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MARIANI’S
Virtual Gourmet
NEWSLETTER
August 11,
2003
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Cover Story: Baden-Baden Baedekker
by John Mariani
New York Corner:
Les Halles
Downtown by John Mariani
Notes from the Wine
Cellar: Chappellet
Old Vines Cuvée by John Mariani
Quick Bytes
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- Readers
trying to
reach me through e-mail can do so by writing directly to johnmariani@prodigy.net
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BADEN-BADEN BAEDEKER
by John Mariani

I sense that Baden-Baden is one of
the quietest cities in Europe,
perhaps because its residents are ever in awe of their good fortune to
live in
the verdant Oos Valley, surrounded by the majesty of the Black Forest. In homage the
city’s designers and architects have always paid very close attention
to
harmonizing the city to its natural beauty, creating low-lying
buildings within
gardens alongside streams and rivers whose silent movement makes
this one
of the most romantic spots in Germany.
Almost
untouched by the Second World War, Baden-Baden was
spared the destruction of its monuments, including Das Goldene
Kreuz
(the Golden Cross), a gate that opens onto a pretty shopping street,
and the
charming neo-classical buildings set around Augustaplatz, Marktplatz
and
Leopoldsplatz in the
Old Town. In warm weather the city is ablaze with gardens, in many of
which are held concerts and performances throughout the summer, and the
Casino here
is justly famous for its baroque and rococo interiors.
Of course, the city’s fame originally grew from the
therapeutic properties of its thermal baths, now housed in a modern
structure
of shimmering beauty built on the idea of Rome’s Baths of Caracalla. (For views and info on
Baden-Baden go to www.baden-baden.de
)
For
125 years now Brenner’s
Park-Hotel & Spa ( Schillerstrasse
4-6; 49-72-21-9000; www.brenners.com ) has been identified with the good life in Baden-Baden, and
recent
renovations have kept it not only at that ranking locally but, with the
addition of a new state-of-the-art spa (where you can enjoy a selection
of
saunas, take a plunge into the icy Frigidarium pool, have yourself
stretched,
pulled, walked on, and colorized, and have a computer-generated look at
your feet that shows you how silly your walk is).
Brenner’s began back in 1872 as
the
hotel Stéphanie-les-Bains. opened by a master tailor to Pforzheim royalty named Anton Alois
Brenner. Over the next two centuries the hotel was expanded and
rebuilt,
including the acquisition of César Ritz’s Hotel Minerva next
door. After World War Two it changed
names, to
Brenner’s Park-Hotel & Spa, now owned by the Oetker family. Thus, what you see today is a fairly modern
but still classic-looking grand hotel that has been modified numerous
times
over the last 125 years, and the most recent renovations of the 100
rooms and
the new spa make this as great a hotel as any in Germany. It is
conveniently set just
yards from the darling
river-run park and a few minutes’ walk from the Old Town.
All
of the hotel’s restaurants have
also be redone, starting with the beautiful Oleander Bar (left),
a cushy and
comfortable spot to have cocktails before dining at either the formal Park-Restaurant or
the more casual Wintergarten
(below right).
(The breakfast buffet in another dining room
is one most extensive and elegantly presented in Europe.)
Cognizant that no one wants to dine on haute
cuisine each day and night,
the Wintergarten’s menus have been lightened and
enlightened with
internationalism. The setting is that of
a conservatory, with sliding windows open to the Baden-Baden air—which is plenty
therapeutic for me. The canopy ceiling
has slow-turning fans, the
black-and-white tile floor and wicker bistro chairs make it all the
more
cheery, and little red lights cast a sweet glow on the tables. I had two meals here, beginning with a local
favorite, fried goose liver served with apples, a corn salad and beets,
and a
delicious “Baden style” potato soup that was as velvety as it was
deeply
flavorful. Also very good was a pepper-and-shrimp cream soup. Not so a rather insipid beef consommé
with
slivers of crêpes.
My
favorites among the main courses
were braised local beef with glazed onions, bacon, celery and mashed
potatoes,
followed by a lamb chop with a gratin of cheese sidled with a
pesto-sage
polenta. Fillet of sea bass on borlotti
beans with a vegetable sauté and olive-flecked gnocchi married
well
together, as did
medallions of veal and sweetbreads in a red wine sauce on wheat
risotto, with
morels and kohlrabi—splendid ideas, each complementary to one another.
For
dessert don’t miss the traditional apple pancake with vanilla ice cream
or the
pretty iced soufflé Stéphanie with raspberry sauce.
The
formality of the Park-Restaurant
(below) is softened by the use
of brilliant cheery colors of cherry red and
white-and-blue striped chairs, with the twilight of spring and summer
pouring
through the windows. Here exec chef
Rudolf Pelkofer and chef de cuisine Andreas Krolik keep in mind this is
a grand
hotel, so their menu is up to the task, while sommelier Heinz Schopf
makes sure
guests can find anything could wish for on the winelist. Main
courses at the Wintergarten range from
€27.50/$31 to €31/$35.
My dinner started off very well indeed
with three forms of goose liver—marinated in a berry sauce,
sautéed and covered
with brioche, with an apple-celery confit. Marinated
prawns on greens with a mousse of
black salsify and a tomato vinaigrette was a splendid appetite-starter,
and
fish courses like steamed turbot in root vegetables with a
caviar-Champagne
sauce showed the classic approach at its best. More
Mediterranean was a sautéed whole sea bass with
herbs and
rosemary potatoes in tarragon-mustard sauce. For
meat there is rosy roast breast of duck with Black Forest honey, duck liver on stewed
pears and braised chicory and potato cakes, and a rack and braised
haunch of
lamb with gnocchi, beans and sweet-sour gremolata. It is far from easy to
choose between a
gratin of mango and pineapple with chocolate sauce and mint ice cream
or a
chocolate soufflé with lavender and honey ice cream. The cheese tray, it goes without saying, is
excellent. Main courses at the
Park-Restaurant range from €36/$40.75 to
€42/$47.50.
Baden-Baden
has plenty of good
restaurants (I must assume this, since I hadn’t time to eat around town
too
much; the Michelin Guide
awards a star to both Le Jardin de France and
Zum Alde
Gott), though a much beloved one, La Provence, nestled in the hills
above the
town, isn’t one of them. Indeed,
everyone I spoke to said, “Ah, La Provence! It’s a wonderfully
romantic place—though the food isn’t very good.” They
were right. Always crowded with people
enjoying
themselves in a rustic German tavern-like setting, La Provence is bare bones when it comes
to amenities, although service is brisk. The
problem is finding anything on the menu to praise—a
wide-ranging
amalgam of French and Italian bistro favorites without a scintilla of
good
taste.
I
did, however, get out of Baden-Baden for a breathtaking drive
through the Black
Forest, swerving
across hills dense with trees then coming around a bend in
view of valleys of stunning beauty below. I
stopped for a tasting at a very modern winery named
Gut
Nägelsförst that showed how underrated the wines of the
Baden region are, including
varietals like merlot and cabernet sauvignon once verboten
in these parts. Starving by midday, we turned off at Sasbachwalden
to dine at restaurant blissfully
set restaurant in one of these valleys. Located
within the Hotel Talmühle (Talstrasse
36; 07841-62-8290; talmuehle@t-online.de ), Restaurant Fallert
is best appreciated when one can dine
outdoors on
the broad lawns dotted with magnolias. Chef Gutbert Fallert is
very serious about his cuisine but he has a light, elegant touch based
on a
very few perfect ingredients rendered with respect.
If you wish to sample a wide array of Baden area wines, this is a very
good place to indulge.
Our amuse gueule was a delicate smoked
trout mousseline, very creamy, very savory, then came a bright salad of
asparagus with the German ham called Bauernschinken
and quail’s eggs. There was a superb trout
in a light Riesling
cream sauce, and a pleasant filet of breaded veal--certainly the best
rendition of Wienerschnitzel ever, served with
spinach and gingered carrots. Tender,
flavorful chicken cooked in Barolo wine was delicious.
A lamb cutlet with ratatouille was
tasty
enough, and I must admit that although a plate of Back-Hend’l Gebackenes von
Schwarzfederhuhn Barlauch/Kartoffelsalat Joghurt-Limonen Sauce
came to
little
more than a German variation on chicken nuggets with lemon sauce, the
dish, quite
frankly, they hit the spot. A vanilla
parfait
with rhubarb ended the meal off beautifully. Main courses €19/$21.50 to €30/$34,
with a prix fixe menu at €39.50/$44.50
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NEW YORK CORNER
LES HALLES by
John Mariani

The
original Les Halles, uptown at Park Avenue South and 29th Street, was one of the first of
the “modern” old-fashioned bistros in New York when it opened more than a
decade ago, bringing an authenticity and
no-kidding-around devotion to meat and potatoes that was missing
elsewhere. Named after the old Paris food market,
Les Halles also functioned as a butcher with French cuts of meat.
Fueled by the publicity garnered from chef Anthony Bourdain’s
best-selling book, Kitchen
Confidential,
it has
kept a steady clientele that comes as much for the sizzle and the steak
frites.
Les
Halles Downtown (15
John St.;
212-285-8585; )
in the Wall Street area is also doing well, now that that
neighborhood is
attracting more residents who enliven those murky streets after 6 p.m..
(For anyone driving his own car into the
area, post
9/11, it can be a maddening experience constantly frustrated by streets
that go
one way,
then the other, and never the way you want to go.)
Shadowy but not dark, with a sound level that
ratchets up to the level of very loud (I asked
them to
turn it down and they graciously did), the place is the epitome of
French
bonhomie, and if I lived around there I’d certainly eat at Les Halles
at least
once a week.
I could hardly ever tire of a fat slab
of terrine de foie gras or a steaming pot of mussels in white wine. The frites are
indeed excellent here and go
well with the full-flavored beef they serve,, along with a menu
teeming
with bistro classics that never, ever get tiresome—bubbling
Gruyère-rich onion
soup, a hearty goat’s cheese salad, a burning hot tartlet of Reblochon
and
bacon, and generous choucroute garni. The mussels actually
come in nine preparations—basquaise, portugues, and so on. I loved the
billi-bi
version with cream and saffron. Confit
de canard was perfectly crisp and delicious, and at meal’s end
the
profiteroles
come with rich dark chocolate, and the crème brûlée
restores your faith in that old standby. It’s
really difficult
to go wrong here with
anything and impossible to be bored by any of it. While
the food here would drive people on the Dean Ornish
diet mad, it
is just about ideal for those on the Atkins, with plenty of caveman
protein to
go
around. Of course, anyone who can resist Les Halles’ potatoes or
macaroni
and cheese French style is probably half dead already.
Wine
prices are fair, with plenty under $40. Coppola
Chardonnay '00 retails for $18, at Les Halles, /$36 ; Paul Blanck
riesling '00 is $13, here $34 ; Domaine
Quatre
Vents '00 $12.50, here $28. But
Pichon-Longueville
’98 sells for $45-$60 in stores, here for a walloping $165.
There are also branches of Les Halles in Miami and
Washington DC.
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WE TOO HAVE A SINGLE
QUESTION: JUST HOW MUCH OFFAL HAVE YOU BEEN WHIFFING LATELY?
"We’ve
been upriver into
that heart of graciousness, and we’ve come back. We
prefer the garlicky persillade, the
long-simmered jus, the whiff of offal, to the thrice-strained sauce
named after
a thin-blooded noble. Ambience, attitude, food--for many of us, they
combine to
raise a single question: We’re glad the restaurant is there, but do we
really
want to go?”
--Patric
Kuh, reviewing L’Orangerie in L.A., Los
Angeles Magazine (August 2003).
. . . AND WAIT TILL
YOU SMELL THESE BAKING IN THE OVEN!
(Reprinted from pastrywiz.com)
Chicken Liver
Cookies
2 c Flour3 T Vegetable oil
1 c Wheat germ or
cornmeal
1 Egg lightly
beaten
1/2 c Chicken
broth
2 ts Chopped
parsley
1 c Chopped
chicken liver cooked
Preheat oven
to 400.
Combine flour and wheat germ. In a separate bowl, beat egg with oil,
then add broth and parsley; mix well. Add dry ingredients to bowl a
little at a time, stirring well. Fold in chicken livers and mix well.
Dough will be firm. Turn dough out on lightly floured surface and knead
briefly. Roll out 1/2" thick and cut into shapes. Place on greased
cookie sheet 1" apart and bake for 15 minutes or until firm. Store in
refrigerator.
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NOTES
FROM THE WINE CELLAR
Chappellet Old Vines Cuvèe 1999
Chenin Blanc
Chenin
blanc has never been
among my favorite varietals, especially after I tasted 80 of them in
one day
for a wine judging where I found myself writing over and over
again--like the
mad writer in "The Shining" typing "All work and no play. . ."--
"citrus, grassy, grapefruit...citrus,
grassy,
grapefruit . . . citrus, grassy, grapefruit” and so on.
Chenn blanc is hardly to be found
among many connoisseurs’ favorite wines, except for those who find,
perhaps,
Vouvray, to their liking. Yet
the first sip of Chappellet Old Vines Cuvée ‘99 Chenin
Blanc had me dumbfounded. It was not
only delicious and mellow but didn’t have that assertive grassiness
that makes
more than a thimble-ful of most Chenin Blancs worth drinking. At first I didn't even think it was a Chenin Blanc. Here is a
white wine of exceptional finesse,
a wine you can tell was very, very carefully made to demonstrate the
point that
this second-rate varietal can be a first-rate wine.
It had a lushness and fullness to it, its fruit
and acid components all in balance, a velvety feeling in the mouth, and
a long
elegant finish that made me want to drink more and more of it with
pleasure.
First produced in 1992, planted on
steep, rocky terraces with a northwestern exposure, the grapes
gain an intensity of sun and sugars that help cut the green-ness
of the varietal, with the wine aged “sur-lie
”for six months. And since
it retails around the U.S. for between $13 and $15, it is testament to
the fact
that a great California wine need not compete in price with the
hierarchy of
any other nation’s wines.
--John Mariani
QUICK
BYTES
*
On Aug. 21 Penfolds winery and Wine Educator
Matthew Lane, will host
the latest Beverly Hills Hotel’s
Winemakers Dinner. Executive Chef Katsuo
"Suki" Sugiura has created a “Taste of Australia” menu to showcase
the hand-selected wines. $95 pp. Call 310- 281-2919.
* In Dallas on Aug. 26 Nana (Wyndham Anatole, 2201
Stemmons Freeway) will feature
the wines of Dominus Estate, Napa Valley presented by Edouard
Moueix, complemented by a 6-course dinner by chef David McMillan. Wines to be poured include
Napanook. Dominus Estate wines to be
served include the 1989, 1994, 1998, 1999 and current 2000 release. Evening concludes with 1937 Ramos-Pinto Tawny
Port. $175 pp. Call 214.761.7470.
* Chicago’s Café
Ba-Ba-Reeba! (2024 N. Halsted) commemorates
Spanish Heritage Month during its Annual Pasion De Paella Festival,
Sept. 1-14,
featuring guest chef Manuel Sanchez of Restaurante L'Albufera in Madrid. There will be interactive paella cooking
lessons, a
discussion of the Spanish artist Velazquez and two live performances by
flamenco dancers. Chef Sanchez will also feature nightly tapas and
paella
specials paired with sherry and wine tastings. Tickets are available on
line at www.cafebabareeba.com
or at the
front door.
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John Mariani is a
columnist for Esquire, Wine
Spectator, Diversion and the Harper Collection. He is author
of The
Encyclopedia of American Food & Drink (Lebhar-Friedman), The
Dictionary of Italian Food and Drink (Broadway), and, with his wife
Galina,
the award-winning new Italian-American Cookbook (Harvard Common
Press). To purchase from amazon.com, click on the
image below.

copyright John
Mariani 2003
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