Showing posts with label top chef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label top chef. Show all posts

Meson 923 Turns One

Top Celebs, Chefs, and Culinarians give Testimony to Chef Baruch Rabasa
In one of the most food obsessed cities in the world, New Orleans cuisine has high marks but often the strong cultural influences are over looked by sticking with tradition. One exciting new restaurant is celebrating its one year anniversary [Best New, Spring 2011 update for Fall Dining Guide, Restaurant Critic, Brett Anderson], Meson 923, which is known for specializing in Catalan cuisine – fusing regional produce with inspirational elements. Think Slow Roast Duck Breast with Corn Pudding and Guajillo Chili Reduction or Grilled Mahi Mahi with Cous Cous, Shrimp, Olives, Almonds, and Tomatoes in a Tunisian Broth.

Executive chef Baruch Rabasa has been a passionate influence and voice in Meson 923’s kitchen since its inception, but most evident since October 2010.  Just in case you didn’t notice, some notable chefs, restaurateurs, journalists, and musicians had a few words to say about chef Rabasa:

Sue Zemanick, Top Chef Masters Season 3 and contestant Executive Chef, Gautreau’s: “Baruch uses familiar dishes and presents them with best new flavor components and ingredients.”

Patrick Singley, Gautreau’s Restaurant Proprietor: “Baruch is refreshingly intelligent with his approach to historically relevant and inspirational cuisine.”

Robert Mercurio, Musician in the well-known band, Galactic: “Baruch’s keen sense of combining disparate ingredients and turning them into a completely original and delicious dish is a breath of fresh air in this town.”

Cedric Martin, Owner of Martin’s Wine Cellar: “Meson 923 is one of my new favorite restaurants in the city.  Chef Baruch's dishes are creative and light. The meals are consistently good, and the ingredients are always fresh.  The atmosphere is trendy yet comfortable, and the staff is polite and very well trained. I am always impressed by Meson 923.”

Jason Oliver Nixon, Delta Sky Magazine: “…set sail on an accessible, yet exotic culinary journey courtesy of the very talented chef Baruch Rabasa... definitely one to watch, I was bowled over by his masterful cooking.”

Tom Fitzmorris, New Orleans Food Critic and Editor of Menu Magazine: “The most impressive [opening] was Mesón 923, a Créole-New American restaurant in the Warehouse District…there’s no question it’s a much more substantial place than most new restaurants of the past five years.”

Ian McNulty, New Orleans Food Critic for Gambit: Described Mesón 923 as the most “ambitious” new restaurant to have opened in 2010.

Robert Peyton, New Orleans food critic: “…I can say that based on the meal I ate, things are going swimmingly.”

Paul A. Greenberg, Writer for Where Magazine and Contributor to Gayot.com: “Chef Baruch Rabasa’s menu combines the local sensibilities of appropriate seasonings with interesting twists on items one expects from a New Orleans kitchen.”

Lisa Leblanc Berry, Food editor for Louisiana Homes & Lifestyles: “…Chef Baruch Rabasa’s amazing cross-cultural cuisine.”

Cat Wall Aschaffenburg, New Orleans Makeup Artist and Freelance Contributor: “Trust me, Mesón 923 is fairly new, but it’s going to be huge…Get in while you still can.”

Dominique Macquet, Executive Chef and Owner of Dominique’s on Magazine: “Latin flavor with New Orleans twist. South America meets south east. Interesting, catchy, unique cuisine.”

Meson 923- 923 South Peters Street - New Orleans -504.523.9200 - meson923.com

Meson 923 is open for cocktails in the bar or balcony and dinner beginning at 5 pm, Wednesday through Saturday.

2011 Festival Tour - Fulbrook Cork & Culinary Fair in Texas

My good friend Fabio Viviani (Top Chef, Top Chef All-Stars, chef/owner Firenze, Italian Restaurant and Martini Bar in Moorpark, CA; and Firenze Osteria, Italian Restaurant and Bar in Toluca Lake, CA) will be one of the guests at the 1st annual Fulbrook Cork & Culinary Fair held in the planned community of Fullbrook, TX on the banks of the Brazos River.  My paeson will be joined by fellow Top Chef alum Ilan Hall executive chef and owner of The Gorbals in Los Angeles.

The good people of Fulbrook invite you to join them on May 7th and stroll down the scenic path toward the Fulbrook Vineyard and enjoy wines provided by French Country Wines of Houston and delicious food items by some of the best restaurants in the Houston/Fulshear area. This year, they salute the flavors and grapes of France.

Schedule of Events:

12:00 - 5:00 Food/Wine Pairing Tents

Admission includes tastings at 10 pairing tents. Area chefs/restaurants will provide delicious food samples to complement the wine tastings served at each tent.

Theatre Tents

12:30 pm    Chef Soren Pederson Cooking Demonstration

1:00 pm      Chef Fabio Viviani Cooking Demonstration

1:45 pm      Chef Ilan Hall Cooking Demonstration

2:30 pm      Informative Lecture on Wine and Cheese

                     French Country Wines and Pola Artisan

                     Cheeses

3:00 p.m.    Vineyards & Viticulture (Fritz Westover,  Texas A & M)

3:30 pm      Celebrity Chef's Meet & Greet and
                     Cookbook Signings

                     Fabio Viviani's cookbooks will be available

                     for purchase.

4:30 pm      Chef Fabio Viviani Cooking Demonstration

5:15 pm      Chef Ilan Hall Cooking Demonstration

12:00 - 6:00 Vendor Tents

Guests can purchase art, cheese, wines and cigars throughout the day from the following vendors:

                     Essence House Café

                     Pola Artisan Cheeses

                     French Country Wines

                     Buffalo Creek Wine & Cigars

                     Mary Catherine Watson Art & Silhouettes

Hot Air Balloon* and Strolling Musicians all Day

6:30 Gourmet Wine Dinner

A multi-course dinner expertly paired with French Wines.

$100/per person. Limited seating.

Purchase by May 3 (or until sold out).

* Weather permitting

To purchase event tickets, click HERE:

For questions or additional information, please contact:

713-857-7366 or todd@averettelayne.com


Brunch Standard: Emeril's Eggs Florentine

Eggs Florentine have been all the rage since a recent episode of Bravo's Top Chef. During the Elimination Challenge contestants had to do a deconstruction of a classic dish. Chef Michael Isabella's task was Eggs Florentine.

Now the average home cook doesn't have calcium chloride and sodium alginate in their pantry and the last time I checked very few suburban kitchens had emersion cookers in them. So rather than trying a Deconstructed Eggs Florentin most of us should stick with the classic. Eggs Florentine is a staple of most Third Coast brunches and few have a better recipe than New Orleans' Emeril Legasse with its luxurious Sauce Morney and Crispy Potato Pancakes so I dug up his from the Food Network web site. Enjoy:

Eggs Florentine
Recipe courtesy Emeril Lagasse, 2004

Prep Time:40 minInactive Prep Time:hr minCook Time:30 minLevel:
IntermediateServes:
2 servings.Ingredients
•Sauteed Spinach, recipe follows
•Mornay Sauce, recipe follows
•Crispy Potato Cakes, recipe follows
•4 large eggs
•1 tablespoon white vinegar
•1 teaspoon salt
•Freshly ground black pepper
•2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh parsley leaves
Directions
Preheat oven to 200 degrees F.

Prepare the Sauteed Spinach and keep warm while you prepare the remaining components. Prepare the Mornay Sauce and keep warm while you prepare the remaining components. Prepare the Crispy Potato Cakes and keep warm in the oven while you poach the eggs.

To poach the eggs: break the eggs into individual saucers or cups. Fill a medium skillet halfway with water. Add the vinegar and salt and bring to a boil. Pour eggs into water, cover the skillet and remove from the heat. Allow to sit 4 to 5 minutes. When the eggs are ready, divide the potato cakes evenly between 2 dinner plates and top each with some of the creamed spinach. Remove the eggs from the skillet with a slotted spoon and gently place on top of the creamed spinach and potato cakes. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste. Ladle some of the Mornay Sauce over the eggs and spinach, garnish with parsley, and serve.

Sauteed Spinach:
2 tablespoons unsalted butter

2 tablespoons finely chopped shallots

1 pound spinach, washed, tough stems removed

Salt and freshly grated white pepper

Pinch grated nutmeg

Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the shallots and saute for 1 minute. Add the spinach and saute, stirring to wilt and combine with the shallots. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper and a pinch freshly ground nutmeg, to taste.

Mornay Sauce:
1 tablespoon butter

1 1/2 tablespoons all-purpose flour

1 cup milk

1/8 teaspoon salt

Pinch white pepper

Pinch freshly grated nutmeg

1 ounce grated cheese, such as Swiss, Gruyere, or Emmenthaler

In a small saucepan melt the butter over medium-high heat. Add the flour and cook, stirring constantly, until the roux is pale yellow and frothy, about 1 minute. Do not allow the roux to brown. Slowly whisk in the milk and continue to whisk until the sauce thickens and comes to a boil, about 2 to 3 minutes. Reduce the heat to a simmer and season with the salt, pepper and nutmeg. Allow to simmer for 2 to 3 minutes. Stir in the cheese and whisk until melted. If the sauce seems too thick, thin with a little milk.

Use sauce immediately or refrigerate, surface covered with plastic wrap, for several days in the refrigerator.

Yield: about 1 cup

Crispy Potato Pancakes:
3/4 pound russet potatoes (about 1 large)

4 ounces pancetta or bacon, cooked until crisp, drained and crumbled

1 large egg, lightly beaten

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon black pepper

Vegetable oil, for frying

Peel the potato and put in cold water. Using a mandoline, grater, or food processor, coarsely grate the potato. Place in a fine-mesh sieve or strainer and squeeze out all of the potato liquid over a bowl. After the starch has settled to the bottom of the bowl, carefully pour off the clear liquid, reserving the starch. Add the grated potato to the starch in the bowl, along with the reserved crumbled bacon, egg, salt and pepper.

Heat a nonstick pan with a small amount of oil in the bottom of the pan. When the oil is hot, take about one-quarter of the potato mixture in the palm of your hand and, using the other hand, flatten and squeeze to remove any excess liquid. Place the potato mixture in the heated pan and cook, pressing down with a spatula to flatten, until crispy and golden, about 3 minutes on each side. Transfer to a paper lined baking sheet and keep warm in the oven while you cook the remaining potato cakes.