Wishing everyone a splendid New Years Eve celebration and a 2010 filled with the finest life has to offer. May this year bring an abundance of peace, health, and joy to all.
With Love and Gratitude,
Todrickallen
Wishing everyone a splendid New Years Eve celebration and a 2010 filled with the finest life has to offer. May this year bring an abundance of peace, health, and joy to all.
With Love and Gratitude,
Todrickallen
Christmas day brunch at the Four Seasons Beverly Hills was as expected: The usual (but not outstanding) cadre of salads, eggs, desserts, Asian food, made special by the company. Our table however, was sat next to Mark Wahlberg and his beautiful family.
Still working on the UK posts, dear Readers! Trying to include a few of the treasures we encountered along the way. On our last evening in London, in our room at the Connaught, we had an interesting cheese from Wales called Corwydd Caerphilly, purchased at Harrod’s. It was creamy, smooth and salty, buttery but not sweet with a distinct meadow flavor. Coupled with a glass of Kistler chardonnay, it was a perfect way to toast a perfect trip!
As you head for the airport in London, I highly recommend having your taxi driver stop by Harvey Nics in Knightsbridge. On the fifth floor, you can procure some bread from the mythic Parisian boulanger, Poilane which will still be fresh enough by the time you arrive home. Nothing cures jetlag better than warm, buttered Poilane toast spread with marmelade and Fortnum and Mason tea.
(As far as I know, the only place you can sample Poilane in L.A. is at the cafe at Saks, who have it flown in daily although I haven’t been in some time.)
We had a delightful boxing day dinner at Melisse (1104 Wilshire Blvd, Santa Monica 90401 http://www.melisse.com) They offer a 5 course garden tasting menu which is out of this world. We stopped frequenting Melisse a few years ago because we felt the quality had dropped somewhat. But they have most definately shored things up. Every dinner we have had there for the past two years has been remarkable in food and service. They deserve their 2 Michelin stars. Some highlights of our meal were the velvety smooth mushroom and chestnut soup with argan oil (very hard to find and well worth your investigation into how this rare oil is curiously produced in Morocco), The main course was a heavenly yuba stuffed with artichokes and ricotta on top of a portobello mushroom with carrots and ‘vadouvan’. Vadouvan is the new ‘it’ spice, sometimes called French curry and is usually comprised of onion, shallot, garlic, and curry spices (find recipe here http://www.gourmet.com/recipes/2000s/2008/09/vadouvan) . The portobello, ubiquitious on many lesser menus was not the usually limp and soggy blubber often seen, rather it was succulent and thinly sliced and was thouroughly delicious. For desert, I managed to score one of the last two sticky toffee puddings, always flawless there. Not everything was perfect. The second course of course of kabocha squash ravioli with black trumpet mushrooms (a favorite of mine) was heavy and dull and only slightly brightened by the addition of pomegranate seeds. The cheese cart is as always, quite good. In addition to many familiar cheeses, I sampled Grain d’Orge from Normandy which was very ‘savory’ (the word used by the cheese steward). It tasted of bitter earth and pasture. The Cassica from Beemster in Holland on the other had was rich and earthy as well, but with a hint of sweetness to redeem it. The Sommelier steered us to a wonderful bottle of 2000 Ermitage ‘Le Reverdy’, a very complex and mysterious white which made our meal absolutely perfect. Such use of rare ingredients (yuba, argan oil, vadouvan) coupled with excellent quality food and masterful chef know-how by Josiah Citrin was a magical combination. Thank heaven Melisse is back on track and moving in the right direction!