when I happen upon something that is wonderful and unexpected. Especially when that something involves wine, lobster, and discounts.

Some months ago, I bought a Travelzoo voucher to Villa-O, an Italian restaurant that seemed upon vague inquiry to be located somewhere in Uptown Dallas. I almost didn't buy it.  But it was $59 for two entrees, an appetizer, AND a bottle of wine, so I went back and bought it. I figured if it was cheap wine I could spend a few extra bucks and upgrade.

Of course, being who I am, I almost let the voucher expire. But I caught myself in time, so BP and I fought the holiday shopping traffic and headed down there Saturday night.

We had a fairly early reservation, 6:30, and only a few parties were already seated. We got a fabulous table in the corner where I could watch all the goings-on in the restaurant, and I had a view of the kitchen, but wasn't so close that I felt the heat of the fires and heard other people's dinner sizzling. They had a good mix of music playing - jazz fusion is perhaps a good description - to the point where we wanted to ask where they got their soundtrack. The best part about it was that we could hear it, but we could also still hear each other.


There were more parties seated to the left of the photo, I promise.

The restaurant's advertising describes it as original, organic, and oceanic. They emphasize the use of free-range ingredients and make everything they can from scratch, in-house. As for the oceanic, the decor has a bit of a nautical bent, but we also discovered that Villa-O can rock the seafood.

I was quite impressed with the wine list, and if you know me, you know that's an accomplishment when it comes to a restaurant that regular people can afford. I was also impressed with our waitress Heather's knowledge of the wine list. Upon finding I preferred reds (BP wisely declined to comment much at this juncture), she made several reasonably priced suggestions. I went with Zenato Valpolicella Classico - it was described as black cherry and currant with hints of spice and chocolate, and if a wine is called spicy, I usually like it. I am on a longstanding zinfandel kick, and this was less bold and robust than zinfandel. Heather said she usually recommends this if someone wants an alternative to malbec. I thought it had a better mouth feel than many malbecs, and was a bit lighter. Anyway, we liked it!

My one, and only one, disappointment with the place was that they didn't create a little puddle of olive oil and pepper for bread-dipping. But I took care of that, since fortunately the appropriate condiments were on the table. The bread was good, if less than hot, and it cried out for olive oil. I happily obliged.

For our appetizer, we chose the Crispy Calamari. I thought we were being boring. BP lamented that we hadn't noticed the bruschetta on the menu before we chose the calamari. But oh, my heavens, that calamari was to die for. We could have gotten spoons and just eaten bowls of it. It came over a marinara sauce that was a bit spicy but not overwhelming, and with these fantastic red and green Italian cherry peppers! I have never had anything like it. Again, the peppers were just slightly on the spicy side, but the bit of heat was just the right partner for perfectly cooked squid that was not the least bit rubbery as fried calamari can sometimes be. At that point, we knew we'd hit the jackpot.

OK, it was also at about that time that BP decided he was going to serenade me along with the music, which may or may not have been "The Way You Look Tonight." He was being smooshy, but the atmosphere was favorable. And I digress.

I ordered the Papardelle all'Aragosta, one of Heather's suggestions, and because I immediately salivate at the thought of lobster and white wine sauce. For some reason the "papardelle" part did not quite register in my head, because oddly I was expecting something like linguine rather than the large, flat pastas. I guess I have had too many frutti del mare entrees that typically come with spaghetti. But no, here I was with half-lasagna noodles, obviously handmade, and - wait for it - an entire lobster tail in the shell!!! I think my jaw hit the table. Before Heather deconstructed it for me, I snapped a photo. Yeah, I'm THAT girl in restaurants.


It was huge. I do believe I swooned.

BP got the Fennel-Crusted Scallops over arugula with a sweet basil vinaigrette, despite his claims to dislike basil. But in the end, there was nary a scallop crumb left, so I think he got over it.


He gave me a bite or two. Okay, three. Holy mollusks, Batman, they were good! I don't think I have ever tasted a better-cooked scallop (sorry, GrandCruMan). The breading was crunchy but not too thick. And the sweet basil vinaigrette was the perfect accompaniment. Come to think of it, my bread from earlier might have liked it, too.

But now, back to our previously scheduled lobster.

It was sweet lobster yumminess, and it seemed to go on, and on, and on. I savored it. Being in a rather interesting marinara sauce, it wasn't overly buttery like lobster often is. The sauce had an ever-so-slightly sweet taste that I was frustrated not to be able to identify, but I suspect perhaps fennel. Whatever it was, it was darn good.

Heather offered dessert, bless her heart, but we were too stuffed with seafood. We agreed that we will have to come back, since I am always on board with chocolate cake and BP is on a quest to find the best tiramisu ever. Both are on Villa-O's menu.

I think next time we will have calamari, wine, and dessert. And the time after that, I have to try some different pastas. And the time after that...

Thank you Travelzoo!