Friday, November 26, 2010

Culver City Dining

I have recently been eating out in Culver City quite a bit and enjoy the small town feeling of the place. There are a number of decent restaurants now and one in particular I enjoyed a few times in the last two weeks is Saint Amour. Right behind Starbucks on Culver Blvd. Saint Amour is one of those classic French bistros that are worth a visit.

I sat outside and had lunch on a warm and sunny day about three weeks ago and had a terrific salad Nicoise. This has to be one of the best salads ever and I teach a class on main dish salads where we learn this traditional entrée. It is a composed salad of steamed green beans, seared tuna, hard-boiled egg and new potatoes with olives and anchovies on top. It is not only beautiful but also very delicious. The Saint Amour version was very, very good.

My husband and I visited for a light meal there about two weeks ago before a movie and were impressed to find such a gem in Culver City where there are many trendy places but less with this type of quality.

The second visit was almost perfect from the service to the beautiful décor we both loved the place. We had wonderful warm baguettes with a small dish of olives along with a delicious Belgian beer. Then ordered frisee salad, parsnip soup and a charcuterie plate. The soup – made with parsnips pureed with butter, cream and chicken stock was velvety and satisfying. The frisee salad with lardons- one of my all time favorites was done to perfection; just the right amount of bacon, a lovely vinaigrette and a perfectly poached egg on top. This salad is a meal in itself and it is rare to find one of this quality in a restaurant. The charcuterie plate came with the traditional accompaniments; cornichons, Dijon mustard and pickled onions. This plate is a winner that I highly recommend.

We reserved a spot on a Sunday night with another couple to try the dinner hour. We ordered a Pot Au Feu which is a beef shank that is braised for hours and then served with a little of it’s own broth with potatoes and root vegetables – a peasant dish. This didn’t look anything like that when it arrived, somehow there were no vegetables and the meat was swimming in liquid, more like a soup with some meat and potatoes in it. I was not impressed with the presentation although it had good flavor. I ordered a half roast chicken with some greens and turnips, which was nicely cooked but just a tad bland. Our friends had mussels, steak frites and the beautiful frisee salad with lardons. The dishes were authentic bistro fare that everyone enjoyed but the salad still wins, hands down.

We then had two desserts a perfect chocolate pots de crème with a layer of salted caramel on top that was to die for and a profiterole. I said this was classic French bistro fare and as you can tell by the menu it truly is. The profiterole presented well but the cream puffs were dry and tough; something I would not recommend.

All in all I would have to say this is a lovely place, the atmosphere is charming, the staff are efficient and professional (almost all are French) and if you would like to feel you are in a bistro in Paris this is the place.

If you want to try the salad Nicoise at home here is the perfect recipe.

Classic Salad Nicoise

Serves 8 to 10

Ingredients

1 Tb. Dijon mustard

2 cloves minced garlic

3 Tb. Balsamic vinegar

1/2 cup olive oil

Salt, pepper

1 pound new potatoes, washed and quartered

12 ounces haricot verts, trimmed

3 large eggs

2 Ahi tuna steaks, about 5 oz. each or 2 cans water packed tuna, drained and crumbled

Olive oil

Thyme, minced

Lettuce for platter

2 ripe tomatoes cut into eighths

10 nicoise olives

4 anchovies, rinsed and drained, optional

6 basil leaves, chiffonade

Procedure

1. Combine the mustard, vinegar and garlic in a bowl and whisk, add oil slowly while whisking and season with salt and pepper. Set aside.

2. Cook potatoes in a small saucepan of salted water until tender about 20 minutes, drain, set aside.

3. Blanch beans and refresh with cold water and set aside.

4. Place eggs in a small saucepan of cold water and bring to a boil, remove from heat, cover and allow to sit for 15 minutes.

5. Meanwhile rub tuna with olive oil, thyme, salt and pepper. Heat the grill and grill for 2 to 3 minutes on each side. Remove to a cutting board.

6. Arrange lettuce on large platter; arrange groups of vegetables in piles around platter. Slice tuna in 1/2 inch slices and add to platter. Scatter with olives, lay anchovies on top and sprinkle over the whole platter. Drizzle the dressing over the platter before serving. Serve cold or room temperature.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Raw Food is Too Raw for Me!

I visited a raw foods restaurant last night on Main street after hearing about it for a while and passing by a few times on my way to the beach. Rawvolution is the name of the place and after walking in and smelling the distinctive aroma of vitamins and wheat grass juice I chose to sit outside.

The service was efficient and friendly and the menu was short but fairly extensive given that there are no cooked foods to be had.

I am definitely into healthier food and take pride in cooking with no dairy, little fat and organic produce so I was open to enjoying a raw food experience. Having said that I must admit after the meal I had a strong urge to go across the street and order a piece of pizza from Bravo.

Ok, ok, raw food is all the rage right now with restaurants cropping up all over L.A. but this was a meal that was hard for me to swallow.

I ordered a mushroom “burger” after hearing from a friend that the onion “bread” they are famous for is so amazing. It came on said bread but something about the texture of it was very strange. First of all, they don’t use wheat, yeast or any flour in their cuisine so all “breads” are made from seeds and some kind of pressed grain. The texture was chewy and dry sort of like eating very salty cardboard and I didn’t detect any onion flavor at all. The mushroom was topped with a spread that is supposed to be a facsimile of cheese which wasn’t bad but also overly salty. The whole thing was quite dense and heavy and I felt full after eating half of it. I also ordered the one quite yummy item of my meal which was a nori roll filled with vegetables and a bean spread, it was delicious and although messy to eat- so not first date material- I would say that is worth going back for. I went with a friend who also is into vegetarian food and enjoys trying new cuisines as I do so she was the right person to accompany me. She ordered a “big mac” but remember we are eating raw foods here so no burger, cheese or bun. This was a creative attempt to copy a burger with the infamous onion bread once again and a textured grain, seed, nut thing as the burger. Hers was also overly salty but she liked it more than I did.

We tried their truffles for dessert and the wait person said they were great. We ordered a cookie dough, chocolate coconut haystack and a Goji berry truffle. They gave us one order that we split, thank god because I could barely eat any most of it. The coconut one was acceptable but the other two were in edible, between the weird texture and the strange sweetener they use I almost spit it out. Give me a good piece of chocolate any day over this mock dessert.

I often here people say I must be picky in restaurants because I am in the food business and my answer is, only when it is bad. I go out to all kinds of places and an appreciative of efforts made to prepare good food as I know what goes into it. But this experience left me with a bad taste in my mouth, literally.

I was macrobiotic for a few years in my early twenties and taught at the one and only vegan cooking school in the country for five years so I am not a novice at off the beaten path vegetarian fare but next time I will pass on the raw part of healthy eating and choose for my food to be cooked.

If you would like a fabulous vegan chocolate chip cookie try this one, you won't be disappointed.

Nutty Chocolate Chip Cookies

Makes about 2 ½ dozen

Ingredients

1 1/2 cups rolled oats, toasted in a 350 oven for 6 min., ground in food processor, cooled

1 cup whole wheat pastry flour

1/2 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. baking soda

1 cup raw almonds or hazelnuts toasted in 350 oven for 10 minutes, roughly chopped and cooled

1 cup chocolate or carob chips

1/2 cup canola oil

1/2 cup maple syrup

2 tsp. vanilla

Procedure

1. Preheat oven to 375. Line two half sheet pans with parchment, set aside.

2. Combine oats, flour, salt, soda, nuts and chips in a large bowl stir and set aside. Combine the oil, syrup and vanilla in a small bowl and whisk. Stir wet into dry ingredients just until mixed.

5. Drop by rounded tablespoons onto sheet pans about 1 1/2 inches apart. Flatten dough with fingers.

6. Bake one pan at a time until lightly browned on bottom about 15 min. Cool and remove to wire rack. Repeat with the other pan and remaining dough.

Raw Food is Too Raw for Me!

I visited a raw foods restaurant last night on Main street after hearing about it for a while and passing by a few times on my way to the beach. Rawvolution is the name of the place and after walking in and smelling the distinctive aroma of vitamins and wheat grass juice I choose to sit outside.

The service was efficient and friendly and the menu was short but fairly extensive given that there are no cooked foods to be had.

I am definitely into healthier food and take pride in cooking with no dairy, little fat and organic produce so I was open to enjoying a raw food experience. Having said that I must admit after the meal I had a strong urge to go across the street and order a piece of pizza from Bravo.

Ok, ok, raw food is all the rage right now with restaurants cropping up all over L.A. but this was a meal that was hard for me to swallow.

I ordered a mushroom “burger” after hearing from a friend that the onion “bread” they are famous for is so amazing. It came on said bread but something about the texture of it was very strange. First of all, they don’t use wheat, yeast or any flour in their cuisine so all “breads” are made from seeds and some kind of pressed grain. The texture was chewy and dry sort of like eating very salty cardboard and I didn’t detect any onion flavor at all. The mushroom was topped with a spread that is supposed to be a facsimile of cheese which wasn’t bad but also overly salty. The whole thing was quite dense and heavy and I felt full after eating half of it. I also ordered the one quite yummy item of my meal which was a nori roll filled with vegetables and a bean spread, it was delicious and although messy to eat- so not first date material- I would say that is worth going back for. I went with a friend who also is into vegetarian food and enjoys trying new cuisines as I do so she was the right person to accompany me. She ordered a “big mac” but remember we are eating raw foods here so no burger, cheese or bun. This was a creative attempt to copy a burger with the infamous onion bread once again and a textured grain, seed, nut thing as the burger. Hers was also overly salty but she liked it more than I did.

We tried their truffles for dessert and the wait person said they were great. We ordered a cookie dough, chocolate coconut haystack and a Goji berry truffle. They gave us one order that we split, thank god because I could barely eat any most of it. The coconut one was acceptable but the other two were in edible, between the weird texture and the strange sweetener they use I almost spit it out. Give me a good piece of chocolate any day over this mock dessert.

I often here people say I must be picky in restaurants because I am in the food business and my answer is, only when it is bad. I go out to all kinds of places and an appreciative of efforts made to prepare good food as I know what goes into it. But this experience left me with a bad taste in my mouth, literally.

I was macrobiotic for a few years in my early twenties and taught at the one and only vegan cooking school in the country for five years so I am not a novice at off the beaten path vegetarian fare but next time I will pass on the raw part of healthy eating and choose for my food to be cooked.

If you would like a fabulous vegan chocolate chip cookie try this one, you won't be disappointed.

Nutty Chocolate Chip Cookies

Makes about 2 ½ dozen

Ingredients

1 1/2 cups rolled oats, toasted in a 350 oven for 6 min., ground in food processor, cooled

1 cup whole wheat pastry flour

1/2 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. baking soda

1 cup raw almonds or hazelnuts toasted in 350 oven for 10 minutes, roughly chopped and cooled

1 cup chocolate or carob chips

1/2 cup canola oil

1/2 cup maple syrup

2 tsp. vanilla

Procedure

1. Preheat oven to 375. Line two half sheet pans with parchment, set aside.

2. Combine oats, flour, salt, soda, nuts and chips in a large bowl stir and set aside. Combine the oil, syrup and vanilla in a small bowl and whisk. Stir wet into dry ingredients just until mixed.

5. Drop by rounded tablespoons onto sheet pans about 1 1/2 inches apart. Flatten dough with fingers.

6. Bake one pan at a time until lightly browned on bottom about 15 min. Cool and remove to wire rack. Repeat with the other pan and remaining dough.