black ink - Atelier Restaurant
Transcription
black ink - Atelier Restaurant
BLACK INK BLACK INK THE ART OF EXTRAORDINARY LIVING • FALL/WINTER 2014 FA L L / W I N T E R 2 0 1 4 The Centurion Guide to the B E S T R E S TA U R A N T S I N T H E W O R L D BEST RESTAURANTS IN THE WORLD INSIDE EDITOR’S LETTER 10 • Abu Dhabi • Alicante, Spain • Antibes, France • Aruba • Axpe, Spain • Auckland, New Zealand • Bangkok 12 • Barcelona 14 • Bariloche, Argentina • Beijing • Berlin • Bogotá, Columbia • Brisbane, Australia 15 • Budapest • Buenos Aires, Argentina • Búzios, Brazil • Cagnes-Sur-Mer, France • Cape Town, South Africa 18 • Carmelo, Uruguay • Casablanca, Morocco • Chicago 20 • Christchurch, New Zealand • Cocentaina, Spain 22 • Copenhagen, Denmark • Courchevel, France • Dallas 24 • Daylesford, Victoria, Australia • Doha, Qatar • Dublin, Ireland • Ensenada, Mexico 26 • Espelho, Bahia, Brazil • Figueres, Spain • Foroglio, Switzerland • Garzón, Uruguay • Grand Baie, Mauritius • Grand Lisboa, Macau 28 • Hong Kong 30 • Houston • Istanbul • Jämtland, Sweden • Jerusalem • Johannesburg, South Africa • José Ignacio, Uruguay • La Paz, Bolivia 32 • Lastours, France • Las Vegas • La Turbie, France • Launceston, Tasmania, Australia • Lencóis, Bahia, Brazil • Lewiston, Maine • Lima, Peru 34 • London 36 • Los Angeles 37 • Lyon, France 38 • Madrid • Melbourne, Australia • Mendoza, Argentina 40 • Metairie, Louisiana • Mexico City • Miami 42 • Monte Carlo, Monaco • Moscow • Mustique, St. Vincent’s and the Grenadines • Napa, California • Naples, Italy 44 • Nashville • New Delhi • New York 46 • Ottawa • Paris 48 • Perth, Australia • Philadelphia • Phuket, Thailand • Pocantico Hills, New York • Positano, Italy • Pretoria, South Africa 50 • Puerto de Santa Maria, Spain • Québec City • Riga, Latvia • Rio de Janeiro 52 • Rome • Roses, Spain • St. Helena, Napa, California • St. Petersburg • Salta, Argentina 54 • San Francisco 56 • San Juan, Puerto Rico • San Miguel de Allende, Mexico • San Sebastián, Spain • Santiago, Chile • São Paulo, Brazil 58 • Seoul, South Korea • Shanghai, China 60 • Siem Reap, Cambodia • Singapore 61• Song Saa, Cambodia • Stockholm • Sydney, Australia 62 • Tallinn, Estonia • Tel Aviv, Israel • Tokyo 64 • Ubud, Bali • Viña Matetic, Casablanca Valley, Chile • Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal • Zürich, Switzerland Braised avocado at Central in Lima, Peru 6 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 THIS PAGE: MARCUS NILSSON. COVER: CULTURA/GETTY IMAGES 8 EDITOR IN CHIEF Chef Ángel León of Barcelona’s Aponiente with today’s catch Richard David Story Alexander Spacher Chiu ART DIRECTOR Marc Davila ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR Cindi Lee ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR Valeria Suasnavas ASSOCIATE RESEARCH EDITOR Joseph Harper ASSISTANT RESEARCH EDITOR Janaki Challa PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Lynn Hofher PRODUCTION MANAGER Glenn Bo CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Heidi Mitchell DESIGN DIRECTOR ASSOCIATE MANAGING EDITOR Faye MANAGING DIRECTOR Deborah Frank SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT/PUBLISHER Steven L. DeLuca VICE PRESIDENT/ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Mark Cooper ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER, MARKETING Yung Moon ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Banino Bano FASHION Ed Cortese TRAVEL DIRECTOR Lindsey Levine AUTO, FINANCE, SPIRITS & NEW ENGLAND Daniel Borchert JEWELRY & WATCH DIRECTOR Jill Meltz Sunn LAS VEGAS/SOUTHWEST Tricia Baak MIAMI Jill Stone, Eric Davis GENEVA Philippe Girardot HAWAII Liane F or those of us who truly relish every bite of a wellcrafted dish, tucking into a dinner that is less than perfect can induce an existential sigh of regret. As a black ink reader, you’ve likely eaten at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal in London. You are probably on a first-name basis with the head waiter at Eleven Madison Park in Manhattan. Your palate is as discriminating as your taste in hotels and clothing. Booking your tables before boarding a flight is integral to your travel regimen. Here we’ve collected a highly opinionated, supremely curated and utterly subjective list of our favorite restaurants from Abu Dhabi to Zurich. Some require long drives to get to; others only have one table. Many are passion projects by decorated chefs; a few are magical experiences helmed by mavericks who just want to cook great food—occasionally in their own home. Some may be imperfect in their decor but sublime in their cuisine, or worth a detour simply to dive into an authentic scene. All will have you recommending them to friends should they find themselves in Houston, Lima or Shanghai. To whittle down the world’s most incredible restaurants to a mere 287 entries, we consulted not gourmands but our favorite food insiders—people who eat only what they love and who truly love to eat. As a result, what you’ll find on the following pages might not be quite the place for a beef Wellington (indeed, no menu may be presented at all), but they will be dining experiences that promise to leave you satiated...and with stories to share. 8 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 TIME INC. CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Joseph CHIEF CONTENT OFFICER Norman Ripp Pearlstine EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, TIME INC. Evelyn Webster EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Jeff Bairstow EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENTS Lynne Biggar, Colin Bodell, Teri Everett, Mark Ford, Greg Giangrande, Lawrence A. Jacobs, Todd Larsen, Evelyn Webster BLACK INK® Issue no.31 THE MAGAZINE PUBLISHED BY DEPARTURES EXCLUSIVELY FOR CENTURION MEMBERS. Published biannually by Time Inc. Affluent Media Group, 1120 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036. Black Ink is a trademark of American Express Marketing & Development Corp. and is used under limited license. Time Inc. Affluent Media Group is not affiliated with American Express Company or its subsidiaries. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and additional mailing offices. Publications Mail Commercial Sales Agreement No. 40036840 (GST# 129480364RT). U.S. and Canada Subscribers: If the postal authorities alert us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obligation unless we receive a corrected address within two years. Postmaster: Send change of address to Black Ink, P.O. Box 62665, Tampa, FL 33662-6658. GENERAL OFFICES: 1120 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036; 212-522-1212. Black Ink does not accept unsolicited manuscripts, drawings, photographs or other works. All rights in letters sent to Black Ink will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes and as subject to unrestricted right to edit and to comment editorially. Contents Copyright 2014 by American Express Marketing & Development Corp. All rights reserved. Nothing may be reprinted in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher. Member of the Alliance for Audited Media. ALVARO FERNANDEZ PRIETO The World on a Plate B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE A BU DHABI Mezlai Long before the arrival of Paris’s new Peninsula Hotel, Abu Dhabi’s Emirates Palace was rumored to be the world’s first billion-dollar hotel. For that price, its owners— Abu Dhabi’s ruling royals—not only got miles of marble and an unofficial home for visiting dignitaries, but also Mezlai, which serves the highest-end example of traditional Emirati food in all of the UAE. Here, local chef and television star Ali Salem Edbowa delivers a contemporary take on a modestly styled cuisine inspired by the nomadic life of the desert-living Bedouins. Must-tries include the madfoun, a meatand-rice casserole slow-cooked in a special oven for up to 12 hours, followed by a bowl of aseeda, a saffron-and-sugar-spiked pudding, all served in a palatial dining room anchored by prime Arabian Sea views. Emirates Palace Hotel; 97-1/2690-7999; kempinski.com. ALICANTE, SPAIN La Taberna del Gourmet Alicante is sometimes thought of as a poor relation to its glamorous northern neighbor, Valencia, but it has its own engaging personality (it’s smaller and more relaxed, for one thing) and its own cuisine, based on a vast array of rice dishes—better than Valencia’s paella, some aficionados say—and a wealth of bounty from the sea. It is, indeed, seafood that’s mostly on display at this perpetually crowded super-tapas bar. Alicante chef-owner María José San Román and her daughter Geni Perramón are in charge, and everything from the tiny, buttery local shrimp called quisquillas to the griddle-seared whole cuttlefish are transportingly good. Calle San Fernando 10; 34-965/20-42-33; latabernadelgourmet.com. ANTIBES, FRANCE Eden-Roc The Michelin folks don’t like this place, which means the terrace restaurant at the Hôtel du Cap-Eden-Roc is even more casual, more sexy, but no less glam. To be honest, the food is not going to knock your socks off, but the setting and crowd make this eternal address a gorgeous escape, especially as the sun melts into the Mediterranean. Families have been coming here for generations, picking a table and sticking with it for decades, all dining in their swimsuits and caftans in a somewhat louche setting that begs anyone (of age, of course) to indulge in that lunchtime cocktail and maybe linger a little too long. It’s their home away from home, and guests are always welcome. Boulevard JF Kennedy; 33-4/93-6156-63; hotel-du-cap-eden-roc.com. ARUBA White Modern Cuisine One of the reasons Caribbean cuisine is generally so unsatisfying isn’t because of a lack of authenticity but a lack of authentic ingredients. With most products imported from North America, Caribbean chefs often turned their backs on their own native bounty. But not chef-owner Urvin Croes. His White Modern menu is a Caribbean rarity, its ingredients sourced mostly from local farmers along with a handful of Aruban foragers. While the former provide staples such as fruits and vegetables, the latter deliver true Aruban greens like okra cress, reef bananas and deep-green seida leaves. They’re all found in Croes’s three- and five-course tasting menus, where locally scavenged flowers top a buffalo mozzarella tart or a papaya Creole sauce complements a meaty grilled mahi mahi. The dishes served are as picturesquely plated as the azure Caribbean is just a short stroll away. 95 L.G. Smith Blvd., Palm Beach Pl., Unit No. 201 Noord; 297/5861190; whitecuisine.com. AXPE, SPAIN since embraced sushi mainstream dining—but the city’s gourmets know better. CEOs and foodies gather around the communal table (no bamboo or vegetable tangles) to try sake unavailable anywhere else in town. Makoto Tokuyama plays with rarified contemporary trends such as foam and savory custard, riffing on sashimi and tempura with quintessential New Zealand ingredients such as spanner crab, Ora king salmon and whitebait. A resplendent eight-course degustation menu dovetails with Tokuyama’s Japanese ritualistic refinement. Cocoro offers visitors yet another way to enjoy this country’s peerless produce. 56 Brown St.; 64-9/360-0927; cocoro.co.nz. AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND Soul Bar While this restaurant may have its sit-down, serious à la carte side during the week, come Friday and Saturday, it’s the bar that is ready for its close-up. Tapas-style snacks—tuna tartare, cauliflower fritters—and funky beats lure the city’s graphic artists, designers and other assorted creatives to party hard. Think oysters and Mumm’s Champagne nights, Wine o’Clock at 5:30 p.m. and fashion shows starring New Zealand’s top designers, meant to draw even the most recalcitrant homebodies out for the night. The cauliflower is a mere precursor to the chandelier-swinging fun. Viaduct Harbour; 64-9/356-7249; soulbar.co.nz. Etxebarri Ask food writers anywhere in the world to name their very favorite restaurants—the ones they would return to on their own dime—and chances are good that Etxebarri, deep in the sheep-flecked mountains of Spain’s Basque country, will be on their list. There’s something about chef Bittor Arguinzoniz’s single-mindedness—to say nothing of his talent—that astonishes even the most jaded of gourmands. Arguinzoniz is a virtuoso of fire, designing his own grills, making his own varieties of charcoal and preparing every single one of his dishes— from the caviar to the goose barnacles and even the butter—over finely tuned flames. In his hands, smoke becomes an exquisite spice and an expression of creativity. Plaza de San Juán 1, Atxondo, Bizkaia; 34-946/583-042; asadoretxebarri.com. AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND Cocoro Peaceful Auckland has its stealth treasures, too, like this elegant Japanese bijou in Ponsonby. Like Australians, New Zealanders have long 10 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BANGKOK The Southeast Asian city buzzes with 24-hour hawker stalls serving up exotic street food and dining establishments featuring creative chefs. Bo.Lan Duangporn “Bo” Songvisava and Australianborn Dylan “Lan” Jones met at David Thompson’s Nahm outpost in London, and in many ways Bo.Lan continues Thompson’s experiment with carefully crafted and soundly sourced Thai dishes that seem absolutely fresh while still reaching back in time. The restaurant has moved from Soi 26 to new premises in Soi 53, but the atmosphere is similar: tropical woods, Thai furnishings, a forest vibe and now a small oval swimming pool in front. Dinner is a set menu that allows the kitchen to calibrate the delicate harmonies and balances of a proper Thai meal. Start with a shot of fiery yadong liqueur served with sour B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE fruits, then progress through a salad of grilled banana blossom and chicken, a green curry of beef and mangosteen and a nahm prik (chile relish) with an acacia-leaf omelet. Bo.Lan will immerse you in Thai cuisine that, even if you do live in Thailand, you likely haven’t eaten before. 24 Sukhumvit Soi 53; 66-2/260-2961; bolan.co.th. caviar and grilled Pacific saury with crab essence and ponzu. It’s one of the few places in Bangkok where you can eat your agnolotti with a Domaine Marquis d’Angerville Premier Cru Volnay while literally rubbing elbows with all the Thai TV stars whose names you don’t know. The Grass, Thonglor Soi 12, Sukhumvit 55; 662/714-9292; waterlibrary.com. dishes that include seafood and meat. This is a rich and long affair; it’s a good idea to leave a little siesta time in your schedule following trademark dishes like squab in escabèche, served with a pear poached in red wine. Carrer d’Aribau 58; 34-9/3323-9490; cincsentits.com. Moments Nahm Aussie chef David Thompson has managed to impress even the locals with his mastery of their cuisine through a dedicated study of the people, history and food of Thailand. His jawdropping grasp of the country’s regions and their varying ingredients and cooking techniques manifests in the deep layers of flavor in his food. He never cuts corners, diligently following traditional recipes through their elongated lists of ingredients and complex stages of preparation, and it pays off. Look around and you’ll notice most of your fellow diners are predominantly (stylish) Thais. 27 S. Sathorn Rd.; 66-2/625-3388; comohotels.com. Namsaah Bottling Trust A collaboration between Iron Chef Ian Kittichai and Bangkok nightlife entrepreneur Justin Dunne, Namsaah is arrayed inside a darkpink two-story mansion on tiny, easy-to-miss Silom Soi 7. Downstairs there’s a bar with a pink papier-mâché pig’s head and a barman who will roast a tangerine and grate the peel into your orange Negroni. Upstairs, there are two handsome rooms, one papered with Chinese scroll paintings and the other with framed vintage erotica. It feels like a private house—it was once a small bank and before that a soda company’s bottling depot and before that the house of a royal aide-de-camp. Kittichai’s dishes are light and playful versions of Thai classics: Try the soda-battered shrimps (namsaah means “soda” in Thai) or the Iron Chef’s version of pad thai. When it’s not monsoon and the thermometer hovers below 95 degrees, you can also sit in the beautiful garden, open until 2 a.m. every day. 401 Silom Soi 7; 66-2/636-6622; namsaah.com. Water Library Downstairs it’s a sleek and well-stocked cocktail bar and a walk-in wine cellar. Upstairs it’s an intimate ten-seat restaurant where diners sit at a single bar and are served a set menu for less than $400 a head, albeit with wine pairings. This is Michelin-style international cuisine, with small, compact dishes: hay-smoked wild wood pigeon with coffee oil, beurre blanc ice cream served with osetra BARCELONA The Catalonian capital is the home of molecular gastronomy, a city where the food rivals the outrageous Gaudí architecture. ABaC In 2002, at age 24, Catalan chef Jordi Cruz became the second youngest chef in the world to gain one of those coveted Michelin stars; nine years later, his ABaC was named Catalonia’s best restaurant by the Catalan Academy of Gastronomy. The key, he says, is not settling for less than excellence in everything from the flatware to the produce. Five or six dishes on the tasting menus change monthly in accordance with the seasons and the chef’s whim: “I want the flavors in my dishes to be pure and true. You won’t find me serving a chocolate pastry with garlic.” Avinguda del Tibidabo 1; 34-9/3319-6600; abacbarcelona.com. Can Culleretes Can Culleretes is Catalonia’s oldest restaurant (and the second oldest in Spain, according to The Guinness Book of World Records); food has been served here in the heart of the city since 1786, and everything from the tile murals on the walls to the food itself harken back to bygone centuries. The Agut family, who has owned the storied place since 1958, adheres to strict edicts of local cuisine. If you want to try traditional Catalan food, the basic building blocks on which today’s cutting-edge Catalan chefs have built their fanciful creations, this is the spot in which to do it. Don’t expect modesty, either: Patriarch Montse Agut Manubens told us his son has perfected crema catalana, the Catalan version of crème brulée. Carrer d’en Quintana 5; 34-9/33173022; culleretes.com. Cinc Sentits Catalans take their heaviest meal at midday, and that’s when chef Jordi Artal offers two abundant gastronomic menus of ten or 15 12 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Carme Ruscalleda and her son Raül Balam are at the helm of Moments in the super-elegant Mandarin Oriental Hotel, located on one of the world’s great shopping boulevards, Passeig de Gràcia. The restaurant garnered two Michelin stars after the chef had already earned three for her restaurant Sant Pau on the Costa Brava. Here Ruscalleda maintains her faithfulness to local ingredients combined with a flair for the creative: Note the “antiaging” dishes, developed in partnership with a Barcelona physician to help stave off wrinkles and memory loss. Plates like wild flounder with green tomatoes and eggplant may add years to your life, but they will also satisfy any youthful desire to indulge. Passeig de Gràcia 38; 34-9/3151-8781; mandarinoriental.com. Els Pescadors This jewel hidden far from the center of town, in a transformed late-19th-century tavern close to the sea, serves the kind of lovingly prepared fish that provides ample reason to make the detour. The monkfish is one of Catalonia’s most beloved staples, and the kitchen does it justice in a dish called rap al serrallo, a filet of monkfish flambéed with a tomato, chopped almonds and jamón ibérico in olive oil. Since opening in 1980, Els Pescadors has also specialized in arrossos, rice dishes that are local variations of paellas. Lobster lovers rave about the arròs caldós de llamàntol, rice in lobster broth. It’s filling, and so very delicious. Plaça de Prim 1; 349/3225-2018; elspescadors.com. Restaurant L’Angle This second Jordi Cruz restaurant produces a menu entirely different from ABaC but no less original. Located on the sleek second floor of the Cram Hotel, only a few doors down from Cinc Sentits, L’Angle stands out even in this most celebrated of gastronomic neighborhoods. Here Cruz has carefully crafted a tasting menu of 30 dishes, with no room for guest suggestions. “I want them each to be somewhere between a tapa and a half ration, and to be sequential. I want them to be made with ingredients everyone knows but put together in a way only I do.” Love it or B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE hate it (though most are smitten), you’ll never change it. Carrer Aribau 54; 34-9/3216-7777; restaurantangle.com. Tickets Bar Small plates are raised to new heights, with just the inventiveness you’d expect from Albert Adrià, the brother and coconspirator of superstar chef Ferran Adrià. He may be serving tapas, but these are far from your grandparents’ versions. The you-never-imaginedeating-this-before kinds of small dishes on offer here, like a pistachio tempura or oysters with cucumber consommé, perfectly illustrate the way that the best new Catalan chefs bring their imaginations to bear on the dishes coming out of their kitchens. At Tickets, they must be doing something right: You’ll need to reserve two months in advance. Avinguda del Parallel 164; no phone; ticketsbar.es. BARILOCHE, ARGENTINA El Refugio Bariloche’s Arelauquen Lodge ushered in creature comforts, charity polo games and challenging golf to Patagonia. During these more quiet winter months, the lodge’s guests—and paying punters—are run up by snowmobile to a cozy mountain cabin near the property’s 4,300-foot peak. Platters of venison pâté, smoked boar and local cheeses are served by candlelight as diners survey the glittering waters of lakes Nahuel Huapi and the Gutiérrez and Moreno glaciers amid the magisterial, ice-carved landscape below. A more romantic setting could not be imagined. Ruta Provincial 82, Lago Gutiérrez; 54-294/ 447-6154; elrefugioarelauquen.com.ar. BEIJING China’s cultural capital offers culinary experiences in some of the most dramatic settings anywhere. but diners are safe in the hands of the chef, a native of the region. For those who’ve only previously tried Chinese food abroad, Yunnan cuisine is always a revelation, from grilled goat cheese, crumbed chile fish and spicy stir-fried mushrooms to Crossing the Bridge noodles. Gulou Dongdajie, 67 Xiaojingchang Hutong, Dongcheng district; 86-10/8404-1430. Duck de Chine There are several Beijing restaurants renowned for their Peking duck, but Duck de Chine’s staff is doing something a little different—and doing it phenomenally well. There’s a comfortable ambiance here, with the typical Chinese-style round tables, wooden floors and warm brick walls. The Peking duck doesn’t deviate too far from tradition, either— crisp roast duck with spring onion, cucumber and a lick of hoisin sauce, all wrapped in a pancake. Yet Duck de Chine also has some clever takes on alternative duck dishes, including a light duck confit and a duck taco with water chestnut and red peppers in a fresh pancake. Had enough of the bird? Order the sour-plum-infused pumpkin and braised oyster mushroom in tofu skin. Courtyard 4, 1949 The Hidden City, Gongti Bei Lu, Chaoyang district; 86-10/6501-8881; elite-concepts.com. Temple Restaurant Beijing This is easily one of the most dramatic dining venues in the capital. Located near the Forbidden City in the compound of a 600-year-old Buddhist temple, the restaurant offers European cuisine, courtesy of Belgian restaurateur Ignace Lecleir, that skews French, starting with amuse-bouches, single-bite treats from the kitchen that include crunchy golden cheese gougères and bacon-and-cheese rolls. Noteworthy dishes: pan-fried foie gras with pureed mushroom, porcini and escargot, pot-roasted lobster with smoked aubergine caviar and a stellar suckling pig confit. And the dessert! The pistachio soufflé with deliciously bitter chocolate ice cream is a transcendental meditation on deliciousness. 23 Song Zhu Si, Beijie, near WuSi DaJie, Dongcheng district; 86-10/8400-2232; trb-cn.com. Dali Courtyard You can understand why Dali Courtyard put its outdoor space in the restaurant’s name: The candlelit terrace offers one of the best alfresco dining experiences in the city (not to mention one of the few places where you can order great cocktails and imported wine). In keeping with the laid-back vibe in the southwestern province of Yunnan, there is no menu, BERLIN Pauly Saal Setting an upscale restaurant in the remnants of a former Jewish girls’ school in Berlin is as adventurous as it is audacious. But there it is—Pauly Saal, which serves solid German classics in a converted school built in 1928 and quickly taken over by the Nazi regime. Some 80 years later, the stark, industrial-edge space—abandoned for decades before being repurposed for the 2006 Berlin Biennale—features a clubby, Deco-inspired bar, an alfresco terrace and a light-filled dining room clad in handmade ceramic tiles and Murano chandeliers and anchored by a hanging, life-size rocket. As for the food, executive chef Siegfried Danler turns out Prussian classics like calf-liver terrine with quail eggs and Pomeranian beef with roasted potatoes for lunch, and sliced Baltic Sea salmon and crispy pike perch with leeks for dinner. It’s a lesson in German cuisine, in a most unusual space. 11–13 Auguststrasse; 49-30/33006070; paulysaal.com. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE BUDAPEST Onyx Thirty years ago, a Hungarian restaurant where white-gloved waiters served goose liver with sour cherries and roast suckling pig with smoked tomato would likely have been shuttered as a capitalist abomination. It’s a new era in Hungary, though, and Budapest—once called “the Paris of the East”—is regaining much of its old gilt and glitter. At the elegant Onyx, one of only two restaurants in the whole country to earn a Michelin star, Szabina Szulló and Tamás Széll, chef and sous-chef, respectively, bring back dishes from the city’s storied past but translate them with a 21st-century sensibility. Vörösmarty tér 7; 36-30/508-0622; onyxrestaurant.hu. BOGOTA, COLUMBIA Criterión Jorge Rausch wants you to eat lionfish. This spiny, venomous Southeast Asian creature, accidentally released into the Caribbean by a Florida aquarium, can gobble up to 20 smaller fish in 30 minutes. “If we don’t stop it,” says Rausch, who runs Criterión with his brother, Mark, “it will be the only species in these waters.” His solution? Put it into ceviche; it’s as delicious as it is daunting-looking. Of course, the Rausches are also happy to serve their clientele—pretty much everyone who’s anyone in the Colombian capital— more conventional fare, from soft-shell crab to smoked pork chops to Key lime cheesecake. Calle 69A, No. 5-75, Zona G; 57-1/310-1377; criterion.com.co. BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA Jellyfish Big lunches stretch into sunken afternoons at this riverside gem right on the Brisbane River, with 180-degree views from Story Bridge all the way to Kangaroo Point. With fresh fish delivered right off the trawler and dishes that customize cooking methods to suit each of the 14 species served, Jellyfish is prized for its seafood. But the eclectic, boutique wine list and location may play a part in the mysterious disappearance of office workers who never return from their three-martini business lunches here. On weekends, the local corporate crowd melts away and the place is abuzz with international travelers and Brisbane beauties who also know that the best way to enjoy Jellyfish is to stretch out the meal all afternoon. 123 Eagle St.; 61-7/3220-2202; jellyfishrestaurant.com.au. BUENOS AIRES An old-world ambiance is complemented by a maverick class of chefs reinventing Argentinian classics with French and Asian twists. Chila Soledad Nardelli was still a young pretender when she took charge at this chic Puerto Madero bistro in 2006. Now a much-garlanded Gourmet Channel regular and mainstay of Buenos Aires’s GAJO society of chefs, Nardelli always exceeds expectations with her French-influenced “new Argentine” seafood and game. Look out for pop-up, open-kitchen or collaborative events—particularly those held in a secluded dining room at Chila’s rear, where plate-glass windows overlook the city’s docks. A dinner cooked alongside Los Angeles’s Suzanne Tracht featured confit of suckling pig with passion fruit and potatoes and a teriyaki rib-eye with Sichuan peppercorns. Av. Alicia Moreau de Justo 1160, Puerto Madero; 54-11/4343-6067; chilaweb.com.ar. El Obrero Rough-and-tumble La Boca’s blue-collar cool is centered largely on Boca Juniors, the port district’s star-studded soccer team; beyond lies little more than a grim urban wasteland. More surprising, then, that workers’ cantina El Obrero has enjoyed such unfailing success through six decades of operation. With authentically peeling paint, chalkboard specials and brick walls adorned with fútbol-related scarves, pennants and flags, El Obrero draws the sophisticated and uncouth alike by offering consistently delicious beef and a raucous, fun-loving vibe. Agustín Caffarena 64, La Boca; 54-11/4362-9912. track, backing up Rocka’s flip-flop glam with snappy execution. Praia Brava 13, Armação dos Búzios; 55-22/2623-6159; rockafish.com. CAGNES-SUR-MER, FRANCE Tarquino Chef Dante Liporace did his obligatory stint at El Bulli but returned to South America to further a native culinary tradition based on the meats, fish and game of Argentina’s pampas and cordillera. At Tarquino, named after the patriarch of Argentinian beef, a Durham Shorthorn bull imported from England around 1836, he reinvents classic Argentinian dishes such as suckling pig, duck confit and puchero stew. On special occasions, he prepares secuencia de la vaca, his take on nose-to-tail dining: Starting with the tongue, Liporace serves up sweetbreads, cheeks and sirloin and then finishes with a fun take on oxtail, reduced to a liquid and mixed with Malbec. Rodriguez Peña 1967, Recoleta; 54-11/6091-2160, tarquino restaurante.com.ar. Bistrot de la Marine Jacques Maximin is one of the greatest unsung French chefs. He’s right up there with Pierre Gagnaire and Paul Bocuse, but he eschews fanfare, so he doesn’t get the attention he deserves. Especially since he spends most of his time in a hidden enclave near Cannes, serving $30 prix-fixe lunches in this tiny bistro decorated with sardine cans. The focus here is on Mediterranean fish, and Maximin can be heard banging pots and pans in the kitchen before beautiful plates of oysters, sole meunière and lobster salad parade out, dish after fresh dish, to a small cadre of very lucky patrons. 96 Promenade de la Plage, Cagnes-sur-Mer; 33-4/93-26-43-46; bistrotdelamarine.com. Unik If, as with Argentina-born, Paris-based architect/painter Marcelo Joulia, you’re not an experienced restaurateur, it helps to have friends as worldly as Mauro Colagreco, chef at Michelin two-star Mirazur in Menton, France. On Colagreco’s advice, Joulia hired the unassuming Maximiliano Rossi, then a mere cook at Barcelona’s AbaC. The tip paid off, as Rossi has evolved into quite the wizard at the helm of the kitchen here. His slowcooked egg with crispy potatoes, romesco sauce and ham appetizer is outstanding; it’s a toss-up for second place between the equally magisterial Patagonian lamb duet with smoked quinoa, almonds and Turkish apricots or the rabbit piled high with homemade bacon, onions and tubers. Soler 5132, Palermo; 5411/4772-2230; unik.pro. BUZIOS, BRAZIL Rocka Conservative beach bums may still prefer a freshly macheted coconut or a chunk of the haloumi-like coalho cheese, sprinkled with oregano and served on a stick, but Búzios beach lounge Rocka deserves kudos for matching “serious” food with a sand-scattered and breezy oceanfront location. Argentinian chef Gustavo Rinkevich whips up tasty dishes like mahi mahi on herb-based croûte or lobster gratin with roasted banana and white corn. But it’s co-owner Santiago Bebianno’s discreet management that keeps things on 14 15 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 CAPE TOWN The nearby winelands make pairings with local seafood and game a truly South African experience. Chef Bruce Robertson’s at The Flagship “It’s a gourmet home, not a restaurant!” says South African celebrity chef and culinary explorer Bruce Robertson of his latest venture: an oceanfront guesthouse in Simon’s Town, where he serves a five-course seafood lunch for up to 12 guests who have scored a seat at the table online. Barefoot is his dress code. Those who get in are treated to an astonishing array of seafood, much of which he forages himself. Among the delicacies: gurnard (sea robin fish), sea snails, sea urchin and seaweed. He makes his own salt, serves oysters from his own tank and bottles his own olive oil. “Ninety percent of my food comes from within ten miles of my own house,” he bellows. “I never rest.” 15 Erica Rd., Simon’s Town; 27-21/786-1700; chefbrucerobertson.com. Delaire Graff Estate Billionaire Brit diamond jeweler and art collector Laurence Graff’s ten-suite wine estate on a soaring mountain pass in the Cape Winelands would be worth a visit even if it weren’t for its swanky flagship restaurant. As it is, chef Michael Deg’s gorgeous art-lined space, B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE with curvaceous tangerine banquettes by William Kentridge and stunning valley views, is the cherry on top. Or, rather, the grape. Enjoy fun, locally inspired creations such as the duck liver “granola bar,” Mozambican pink prawn bisque or Northern Cape lamb neck with grilled leeks. It’s best to enjoy it with a bottle of Delaire’s own vintages, perhaps the Botmaskop 2013, a Bordeaux-style red blend. R310, Helshoogte Pass, Stellenbosch; 2721/885-8160; delaire.co.za. Equus Dine at Cavalli Horses, gardens, art, whiskey, wine, fine food… this sprawling estate, opened in 2013, brings a California-like style and confidence to the hitherto sedate Somerset West winelands. The 70-seat restaurant, with a polished cement deck overlooking a small dam, is just one part of a state-of-the-art, geothermal-powered green building that houses a gallery, a fashion boutique, a wedding venue and a whiskey room. Talented local chef Henrico Grobbelaar’s contemporary-classic locavore menu—guinea fowl chicken parfait with pickled kombu; smoked BBQ pork belly with peas and truffled jus—would go down well in Napa, as would his kitchen’s use of the heirloom gardens on the grounds for their herbs and vegetables. Cavalli Wine & Stud Estate, R44, Somerset West; 27-21/855-3218; cavallistud.com. Mondiall Kitchen & Bar As executive chef of a collection of five Relais & Châteaux hotel restaurants in South Africa, Peter Tempelhoff has his hands full. Still, no reason not to add his own restaurant to an already stellar portfolio. Occupying a scenic quay-side berth on the V&A Waterfront, the warehouse-sized Mondiall, opened in late 2013, oozes New York–style glamour, from the soaring, box-lit ceilings hung with metal chandeliers to the glamorous designer-clad clientele streaming in for brunch (try the eggs Benedict) through to late-night cocktails. For all its modish touches, it’s actually a historic culinary tribute. Every dish on the menu features the year and city of its provenance: Crispy Duck Confit—Circa 13th Century France. Those eggs Benedict? New York City, circa 1894, as it happens. Alfred Mall, Quay Four, V&A Waterfront, Cape Town; 27-21/4183003; mondiall.co.za. Overture at Hidden Valley Accessed via a rugged mountain road, this rustic-chic wood, stone and glass eatery hovering on the craggy slopes of Hidden Valley wine farm near Stellenbosch is the culinary shrine of chef Bertus Basson—at 35, the dashing wild man of South African cooking. Blue-eyed and black-haired, Basson is the locavore’s locavore, changing his menu daily and deciding what to cook based on whatever local ingredients— springbok, quail—his farmer and fisherman friends have delivered that morning. The result is astonishing: perfectly balanced flavors with oddball flourishes like spicy octopus with avocado puree or a chilled zucchini soup with olive ice cream. Hidden Valley Wines, T4 Rt., off Annandale Rd., R44, Stellenbosch; 27-21/8802721; dineatoverture.co.za. Pierneef à La Motte Named in honor of iconic 1920s painter Jacob Hendrik Pierneef (the artist’s portrait with his daughter is embossed on each high-backed chair inside), the restaurant of the sumptuous wine farm of opera singer Hanneli RupertKoegelenberg is a tribute to Cape Winelands cuisine dating back to the first Dutch settlers here 350 years ago. Continuing the tradition of mentor Chris Erasmus, chef Michelle Theron uses old techniques such as cooking with bone marrow instead of butter to create sweet, fruit-rich meat dishes popular among the early settlers. Try the slow-cooked beef cheek with preserved lemon in rosemary juice. Hanneli is the sister of billionaire luxury goods tycoon Johann Rupert, whose gorgeous L’Ormarins wine estate down the road is worth a visit. La Motte, R45 Main Rd., Franschhoek Valley; 27-21/8768000; la-motte.com. The Pool Room at Oak Valley Farm-to-fork takes on new meaning at the Pool Room, the alfresco poolside restaurant of historic Oak Valley Estate in Elgin, an hour’s drive east of Cape Town. Pigs roam freely in the century-old English oak forests on the grounds, and acorn-fed, slow-roasted pork belly appears regularly on the menu. Grass-fed beef from the farm’s large herd of Simmentaler cattle is used in the restaurant’s cured meats and burgers, and when a full-blooded Wagyu herd currently being raised on the farm is big enough, you will get to taste marbled Japanese steak. All that—plus superb wines, such as the 2009 Oak Valley Mountain Reserve, a Semillon blend with floral notes and hints of oyster. Dine poolside or ask staff to prepare you a picnic to be enjoyed on the oak-shaded grounds. Oak Valley Estate, Oak Ave., Elgin; 27-21/859-4111; oakvalley.co.za. Springfontein Eats Many of South Africa’s best restaurants are in remote areas. Springfontein Eats, for example, sits literally down a gravel road on a wine 16 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 farm outside rural Stanford, 100 miles southeast of Cape Town. It was here that Michelinstarred German chef Jürgen Schneider ended up in 2013, turning local diners more used to meat on a grill wide-eyed with wonder at the sight of foams, jellies and smudges. The open-plan kitchen of the rustic converted farmhouse lets Schneider talk to diners as he cooks, and while the three- to six-course tasting menu options seem simple on the printed page—beef, beans, marrow; olive oil moose and gooseberries—they ooze the style and sophistication of a Fat Duck or an Alinea. Springfontein winemaker Tariro Masayiti’s award-winning Jonathan’s Ridge Pinotage is outstanding. Springfontein Wine Estate, Springfontein Rd. 8, Stanford; 27-28/341-0651; springfontein.co.za. The Tasting Room at Le Quartier Français A decade ago, when most South African chefs were making fussy nouvelle cuisine, Dutch transplant Margot Janse was already using seasonal local ingredients—Cape mountain herbs, Atlantic seafood, and grass-fed lamb— to produce a new Cape cuisine with molecular twists. Voilà, a revolution. Janse has inspired dozens of other South African chefs to go locavore and has helped turn the scenic winelands village of Franschhoek into a billionaires’ playground and gourmet capital. Her hushed, clean-lined dining room can seem like a shrine, but her five- and eight-course tasting menus featuring roast Cape wildebeest, smoked West Coast oysters and ice cream sprinkled with the powdery fruit of the baobab tree are astonishing gastronomic safaris. Le Quartier Français, 16 Huguenot Rd., Franschhoek; 27-21/876-2151; lqf.co.za. The Test Kitchen This cozy, 65-seat wood-floor spot, located in an old mill in Cape Town’s shabby-chic Woodstock, earned its rank as the hottest restaurant in all of Africa. Chalk that up to Brit chef-owner Luke Dale-Roberts’s colorful, artfully presented twists on Cape, French and Asian cuisine. (He spent five years traveling and opening restaurants in Asia before settling in South Africa.) Signature dishes such as pork belly with wild-rosemary-infused honey or grilled scallops on miso toast are served on handmade plates or stone boards, their ingredients resembling a work of art at MoMA. A favorite haunt of supermodels, with a cocktail hot spot upstairs in the chef’s small-plates bar, Pot Luck Club. The Old Biscuit Mill, 375 Albert Rd., Woodstock; 2721/447-2337; thetestkitchen.co.za. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Grant Achatz masquerades as producer and director. A small campfire set on a platter reveals lit Japanese binchōtan and kombu seaweed “logs” stuffed with pork belly and parsnips. A Jackson Pollock–inspired piece painted tableside turns out to be a milk chocolate tart splattered with sauces and crumbles. Nothing is offlimits, from riffs on lowbrow state-fair fare to sophisticated, fantastic creations that could’ve come only from the mind of Achatz—or perhaps Willy Wonka. What you can count on: endless surprises followed by instructions, instructions, instructions, since there’s nothing obvious about this affair. 1723 N. Halsted; 312-867-0110; alinearestaurant.com. Narbona Chef Daniel Boulud The king of contemporary French cuisine has been busy opening outposts in Boston and D.C., which has inspired his most recent list of top dining spots. BREAD FURST Washington, D.C. Great coffee, the finest bread and anything baked. JOSE ANDRES Washington, D.C. All of his places. 2941 Washington, D.C. Chef Bertrand Chemel is a Daniel alum from the early days. LA PIQUETTE Washington, D.C. Chef-owner Francis Layrle is one of my oldest friends in D.C. O YA Boston When my daughter left for Tufts University, the move-in meal was at O Ya, which The New York Times had declared the country’s best new restaurant in 2008. MENTON Boston Barbara Lynch’s fine-dining restaurant was the location for the graduation meal. It took an outsider to spot potential in once-crumbling Finca Narbona, Uruguay’s oldest vineyard. With a little care—and a lot of slick packaging— canny Argentinian Eduardo Cantón transformed the Río de la Plata winery into a sepia-tinted, heritage-style rural empire encompassing farm, dairy, deli, two restaurants and a Relais & Châteaux–badged hotel. Narbona’s food is a locavore’s delight: Orchardgrown fruit and vegetables go straight to the kitchens, as do estate-bottled olive oil, provoleta and brie from the dairy and tannat from the vineyard. Even the organic beef comes from cattle that range free over the estate’s grassy hills. Ruta 21, km. 268; 5984540-4778; narbona.com.uy. CASABLANCA, MOROCCO Restaurant du Port de Pêche A few blocks from Rick’s Café—not the fictional Bogart original, of course, but a recent re-creation—in this fabled but seldom-visited city (it lacks any real tourist attractions), the Restaurant du Port de Pêche lives up to its name as the fishing-port restaurant. At ground level, local fishermen eat cheaply from a blackboard menu written in Arabic. Upstairs, in a big, bright, always-crowded dining room, local lads attack seafood-laden paella with big bottles of Coke on the side while French expatriates tuck into heaping platters of Oualidia oysters and bright red langoustines as big as turkey legs while sipping tart Moroccan rosés. Le Port du Pêche; 212-522/318-561. Originally a European wine bar, Paul Kahan’s perennially packed juggernaut quickly moved toward food with Kahan pushing out eclectic small plates through the cedar-wrapped, cozy corridor of the restaurant. Thankfully, straddling the line remains the magic at Avec, where a tight Danish Modern design pops from the gritty West Loop, and where dishes like chorizo-stuffed Medjool dates and wood-oven paella with tangerine aioli (Kahan’s favorite) still compete with the 130-bottle wine list. Regulars swear by the unpretentious, food-loving vibe; feel it when you dine shoulder-to-shoulder with everyone from college kids to sports car aficionados. For more intimacy, follow the stainless-steel bar to where two seats meet the galley kitchen—the unofficial chef’s table. 615 W. Randolph; 312-3772002; avecrestaurant.com. Brindille CHICAGO It’s dinner as theater here: Chefowners put as much attention to detail in their dishes as their dining rooms. TORO Boston Just before opening Bar Boulud here, I took the entire team out to dinner at Toro and had a great meal, courtesy of chef Ken Oringer. Avec Alinea Peculiar presentation and theater-onthe-plate are de rigueur at this edible mind trip, where things are rarely what they seem and culinary magician A taste of Paris comes without pretense at Brindille (pronounced “Brawn-dee”), the latest from the Nahabedian family—namely, chef Carrie and her cousin Michael (both of Naha). Beautiful things in the intimate, jewel-box-styled boîte are deliberate, like fine china and French linens, punchy amber lights and throw pillows lining the backs of espresso-hued banquettes. But it’s all understated against the eye-popping, sexy and always complex French cuisine. Warm-cold oysters with creamy eggs 18 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 brouilles and caviar, roast guinea fowl in a thick vin jaune reduction, whole Maine lobster with pink grapefruit, sugar flumes housing chocolate mousse, pound cake and soufflé. You’ll want it all, plus the private, six-seat circular booth, an old-world wine from a French-leaning list and a reason to take someone special. 34 N. Clark St.; 312-595-1616; brindille-chicago.com. David Burke’s Primehouse David Burke was the first chef to own his own bull, his contemporary American steakhouse borne from his patented dry-aging technique. Power brokers pack the buzzy, dimly lit room on weeknights, but by the weekend, couples, bar-hopping groups and out-of-towners staying at the neighboring James Hotel Chicago bring a more festive atmosphere. Ask for table 108 (hidden for uninhibited people-watching) and then a private tour of the dry-aging room tiled with 250-million-year-old Himalayan salt. What you really come for, though, is the highly marbled salt-brick beef in 28-, 40-, 55- and 75-day rib-eye configurations (the last packing a blue cheese punch and ringing in at $79 a serving). They are perfectly paired with accompaniments like lobster scrambled eggs, black-peppery ricotta gnudi and pours of rare vintage wines extracted by Coravin. 616 N. Rush St.; 312-6606000; davidburkesprimehouse.com. 42 Grams Storytelling matters at this 18-seat Uptown sophisticate. Inspired by the belief that two souls united equal 42 grams, the name itself nods to the story of the husband-wife team, chef Jake Bickelhaupt (formerly of Charlie Trotter’s) and Alexa Welsh. Like Alinea and Next, the prix-fixe experience is by ticketed reservation, but 42 Grams is more open-book, intimate and BYO, with über-specific wine pairing suggestions e-mailed to you in advance. Arrive to a room filled with family heirlooms, art and Bickelhaupt’s own rock playlist, plus a warm greeting by Welsh (who pours your wine into beautiful stemware). Then, host turns captivating storyteller, describing the elements and inspiration behind each of his gorgeous creations and adding ANDREA DI LORENZO/IMAGEBRIEF.COM. ALL ILLUSTRATIONS BY MATT COLLINS CARMELO, URUGUAY Chef Albert Adrià at Tickets Bar in Barcelona B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE unforgettable dimension—and conversation— to the meal. 4662 N. Broadway; no phone; 42gramschicago.com. Girl & the Goat You have to get the pig face when you dine at Stephanie Izard’s hot spot, the indisputable nexus of Restaurant Row. The oven-roasted patties set on crisp potato sticks are christened with a lush, runny egg on top. Keep your eyes peeled for special meals (beyond the already hyperlocal menu)—we’ve seen a tailgating version and a farm-to-fork-driven Sunday supper. Winner of season 4 of Top Chef, Izard is also the queen of atypical surf and turf. Case in point: pan-seared diver scallops with Cubano pork, apple mojo and pepper-raisin relish. Even though it’s been open for more than four years, reservations still take months. Here’s the workaround: Nab cancellations 48 hours in advance or walk in, aiming for bar seating for two with full views of the kitchen. 809 W. Randolph St.; 312-492-6262; girlandthegoat.com. Longman & Eagle Dress down and head beyond downtown to Logan Square’s Longman & Eagle, Jared Wentworth’s Wild West, punk-rock-playing saloon, where you’ll find one of the best bourbon and whiskey collections in the country. Reservations are not accepted, but you want the bar anyway, if only for access to low-key bartenders who know their stuff. Go for the braised rabbit or the wild boar sloppy joe with pickled jalapeño and crunchy sage. The 300-strong spirits collection offers excellent flights covering everything from the smoky to the obscure (including a Knob Creek bourbon bottled exclusively for L&E). Note, the Manhattan is one of the smoothest we’ve ever tasted. You can also stay the night upstairs at the arty six-room inn (from $76). 2657 N. Kedzie Ave.; 773-276-7110; longmanandeagle.com. Next The hottest and increasingly more expensive ticket in town (up to $500 a person), Grant Achatz and Nick Kokonas’s wildly inventive, less-formal sibling to Alinea sparks debate among the food-enthused. Polarizing dishes often elicit a WTF response; couple that with the constantly changing concept—which suits the banal, dark dining room—and Next is unlike any other culinary experience anywhere. Every few months the entire restaurant— menu, music, look, service—shifts gears. Past themes like Paris 1906 and Childhood have transported diners to countries, moments in time and, recently, an iconic, erstwhile restaurant (Trio). At The Hunt, earthy, ground-fermented carrots were upstaged by fresh-pressed squab brain encased in a reconstructed skull, eyes still gazing up at you. Tip: Book the semiprivate Kitchen Table for views of the kitchen and the chance to score a course other diners won’t. 953 W. Fulton Market; 312-226-0858; nextrestaurant.com. countryside and the winery’s equally elegantly black interiors and wine labels. Bifold doors open up to vast views of the vineyard as delicious pickle and pork rillettes, fennel salami, regional cheeses, venison and house-smoked Akaroa salmon is served with newly certified organic wine. 614 Omihi Rd.; 64-3/314-6085; blackestate.co.nz. Sixteen CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND Everything is beautiful at Thomas Lent’s palace of a restaurant on the 16th floor of Trump Tower. Soaring ceilings under a twinkling Swarovski chandelier open up to panoramic views that do better than the skyline (it seems as if you can touch the Wrigley Clock Tower). Esoteric, themed menus inspired by celestial bodies or the tide might come off as precious, but really, the escalating spectacle is just Lent’s thought-provoking attention to detail. See it everywhere, from whimsical, diminutive plates prepared by deft hands to impeccably choreographed—and friendly—service. Don’t dismiss the young-looking sommelier and wine director, Dan Pilkey: This guy will surprise you with wines from unexpected places like Hungary. 401 N. Wabash Ave.; 312-588-8030; sixteenchicago.com. Brick Farm Christchurch denizens adore this wee restaurant—first because it has taken over one of the last remaining stone buildings left after the recent earthquake, but also because it grants the over-30 gourmet crowd a female-friendly haven in a very male-centric town. Pristine NZ produce shines in chef Johnny Moore’s short-and-sweet European-style bistro menu, anchored in a satisfying pasta, fish or red-meat dish and a fine risotto. It’s high-quality food served in a casual environment, a fabulous spot for a date night in a city with, one could argue, a few too many masculine offerings. 172 High St.; 64-3/366-5369; facebook.com /brickfarmnz. CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND Spiaggia Still jaw-dropping after 30 years, only now more up-to-date and come-as-you-are since the May refresh (the jacket requirement, for one, is no longer), Tony Mantuano’s tiered dining room remains in the top slot among tables citywide—and not just the Italian ones. Between the colossal marble columns, the new 30-seat lounge is the place for stuzzi (snack) and twisted Negroni cocktails. Salty ricotta rolls and holdout dishes like gnocchi swathed in ricotta cream and topped with black-truffle sauce are now joined by skillfully plated à la carte dishes. Unobstructed views through a threestory glass wall over Oak Street Beach and Lake Michigan still command the room, and everything from the bar to the tables has been repositioned toward that view. 980 N. Michigan Ave.; 312-280-2750; spiaggiarestaurant.com. CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND Black Estate Tasting Room Black Estate is a family-run vineyard set among the clay and limestone hills of Waipara Valley, North Canterbury—a lovely drive out of Christchurch. The architecturally designed tasting room and restaurant are housed in a long, sleek modernist version of a rural shed—emblematic of the surrounding 20 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Shop Eight Love your locavore? Shop Eight’s sustainable street cred is impeccable right down to its recycled timber fittings, salvaged from this plucky city’s earthquake-damaged buildings. The menu is downright neighborly, devised exclusively from produce grown or reared in the Canterbury region, with daily dishes that echo that day’s farm deliveries. Sit at a monastic table upstairs for nose-to-tail favorites: sweetbreads, kidney, gamey venison with pine puree, terrines. Or keep it freewheeling at the wine bar downstairs and drink in the coolclimate purity of a Waipara Valley Sauvignon Blanc and the charming eccentricity of the local kiwi accent. 8 New Regent St.; 64-3/3900199; shopeight.co.nz. COCENTAINA, SPAIN L’Escaleta L’Escaleta is one of the great secrets of modern Spanish cuisine. Located far from pretty much anything (it’s in a little textile-producing town about 25 miles north of Alicante and 50 or so south of Valencia), it somehow manages to offer sophisticated, intelligent contemporary cuisine, an immense international wine list and a level of service that’s hard to find even B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE COPENHAGEN New Nordic cuisine plus chef René Redzepi and his disciples dominate the culinary scene with radical interpretations of local ingredients. Marchal Studio When the Hotel d’Angleterre reopened in 2013, it introduced the world to Marchal, and the response was a resounding “Wow!” Chef Ronny Emborg was the executive chef at AOC when it earned a Michelin star, and he also trained at El Bulli’s temple of molecular gastronomy, but here he leans slightly more French in his à la carte menu, with the option of two-person dishes like lobster or Chateaubriand. Emborg doesn’t shirk the lessons he learned in the molecular kitchens of Spain; but he also nods respectfully to classic cuisine, ensuring that every dish is easy on the eyes and delightful to the palette. 34 Kongens Nytorv; 45-33/120094; marchal.dk. Another restaurant created by Noma acolytes. This one comes straight from the source, courtesy of Noma co-owner Claus Meyer and Torsten Vildgaard, who slaved away for seven years with René Redzepi, and it’s worth trying if only to see what the graduates are up to. Vildgaard cooks at an open kitchen, so grab a seat near the heat and marvel at the creativity and energy that make this small dining room work. Some of his spectacular dishes: a grilled reindeer heart with a wood sorrel emulsion, and a tartare of razor clams and dill with mussel-marinated stem celery. The Standard, Havnegade 44; 45-72/148-808; thestandardcph.dk. COURCHEVEL, FRANCE Noma AOC AOC’s elegant vaulted dining room is in the cellar of a 17th-century mansion—a fitting location for a restaurant where the wine is given the same status as the food. Søren Selin, the new man behind the stove, has remained faithful to the restaurant’s New Nordic traditions, showcasing ultrafresh ingredients harvested from the mountains, valleys and waters of Scandinavia. He presents his guests with starkly beautiful and eloquent dishes that give full expression to the fabulous produce and pure tastes. A choice of menus (five-, sevenor ten-course) change with the season but could include lamb with yellow beetroot and a pickled-onion-and-smoked-marrow sauce, or razor clams with tomato, dried scallop roe and mussel “snow.” Dronningens Tværgade 2; 45-33/111-145; restaurantaoc.dk. Geranium Rasmus Kofoed has been at the forefront of New Nordic cuisine since it first hit the foodie radar, and he continues to be inspired by terroir and seasonality to the extreme. Here, quite unusually, vegetables are given equal billing alongside heavier-hitting meats and seafood, but no matter which you prefer, dishes are light, with stunning presentations that incorporate natural materials such as twisted branches and stone—lest you forget that the meal in front of you is a gift from Mother Nature. The tasting menu often highlights hyperlocal ingredients, like cloudberries, venison, sea buckthorn and pickled ramson. The whole experience is a weird, wild voyage through the mind of a culinary genius. Just tread slowly; there are upward of 23 courses on this journey. Per Henrik Lings Allé 4; 45-69/960-020; geranium.dk. Line fish with baby marrow flower, fish tartare, pickled potato and tarragon at Delaire Graff Estate in South Africa’s Cape Winelands Your parents would have cooked the food chef René Redzepi routinely puts on a plate only if they were starving, but that just shows how far people have strayed from eating what grows locally. Set in a former warehouse, Noma turns foraging from the sea and forest into an art form and is often credited with turning “locally sourced” into a mantra for food lovers. The interior is done in that cool, sparse Scandinavian style that seems to prompt you to reconsider your approach to food and its origins. The menu is best described as a new interpretation of Nordic cuisine: Think moss and porcini, beef tartare and ants (you read that right) and shrimp with goosefoot leaves. You have to try it to believe us, but it is, unquestionably good. Strandgade 93; 45-32/963-297; noma.dk. Relæ It’s tempting to think of Relæ as the sort of place Noma would be if Noma were a cozy bistro you could drop by once a week. Though its chef, Christian Puglisi, will probably always have the words “former sous-chef at…” attached to his name, he is a visionary in his own right. After years of working at Noma, he opened Relæ in a sketchy neighborhood and not only won a Michelin star for his efforts, but also sparked a creative outpouring that turned the area into Copenhagen’s hottest neighborhood. Identifiably Nordic in its emphasis on pristine local ingredients, Puglisi’s cooking is heavy on the vegetables and light on the manipulation: Offerings include sunchoke tempura and dried zucchini with bitter leaves. But in his inventiveness and his ability to coax a deep deliciousness from seemingly simple products, he is every bit his own chef. Jægersborggade 41; 45-36/966-609; restaurant-relae.dk. 22 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Le 1947 Very few people know it yet, but the ultraglamorous French Alpine station of Courchevel has become just as fine a destination for anyone whose idea of a good workout is two hours at the table with a knife and fork as it is for serious skiers. To wit, there are an amazing six Michelin two-star restaurants in a village that really puts the haute in haute cuisine, and the one that’s worth a trip on its own is chef Yannick Alléno’s luxury igloo of a dining room at the Cheval Blanc Hotel. Think fluffy white sheepskins draped over white Corian tub chairs and a dazzling, delicate but potent cuisine fit for a snow queen (or king). Dishes like a vegetarian boudin noir (blood sausage) made with finely cubed beets and black rice, garnished with pickled Iranian garlic and caramelized apples, and a tagliatelle made from dried egg yolks in a sauce of chicken fat and black truffles are as light as they are luxurious and dazzlingly original. Le Cheval Blanc Hotel, Le Jardin Alpin; 33-4/79-23-14-00; chevalblanc.com. DALLAS The food scene here is as much about local celebrity spotting as it is about reinvented down-home cooking. CBD Provisions The sassy downtown restaurant is owned by Dallas billionaire Tim Headington, who spared not a nickel on food costs: It’s all made from scratch and sourced from regional COURTESY DELAIRE GRAFF ESTATE in Madrid or Paris. Kiko Moya is the young chef in charge of the kitchen, and he performs feats of wizardry, turning salt cod and red pepper salad into crackers, for instance, or transforming the local nougat, turrón, into a sauce for curry-infused raw tuna. None of this tastes like a gimmick; it just tastes really, really good. Cami Estacio del Nord 205; 34-965/59-21-00; lescaleta.com. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Fearing’s Restaurant Dean Fearing’s elevated American cuisine— a blend of ranch cooking, barbecue, classic Southern and Tex-Mex—should be listed in an upscale what-to-do-in-Dallas guide. The larger-than-life chef works the room and seems to know almost every diner by name. Texas game meats such as quail, rabbit, antelope and buffalo plated with innovative sides like jalapeño grits and butternut squash taquitos are superb. There are two bars: the Live Oak Bar outside, with a huge brick fireplace surrounded by private conversation pits, and the sexy Rattlesnake Bar inside, which starts rocking around 10 p.m. Grab a potent handmade margarita and watch the courtship rituals begin. Ritz-Carlton Dallas, 2121 McKinney Ave.; 214-922-4848; fearingsrestaurant.com. Knife Dallas Noted chef John Tesar’s modern all-thingsmeat menu showcases the $30,000 worth of beef he houses in a dry-aging room. The star is a 240-day dry-aged rib-eye priced at $80 an inch. Less exotic but equally satisfying is the Japanese-style Akaushi rib-eye, a steal at $95 for two. Instead of the usual California Cabernet, Tesar dares you to leave your comfort zone and pair the marbled meat with an old-world Burgundy like Puligny-Montrachet. The exquisite match is not trendy or chic, it’s radical. 5680 N. Central Expy.; 214-443-9339; knifedallas.com. Neighborhood Services This 90-seat restaurant is rapidly becoming Dallas’s worst-, best-kept secret. It’s almost impossible to get a table unless you know someone or have an assistant with excellent dialing skills. Affable chef-owner Nick Badovinus has created a space where customers like T. Boone Pickens are seated next to local athletes and celebrities. They all vie for the coveted power booth (number 55) in back. The menu features a brilliant cheeseburger and sophisticated yet simple seafood and meat specials. Go early for cocktails and stay late to catch the end of an NBA game on the television above the bar, and perhaps a player himself. 5027 W. Lovers Ln.; 214-350-5027; nhstheoriginal.com. ambiance; Wolf-Tasker’s fabulous va-va-voom does the rest. 4 King St.; 61-3/5348-3329; lakehouse.com.au. DOHA, QATAR Idam Nonna The beauty of Nonna doesn’t come from the subtle, almost ordinary interior; it shows up in bowls and plates of gorgeous handmade pasta. Chef Julian Barsotti produces at least ten different pastas each day. Most of the meat and seafood dishes are baked or braised in a wood-burning oven, and the all-Italian wine list will even satisfy patrons with vacation homes in Italy. The small restaurant sits on the border of Highland Park, the 75205 zip code full of many-gabled mansions. The boldface names of Dallas dine here regularly, and chances are good you’ll spot hometown newsman Bob Schieffer or a former president of these United States. 4115 Lomo Alto Dr.; 214-521-1800; nonnadallas.com. Imagine interiors dreamed up by Philippe Starck and placed inside a superb Islamic art museum designed by I.M. Pei. Imagine soaring ceilings and a panoramic skyline viewed through acres of glass windows, and cuisine under the direction of star chef Alain Ducasse that blends French and Middle Eastern accents, offering an only-in-Doha maximalism (the signature dish is long-cooked, tender camel meat). Now imagine that there is no wine list, no alcohol of any kind. This may seem like a disconnect, but the overall experience is so intoxicating that you might not even notice. Museum of Islamic Art, Doha Harbor; 974/4422-4488; alain-ducasse.com. DUBLIN, IRELAND Chapter One Stampede 66 Chef-owner Stephan Pyles has been a fixture on the Dallas dining scene for more than 30 years. The fifth-generation Texan’s menu at this restaurant is an homage to his roots, and it features updated versions of honeyfried chicken, smoked-pork-belly tacos and chicken-fried buffalo steak. The atmosphere is trippy: Longhorns hang over the bar, sculpted steel-wire horses line one wall and a neon rattlesnake curves around a large banquette. The list of tequilas is long, and a prickly-pear-cactus margarita mixed tableside and frozen with liquid nitrogen is worth ordering for the theatrics if not for the shot of tequila. 1717 McKinney Ave.; 214-550-6966; stampede66.com. DAYLESFORD, VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA Lake House Regional gourmands and epicurean pleasureseekers make the 90-minute pilgrimage to haute boho Daylesford to pay homage at this foodie temple. Culinary director and owner Alla Wolf-Tasker is the matriarchal powerhouse who single-handedly revived this colonial spa town, creating a six-acre rural idyll where ducks march through manicured gardens and posh Melbourne comes to unwind. The Lake House culture of spending a spa weekend meandering through the menu and 10,000-strong wine list is as delicious as the foraged produce. Lake views flood in to add 24 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Cork-born chef-owner Ross Lewis has rethought the old joke that a seven-course Irish dinner consists of a potato and six pints of Guinness. At this Michelin-starred establishment in the basement of the Dublin Writers Museum, he cooks first-rate contemporary European fare based on the best Irish raw materials. His seven-course feast includes the likes of poached Atlantic lobster with tomato jelly and salted blood peach and pig’s tail stuffed with Fingal Ferguson’s bacon and Dublin Bay prawns. There’s Guinness if you insist, but the wine list is full of French rarities and other treasures. 18–19 Parnell Sq. N.; 353-1/873-2266; chapteronerestaurant.com. ENSENADA, MEXICO Manzanilla This isn’t your typical Mexican restaurant— in its original location, a legend painted on the half-curtained windows outside read: “Fine Wine, Live Abalone, Rare Mezcal.” The restaurant has since moved to a new portside location, but the formidably moustachioed Benito Molina (who once worked for Todd English) and his beautiful wife and co-chef, Solange Muris, still deliver on the promised specialties from years ago. Only now they go far beyond: Ensenada, about 50 miles southeast of notorious Tijuana in Baja California, is a commercial fishing port, and this rollicking gastro-tavern does magical things with local oysters, clams, fresh tuna and, of course, that MEI-CHUN JAU farmers and ranchers who produce small quantities just for Headington’s restaurants. The Texas brasserie menu offers everything from a classic bowl of chili to a showy whole Berkshire pig’s head, snout and all. After dinner, hang in the bar or head downstairs to Midnight Rambler, a new subterranean speakeasy where guests of the adjoining boutique Joule Hotel mingle with sophisticated downtown denizens over craft-made cocktails. It’s a secret hideaway for the don’t-want-to-seeor-be-seen crowd. 1530 Main St.; 214-2614500; cbdprovisions.com. Preparing for the dinner rush at CBD Provisions in Dallas B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Chef José Andrés José Andrés introduced molecular gastronomy to the States with his six-seat Minibar in 2003. It has since gone on to become a proper restaurant—and the hottest seat in D.C. But he doesn’t always dine on his “exploding olives.” Here’s where he likes to eat, from Spain to Tokyo. CASA BALBINO Cádiz, Spain Casa Balbino has the best tortillas de camarones [shrimp fritters]— the ultimate fried tapa. It’s just perfect. EL CAPRICHO León, Spain The owner, José Gordón, is a “beef whisperer,” because he understands beef like no one else. José allows his animals to grow up to 15 years, and the result is meat that has an astonishing bold and silky texture. No other beef comes close to it. TEN-SHIN Tokyo, Japan Ten-Shin is a small secret spot that all the locals love and that I was lucky to discover. If you go around July, you must have the ayu tempura, an astonishing fresh fish that’s in season only a short time. ESPELHO, BAHIA, BRAZIL Restaurante da Silvinha Backed by dense stands of Atlantic forest, two-hut hamlet Praia do Espelho sits on the southern Bahia shoreline, a 45-minute drive down sandy lanes from rustic Trancoso. Little disturbs the quiet but the breeze; the chief mode of transport is the mule. Paulista transplant Senhora Silvinha took a fisherman’s cottage, roofed it with wood and banana leaves, equipped it with hammocks and scattered cushions in bright azure and lime throughout. (She left the sides open to the tropical clime.) Silvinha has two tables that overlook the beach and a fixed menu that begins and ends with whatever the boats brought in that morning, grilled over embers or whipped into a coriander-scented moqueca stew. Praia do Espelho; 55-73/9985-4157. FIGUERES, SPAIN El Motel When the Roca brothers (whose El Celler de Can Roca is nearby), the legendary Ferran Adrià and most of the other groundbreaking chefs in Catalonia want to kick back with their families and eat simply cooked food, both traditional and updated, they come to the 1960s-modern dining room called El Motel (the name is a long story). Here they let the urbane, soft-spoken Jaume Subirós fill them with food and stories. Wild mushrooms, in season, are a particular draw here, as are just-the-rightsize baby squid sautéed with garlic and parsley. Deep-fried anchovy spines are the essential appetizer. Avda. Salvador Dalí i Domènech 170, Apt. Correus, 32 ; 34-972/50-93-58; hotelemporda.com. FOROGLIO, SWITZERLAND Grotto La Froda Mountain culture meets culinary culture at Grotto La Froda in the tiny hamlet of Foroglio, in Switzerland’s Italian-speaking Alps. There is nothing particularly new about La Froda, but that’s the point. Familyrun and inhabiting the same country tavern since the late 1920s, the restaurant has long served titans of industry, art and style who appreciate its fuss-free ambiance and prime position facing a pristine waterfall. Unsurprisingly, La Froda’s food steers comfortable and classic: polentas and pastas, prosciutti and Prosecco, rich local cheeses and game all sourced from regional farmers, with menus timed to the seasons. An antidote to the Alps’ typical après-ski arena, Grotto La Froda remains an undiscovered gem in this over-discovered era. Foroglio 6690 Val Bavona Ticino; 41-91/754-1181; lafroda.ch. GARZON, URUGUAY Restaurante Garzón Francis Mallmann’s string of hit restaurants run from Patagonia Sur (Buenos Aires) and Patagonia West (Westhampton Beach, New York) to Siete Fuegos, his latest venture, in Argentina. Mallmann’s heart, however, lies in Pueblo Garzón, where he retooled a 160-year-old general store as a rustic country kitchen and threw up a five-room hotel almost as an afterthought. As ever, Mallmann fine-tunes Río de la Plata classics—lentil stew, roast piglet, rib-eye steak with chimichurri sauce—in his trademark infiernillo, an Inca-inspired home-made oven. Camino a la Capilla; 598/4410-2811; restaurantegarzon.com. GARZON, URUGUAY Restaurant Lucifer Seasons flow at a languid pace in this sleepy hamlet: Sheep graze unpaved streets, and wood rails scuttle in the verge. After nine years as an apprentice to South American superchef Francis Mallmann, self-effacing cook Lucía Soria adopted the Uruguayans’ knack for inspired improvisation and knocked together a kitchen of sorts in her own cottage garden. Scattering pastel-painted chairs and lapacho tables beneath the fruit trees, Soria coaxes unexpected flavors from the natural produce of Uruguay’s dune- 26 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 backed Atlantic shore and gently rolling grasslands: crisp sweetbreads, grilled baby cuttlefish, sage-andpumpkin ravioli. Expect few frills, just a genuinely rural idyll and delicious dishes crafted with something approaching love. Camino a la Estación Custiel s/n; 598/9925-5249; restaurant lucifer.com. GRAND BAIE, MAURITIUS Flat Island at 20 Degrees Sud Mauritius’s first boutique hotel, set on the exquisite white sands of Grand Baie, has three restaurants, the most dramatic of which is Flat Island: a handful of simple tables set in the ruins of a 19th-century fort on the island of that name, a one-and-a-half-hour sail away on the hotel’s luxe catamaran. Staff overseen by chef Sanjeev Purahoo grill lobster, lamb kebabs and fresh fish (babonne, red wrasse, coryphène sea bream) right on the beach, serving it to you at tables placed beneath umbrellas in the shadows of the ruins. Let the sea breeze coming off the waves be your air-con. Pointe Malartic Coastal Rd., North Mauritius; 23-02/635-000; 20degressud.com. GRAND LISBOA, MACAU Robuchon au Dôme With its panoramic views on top of Macau’s tallest casino (a building that looks like a moored spaceship), its extravagant chandelier plunging like a crystal waterfall from the top of the glass dome and its scaled-down models of Bordeaux estate mansions, Joël Robuchon’s Michelin three-star temple benefits from Lisboa owner Stanley Ho’s obsession with fine wine (the Hong Kong real estate billionaire is perhaps Asia’s foremost collector). The food is predictably extraordinary, but the wine list more than matches it. If you ask the sommelier nicely, he might tell you tales of what lies below in the cellars beneath the gaming floors: There are bottles of Riesling with Nazi-era labels, rare Pomérols that would be hard to find in Paris and $38,000 bottles of Chinese sorghum wine called Moutai from Kweichow Moutai. The vintage? 1928. Grand Lisboa Casino, 43/F Avenida de Lisboa; 85-3/8803-7878; grandlisboa.com. BARRY MCCALL abalone—best served Manzanillastyle with smoked tomato epazote and olives. And, naturally, a few shots of that aforementioned mezcal. Teniente Azueta 139, Recinto Portuario; 52-646/175-7073; rmanzanilla.com. The tomato plate with smoked mozzarella and yuzu salt at Chapter One in Dublin B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE HONG KONG No alcohol tax means rare vintages paired with traditional dishes at multigenerational, family-run establishments. Amber Sea urchin is now ubiquitous on high-endrestaurant menus throughout Hong Kong, but the original and the best is undoubtedly prepared by chef Richard Ekkebus at Amber. Case in point: His Hokkaido sea urchin in a lobster “Jell-O” with cauliflower, caviar and crispy seaweed waffles is served in a custom-made china “shell” commissioned by Ekkebus rather than the crustacean case itself (which is de rigueur from here to Hawaii). While Ekkebus’s menu is a mix of East and West, the service is obviously polished French. Everything from the pretty array of olive oil bottles to the sommelier’s spot-on suggestions are reminiscent of Paris standards—minus the snootiness. 7th fl., The Landmark Mandarin Oriental, 15 Queen’s Rd.; 85-2/2132-0066; amberhongkong.com. Bo Innovation Hong Kong’s newest Michelin-three-star recipient is based on the second level (careful with those stilettos on the walkway decking) on Ship Street, which itself has become a foodie destination in otherwise seedy Wan Chai. If you can get over the “X-treme Chinese Cuisine” moniker, you’re in for a treat. Alvin Leung has created a fun and delicious menu that takes Chinese classics into the 21st century with dishes like Molecular Xiaolongbao, a gelatinous ball that tastes, but doesn’t look or feel, like a soup dumpling. For dinner and a show, book the chef’s table, where you can watch the dishes being assembled. 2nd fl., 60 Johnston Rd. (entrance 18 Ship St.); 85-2/2850-8371; boinnovation.com. The China Club Take the elevator to the top of the former Bank of China building and you’ll walk into a delightful Art Deco–meets–chinoiserie private members club (any good concierge can get you in). Come for the Saturday brunch, where a constant stream of freshly prepared Chinese dishes is served buffet-style (no food left for hours under hot plates here). Don’t arrive fashionably late or stand on ceremony: Once something runs out, it’s not repeated, and even the grandmas have sharp elbows. Request a table in the main dining room, near the window. The flamboyant owner, Sir David Tang, is frequently seen dining here. 13th fl., Old Bank of China Building, Bank St.; 85-2/2521-8888. 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana Umberto Bombana could have been a star chef anywhere, but he chose to settle in Asia and make his name here, first at the old Ritz-Carlton Hotel’s Toscana and now with his very personal ristorante. Exploring his Northern Italian roots with a fresh contemporary approach, he is, quite rightly, the godfather of Italian cuisine in Hong Kong. In appreciation of Bombana’s skill in presentation, panache in technique and elegance in flavors, Michelin gave his spot three stars—the first in Hong Kong and the only Italian restaurant outside Italy to achieve such status. During white truffle season, tables are even more in demand; big-spending gourmands trust him to turn their expensive fungus into refined plates of risotto. Shop 202, Landmark Alexandra, 18 Chater Rd.; 85-2/25378859; ottoemezzobombana.com. Fook Lam Moon The number of Rolls-Royces parked out front tells you exactly the kind of place this is: a legendary canteen for tycoons that’s been around more than 40 years and is still run by the third-generation Chui family. The grandfather, in fact, began cooking for Qing Dynasty nobles and was later the house chef for one of Hong Kong’s most prominent families, and that history can be tasted in every bite. The kitchen remains focused on the fundamentals of top-shelf Cantonese, with a highly regarded reputation for rarified ingredients like bird’snest soup, abalone and shark’s fin. But the Chuis also do street food proper; the chicken feet with wine sauce is killer. 43–45 Johnston Rd.; 85-2/2866-0663; fooklammoon-grp.com. Kenjo This sushi place is so good and so discreet, the owners actually eschew any publicity. They get enough business from the rich, the famous and those in the know for their refined take on sashimi. Kenjo-san has been at the end of Minden’s dumpy cul-de-sac for years, and though his former apprentices may wow the trendy crowd, this chef has no interest in self-promotion. His only concession to the pleading masses was to open an outlet a block away; that’s where he sends newcomers. His established clients are coddled at the original location. Should you be lucky enough to get in, let alone score a seat in front of Kenjo at the fish counter, just order the omakase and let the chef decide. 30 Minden Ave.; 85-2/2369-8307. 28 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Kimberley Chinese Restaurant Off the tourist map, the Kimberley is fantastic for dim sum and Cantonese banquets, but the reason to come is for the city’s best oldschool roast suckling pig. To make it, a whole deboned piglet is stuffed full of glutinous rice and slow cooked whole. The result? Golden and crispy skin and heaps of rice infused with all that fat and flavor. This traditional method is much more labor-intensive than what you’ll find at other establishments, but one taste and you’ll know it’s worth the trouble. Glorious and impressive, one little piglet easily feeds half a dozen. Preordering and a deposit are required. Mezzanine fl., Kimberley Hotel, 28 Kimberley Rd.; 85-2/23698212; kimberley.hk. Lung King Heen Chef Chan Yan Tak creates the finest Cantonese cuisine in Hong Kong. The Four Seasons Hotel cleverly lured him out of retirement, and he promptly racked up three Michelin stars for Lung King Heen—unprecedented for a Chinese restaurant. Every detail has been carefully vetted; even Tak’s XO sauce is renowned. The proof of authenticity in his creations can be seen in the number of locals eating here, especially large family groups celebrating over exquisite dim sum on the weekend. Windowside tables overlook Victoria Harbour, but to really impress, book the private dining room. 4th fl., Four Seasons Hotel, 8 Finance St.; 852/3196-8888; fourseasons.com. Summer Palace at Island Shangri-La The richly decorated red-and-gold room is sumptuous and traditional, the service as perfect as it gets; no doubt Summer Palace is one of the world’s greatest hotel restaurants. Try the chilled crystal ham, the century egg with sour ginger, the double-boiled “Buddha jumps over the wall” abalone or the Peking duck, which is one of the best in southern China, with optimally fresh pancakes. To be truly decadent, pair it all with a 1996 Krug vintage or a bottle of 1994 Cheval Blanc: Since Hong Kong abolished alcohol taxes, Summer Palace has become not just a gourmet’s but also an oenophile’s paradise. 5th fl., Pacific Place, Supreme Court Rd.; 852/2820-8552; shangrila.com. Yin Yang Coastal For a truly unique, non-gimmicky dining experience, take a 40-minute car ride from central Hong Kong to beachside Ting Kau to find Yin Yang Coastal. Chef-owner Margaret Xu pioneered the farm-to-table ethos in Hong Kong, B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE HOUSTON Pondicheri Pondicheri turns out inventive Indian food in a swank setting, which already seems rather out-there for Houston. What’s more unusual is the best breakfast in town is served here— a meal for which most Americans wouldn’t generally consider going Indian. Order the saag paneer omelet or the stone-ground yellow grits with cauliflower, peanuts, yogurt and cilantro and be transported to some super-authentic rickshaw stop in the British Raj (in your mind, at least—the surroundings here are considerably more upscale). We’re also smitten with the Tuesday fried chicken, done with a not-so-subtle Thai influence. 2800 Kirby Dr., Ste. B132; 713-522-2022; pondichericafe.com. ISTANBUL Çiya Sofrasi Take the ferry across the Bosphorus to Kadikoy to understand how utterly transporting Turkish peasant food can be. Chef Musa Dağdeviren is like a Turkish Dan Barber, a man devoted to seasonality, authentic flavors and the cooking of his homeland. He’s searched the far reaches of the Ottoman Empire for ancient recipes, which he re-creates in a rather humble kitchen, then lets diners come up to the counter and plate what they want. You never really know what you might find in the brass pots simmering on the stove: staple dishes like stuffed eggplants or caramelized onions placed atop lamb kebab. Load up a platter, then grab a seat outside and watch the locals settle in for a Turkish coffee and a chat after a day’s work. Güneşli Bahçe Sokak No. 43; 90-216/330-3190; ciya.com.tr. ISTANBUL Nar In certain parts of Istanbul, you can’t walk two steps without being importuned by a rug merchant, and the city’s famous Grand Bazaar, with its more than 3,000 shops, is simply overwhelming. Armaggan offers a more refined shopping experience, selling a skillfully curated collection of artisanal arts and crafts—and, as a bonus, has this fifth-floor restaurant, serving vividly flavored interpretations of traditional Turkish and Ottoman dishes prepared under the supervision of Vedat Başaran, an expert in his country’s culture in every variation. Go for lunch and choose from the buffet of cold salads and vegetable dishes, then head downstairs to purchase a memento for back home. Nuruosmaniye Cad. 65; 90-212/522-2800; narlokantasi.com. JAMTLAND, SWEDEN Fäviken Chef Magnus Nilsson is a Swedish version of a mountain man, all flowing locks and uncanny ability with rifles and fishing gear. Yet despite Nilsson’s rugged appearance, his cooking is decidedly sophisticated, making dinner at the remote Fäviken, six hours north of Stockholm in west-central Sweden, with its char-dark beams and hanging animal-skin coats, feel like a meal in a fairy tale. And, indeed, each course—the sweet, smoky scallops from cold Norwegian waters, the redolent beef from a properly aged cow that Nilsson butchered himself—is introduced by the chef, so that stories come interwoven with each bite. Aficionados know to arrive early—the better to sweat up an appetite in the attached inn’s sauna—and to stay for the spectacular breakfast served the next morning. Fäviken Magasinet, Järpen; 46-647/40177; favikenmagasinet.se. JERUSALEM Machneyuda Jerusalem’s bazaar-like Mahane Yehuda Market is a warren of alleys and stalls stocking everything from produce to pastries, spirits to spices. While the falafel and shwarma stands have lured snackers for decades, the arrival of Machneyuda transformed the market into a serious dining destination. Manned by a trio of Israel’s top toques—Assaf Granit, Yosi Elad and Uri Navon—this split-level restaurant’s Levantine menu is inspired and sourced from the market itself. Book early to score a seat at the kitchen-front bar for set tasting menus highlighting signature seasonal dishes like red tuna carpaccio with plums and flying fish roe, black risotto flecked with pumpkin and salmon and fresh seafood cooked in arrack (a regional spirit)—followed by a traditional semolina cake with fresh fruit and tahini ice cream inspired by Elad’s mom. Expect music, culinary 30 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 theatrics and arrack-fueled sessions of tabletop dancing. 10 Beit Ya’akov St.; 97-2/2533-3442; machneyuda.co.il. JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA Five Hundred at the Saxon Hotel The Saxon Hotel in Johannesburg’s upscale Sandhurst suburb became famous as the place Nelson Mandela retreated to finish writing Long Walk to Freedom. Today it’s renowned for the astonishing dining experience at its flagship restaurant, Five Hundred, which occupies the hotel’s former Presidential Suite. Superstar executive chef David Higgs, a transplant from the Cape Winelands, has brought the locavore concept to even this urban setting, using handpicked seasonal ingredients from an organic vegetable garden on the hotel grounds that he personally brought back to life. Some dishes, such as steamed yellow marrow with pine-nut chutney, gem squash yogurt and butternut brûlée, come entirely from the garden. Higgs appears on the floor to discuss each individual dish on the four- and six-course menus, and at the end of the meal you arrive as you came: chauffeured to your car in the hotel’s BMW. 36 Saxon Rd., Sandhurst; 27-11/292-6000; saxon.co.za. JOSE IGNACIO, URUGUAY Parador La Caracola Celebrity caprices are shunned at Uruguay’s back-to-basics beach settlements. Even in the sought-after summer enclave of José Ignacio, showiness is out, modesty is in. Seeking to elude prying eyes, those in the know hit up local restaurateur Guzmán Artagaveytia for one of 30 invitations to La Caracola, a private, summer-only lunch club aimed at those who, says Artagaveytia, “appreciate the luxury of being alone in immense nature.” The club is housed in an artfully decorated wooden shack on an isolated, sandy isthmus. Guests are rowed out across a lagoon, where potent caipirinhas, freshly grilled drum fish and a womb-like seascape bring on a trance that endures until the boatman calls time for home. Ruta 10 km. 189, Rambla Costanera El Caracol; 598/9422-3015; paradorlacaracola.com. LA PAZ, BOLIVIA Restaurant Gustu Claus Meyer’s Noma may have helped re-brand Copenhagen as a hot spot for globe-trotting foodies, but the Dane’s attraction to La Paz MARCUS NILSSON and at this latest location for her private-dining concept, she sources produce from her own farm in the New Territories. With all that good will comes some stern rules: Bookings must be made in advance, deposits are required and all diners must choose the ingredients of their meal 48 hours ahead—from which Xu devises a menu to order. Meeting the charismatic Xu is all part of the experience. House 117, Ting Kau Beach; 85-2/2866-0868; yinyang.hk. A coffee-andcacao star cookie with an emulsion of egg yolk and achiote at Central in Lima B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE was quite different. Meyer was looking for a poor yet biodiverse country whose natural riches were not reflected in its national cuisine. Bolivia, with its Amazonian fish, exotic lowland fruit and 1,200 varieties of potato, fit the bill. Despite the challenge of cooking at 12,000 feet above sea level, Meyer tasked a group of trainee cooks with kitchen management; working only with endemic products—typical ingredients include amaranto, a long-lost Inca grain; pacay, a five-foot bean pod with lychee-like flesh; and cochayuyo, an alga from small lakes located in Potosí—he successfully turned high-altitude ingredients into high-end cuisine. Calle 10 No. 300, Calacoto; 591-2/211-7491; restaurantgustu.com. LASTOURS, FRANCE it’s that it reminds them of childhood vacations in the South of France, when life was carefree and everything was orchestrated for them. Whatever the reason, it’s become a pilgrimage spot. The haute Riviera cuisine, courtesy of chef Bruno Cirino, leans heavily on French classicism, and his obsessive commitment to market-fresh produce is the stuff of utopian dreams. Cirino’s wife, Marion, was a harpist and is now an incredible sommelier; perhaps all those complex musical compositions informed her understanding of subtle notes and blends essential to great wine. Should the food affect you profoundly, you needn’t travel far to sleep it off; there are a few rooms above the restaurant. 20 Rue du Comté de Cessole; 33-4/92-41-51-5; hostelleriejerome.com. Le Puits du Trésor Devotees of this labor of love feel their way down a winding road to find it. Food critics, however, are not among them. Which is a shame, because Jean Marc Boyer was trained by Bernard Pacaud (of L’Ambrosia, in Paris), and his sole purpose in cooking is to keep the standards high. The place is a bit austere, but that minimalism only serves to highlight Boyer’s disarming sincerity. Most who make the trek to this South of France gastro-retreat overdo it in the wine category, which isn’t a problem, since there’s an on-site guestroom for just $125. Route des 21 Châteaux; 33-4/6877-50-24; lepuitsdutresor.fr. LAS VEGAS Lotus of Siam Set in a down-at-the-heels shopping center filled with karaoke parlors and swingers clubs, Lotus of Siam serves what may be the best Thai food in America. The menu is lengthy, offering an array of regional dishes that go well beyond pad thai and tom yum. Those classics are available, of course, but why tuck into a massaman curry when you can get a pretty decent rendition when you order in at home? Do what the locals do and have your waiter choose your platters for you instead, perhaps the sai oua sausage, stuffed with basil and other aromatics, and the soupy Northern rad na with seafood. He’ll select a wonderful Riesling to go with all, too. 953 E. Sahara Ave., Ste. A5; 702-735-3033; saipinchutima.com. LA TURBIE, FRANCE L’Hostellerie Jérôme It’s hard to pinpoint what people love about this inn perched above Monte Carlo. Perhaps LAUNCESTON, TASMANIA, AUSTRALIA Black Cow “Happy beef” that has lived the life of Riley is a culinary ideal—and it doesn’t get better than the grass-fed Wagyu at Black Cow, sourced from cattle that frolic all day on Robbins Island, off the northern coastline of Tasmania, Australia’s southern island state. Date-night couples, local suits and casual weekenders alike loyally return to this upmarket steakhouse in the historic northern hub of Launceston for swoonworthy, velvety beef that tastes all the more succulent with the signature truffled béarnaise sauce. This converted butcher shop in a chic riverside town is one of myriad rewards for making your way to one of the most pristine environments on earth. 70 George St.; 61-3/6331-9333; blackcowbistro.com.au. LENCOIS, BAHIA, BRAZIL Cozinha Aberta Brazil’s Chapada Diamantina—the Diamond Highlands of Bahia—exude a Lost World feel. Encircled by cliffs, 270 miles from the nearest beach, this diamond-fever nexus is now a forested natural refuge. Slow-food disciple Deborah Doitschinoff stumbled on the region in 2002 and stayed on to craft precise, flavorrich dishes from forest ingredients. Thus, eggplant is matched with cashew and spicedguava sauce, ricotta-and-walnut tortellini with achiote-seed powder; her cardamom ice cream is the creamiest we’ve tasted. Far from global currents and cosmopolitan concerns, Doitschinoff’s cooking is largely unsung, yet her restaurant’s very remoteness only deepens its draw. Av. Rui Barbosa 42; 55-75/3334-1321; cozinhaaberta.com.br. 32 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 LEWISTON, MAINE Fuel Fuel is, rather unlikely, a contemporary bistro specializing in rustic French food enhanced by an ever-changing list of plats du jour (escargot with bone marrow and diver scallops over chorizo and creamed corn). The restaurant may be located in a town only your GPS can find, but somehow Fuel and its wine list have been consistently awarded top accolades, and so has its deliberately intense spirits program: Bartender Rachel Jalbert makes all her own infusions and mixers and keeps fresh herbs on the bar for whatever new cocktail concoction might form in her mad scientist’s mind. The bar, in fact, is the place to sit, and its menu changes every Friday, when the place is packed with weekender home owners and in-the-know out-of-towners. It’s first come, first served there, so for a romantic interlude, book a table—number 99, in fact. It’s in the back of the restaurant, with three walls and a sheer curtain that can be drawn for a special anniversary or a proposal—of which there have been many. 49 Lisbon St.; 207/333-3835; fuelmaine.com. LIMA Pure, fresh seafood and the world’s best ceviches served in casual, laid-back environments is what you’ll find most here. Astrid y Gastón After overcoming a half-millennium cultural cringe—colonial Spaniards obliged their charges to spurn Andean crops and Pacific seafood in favor of “noble” European foodstuffs such as the turnip—Gastón Acurio has become something of a conquistador himself, conquering global taste buds with his vibrant model of Peruvian national cuisine. At his flagship Lima restaurant, newly located in a grand San Isidro hacienda, Acurio produces bold, memorable dishes such as suckling pig with tacu tacu, a twist on rice and beans. Skip the labored tasting menus: The 29-course Memories of My Land lasts two-and-a-half hours. Av. Paz Soldán 290, San Isidro; 51-1/442-2775; astridygaston.com. Central We’re not usually fans of places that take longer to explain a dish than it takes to actually eat it. But Virgilio Martinez’s Lima restaurant B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Chez Wong Situated behind an inconspicuous door in a rather edgy part of Lima, Chez Wong has only ten tables. And no menu. You simply turn up and watch Javier Wong, a small Chifa master, turn the freshest sole into a ceviche that makes guests gasp with delight. Just salt, lime juice and chiles are added, but the flavors zing across the tongue. And as there’s no menu, there are no prices either. Wong charges what he thinks you can pay. So take our advice and bring a Liman with you. Whatever the final cost, this is one lunch that you’ll remember forever. Calle Enrique Leon Garcia 114, San Isidro; 51-1/470-6217. Maido It was Nobu Matsuhira who brought Nikkei food, that wonderful blend of Peruvian and Japanese, to the world’s attention. But Mitsuharoi Tsumaura’s Lima restaurant goes way beyond even Nobu-san’s achievements. You’ll find ceviches, sushi, sashimi and tiraditos made from fish so fresh they’re still gasping. Flavors are clean and pure, technique is faultless. Don’t miss the meltingly meaty magic of the 50-hour-cooked thick ribs. It will likely be the best meal you’ll eat in Lima, which is some accolade, considering that this is a city where good eating is an absolute given. Calle San Martin 399, Miraflores; 51-1/446-2512; maido.pe. El Mercado Casual and low-key, and sitting in the heart of Lima’s up-and-coming Miraflores district, chef Rafael Osterling’s ceviche and seafood restaurant is ever reliable. It celebrates the piscine perfection of the Peruvian coast, serving up dozens of varieties of ceviche, as well as sumptuous tiraditos and dishes such as raw scallops done three ways. The wine list is well priced and interesting, and the cocktails (especially the Coca sour) well mixed, too. It might seem relaxed, but the high quality of the food is anything but. Hipolito Unanue 203, Miraflores; 51-1/221-1322; rafaelosterling.pe. LONDON Variety abounds, from jacket-required fine dining to cheerful gastropubs to buzzy power spots. Not to mention legendary Indian, Scottish offal and Irish beef. Barrafina-Covent Garden No booking. No tablecloths, either. And you’re seated on a thin bar stool, with a paper menu as your placemat. But this modern tapas spot, with its long, L-shaped marble bar, Josper oven and sparkling array of spanking-fresh seafood awaiting the grill on glittering ice, serves up some of the best Spanish tapas you’ll ever eat, anywhere. The charcoal-grilled lambs’ kidneys are superlative, along with deep-fried ortiguillas (sea anemones), oozing tortillas, suckling pig and Iberian pork ribs. All of London eats here, and you’re just as likely to find yourself perched next to Keira Knightley as you are to the cream of London culinary society. These are certainly the hottest bar stools in town. 10 Adelaide St., WC2N 4HZ; barrafina.co.uk. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal It might be Heston’s name above the door, and the great chef is still as involved as ever in menu development, but it’s his executive chef, the very talented Ashley Palmer-Watts, who runs the show here. Dishes are inspired by historic English favorites, from salmagundi (a medieval salad) to Rice and Flesh, and, as you’d expect, both are technically brilliant and a joy to eat. Take the restaurant’s famed Meat Fruit: The most silken of chicken liver and foie gras parfaits is shaped into a small ball and coated with a mandarin orange jelly. The result? It looks like a fruit but tastes like heaven. Flavors sing and textures thrill. Make sure you book one of the window tables, where the view of Hyde Park is every bit as inspiring as the food. Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, 66 Knightsbridge, SW1X 7LA; 44-207/201-3833; dinnerbyheston.com. Le Gavroche One of the last places left in London where a jacket is still very much required, but it’s worth dressing up to eat at Le Gavroche. Service is flawlessly old-fashioned, never intrusive, but utterly immaculate. And chef-owner Michel Roux Jr.’s food is traditional French haute cuisine with a resolutely modern touch. So you’ll find blissfully rich old-school offerings such as Soufflé Suissesse alongside king crab salad with Asian dressing. In an old dish or new creation, the cooking is precise, clean and very grown up. 34 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Ask for one of the small booths at the side of the room and spend some quality time with the wine list; it’s a work of art. 43 Upper Brook St., W1K 7QR; 44-207/408-0881; le-gavroche.co.uk. Gymkhana London is known for its Indian restaurants, but they tend to split into old-fashioned, EnglishIndian curry houses or high-end, modern subcontinental cooking. Gymkhana is different. Not only does it master a whole range of classic regional Indian dishes (suckling pig vindaloo, wood pigeon pepper fry, wild rabbit nihari), using exceptional ingredients and exceptionally assured technique, but this Mayfair dining room is beautifully decorated in the style of a colonial sports club (hence the name)—paneled walls, massive ceiling fans, antique cricket photos and the rest. The only trouble is that this newly opened restaurant is still hotter than a fistful of Kashmiri chiles; but if you do bag a table (and upstairs is best), you’ll realize that for once the hype is entirely justified. 42 Albemarle St., W1S 4JH; 44-203/011-5900; gymkhanalondon.com. Hawksmoor Seven Dials There’s steak. Then there’s Hawksmoor steak—British, rare-breed, grass-fed, dry-aged meaty magnificence that’s cooked simply over coals. You’ll find at least six different cuts, from fillet and bone-in prime rib to porterhouse and 55-day-aged D rump on the menu, and with each, the flavor is spectacular: rich, minerally and ridiculously juicy, with serious bovine heft. Should meat not be enough, dig into the sides, from creamed spinach to triple-cooked chips. The wine list makes excellent reading (and drinking), and the cocktails are among the best in town. 11 Langley St., WC2H 9JG; 44-207/420-9390; thehawksmoor.com. J Sheekey Nobody does it better—fish, that is—than J Sheekey, a theater-land institution that has seen more great actors, actresses, directors, playwrights and producers walk through its doors than even The Beverly Wilshire. You can either sit in the restaurant proper, under the watchful eye of thespians past and present, or retire to a bar stool and order whole crab, a dozen native oysters and Sheekey’s fish pie. It’s open late, too—perfect for that essential posttheatrical debrief. 32 St. Martin’s Ct., WC2N 4AL; 44-207/240-2565; j-sheekey.co.uk. The Ledbury Chef-owner Brett Graham has the looks of a laid-back surfer dude but the cooking ability of a true star. It’s not for nothing that his Notting Hill MING TANG-EVANS is quite simply worth the wait. The 17-course set menu offers an edible explanation of Peru’s hugely diverse regions, all based on the distance from sea level. Sounds pretentious, but one taste of the Sixty Mile Fish (squid, hurango and clam), Extreme Altitude (a potato dish) or Dry Andes (sweet, rich, edible mud!) and you’ll want more. This is world-class cooking. And we’re not alone in our adoration, so make your reservations before booking your flight. Calle Santa Isabel 376, Miraflores; 51-1/242-8515; centralrestaurante.com.pe. The coffee and tea bar at Lyle’s in Shoreditch, London B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE restaurant has two Michelin stars. Yet Graham is all about taste. Though there is the occasional smear or oddly shaped plate, mostly the food is the dazzler, and Graham is able to tease flavors out of each and every ingredient to create dishes that wow. It’s good all year, but in the fall, when his beloved game come into season, prepare to be rendered speechless. 127 Ledbury Rd., W11 2AQ; 44-207/792-9090; theledbury.com. Lyle’s Everything about Lyle’s, a small restaurant in the heart of Shoreditch, is discreet, pared down and unself-consciously modern. The walls are blank, the floor is poured concrete, and the kitchen is very much open. Head chef and co-owner James Lowe was formerly head chef at St. John Bread and Wine, and the Fergus Henderson influence is obvious: utilitarian menu prose and an interest in the more humble parts of the beast. But this is no mere St. John clone. Lowe looks as much to Japan as he does to Britain, with dishes such as smoked eel broth, and puffball, egg and onion, possessing a stunning clarity of flavor. There’s no fuss or pretense, just modern British cooking of the very highest order. Tea Bldg., 56 Shoreditch High St., E1 6JJ; 44-203/011-5911; lyleslondon.com. The Restaurant at the Ritz London Hotel Why The Ritz dining room isn’t garlanded with Michelin stars, we’ll never know. Because seated in this ornate, gloriously over-the-top room, surrounded by gilded statues and pretty painted frescoes, you feel like you’re in a different age. Waiters clad in immaculate tails still coordinate the lifting of the gleaming silver cloches. There’s a sense of ceremony and occasion here that’s so often lacking in the capital. True, as at Le Gavroche, you have to sausage into suit and tie to even get in. But executive chef John Williams is a cook of the old school, a man who cuts no corners to achieve haute cuisine magnificence. 150 Piccadilly, W1J 9BR; 44-207/493-8181; theritzlondon.com. the only star at St. John, perhaps the most influential London restaurant of the last quarter century. 26 St. John St., EC1M 4AY; 44-207/251-0848; stjohngroup.uk.com. Tramshed A specially commissioned Damien Hirst sculpture takes center stage at restaurateur Mark Hix’s cavernous Shoreditch dining room. It’s a vast cow in formaldehyde, with a chicken perched on its back—which is fitting, as Tramshed specializes in two things: roast chicken and steak. The art might seem abrupt, brutal even, if it weren’t for the sheer quality of the raw ingredients. Reg Johnson’s glorious Goosnargh chickens, packed with serious heft, are roasted whole and served with the feet still attached. Peter Hannan’s Himalayan salt-cave-aged Northern Irish beef is served in great charred slabs. You’ll find most of the contemporary art world in here, plus various East London arty types. Like the art that surrounds the patrons, Tramshed’s is a simple concept but one executed with utter confidence and élan. 32 Rivington St., Shoreditch, EC2A 3LX; 44-207/749-0478; chickenandsteak.co.uk. The Wolseley The Wolseley is not only about the food. Sure, there’s the coq au vin and the Arnold Bennett omelet with smoked haddock, Parmesan and cream. But here at this eternally popular Piccadilly power spot, the atmosphere is every bit the equal of the kitchen. The place hums, buzzes and throbs with gossip and deal-making Masters of the Universe overdoing it on off-menu burgers and oysters while planning their next takeover bid. And it’s not just the moneymen but movie stars and supermodels, überagents and blue-chip artists, all thriving in this magnificent room. The inner circle, at the front, is the place to sit but the entire place is magic. 160 Piccadilly, W1J 9EB; 44-207/4996996; thewolseley.com. St. John Bar and Restaurant Twenty-one years on, and St. John is still rocking. Fergus Henderson, the co-owner and culinary maestro, may no longer be behind the stoves—he’s now seen as more nose-to-tail titan than mere pan shaker—but this is one of London’s legendary restaurants, a room dedicated to the serious pleasures of British succor, good cheer and a long lunch or dinner. Ingredients are always seasonal and the very best, be they asparagus and gulls’ eggs in spring or roast grouse and teal in the fall. Offal plays a leading role in the menu, but it’s not LOS ANGELES Here it’s about the see-and-be-seen tables to book and California ingredients used in everything from French to Italian to Japanese dishes. Alma File under “a bit of Brooklyn in downtown L.A.” In a spare, loud and slightly slapdash industrial space just steps from the new Ace Hotel and decked out with cookbooks and a Chez Panisse poster, servers include a 15-year-old line cook and a skinny-trouser-clad sommelier offering wine made from a Portuguese grape that nearly went extinct. Chef Ari Taymor, 28, haunts farmers’ markets and his own herb garden in Venice to create micro-seasonal eight-course tastings that are as bold, precious and sometimes brash (frozen duck liver with coffee granola, anyone?) as his young, fashionforward following. For dining—and a neighborhood—that can be a little rough around the edges, Alma bestows serious next-big-thing bragging rights. 952 S. Broadway; 213-2441422; alma-la.com. Chi Spacca Sandwiched between Mario Batali, Joe Bastianich and Nancy Silverton’s Mozza restaurants, Chi Spacca is a small but beefy part of their Melrose Avenue Italian empire. At this dark and clubby grill, chef Chad Colby has established L.A.’s first dry-curing salumeria featuring housemade terrines, fennel-pollen salami, duck pancetta and a Lambrusco-washed culatello that’s aged for 15 months. Hearty and rustic, the menu offers sweetbreads and amberjack spiedino for dainty diners, but the carnivore crowd goes for Tomahawk pork chops and a $210 porterhouse that weighs 50 ounces. Vegetarian? Not a problem. Take a seat with the walk-ins at the counter and watch the fireworks as Colby blisters your Little Gem lettuces and tosses whole cauliflower heads into a roaring wood oven to serve with crushed lemon bagna cauda. 6610 Melrose Ave.; 323-297-1133; chispacca.com. Lucques Smack-dab in the center of the city’s best district for fashion and decor, the ivy-covered Lucques seduces midday passers-by with the scent of burning maple, walnut and citrus wood. Step into the brick-walled 1920s carriage house that once belonged to the silentfilm star Harold Lloyd and was transformed with a relaxed refinement by designer Barbara Barry, and enjoy lunch among designers and moviemakers in the garden or one of the semicircular olive-green booths. Named for the Rolls-Royce of olives that graces the tables, the 16-year-old Lucques is beloved for chef Suzanne Goin’s market-fresh Californiacasual approach to American comfort food and European classics like s’mores cake and Spanish grilled cheese. Book well in advance for the $45 prix-fixe Sunday suppers, which launched Goin’s 2005 James Beard award– winning cookbook—and a devoted following with standing reservations. 8474 Melrose Ave.; 323-655-6277; lucques.com. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Melisse Saam at The Bazaar by José Andrés It’s all about you in this Paris-chic, dusky violet Santa Monica dining room, where Champagne trolleys and cheese carts waltz silently past the elevated leather booths, and footstools are provided for mesdames’ Birkins. Meals are four-, ten- or 16-course tastings (from $135), “but of course, we are happy to make adjustments,” says table captain Douglas Delancey, who serves booths 6, 7 and 8 with leading-man savoir-faire. Sommelier Brian Kalliel can read you like a book, saving you from consulting theirs: a hefty 1,200-vintage volume lush with rare five-figure Burgundies. Stick around long enough to commend charismatic, roundsmaking chef Josiah Citrin for his signature egg caviar appetizer, chocolate soufflé (presented with a syringe of injectable molten Valrhona) and everything in between. 1104 Wilshire Blvd.; Santa Monica; 310-395-0881; melisse.com. Picture a dining car in the Orient Express as outfitted by Hermès, with luggage racks stocked with books and Baccarat crystal. Such is the vibe that designer Philippe Starck created in the SLS Beverly Hills’ private dining room, which seats no more than 20 just three nights a week. Saam’s $150-per-person tasting menu offers some two-dozen savories and sweets, expertly delivered and explained by an attentive and attractive waitstaff. Envisioned as a testing ground for dishes that might make the menu for the hotel’s popular but more clamorous restaurant, The Bazaar, Saam gives mad scientist and molecular gastronomist José Andrés, a disciple of El Bulli’s Ferran Adrià, the opportunity to perfect food fantasies. Among them: thermo-whipped passion fruit espuma for cocktails, Peking duck in a cotton candy dumpling, spherical cheeses and vegetable gnocchi that explode in your mouth and liquid-nitrogen-treated crispy bites such as Dragon’s Breath, which, when you chew it, sends vapor through your nostrils and pretty much blows your mind. 465 S. La Cienega Blvd.; 310-246-5555; thebazaar.com. Mo-Chica Made from pomace brandy with a tincture of cinnamon, this modernist Peruvian cantina’s pisco sour—the best in L.A., devised by mixologist Deysi Alvarez—will set you up right for ceviches, tiraditos and stews enlivened with the fire and tang of aji amarillo, the jalapeño of Peru. Lima-born and London-trained at the Japanese restaurant Zuma, chef Ricardo Zarate plates native recipes with a sushi sensei flair at his newer West Side restaurants, Picca and Paiche, but Mo-Chica, launched in a food court and housed in an arty industrial space in downtown L.A.’s new restaurant row since 2012, is the originator and the hippest—with walls tagged by local graffito Kozem and weekend prix fixes from $35. 514 W. Seventh St.; 213-622-3744; mo-chica.com. Providence Presentation is paramount at this consistent best-of-list topper near Hollywood’s Paramount Studios. Chef Michael Cimarusti’s wild Santa Barbara spot prawns arrive buried in roasted salt, Wagyu beef stogies are served in cigar boxes, and grilled New Zealand abalone nestles in a tabletop rock garden with seaweed shrubbery. In summer 2014, Providence added four tasting menus (from $100 to $220) and tapped designer Tamara Kaye-Honey to update the interiors as an undersea fantasia with groovy Rorschach-blot wallpaper and plush blue velvet seating. Popular corner tables 5, 10 and 20 can be booked out a month in advance on weekends but are easier to snag after 9 p.m. Or swing by on Friday, the only day Providence does lunch. 5955 Melrose Ave.; 323-460-4170; providencela.com. Spago Since opening in 1982 just above the Sunset Strip, Spago has been the unofficial Hollywood canteen and the linchpin of Wolfgang Puck’s empire. Now ensconced in Beverly Hills, the restaurant famous for its industry power lunches, seasonal California tasting dinner menus and 30,000-bottle wine cellar got a stellar redesign by Waldo Fernandez in 2012. Known for his masculine style and A-list actor clients, Fernandez installed a dark and sexy yet gentlemanly bar—and a skylightilluminated dining room with artwork by Ed Ruscha and John Baldessari. The most popular see-and-be-seen spot is the brick patio with potted olive trees and two enormous architectural fireplaces. Tables P5 and P8 bask in the glow of the burning logs; those requiring more privacy request P1 in the corner. And though Spago attracts a well-heeled crowd, the code is come as you are and leave utterly satisfied. 176 N. Canon Dr., Beverly Hills; 310-385-0880; wolfgangpuck.com. Trois Mec With his sleeve-tattooed arms, Gallic scowl and love for French rap as a soundtrack, Ludovic Lefebvre seems un peu formidable. But if you can score online tickets (released every two weeks with around 50 offered, Monday through Friday only), sit at the counter of the pop-up king’s first brick-and-mortar—a former pizza 36 37 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 shack in an anonymous Hollywood strip mall. By evening’s end, this bad boy of modern bistronomy will regale you with tales of the slightly sketchy neighborhood in a thick French accent as delicious as his potato with brown butter and bonito flakes. Catapulted to the top of local and national best-new-restaurant lists in 2013, Trois Mec offers the first four courses without cutlery “for you to explore like a child,” Lefebvre says. But demand a fork and spoon for the truffle grilled cheese with campfire ice cream. 716 N. Highland Ave.; troismec.com. Urasawa Abandon all autonomy, ye who enter here. Hidden above Beverly Hills’ Via Rodeo, Hiroyuki Urasawa’s kingdom of kaiseki—located in the space once occupied by his mentor, Masa Takayama—has the air of a tiny private club. There are but ten seats around a simple maple bar (sit on the short end to watch chef Hiro’s heroics), and though it costs $180 for a 20-course tasting, you must play by the master’s rules: Reservations require a credit-card deposit; there is no photographing the food; and the fresh sushi dishes must be consumed within ten seconds of serving. Though Urasawa has developed a less savory reputation as a stern taskmaster with his staff, he is nonetheless acknowledged as a purist—his soy sauce and even the salt are housemade—with an artist’s touch, topping an already glorious egg custard with sea urchin, Japanese chive gelée, caviar and flakes of gold. 218 Via N. Rodeo Dr., Beverly Hills; 310-247-8939. LYON, FRANCE Paul Bocuse’s L’Auberge du Pont Collonges France’s longest-running Michelin-three-star table—it’s held the ultimate Gallic accolade nonstop since 1965—surprises many by its look: At first glance, it is unexpectedly mid’70s ugly. Add to that its culinary mastermind is the charming 88-year-old chef-owner Paul Bocuse, and it’s reasonable to wonder if this place may be way past its prime. It’s not. Bocuse’s brilliant restaurant is a living museum in the best sense of the concept, since the tastes and textures of dishes like his black truffle soup—which comes to the table under a golden cap of flaky brioche dough and releases a head-spinningly sensuous vapor of the precious funky tubers and the world’s best beef bouillon when pierced with a spoon—are those of the gastronomic glory days of prewar France. So go now, before anything changes. 40 Rue de la Plage, Collonges-au-Mont-d’Or; 33-4/72-42-90-90; bocuse.fr. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Sacha’s Chef Wylie Dufresne The man who launched molecular gastronomy in the U.S. with WD-50 in New York, now cooking at Alder, offers his dining picks around the world. BIG G’S DELI Winslow, Maine This is a sandwich shop near where I went to college. Even at my 20year anniversary we couldn’t resist ordering up a half-dozen Miles Standwiches (turkey, stuffing, cranberry, Swiss). SIA KEE DUCK RICE Singapore The duck rice is unbelievable, probably on par with the greatest duck confit the French have ever made. DANI GARCIA RESTAURANTE Marbella, Spain Michelin-twostar chef Dani García’s restaurant in the Puento Romano Beach Resort serves delicious food that is unbelievably creative. ASADOR RESTAURANTE PORTUETXE San Sebastián, Spain Don’t miss the baby squid with caramelized onions in this 400-year-old farmhouse. The most important thing the diner has to know about this jaunty Madrileño bistro is that it isn’t where you think it’s going to be. Find the street address and then look in vain for the restaurant. The trick? Head around the back of the building and down a manicured alley—and walk into a warm, noisy, dimly lit haven full of antique furnishings and acres of crisp white linen. Here notables from the worlds of Spanish politics, business and art eat Alejandro Sacha Hormaechea’s fried oysters, sea urchin lasagna and veal-and-artichoke stew, all of it dependably savory. Calle de Juan Hurtado de Mendoza 11; 3491/345-59-52. MELBOURNE Australian delicacies like kangaroo, wallaby and barramundi, and the new ways in which they’re being presented, have put this city on the food lover’s map. Attica Even in a city of the food-obsessed, Attica stands apart. This pared-down darkened stage of a room has placed spotlights over each table, and such theatrics are warranted: Over the course of a meal, you might tuck into kangaroo and walnut puree served in its own shell and all manor of foodstuffs you’ve never heard of and didn’t know you needed to try—but clearly have been missing out on. Even the humble potato, this most nondescript of vegetables, is somehow transformed into the sine qua non of food itself in the incomparable hands of chef Ben Shewry, who may just invite you mid-meal to visit his garden, where he grows many of the things you’ve eaten. 74 Glen Eira Rd.; 61-3/9530-0111; attica.com.au. Cumulus Inc. Since it opened in 2008, chef Andrew McConnell’s casual restaurant has been serious about its food and wine, capturing what many feel is the spirit of Melbourne at a point in history when the city is having quite the foodie moment (in its laid-back Aussie way, of course). He serves breakfast, lunch and dinner in an airy, high-ceilinged room where light floods through massive windows. The menu features items made to share—and what better way to get a chance to sample favorites, like fried cauliflower with spiced salt and whole slow-roasted lamb shoulder, or fun oddities such as pig’s-head croquettes? 45 Flinders Ln.; 61-3/9650-1445; cumulusinc.com.au. Flower Drum A stalwart on the Melbourne dining scene (it’s been in business for 39 years), this classic Cantonese restaurant serves simple, delicious food in a traditional Chinese setting of lacquered wood, red carpets and Asian art. Try Flower Drum’s perfect rendition of Peking duck with plum sauce or sample an Australian standby like wallaby tail soup, for example, or wild barramundi fillet. (We suggest finishing with deep-fried ice cream.) Oenophiles will appreciate the wideranging wine list, which concentrates mostly on Australian and French bottles, but everyone will enjoy the service: Waitstaff here dress in formal attire like old-school servers and act like them, too, unfailingly helpful and deferential. 17 Market Ln.; 61-3/96623655; flower-drum.com. Pei Modern This casual bistro in the courtyard of the Sofitel, named after I.M. Pei (who designed the atrium roof under which the restaurant is located), has quickly become a local favorite. With a quirky wine list and distinctive takes on menu staples (the burrata dish includes artichoke and kingfish, for example), Mark Best’s foray into the Melbourne dining scene uses marketfresh seasonal ingredients in inventive ways. The interior is stripped-down, all wood and glass, and subdued tones can be heard wafting from the open kitchen, where chef Florent Geradin is hard at work. The proximity to the Parliament House means you may spy well-heeled suits sharing a power breakfast or working lunch; nighttime gives way to locals and foodies from near and far. 45 Collins St.; 61-3/96548545; peimodern.com.au. 38 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Rockpool Bar & Grill If well-known chef Neil Perry’s Instagram is to be trusted, he rarely encounters anything but beautifully plated dishes as he moves through his days. This respected author of eight cookbooks (with seven restaurants under his belt) opened Rockpool Bar & Grill, a study in streamlined Art Deco opulence, in 2006, and it’s still going strong. A steakhouse par excellence, Rockpool proffers beef of every stripe, vintage dishes like mac and cheese and smartly choreographed sides (try the woodfire-grilled broccoli with anchovy dressing and macadamia nuts). Many, of course, come not for the big meals but for the sweet finishes: There are far too many desserts to name here, but suffice to say, the dark-chocolate-mousse cake with a soft caramel center is worth every calorie. Crown Complex, 8 Whiteman St.; 61-3/8648-1900; rockpool.com. MENDOZA, ARGENTINA Siete Fuegos at the Vines Mendoza Resort & Spa This new venture by perhaps the most celebrated chef in South America, Francis Mallmann, is based entirely on his techniques for cooking over open fires, a skill he learned from the local gauchos. And because his head chef, Diego Irrera, has access to the fecund Uco Valley and all the wondrous bounty here at The Vines of Mendoza resort and co-op vineyard, he can craft inspired regional dishes that highlight Argentina’s prized beef, the expansive resort gardens and whatever else roams wild on the surrounding lands flanked by the Andes. Savor the rustic, fiery flavors of specialties like nine-hour slow-grilled ribeye, cast-iron-baked, salt-encrusted salmon, even fire-grilled seasonal fruits. Siete Fuegos, or “seven fires,” evolves by season, in tune with nature. What doesn’t change are the wine pairings—ideally grown right on the vines striping the landscape beyond Mallmann’s seven flickering fires. Ruta Provincial 94, km. 11 Tunuyan, Uco Valley; 54-261/461-3910; vinesresortandspa.com. BRIAN FINKE MADRID Those famous crab legs at Joe’s Stone Crab in Miami B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE R&O’s First, a lesson: A po’boy is a New Orleans staple that consists of two slices of crunchy, pillowy bread overstuffed with, well, anything you like. But here at R&O’s out in Metairie, the chopped roast beef version—heavily doused with rich gravy, delicately topped with tomatoes and shredded lettuce, served alongside sliced pickles—has reached legendary status. Restaurant critics and longshoremen alike make the trek to Lake Pontchartrain just to scratch their po’boy itch, wisely skipping breakfast and filling up on the packed-tothe-gullets, seeded-loaf version. It ain’t fancy (watch that dripping juice!), but it’s a meal you will talk about, and crave, for months on end. 216 Metairie-Hammond Hwy.; 504-831-1248. MEXICO CITY Merotoro Like his friend Benito Molina at Ensenada’s Manzanilla, chef Jair Téllez was a pioneer of what has been called Baja Mediterranean cuisine, with his Laja in the Valle de Guadalupe— Mexico’s prime wine country. Now, with this bustling bistro in the trendy Colonía Condesa district, he has partnered with Gabriela Cámara (whose own Contramar specializes in superfresh seafood) to bring the flavors and relaxed lifestyle of Baja to the landlocked Mexican capital. The restaurant’s name combines the Spanish for grouper and bull, and both seafood and meat (though not necessarily toro) are prepared here with originality and flair. Calle Amsterdam 204, Cuauhtémoc, Hipódromo Condesa; 52-55/5564-7799; merotoro.mx. MIAMI Restaurants—set on the sand, under tents, by the river and in areas on the verge— define this city’s eclectic food traditions. Joe’s Stone Crab Few restaurants can claim they’ve maintained their stellar reputation for a century, but Joe’s Stone Crab can. When he opened his fish counter in 1913, the original Joe discovered that stone crabs from the bay were edible (and delicious) and began serving them steamed and cracked with hash browns and coleslaw for 75 cents. The presentation is still the same (though prices have gone up), and patrons come as much for those crustaceans as for the famous Key lime pie, sweet and tart and with a sinful graham-cracker crust. It’s a Miami institution with serious staying power. 11 Washington Ave.; 305-673-0365; joesstonecrab.com. Mandolin Aegean Bistro Most ethnic cuisine in Miami derives its flavor from Latin countries, but Anastasia Koutsioukis and Ahmet Erkaya’s Design District restaurant’s dishes hail from more distant shores. Their Mandolin Aegean Bistro takes what would be considered peasant food back in their homeland of Turkey, places it in the requisite blue-and-white setting that is its natural habitat, then somehow enhances it with—could it be love? Those slices of housemade feta, that grilled whole fish that is equally lemony and buttery, those kefte that are so far removed from the familiar street-stall version as to seem a different substance altogether, are all so simple and yet so remarkable; they could only have been infused with the tenderness that comes from nurturing something from seedling to adulthood, or, in this case, from the next-door garden to what you see on your plate. 4312 NE Second Ave.; 305-7499140; mandolinmiami.com. Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink Michael Schwartz opened his bistro, Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink, back in 2006, just before everything else in Miami came to a screeching halt. Perhaps because he stuck to his approach—farm-to-table, pared-down food—rather than the high-flying dining happening at other area establishments, he persevered and emerged as something of a pioneer in the heretofore scruffy Design District. Offering house-cured heritage meats and produce delivered by an on-the-books forager, Schwartz’s slow-cooking refuge became the anchor to what has become home to some major A-listers (Prada and Cartier, to name just two). His loyal followers come not for the shopping but for the reliably good food and lack of pretension—a rarity in a city where high heels and a bikini are appropriate attire for lunch. 130 NE 40th St.; 305-573-5550; michaelsgenuine.com. Mr. Chow When the W South Beach opened here in 2009, it brought with it Hollywood’s (and New York’s and London’s) perennially star-studded Chinese restaurant, Mr. Chow. Only here it’s set in a double-height, sleek space with blacklacquer walls and a towering Swarovski chandelier, plus a sexy tented outdoor space. Chef 40 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Hou Lam “Dicky” Fung crafts his own noodles for the menu, which is best served prix fixe for the whole table, though there are plenty of à la carte options: chicken satay, Beijing duck, sweet-and-sour pork, those famous Mr. Chow noodles. Come late for the bar scene that rollicks well past reasonable dining hours. 2201 Collins Ave.; 305-695-1695; mrchow.com. Prime 112 Many a society fixture has juice-fasted for five days after a night at Prime 112. The food is so good, so hearty, so filling, you honestly feel like you’ve eaten enough for a week after a night here. Start with the oysters Rockefeller and the truffled deviled eggs with caviar, then move on to one of the ten salads (an iceberg wedge with bacon and thousand island, perhaps?). Next up: meat, dry-aged for at least three weeks, salty and crisp on the outside and tender and pink within. (The nine sauces are delicious, but really they’re just gilding the lily.) Of course you must have sides, like rum-baked sweet plantains and creamed spinach. But don’t overstuff just yet. There’s still those ridiculously decadent deconstructed peanut butter and chocolate s’mores with vanilla ice cream to come. 112 Ocean Dr.; 305-532-8112; mylesrestaurantgroup.com. Seasalt and Pepper What was once a barren wasteland near the Miami River has been reborn as a social hot spot with a party vibe and rare water views in this city by the sea. Exotic cars fill the two nearby parking lots as everyone from Jay-Z to Real Housewives come to this Lummus Park seafood brasserie for wood-fired casseroles and luxe surf and turf. But the real appeal is the scene. On the wooden deck, revelers imbibe cleverly crafted caipirinhas and dance to the sounds of a DJ as yachts dock right up against the tables. Only in Miami. 422 NW North River Dr.; 305-440-4200; seasaltandpepper.com. Zuma Miami residents also arrive by boat to this downtown dining spot where brunch is the hot ticket. They dock at the EPIC Marina, then dig into main courses like rice hot pot for the table, maki rolls and branzino with pickled fennel. Take a seat on the terrace for impeccable views of the Miami River, or look inside toward the kitchen, where owner Rainer Becker oversees a team of majordomos turning out sweet-hot rock shrimp tempura and seared scallops in a pickled plum sauce. Desserts at FRANCESCO TONELLI METAIRIE, LOUISIANA Foie gras crème brûlée with berries and pickled beets at New York’s Eleven Madison Park B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Chef Paul Pairet The maestro behind theatrical-dining phenomenon Ultraviolet in Shanghai reveals his favorite restaurants, based on his recent travels. TIPPLING CLUB Singapore Ryan Clift is one of the brightest young chefs on the avant-garde food scene in Asia. L’ARPEGE Paris Alain Passard continues to inspire and create. LE BARATIN Paris Chef Raquel Carena has certainly influenced the whole French bistronomy, from wine to food. L’AUBERGE DU VIEUX PUITS Fontjoncouse, France Gilles Goujon is about bold and very good taste, complemented by a delicate technique. this buzzy space fluttering with paper lanterns are a highlight, especially the chawan mushi with exotic fruits—but it’s the parade of beautiful people that really sweetens the whole experience. 270 Biscayne Blvd. Way; 305-5770277; zumarestaurant.com. MONTE CARLO, MONACO Elsa Elsa is the restaurant at the MonteCarlo Beach Hotel, and it also happens to be the first 100-percent organic restaurant to receive a Michelin star. A creative and eclectic seasonal menu created by chef Paolo Sari is available during the warmer months (March through October), and of its 20 dishes, every last one sings with the zing of fresh-plucked goodness. One of our favorites is the vegetarian risotto, a rich and savory dish that marries Italian and French influences with the distinctive flavors of poivrade (Provençal artichoke), Parmesan and fresh borage flowers. Other standout dishes include a pan-seared sea bass with tomato essence served with eggplant, sweet peppers, courgettes and snow peas. If he could pack any more local flavors in, he would, but the balance on this one is just right. Ave. Princesse Grace; 37-7/98-06-50-05; montecarlosbm.com. party for his daughter. Downstairs is the old laboratory, the ultimate space for a romantic rendezvous. Upstairs, it’s all haute cuisine. Waitstaff are outfitted in vintage servants’ frock coats, and, in a quest for authenticity, the menus are written in Old Church Slavonic (you may request an English version). So, yes, Pushkin can feel a little gimmicky, but few dining establishments can claim to transport diners so fully, so sensually. (And the Stroganoff isn’t bad, either.) Tverskoy Bulvar 26A; 7-495/739-0033; cafepushkin.ru. Selfie This little sister to White Rabbit (see below) is run by chef Anatoly Kazakov, and his hard-to-go-wrong menu adheres to the latest gastronomy trends. Settle into the sounds of lounge music and watch the showmanship in the open kitchen. There, a team of cooks turns out tangy sea scallops with cauliflower, raisins and morel sauce; lamb rib roast with quinoa, raisins and Port sauce; and a famous Pozharski cutlet with cucumber ketchup and crispy potato. Dessert is a highlight; try the sorrel panna cotta with smetana ice cream and tonic jelly. Novinsky Bulvar 31; 7-495/99-58-503; selfiemoscow.com. White Rabbit MOSCOW Old-world aristocracy, romance and revolution set the scene for progressive interpretations of classic Russian dishes. Pushkin Café To step through the doors of this 15-year-old place is like stepping back into pre-revolutionary Russia, right into the pages of a Tolstoy novel. In the ground-floor café, aristocratic cuisine is served 24-7 in a space reminiscent of a 19th-century chemist. (Many agree it’s the best breakfast in town.) Look for the secret door in the corner that leads into the Rimsky-Korsakov mansion’s fireplace room, where a CEO might be holding a birthday A separate elevator whisks diners to this Moscow hot spot located in a rooftop conservatory high atop Smolensky Passazh. And such a rarified entrance is fitting; once the doors open, a buzzing room of oligarchs and opera stars is revealed, kitted out with antique wooden tables, 19th-century settees and hardwood floors. Within that oldmoney atmosphere, star chef Vladimir Muhin turns out the most progressive reinventions of Russian classics. Best to put yourself in his deft hands and go with the seven-course tasting menu, which brims with figs, young goat cheese, stone crab and, quite frequently, foie gras. It’s a Russian Wonderland, in the form of a decadent restaurant—with easily the best city views around. Smolenskaya Sq. 3, 16th fl.; 7-495/66-33-999; whiterabbitmoscow.com. 42 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 MUSTIQUE, ST. VINCENT’S AND THE GRENADINES Beach Café at The Cotton House Tristan Welch, who recently joined The Cotton House as head chef, is a well-known culinary figure in the United Kingdom as former head of Gordon Ramsay’s Pétrus at The Berkeley. In the Caribbean, Welch has the added advantage of a killer location on Endeavour Bay, where he can pluck spiny lobster, conch, snapper, jacks and any other sea creatures and plant foods straight from the sea and transform them into dishes such as spiny lobster risotto, fish cake with wilted callaloo in a ginger, lime and butter sauce or a simple Caribbean carpaccio. His aim is to complement the culture and location of the island by intermingling local staples with the exotic flavors of this tiny resort island, then preparing them in traditional yet highly creative styles. Cheltenham, St. Vincent & Grenadines; 855-261-1316; cottonhouse.net. NAPA, CALIFORNIA Ad Hoc Why go to the French Laundry when you can eat the same food that the chefs there do? Ad Hoc was opened in 2006 by chef Thomas Keller as a temporary restaurant until his team of wizards conjured the Next Big Idea in dining. But it clicked with Napa regulars, and the concept stuck. Now the temporary spot is fully established, turning out daily-changing four-course dinners for $52 in a much more casual setting than its sister. Fried chicken and pot roasts are served familystyle, so you get to chatting with local vintners or Silicon Valley entrepreneurs or ladies out on girls’ wine-tasting weekends. Better yet, Ad Hoc is all very casual; getting a reservation is almost easy. 6476 Washington St., Yountville; 707-9442487; adhocrestaurant.com. NAPLES, ITALY Da Dora You could pass Da Dora, a beloved Neapolitan fish restaurant, without even noticing it was there. The two B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE rooms are small and rather simple, the walls covered with pictures of celebrities, from Sophia Loren to Julio Iglesias. There is no pomp or arrogance here, just the best, freshest fish. Yes, it comes at a price. But the shrimp crudo and the spaghetti alle vongole are as good as these dishes get. In the latter, the pasta is the star, cooked al dente, slick with tangy olive oil, scattered with parsley and studded with dozens of the sweetest of clams. Stick to the local Campania whites and, rather than rushing, sit back, eat well and revel in your discovery. Via Palasciano, 30; 39-81/680-519; ristorantedora.it. NASHVILLE Rolf & Daughters Chef Philip Krajeck is the strongest talent in this restaurant boomtown, and he excels at pasta—crazy-shaped, wily pasta in an infinite array of sauces, formats and sizes. His goal was to create an everyday sort of place where the bread was baked fresh, the meat was butchered whole and Germantown dwellers could stroll over for a quick bite. He exceeded that straight out of the gate, causing quite a stir with his unbelievable tree-nut ragout tangled in housemade pasta, and other non-carb dishes, like the simple, succulent, flat-roasted chicken. As the website says, “Walk-ins encouraged.” 700 Taylor St.; 615-866-9897; rolfanddaughters.com. NEW DELHI Varq Forget everything you know about the Indian palette and replace it with the refined, ambrosial creations found on Varq’s Modern Indian menu. Housed in the peaceful marble cocoon of the Taj Hotel, where local women draped in jewel-toned saris crisscross the lobby on the way to a special occasion, Varq’s sleek contemporary decor is your first clue that this is no ordinary Indian restaurant. The subcontinent’s spices and flavors are reimagined with such finesse that the vegetarian dishes alone would blow away the most dedicated carnivore. Fried spinach leaves are covered in beaten gold; spiced Varqui crab rests on filo pastry towers; sugarcane chicken kebab comes in a shot glass. Cultural riches and splendor meet futurist creativity here; it’s like an arranged match made in foodie heaven. The Taj Mahal Hotel, Taj Mansingh Hotel Rd.; 91-11/6656-6162; tajhotels.com. NEW YORK From Manhattan to Brooklyn, the ultimate dining experiences involve chef’s tables, prixfixe tasting menus and celebrity cooks. Ducasse alum. He has not only perfected Le Bilboquet classics like the Cajun chicken but also does a roster of daily specials that show cases of his individual style. (Ask your waiter to list them; service can be spotty and he might gloss over it.) Snobby? To be sure, but so deserving of its superiority complex. 20 E. 60th St.; 212-751-3036; lebilboquetny.com. Barbuto Brushstroke Flanked by glass garage doors that swivel open in summer, Barbuto is the consummate West Village restaurant: a star-studded crowd, boisterous brunches and dishes with rustic Italian influences that feel as fresh and airy as the restaurant’s surroundings. The real find here is the Chef’s Table, which needs to be reserved well in advance and sits a solid gathering of your closest friends. Plunked right in the middle of the action, diners are treated to an ever-changing menu of seasonal bites from a doting staff who whiz by while manning the vegetable station and wood-burning oven. 775 Washington St.; 212-924-9700; barbutonyc.com. You wouldn’t expect a Yankee chef in New York City to match the outstanding kaiseki on offer in Japan, but somehow David Bouley manages to pull it off. Brushstroke is the result of more than a decade of planning between the chef and the mastermind behind the Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka; Bouley and Tsujisan wanted a restaurant that could showcase the talents of the school’s graduates while adhering to the performance-art and healthyeating ethos of the traditional kaiseki. Now the wood-lined room and vaulted ceilings play host to TriBeCa locals and food pilgrims, who venture downtown for an ever-changing menu that always features sashimi, rice, chawan mushi (an egg custard dish) and whatever is fresh from the farmers’ markets that day. 30 Hudson St.; 212-791-3771; davidbouley.com. Le Bernardin When Maguy Le Coze and her brother Gilbert moved from their native Brittany to open a modest fish bistro on the Left Bank of Paris in 1972, they had little experience and less money. But they had one fierce ideal—that the creatures of the sea demanded respect. Each one had an identity, a self, which must be preserved when it was prepared to be eaten. Parisians were enraptured by the purity of Le Bernardin. The Le Cozes brought their ideal to New York in 1986 on a grand scale. Gilbert died in 1994, but Maguy and chef Eric Ripert carry on his vision. 155 W. 51st St.; 212-554-1515; le-bernardin.com. Le Bilboquet Philippe Delgrange is the palm to grease if you want a spot at Le Bilboquet—lately the only address for the power set uptown. You can try, but if you’re even lucky enough to get a human on the line, chances are there won’t be much in the way of openings. (Insider tip: Stop by in person at 11:30 or 3:30, before or after the lunch rush, and ask Philippe nicely for a table.) If you do have the option to choose, the place to be is in the front of the house; the area is reminiscent of Le Bilboquet’s original location, on East 63rd Street, where it catered to the pearl-and-sweater set for 27 years (but, sadly, closed in 2012). Newly relocated a few blocks down, the restaurant also has a new chef in Julien Jouhannaud, a longtime Alain Daniel One serious eater’s favorite dish in the world, lièvre à la royale—a spectacular construction of European wild hare, foie gras, boletus mushrooms, truffles and a sauce based on the hare’s blood—is essentially impossible to find anymore anywhere, even in the few remaining palace restaurants of France. The labor and precision required are beyond the reach of a contemporary kitchen, relics of the age of Escoffier. But when that foodie wanted to treat a dear friend to the most memorable meal of his life, he asked Daniel Boulud if it might, just might be possible. It was. Insiders also know about the private Bellecour dining room, where a sommelier will take up to 90 diners through a multicourse dinner and all its requisite pairings. 60 E. 65th St.; 212-288-0033; danielnyc.com. Eleven Madison Park Young chefs clamor to intern here; peer into the kitchen, in fact, and you’ll see more staff than patrons, placing clean, contemporary food on extra-large plates. New York’s finest outpost of up-to-the-minute offerings is part theater, part gastronomy and always impressive. It put the neighborhood on the map (Eataly and A Voce came after its opening, way back in 1998) and is still the preferred downtown power lunch for media and the creative class. And B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE bankers. And mothers out for refined meals with their daughters. And out-of-towners. Its vaulted ceilings (the linen-covered tables are set on the ground floor of the former Met Life Building) and broad windows lend an only–in–New York attitude, and the menu, unencumbered by choice, leaves little room for error. Just turn up on time, have the bartender concoct something of his choosing off-menu and let platter after platter of New York produce (sturgeon, razor clams, rib-eye) arrive at your table in procession, one more simple yet provocative than the next. 11 Madison Ave.; 212-889-0905; elevenmadisonpark.com. Jean-Georges “Greatness” in restaurant food still too often comes freighted with a certain ponderousness—diners weighing each taste with solemn gravity. Jean-Georges is undeniably among the great restaurants of the world, but it achieves its dazzle with lightness, wit and gaiety. The room is at its most beautiful at lunchtime, with the shifting light of Central Park flooding in through the walls of glass (and the prix fixe is but $38 in the adjacent, equally as good Nougatine). The food is daring but always graceful, as in the yellowfin tuna ribbons with avocado and spicy radish in a ginger marinade. 1 Central Park West; 212-299-3900; jean-georgesrestaurant.com. The Lambs Club Restaurateur and Iron Chef Geoffrey Zakarian began his career at the side of a master, Daniel Boulud, when both worked in the original kitchen at Le Cirque. Since then Zakarian has gone on to fame and glory and so many stars we can’t keep track of them all. There was his time at the Royalton on West 44th Street, and who can forget Town and later, Country. His restaurant of the moment is The Lambs Club on West 44th between Sixth Avenue and Broadway. Of course, dinner is a natural— before or after theater—but it’s really The Lambs’ position as the jewel in the midtown lunch crown that has given it star power. One large clubby room, rimmed with red leather banquettes—Vogue’s Anna Wintour holds court in the first of them to the right as one enters—and festooned with celebrity caricatures, harkens back to the grand old days of air-kissing and three-martini lunches. And the food? Sublime—whether it be an appetizer of Richard’s Soup, the Spanish octopus à la plancha or yellowfin tuna tartare or the main lunch offerings like the chicken Cobb salad, Nova Scotia lobster roll or lamb gyro with house-made pita. 132 W. 44th St.; 212-9975262; thelambsclub.com. Maialino NoMad It was a given that this romantic retreat tucked into the ground floor of Gramercy Park Hotel would be a sensation, but chef Nick Anderer has elevated the institution to something more. Or maybe less. Because, although one bite of the skewers of chicken heart or crispy suckling pig face will erase any apprehension about snout-to-tail dining, and restaurateur par excellence Danny Meyer is the moneyman behind the operation, this is also the sort of unpretentious restaurant where hotel guests can pop in for a breakfast of ricotta pancakes or soft scrambled eggs with pecorino; Gramercy denizens stop by for coffee to go; and the three-course lunch is just $35. Dinner is a must here, but come any time for fantastic food and an authentic neighborhood vibe. 2 Lexington Ave.; 212-777-2410; maialinonyc.com. The decor at NoMad’s aptly named Atrium restaurant can feel a bit contentious because the design scheme falls somewhere between swank lobby lounge and velveteen bordello. No one, however, has contradictory opinions about the food. Handcrafted loaves of bread start the meal off right (the ingredients change every day: olive, Parmesan, etc.). The chicken smothered in foie gras and truffle (served for two) is the signature dish, but we prefer the revolving array of white fish, usually accompanied by a farm-fresh green. Whatever you order, don’t skip dessert; the deconstructed sweets look like a kindergartner’s art project but have just the right sweet-to-salty ratio. 1170 Broadway; 212-7961500; thenomadhotel.com. Masa Prix fixe, $450? You read that right. But if you can compare a gustatory experience to a visual one, imagine a gorgeously protracted sunset, with every wash of gold or orange or purple lasting only an instant. When it’s finally over, you know you’ve experienced something exalted—in fact, the best sushi in America—but now it’s vanished, done. Even devotees complain that, while the dishes are exquisite, they are undeniably small. Luckily, the Carnegie Deli is only four blocks away, with an overstuffed pastrami sandwich for a mere $20. 10 Columbus Cir.; 212-8239800; masanyc.com. Per Se Restaurant as theater? As marathon? In any case, prepare to have both your palate and your wallet exhausted. The chef’s tasting menu will set you back around $300. And that’s just the bare-bones version (nine courses or so). Add caviar, $75 more. Add foie gras, $40. Little nip of Wagyu beef, a hundred bucks. But every dish is breathtakingly beautiful, and some are memorably exquisite (plus, service is included). Don’t forget to ask the sommelier to match your dishes—a pairings menu is likely to include not just wines but some outlandish beer, rare sake and perhaps something you’ve never heard of. 10 Columbus Cir.; 212-8239335; perseny.com. ll Posto Accanto Momofuku Ko David Chang was a game-changer when he opened his tiny Momofuku Noodle Bar in 2004, creating the craze for ramen and putting Korean food in the culinary constellation. Today his empire includes a host of exciting restaurants around the world, but the flagship is tiny Ko, his third restaurant, opened in 2008, with just a dozen highly coveted seats (reservations available only online) in a darkly lit space. You sit at a kitchen counter and are served a ten-course meal by the cooks themselves, who are affable enough to take the time to explain the provenance of the pork or the pungency of the sauce. Like all the Momofuku restaurants, Ko (meaning “son of”) uses local, seasonal ingredients and changes its menu frequently, based on market availability. If you can score a slot, we promise you’ll be back again (and P.S., lunch is 16 courses and easier to secure). 163 First Ave.; 212-500-0831; momofuku.com. 44 45 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Friends of chef-owner Beatrice Tosti di Valminuta know to ask for The Gricia—an off-menu pasta dish with pecorino, cracked black pepper and, the kicker, guanciale, or cured pork jowl. There’s also the popular (and off-menu) grilled fresh calamari, potatoand-spinach gnocchi with Gorgonzola sauce, hand-cut Bolognese sauce over fresh pasta of your choosing and, for dessert, spicy cantaloupe gelato. In fact, nearly everything about this tiny labor of love feels special, like you were invited into a friend’s home for dinner. As if in keeping with that theme, there are no reservations, and regulars agree that the best spot is at the head of the communal table. (Though really, any free table is a good one.) Come around 7 p.m. for a decent chance at snagging a seat, or roll in on Sunday, when Beatrice’s husband, Julio, will lead you to a table and serve their Italian version of brunch. 190 E. Second St.; 212-228-3562; ilpostoaccantonyc.com. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Sant Ambroeus Soho The first Sant Ambroeus actually dates back to 1930s Milan, where it was the stomping ground of Italy’s intelligentsia. It came to Madison Avenue, followed by Southampton, then the West Village, and has remained a mainstay for sunglass-clad celebrities, fashion designers, financiers and media types taking meetings in the discreet back area, or local residents dropping in for lunch at the polished-wood bar. Somehow, in fickle New York, its quiet reputation has only grown with age, and a fourth outpost was introduced about a year ago in SoHo. Here owners Gherardo Guarducci and Dimitri Pauli beautifully orchestrate a balance of see-and-be-seen ambiance with traditional Milanese cuisine, like seared octopus and burrata with hazelnuts and figs. Just don’t linger for too long on the leggy blonde at a nearby booth; she already knows you know who she is, and you don’t want to seem impolite. 265 Lafayette St.; 212-966-2770; santambroeus.com. ...MEANWHILE, OVER IN BROOKLYN Blanca of chef César Ramírez; the dishes change every night, and you’ll be served 20 or so small plates of seafood in succession at his discretion. 200 Schermerhorn St.; 718-243-0050; brooklynfare.com. Peter Luger Steak House Walking into Luger’s feels like entering an old club—a gentlemen’s club, to be sure, full of Wall Street wallets and gallons of testosterone. The meat-laden menu that the bow-tie-clad waiter will hand you does nothing to erase the mirage. Of course, there is salmon and sole, but you’re a fool to come all the way across the Williamsburg Bridge for anything other than the dry-aged porterhouse for two (or three, or four). Picture gorgeously caramelized steak with a salty crust and an ever-so-slightly gamey-aged flavor. It’s a steak that will redefine the genre for you and, sadly, spoil your palette for all others. Order like the boys do, with a wedge salad topped with bacon and blue cheese; end the meal like their girlfriends and wives do, with a dessert piled high with housemade whipped cream. 178 Broadway; 718-387-7400; peterluger.com. Everybody loves Roberta’s, a Brooklyn pizza phenomenon, but most haven’t even heard about Blanca, the secret restaurant housed in the little stainless-steel kitchen building out back. Denim-clad pizza eaters watch with puzzlement as well-heeled travelers from Manhattan scuttle past, through the garden surrounded by shipping crates and tents, to sit at a counter for just 12. There they watch as chef Carlo Mirarchi produces a mad-scientist prix-fixe meal in a buzzy atmosphere (it was once a Bushwick auto-body shop), in course after course after course. He’s no pushover, however: There are only two seatings and no special requests, no matter how famous or allergy-ridden you are. Defer to his whim and you’re rewarded with 27 tiny plates that might include sea urchin cooked in a crab shell and one transcendent raviolo stuffed with sausage. 261 Moore St.; 347-799-2807; blancanyc.com. Talde Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare Few New Yorkers wander out to DUMBO for dinner, much less to Vinegar Hill, its lessdeveloped neighbor to the north, surrounded on its other sides by an industrial stretch of the East River, the Navy Yard and the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. But when word got out about this place, the foodie flocking began. Now devotees fill the sidewalk with talk of seasonal American comfort food, especially the brined, butter-basted red wattle country pork chop, which comes (if you’re lucky and it’s wintertime) with seriously rich sides like cheddar grits. The other must-order dish on every- This teeny tiny spot started out as a few stools alongside an upscale market and quickly became the most exclusive dining establishment in the borough, and the only one with three Michelin stars. It’s on an unassuming block of Boerum Hill on the edge of still-gentrifying downtown Brooklyn, but you’ll find it easily by the town cars that line up every night. Just don’t think you can study the menu in advance, like you would with other restaurants of this caliber. Instead, put yourself in the hands Dale Talde, a Top Chef alum most famous for his temper, makes good on his TV notoriety with a neighborhood hangout filled with playful takes on Asian fare. Start with the pork-andchive-filled pretzel dumplings with spicy tahini or the flavorsome Kung Pao chicken wings, followed by the house specialty: a truly elegant take on hot and spicy Korean-style fried chicken that comes with a cool kimchi spiked yogurt sauce. Better yet, come at brunch and have your Korean fried chicken served over waffles, or order the Breakfast Ramen: buttered-toast-flavored broth (yes, really) studded with honey-glazed bacon and topped with a soft-boiled egg. 369 Seventh Ave.; 347-916-0031; taldebrooklyn.com. Vinegar Hill House B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE one’s list: the cast-iron-pan-seared chicken glazed, appropriately, with a tangy sherry wine vinegar sauce. 72 Hudson Ave.; 718-522-1018; vinegarhillhouse.com. OTTAWA Atelier Chef Marc Lepine’s Atelier has become the veritable Meryl Streep of Canadian cooking awards ever since it opened in 2008: It’s earned the Canadian Culinary Championship; its wine expert won Ontario’s top sommelier award; and it’s placed twice on the country’s top-five restaurant list since it opened. Lepine’s kitchen is a laboratory, of sorts, with nary an oven in sight: It’s all about molecular gastronomy, with an unwavering dedication to fresh local bites and artistic presentation. The 12-course set menu changes frequently and will play with your conventional conceptions of cuisine, but Lepine doesn’t take it all too seriously—some of his dishes have been named Yolko Uno and The Codfather. 540 Rochester St.; 613-321-3537; atelierrestaurant.ca. PARIS Small, out-of-the-way boîtes in outlying arrondissements are taking this city’s food scene to new levels of French fare. L’Astrance Getting a table at chef Pascal Barbot’s restaurant on a cobbled side street in the 16th Arrondissement takes persistence, but we promise it’s worth it. That’s because Barbot’s style is brilliantly witty and deeply imaginative, approaching French haute cuisine in a very 21st-century, unshowy manner. Layered foie gras with raw button mushrooms and hazelnut oil and lemon confit, for example, is a beautiful display, but simple nonetheless; his hollowed-out eggshell cups filled with jasmine-infused eggnog is a roundabout take on a French fine-dining classic. There’s no menu as such; just decide on the number of courses and let the chef work his wonders. 4 Rue Beethoven, 16th arr.; 33-1/40-50-84-40; astrancerestaurant.com. Le Cherche Midi This packed-out Left Bank trattoria is where multistarred chefs, including Eric Fréchon (of Le Bristol Hotel), Thierry Marx (of the Mandarin Oriental), Christian Constant (of Le Violin d’Ingres) and Yannick Alléno (of Le Pavillon Ledoyen), come to dine when they’re off-duty. They’re not alone: Laetitia Casta, Scarlett Johansson and Isabelle Adjani are also fans of the restaurant’s homemade pasta and market-driven menu. Specialties include spaghetti alla bottarga, fettucine al tartufo, artisanally made cured meats such as mortadella with truffles and the bufflone mozzarella, which is made twice weekly in Italy and flown to Paris the next morning. Don’t expect pizza— there is none. 22 Rue du Cherche-Midi, 6th arr.; 33-1/45-48-27-44; lecherchemidi.fr. American wife. Now he’s back—with a zen, blond-wood duplex restaurant of his very own that opened in December 2013 on a side street on the Left Bank. And he’s better than ever. Spectacularly creative and hugely experienced—he’s cooked with everyone from Alain Passard in Paris to Andoni Luis Aduriz of Mugaritz in Spain—Toutain has a style that seesaws between a bucolic love of fruits and vegetables and the jaw-dropping thrill of sensually seditious mixtures of new tastes and textures, like seared duck foie gras in baked-potato bouillon with black truffles. 29 Rue Surcouf, 7th arr.; 33-1/45-50-11-10; davidtoutain.com. Chez Georges You don’t get more Parisian than Chez Georges—the quintessential bistro with whiteaproned waitresses, a daily menu scrawled in lilac ink and shared bowls of rillettes, smoked herring and champignons à la grecques. You’ll find grandes dames clad in vintage Chanel picking at plates of turbot grille swathed in sauce béarnaise sitting beside road sweepers making light work of steak au poivre. People worry that culinary standards are dropping in Paris. But lunch or dinner at Chez Georges will restore your faith in French regional cooking. 1 Rue du Mail; 33-1/42-60-07-11. Le Cigale Récamier Le Duc Don’t be misled by the breezy, slightly dated yachtsman’s decor. For close to half a century, Le Duc has steered clear of the trends in favor of quietly cultivating a reputation as a prestigious port of call for high-flying seafood lovers. Parisian powerbrokers, politicians, well-heeled locals and anyone else who’s fastidious about seafood and shellfish come here for ultrafresh, locally sourced and impeccably prepared dishes, from carpaccios and tartares (the scallop version is worth a detour alone) to moules marnières, turbot and langoustine royale. 243 Bd. Raspail, 14th arr.; 33-1/43-20-96-30. The soufflés are light as air; the clientele is the crème de la crème: Le Cigale Récamier was a Left Bank haunt for Le Tout-Paris well before Michelle Obama brought her daughters and mother here for lunch (Laura Bush was a loyal fan, too). Located beside a little garden on a dead-end street a block from Le Bon Marché department store, this familyrun restaurant serves up perfect renditions of soufflés but also excels in unexpected alternatives such as scallop and ginger, or carrot à l’orange. Its off-menu specialty, discretion, has earned Le Cigale the gratitude of the famous, powerful and adulterous; disrupt anyone else’s meal and you’re blacklisted for life. The best tables are on the veranda; of these, table 100 is reserved for ultra-elite, from heads of state to movie icons. 4 Rue Récamier, 7th arr.; 33-1/45-48-86-58. Ferdi David Toutain La Fontaine de Mars After dazzling Paris with contemporary French cooking at the cramped railroadcar-sized L’Agapé Substance restaurant in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, young chef David Toutain, 32, astonished everyone by bolting off on a yearlong round-the-world tasting trip in December 2012 with his Vietnamese This quaint little bistro with wicker chairs and checkered tablecloths was a neighborhood favorite for a century before the Obamas’ visit catapulted it into the spotlight and made it harder to score a table. No matter: The faithful keep coming, and they don’t seem to mind being surrounded by English-speaking clients Don’t even try to get a table here during Fashion Week; this pocket-sized restaurant is beyond trendy. And no wonder: The Venezuelan chef, Alicia Fontanier, is the sister of fashion doyenne Maria Luisa Poumaillou, and although she is entirely self-taught, many believe she serves up the best burger in Paris (she also gets high marks for her ceviche and empanadas). Her husband, Jacques, who runs the front of the house and mans the bar, has developed a reputation for his mojitos and a house cocktail dubbed Le Pompadour (with wild strawberries and vodka). A secondhandchic decor and warm ambiance keep a highwattage international crowd coming back for dinner, the only meal served. 32 Rue du Mont Thabor, 1st arr.; 33-1/42-60-82-52. 46 47 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 (if you seek quiet, reserve upstairs). Run by the personable patronne Christiane, the restaurant specializes mainly in southwestern comfort dishes such as magret de canard, foie gras and cassoulet, and excellent wines, predominantly from Bordeaux. There are some fish dishes, too, but it’s better to go ahead and indulge. 129 Rue St. Dominique, 7th. arr.; 33-1/47-05-4644; fontainedemars.com. Kunitoraya 2 This comparatively recent entry on the Paris gourmet scene is considered by many to be the best Japanese restaurant in the French capital (some contend it’s the best in Europe). Fashionable yet laid-back, it occupies a white-tiled, turn-of-the-century-style bistro near the Palais Royal and specializes in housemade udon. Chef-owner Masafumi Nomoto has a stellar reputation for surprising even jaded gastronomes, whether it’s with his heavenly noodles, unbelievably light tempura and bonito tataki or more recherché dishes such as poached oysters with caviar and grilled scallops with algae butter and truffles. A newer, family-style cantina called Kunitoraya 1, just down the street, is popular among trendsetters. 5 Rue Villedo, 1st. arr.; 33-1/4703-07-74; kunitoraya.com. Septime Most of the heat in the Parisian food scene is emanating from the up-and-coming doubledigit arrondissements on the east side of town, and first among these is Septime (even Beyoncé and Jay-Z made the trek). A must-get table from the minute it opened two years ago, the restaurant takes its name from a character played by the beloved late comic actor Louis de Funès. Its owner, chef Bertrand Grébaut, delivers on that promise of good humor with highly inventive, generous market-driven dishes: If they’re on the menu, don’t miss the line-caught tuna and razor clams. The decor is pleasingly pared-back—think industrial meets rustic Scandinavian—and the atmosphere relaxed so that the focus is squarely on what’s on your plate. The $75 tasting menu is one of the best deals in town, and reservations are de rigueur. 80 Rue de Charonne, 11th arr.; 33-1/4367-38-29; septime-charonne.fr. Le Stresa Think of it as Paris’s answer to Harry’s Bar in Venice: Favored by the media, artistic, political and cinema elite, this velvet-banquette-lined Italian joint has remained virtually unchanged since opening in 1951. Owned and run by the six Faiola brothers, the place owes its B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE renown to regulars including Alain Delon and Jean-Paul Belmondo, each of whom received a signature pasta dish in their honor (the Trenette and a spaghetti with a little kick, respectively). The youngest Faiola, Marco, specializes in market-driven fare and is particularly prized for his way with white truffles from Alba (from now through Christmas). 7 Rue Chambiges, 8th arr.; 33-1/47-23-51-62; lestresa.com. Le 21 If you didn’t know what to look for, you’d walk right by this unprepossessing black façade in Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Prized by highvisibility habitués such as designers Marc Newson and Victoire de Castellane, Le 21 has a private-club vibe that makes it a go-to for discreetly chic dinners among friends. Chef Paul Minchelli, the man credited with teaching the French to love raw fish back in the ’70s, offers up outstanding seafood and a menu that varies depending on the day’s catch. When pressed, owner-sommelier Didier Granier cites the line-caught meagre with tomatoes and basil as the menu’s star, but there are plenty who rave about the “handmade” (deboned and marinated) herring, spicy squid and housesmoked salmon. Save room for the baba au rhum for dessert. 21 Rue Mazarine, 6th arr.; 33-1/46-33-76-90. Le Voltaire A relic of a bygone era, the chic and diminutive Le Voltaire reliably draws the city’s top tastemakers (Yves Saint Laurent was a regular). Located in the building where the famous French philosopher breathed his last, this Parisian institution par excellence faces the Seine and remains family-run, so it stands to reason that its clientele returns again and again—despite the steep prices—because they feel like part of the family, too. Famously, the house oeuf mayonnaise has been featured on the menu at its original prewar price (at $1.27, it’s the cheapest starter in town). Other favorites include salmon with béarnaise sauce, perch au beurre blanc, superb steaks with crispy fries, tarte Tatin and a much-noted wine list. 27 quai Voltaire, 7th arr.; 33-1/42-61-17-49. PERTH, AUSTRALIA Print Hall Western Australia’s boom-time mining economy has brought new life to a Perth, previously a corporate ghost town. Government grants lure young entrepreneurs back as gritty industrial spaces and heritage buildings come alive again as reimagined leisure precincts. Print Hall is the canary in the coal mine of Perth’s resurgence, a lavish multitiered venue in the former Newspaper House. This veritable pleasure emporium houses enough bar stools and dining variety to bring patrons back, even from Sydney. The bar is named in honor of Australia’s favorite, rowdiest prime minister, who with true Aussie larrikin spirit gave the nation the day off when Australia won the America’s Cup. Imbibe at Bob’s Bar accordingly. Brookfield Pl., ground fl., 125 St. Georges Terr.; 61-8/6282-0000; printhall.com.au. PHILADELPHIA Serpico David Chang alums are now planting their own flags across the country, but Serpico is the best from the acolytes. In a South Street stunner, former Momofuku Man Friday Peter Serpico, along with partner-restaurateur Stephen Starr, offers Philadelphians a revolutionary—and revelatory—dining experience. The menu is contemporary American with an Asian influence, but Serpico brings a global arsenal of tips, tricks and techniques. If they’re on the menu, try the grilled beef pho sandwich with jalapeños or the deep-fried duck leg with housemade Sriracha, both crispy and juicy and served as sandwiches alongside pickled cucumbers. Ask for a seat at the chef’s counter, overlooking the open kitchen. 604 South St.; 215-925-3001; serpicoonsouth.com. PHUKET, THAILAND Aziamendi Iniala, a villa-only resort located about half an hour north of Phuket in quieter (and more beautiful) Phang Nga, is one of Thailand’s most luxurious and private hotels. The property is designed around collections of contemporary art (check out the Warhols), and its restaurant, Aziamendi, is no exception. Helmed by young Basque chef Eneko Atxa, this ultramodern kitchen turns out what could be called tropical renditions of molecular Basque cuisine: If you’re lucky, the chef might lead you out to the garden, where bonsai trees are laden with artfully placed cherry tomatoes (guests are encouraged to pluck them off and pop them in their mouths). You can watch truffled eggs being made in the kitchen, then served on tiny silver spoons, and who could forget the deliciously strange foie gras encrusted with ash or the mango fettucine served with salted chocolate? 40/41 Moo 6 Baan Natai T. Khokkloi A. Takuathung; 66-093/779-2312; aziamendi.com. 48 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 POCANTICO HILLS, NEW YORK Blue Hill at Stone Barns King of the locavores Dan Barber raises most everything he serves in the surrounding notfor-profit Stone Barns Center (everything else comes from more than 40 nearby farms)—and fashions individual meals for each patron. Scientists, farmers, breeders and Ph.D. students all get in on the action to raise heritage breeds and divine the most flavorsome carrot possible. Repeat guests know to arrive early to check out the farm, whether that means taking a formal tour, ambling through the fields and woods or just having a cocktail on the terrace if the weather is right. Afterward, diners aren’t given a menu but instead are led through a series of courses that graze and wander from the Rockefeller Estate’s dairy shed to the kitchen, outdoors and, finally, the barn. In 30 courses, chef Barber attempts to tell the story of the earth through its food. 630 Bedford Rd.; 914-366-9600; bluehillfarm.com. POSITANO, ITALY Da Adolfo Da Adolfo, a short boat trip from Positano’s harbor (look for the free taxi boat with the big red wooden fish atop the mast), is a classic: Local families indulge in vast bowls of tomatospiked zuppa di cozze. Billionaires, their gin palaces parked out to sea, tuck into grilled mozzarella served on lemon leaves. And sunhoneyed youth, from New York, London, Rome and Paris, sip local wine and while away a blissful afternoon. Once the eating’s done, just find a warm rock, lie in the sun and relax. Via Laurito, 40; 39-089/875-022; daadolfo.com. PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA Mosaic at the Orient Part of the Kasbah-like Orient Boutique Hotel on a wildlife conservancy outside Pretoria, close to Johannesburg, Mosaic is a hit with the diplo and business set. The first thing you notice is the decor—stained glass windows, lavish oil paintings, plush booth seating—in the Art Nouveau look of early 1900s Paris, a style chef Chantel Dartnall fell in love with while working in Michelin-starred restaurants in Europe. Next is the food. SA’s 2009 chef of the year, Dartnall uses earthy seasonal local ingredients to create a rich, bold, cosmopolitan cuisine: sautéed forest mushrooms with black truffle foam; quail tempura in tamarind sauce, and a French “steak tartare” hamburger. Orient Boutique Hotel, Elandsfontein, Crocodile River Valley; 27-12/371-2902; restaurantmosaic.com. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Aponiente Even in a country well-known for its imaginative chefs, Angel León’s inventiveness stands out. Aponiente may be located in an uninspiring coastal town not far from Spain’s sherry-making center, but the things that León does there with seafood are nothing short of wondrous. This, after all, is the man who figured out a way to thicken sauces using the gel in fish eyeballs, who created a tasting menu that reimagined the marine food chain and who devised a method to cultivate plankton—the better to serve it, often in an unadorned spoonful, a sensation not like mainlining the sea. Yet the true wizardry lies in his ability to make all these experiments taste fantastically good, even while they function as subtle lessons in sustaining the world’s oceans. Calle Puerto Escondido, 6; 34-956/851-870; aponiente.com. QUEBEC CITY of the Riga Dome Cathedral and the Daugava River. Dome Hotel & Spa, 4 Miesnieku St.; 371/6755-9884; zivjurestorans.lv. RIGA, LATVIA Vincents Rumor has it that when Queen Elizabeth II arrived in the Baltic, she ate lunch at Vincents and then promptly refused to eat anywhere else during the rest of her stay. And the royal seal of approval is definitely warranted; Vincents is quite literally the restaurant that started Riga’s haute cuisine movement after the dark ages of Soviet pork and potatoes (its URL even means “the restaurant”). Chef Martins Ritins championed the farm-totable movement long before the chefs in the neighboring Nordic countries were collecting their global accolades, and one day—when Michelin discovers Latvia—Vincents will undoubtedly be awarded a constellation of stars. 19 Elizabetes Iela; 37-1/6733-2830; restorans.lv. Aux Anciens Canadiens If there is one restaurant that deserves to be called wild, then it’s this Québec City favorite that’s been serving game dishes with a French twist since 1966; bison cooked in a creamy blueberry-wine sauce is but one of the dazzling entrées that will awe game lovers. Just a short walk from the iconic Fairmont Le Château Frontenac Hotel, the restaurant is hard to overlook: Keep an eye out for a diminutive white house with red trim built in 1675. Inside is rustic decor with wainscoting and recessed cupboards that retain the lovingly worn look of those early days. 34 Rue Saint-Louis; 418-692-1627; auxancienscanadiens.qc.ca. RIGA, LATVIA Le Dome Chef Māris Astičs is an experienced hunter, and his passion for paleo is revealed in his seasonal menus: wild boar and just-caught rabbit often take center stage in the best dishes, enhanced by freshly delivered chanterelles, wild strawberries, cloudberries and juniper. Latvian eel, plaice, sturgeon, sander and other catches of the day regularly arrive from Latvian lakes and rivers and the Baltic Sea, where their fresh flavors are enhanced by the environment—a 16th-century private home as the setting, live piano (on weekends) as the soundtrack and photographs of fishermen fighting the cold, stormy waters of the Northern sea as a backdrop. It’s moody, to be sure, but for a more delicate pas de deux, take a seat on the rooftop terrace during summer months and soak up magnificent views RIO DE JANEIRO The best eateries here are found off the beaten path with commanding views that induce long, leisurely meals. laid-back tapas bar aimed at shoppers on the go, and Mira!, a spry start-up in art collector Ruth Schmidheiny’s Casa Daros Rio museum. Ciasca’s original, Miam Miam, combines cool attitude and colorful vintage decor with warm service. Shaven-headed, tattooed waitstaff sashay amid Formica-topped tables and unapologetic quantities of chrome, vinyl and acrylic, serving grilled grouper with sweet potato and cauliflower and prawns matched with hearts of pupunha (peach palm). Rua General Góes Monteiro 34, Botafogo; 5521/2244-0125; miammiam.com.br. Restaurante Aprazível For an oceanfront city, it’s odd that Rio’s hippest district should be a hilly enclave some distance from the sea. Artists’ quarter Santa Teresa is filled with quaint, serpentine streets and imposing—if slightly shabby—mansions. Ana Castilho was a pioneer when she opened Aprazível in 1997 in her former home. Her jackfruit and mango trees now tower over a labyrinth of patios, terraces and verandas in what were once the house gardens. Castilho favors artful takes on recipes from the state of Minas Gerais: Goat is served with yam and tropical sea fish with cashew-and-coconut rice and baked plantain. Tables on the Barroco terrace afford commanding views of glittering Guanabara Bay far below. Rua Aprazível 62, Santa Teresa; 55-21/2508-9174; aprazivel.com.br. Roberta Sudbrack Espírito Santa Natacha Fink’s creative take on Amazonian cuisine appears as exotic to Brazilians as to most foreigners. Fink has made the tambaqui river fish her stock-in-trade, promoting the lesser-known namorado fish as a worthy alternative. Conservative diners are offered meat-based family favorites such as feijoada de rolo (rice rolls filled with black beans and pork), here given a piquant touch, but Fink returns to the Amazon for desserts based on cupuaçu, a fruit so closely resembling cacao that mothers feed it to their children as if it were chocolate. Shaded by a soaring Tahitian apple tree, the rear terrace overhangs a steep hillside, providing an excellent spot to while away a sultry Rio afternoon. Rua Almirante Alexandrino 264, Santa Teresa; 55-21/25074840; espiritosanta.com.br. Miam Miam Le Cordon Bleu–trained Roberta Ciasca is fast turning Rio’s bayside Botafogo district into an up-and-coming culinary hot spot. Openings in the past five years include Oui Oui, a 50 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Incredibly, the self-taught Sudbrack learned to find her way around a kitchen so deftly that she wound up as personal chef to former Brazilian president Fernando Henrique Cardoso. Since shimmying free of public service, Sudbrack now fronts an eponymously named restaurant in the Jardim Botânico district, where she mixes up ingredients and culinary traditions like an alchemist. She cooks what’s fresh and what takes her fancy—on our last visit, that was a deceptively simple slow-cooked lamb with chervil and potatoes. There is little wiggle room between tables on the ground floor; upstairs, there’s less bustle and more space. Av. Lineu de Paula Machado 916, Jardim Botânico; 5521/3874-0139; robertasudbrack.com.br. Rubaiyat A herd of home-bred Brangus—an intriguing bovine mix of Indian Brahman and Aberdeen Angus—lies at the heart of Galician immigrant Belarmino Fernández Iglesias’s success in building an international chophouse chain with outlets in Lima, Madrid and Mexico City. Grazing freely on Mato Grosso do Sul farmland, ALANNA HALE PUERTO DE SANTA MARIA, SPAIN The highly stylized dining room at Saison in San Francisco B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE the cattle yield standout cuts such as picanha (from the rump) and bife de tira (cross-cut short ribs). Rubaiyat’s Rio outlet, set above the racetrack at the city’s Jockey Club, comes with a swoon-inducing view of the outstretched arms of Heitor da Silva Costa’s Art Deco statue of Christ the Redeemer on Mount Corcovado. Rua Jardim Botânico 971, Jardim Botânico; 55-21/3204-9999; rubaiyat.com.br. ROME Salumeria Roscioli Many a favorite pasta preparation—carbonara, amatriciana, cacio e pepe—are Roman in origin, and nobody does them better than this combination food shop, wine store and restaurant near Rome’s celebrated Campo de’ Fiori. Brothers Alessandro and Pierluigi Roscioli converted their family’s grocery store into an instant culinary institution about a dozen years ago, placing emphasis not just on classic local fare but on the integrity of their raw materials. (“Before cooking” is their motto—meaning that that’s where the quality starts.) The breads, produced in the family bakery, which dates back to the 1830s, are definitely worth the carbs. Via dei Giubbonari 21/22; 39-06/6875287; salumeriaroscioli.com. ROSES, SPAIN Rafa’s This legendary hole-in-the-wall in the Costa Brava resort town of Roses is the simplest restaurant imaginable: There’s a woman waiting on tables and a man—Rafael Cantero, known to everyone as Rafa—behind the counter. He is armed with only a griddle, a spatula and a pair of tongs; his larder consists of olive oil and salt. A refrigerated case is filled with maybe 15 kinds of seafood, so fresh some of it is still moving. You make your choice, Rafa sears it on the griddle and you eat the best, most vividly flavorful fish and shellfish of your life. When he can’t get the quality of seafood he wants, or when he runs out of the best of it, Rafa closes up shop. Carrer de Sant Sebastià 56, Roses; 34-972/25-40-03. ST. HELENA, NAPA, CALIFORNIA The Restaurant at Meadowood Chef Christopher Kostow is undoubtedly a wunderkind, even though his talents are often overshadowed by the various Thomas Keller enterprises nearby (which are much harder to get into). Many say this is the French Laundry for the 21st century, a wine-country resort restaurant with no menu, no real rules about where to sit (bar, rotunda, private dining room, chef’s counter) and no absentee chef with a rarified title off building an empire. The dialogue between guest and restaurant begins the moment a reservation (essential) is made. Bookers will ask your likes, dislikes, allergies and aversions, as well as the type of experience you wish to have. After that, a specific menu is created by the chef himself for each table. For planning ahead, you might get the honor of sampling potatoes cooked in beeswax with assorted sorrel, or a whole meal designed for your pescatarian partner. Of course, the best table is the chef’s counter in the kitchen, where Kostow and his team often serve the dishes to you themselves and explain the flavors exploding on your tongue. After dinner, the 44 guests often repair to the rotunda for digestifs, play chess and hang out until someone says, “Last call.” 900 Meadowood Ln.; 707-967-1205; therestaurantatmeadowood.com. ST. PETERSBURG Il Lago dei Cigni Where else would a restaurant exist with the sole purpose of weaving Russian folklore and the tale of the restaurant’s namesake, Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, than on the idyllic setting of Krestovsky Island? Luxurious interiors by Hirsch Bedner Associates and a wine collection of more than 600 bottles (including a 1965 Barbaresco and a Barolo from 1989) attract oil tycoons and Russian oligarchs to this whimsical concept of an Italian restaurant. But the food keeps them coming back: Carpaccio is made from the tentacles of giant squid; Japanese marbled beef is prepared in front of the guests on volcanic rocks of pink salt. Once the music starts playing in the dining rooms and the lights begin to twinkle on the terrace, Swan Lake murmurs to the beat of lively conversation. 21 Krestovsky Prospect; 7-812/602-0707; illago.ru. ST. PETERSBURG Percorso Contemporary Italian to the core, Percorso combines magnificent interiors courtesy of Japan’s Spin Design with serious Italian food. From the drama of the crystal chandeliers to the dark woods and a roaring fire, everything oozes a refined theatricality, a perfect antidote to the gray, snowy weather outside. Guests can choose tables with views onto the kitchen, beside that fire in the Amber room or overlooking St. Isaac’s Cathedral. Once they’re comfortable, the show begins, starting with a 52 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 basketful of artisanal bread accompanied by housemade butter, two types of salt and small dishes of a fruity, peppery olive oil for dipping. Next comes fresh seafood, burrata, delicate meats, handmade pastas and anything else divined from Italy and jazzed up by chef Andrea Accordi—the first chef in Eastern Europe to be awarded a Michelin star. Four Seasons Hotel Lion Palace St. Petersburg, Voznesensky Prospect 1; 7-812/339-8044; fourseasons.com. ST. PETERSBURG PMI Bar Headed by young Russian chef Ivan Berezutskiy, PMI Bar on the Moyka River delivers on (the relatively new idea of) contemporary Russian cuisine. Gourmands from Moscow come for Berezutskiy’s creative tasting menu with precise wine pairings, which has become one of the most exciting dining experiences in Russia. Murmansk crab served with wild herbs and smelt caviar, White Sea mussels with laminaria sticks and elder sorbet with sorrel sauce are only a small part of the gastronomic spectacle, where presentation is no less important than the inherent taste of the local ingredients—in fact, each porcelain plate printed with regional herbs is a collaboration between chef Berezutskiy and renowned Russian artists. Moyka River 7; 7-812/907-0710; pmibar.com. SALTA, ARGENTINA La Casona del Molino In the remote high-altitude valleys of northwest Argentina, Spain’s colonial legacy lives on in the form of well-preserved churches, municipal buildings and rambling adobe ranches such as La Casona del Molino. The former lodge for Bolivia-bound muleteers now houses a restaurant and peña, a free-for-all fiesta of folk music and dance, in which half-drunk gaucho musicians sway and stagger from one courtyard to another. Spicy tamales (beef, chili and corn meal, wrapped in a corn husk), tangy humitas (caked sweet corn) and locro stew, all best eaten with a tannic Malbec from the nearby Cafayate vineyards, make a fine alfresco accompaniment to the coarse country melodies. Luis Burela 1; 54-387/434-2835; facebook.com/lacasonadelmolino. SALTA, ARGENTINA El Manantial del Silencio Indigenous beliefs intermingle with Spanish colonial culture in the Quebrada de Humahuaca, a multihued, 100-mile gorge that B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE slices violently through Argentina’s arid north. Among Purmamarca’s simple adobe houses, far indeed from global concerns, Sergio Latorre made a new home after abandoning a World Bank career and falling in love with a local girl. The life-changing move saw Latorre take over the kitchen at baronial country hotel El Manantial del Silencio, where he turned his mother-in-law’s traditional Quebrada recipes—heavy with goat cheese, maize and prodigious quantities of llama steak—into gastronomic set pieces. Ruta Nacional 52, km. 3.5, Purmamarca; 54-388/490-8080; hotelmanantialdelsilencio.com. La Ciccia Everyone’s tasted great Italian, but somehow Sardinian cuisine—bold, rustic and pungent, with a strong Spanish influence—is still under the radar. And that’s a good thing for fans of La Ciccia, which, though hard to get into, isn’t totally impossible. Devotees scale the streets of Noe Valley to revisit chef Massimiliano Conti’s beloved spaghetti con bottarga (fish roe pasta) and for calamari that is exactly as delicate and tender as nature intended. Ask his wife, Lorella, for recommendations on the wine list, 180 labels strong. 291 30th St.; 415-5508114; laciccia.com. Coi SAN FRANCISCO Remember when this town was the center of the universe back in the ’80s? Well, it’s slowly reclaiming its spot as California’s food capital. Aziza Moroccan cuisine is among the world’s greatest, but the received wisdom is that you cannot get it in a restaurant—even in Morocco. Only private homes, with scowling grannies or the finest family chefs, produce the true thing, and good luck getting invited. Mourad Lahlou doesn’t worry about authenticity, though his olfactory memory is an encyclopedia of his childhood in Marrakech. Rather than struggle, and fail, to re-create what he remembers, he embraces the equally potent scents of northern California. To the two he applies his singular power: imagination. What emerges is not a synthesis but something entirely new. 5800 Geary Blvd.; 415-752-2222; aziza-sf.com. Burma Superstar Burma Superstar has racked up a helluva lot of karma points for its community initiatives (funding schools and animal shelters, to name two). But we come here for the food. The tea leaf salad—an aromatic blend of greens and spices imported from Myanmar—just might change your life. The mishmash of items found in a typical Myanmar garden is one of those don’ttry-this-at-home dishes that’s best served by the superstar waitstaff, who churn the produce right before your eyes. Start with that, then move on to creamy curries that double as the ideal dipping sauce to the naan-like bread. 309 Clement St.; 415-387-2147; burmasuperstar.com. Daniel Patterson goes into a forest in search of a certain lichen. He spends hours cleaning, boiling and dehydrating it. Then he grinds it into powder, encrusts it on a little bitty piece of beef—likely the only meat you’ll get in your 11-course meal. Everything is going to be so zen that you’re really going to have to give it some thought. Coconut mochi bun with kiwi and shiso? California bowl of snow-cone plum ice, black lime, sturgeon caviar, smoked egg yolk, crème fraîche and chives? There are raucous strip joints outside, but here all is calm, triple weird and fantastic. 373 Broadway; 415-393-9000; coirestaurant.com. Gary Danko Intimate, mood-lit and tranquil, with an ultrapolished white-tablecloth service and perfectly plated contemporary California cuisine to match, Gary Danko has long been one of the city’s top picks for special occasions. But few know that you can also sit at the 11-seat bar and order a world-class dinner at the last minute and à la carte (the dining room is multicourse only)—or that there’s a very small private room that’s just right for exclusive meetings, or guests that want to raise decibel levels along with their glasses. Classics reign here, which means the caviar service with buckwheat blini, cheese cart and tableside flambé are musts. (Sorry—there’s no flambé at the bar.) 800 N. Point St.; 415-749-2060; garydanko.com. Keiko à Nob Hill Only in San Francisco would a chef opt to reduce the number of covers to increase the quality of the crop. But such is the case of this Nob Hill izakaya, where, since February, chef Keiko Takahashi offers her 13-pluscourse menu to just 25 diners each night. Takahashi now flies all her fish in fresh from the Tsukiji Market, all her beef is authentic 54 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Wagyu and every diner gets personal attention (though no special requests, please). Fortunately some things never change: The vintage wine collection is still available, with elegantly aged Bordeaux to go with your single-hook-caught baby bonito and wild cherry trout. 1250 Jones St.; 415-829-7141; keikoanobhill.com. Quince Lindsay Tusk has an astonishing eye for Venetian glass, which made Quince one of the prettiest restaurants on earth. Her husband Michael, the chef, has an equally refined palate in the kitchen. The duo launched the restaurant in modest quarters in 2003, and its latest incarnation—not modest—is their moon shot. The menu now offers only two nine-course menus (one is vegetarian), both ever-changing: With exceptions for allergies and absolute distastes, you put yourself in Michael Tusk’s hands and trust that all shall be well. 470 Pacific Ave.; 415-775-8500; quincerestaurant.com. Saison At San Francisco’s most expensive and highly touted restaurant of the moment, the dining room and kitchen have no division, multicourse dinners start at $248 per person and the vibe in the converted warehouse echoes the edgy-yet-refined modern California cooking of Joshua Skenes. A study in culinary creativity, the revolving menu, backed by a mind-boggling, two-volume wine list, is a perpetual parade of bite-sized masterpieces that nod to Skenes’s passion for “fire cooking.” Request a table closest to the kitchen for the best ringside view. Better yet, reserve one of the eight spots for the exclusive, wine-paired test-kitchen dinner, to be escorted to a nearby location for a behind-the-scenes taste of chef Skenes’s latest experiments before they hit the menu. 178 Townsend St.; 415-828-7990; saisonsf.com. State Bird Provisions Believe the hype. The inventive, internationally influenced small plates wheeled around à la dim sum carts are worth the hurdles that must be cleared to get a reservation. And not just because chef couple Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski won a James Beard award immediately after opening. This spot, edging the grittier section of Fillmore Street, embodies San Francisco—casual, unpretentious and diverse right down to the clientele and the fare coming out of the shoebox-sized open kitchen. (If the yuba noodles are offered, don’t miss them.) If you can’t be bothered with reserva- B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO José Enrique The most intriguing example of the revitalization around La Placita market is José Enrique, which has emerged as the city’s most coveted booking. Its location could not be more unassuming: a simple, smallish, ’50s-style bungalow in the heart of the arty barrio of Santurce. Fiery mojitos and rich sangria are sipped on the terrace as guests wait for one of the sturdy wooden tables in the restaurant that bears its chef’s name; they’re set in an airy dining room or on low-lit terraces where waiters present the evening’s menu scrawled on a dry-erase board. The food is ultra-local, with a focus on fresh produce and seafood sourced from the nearby market. While the dishes vary, staples include hearty meat stew paired with rice and tostones, a juicy churrasco with chimichurri sauce or crispy whole-fried fish followed by tembleque—a classic Puerto Rican coconut pudding spiked with crispy biscuits. Arrive early (reservations are not accepted) or dine at José Enrique’s new outpost in the recently debuted El Blok Hotel on the tiny nearby islet of Vieques. 176 Calle Duffaut, Santurce; 787725-3518; joseenriquepr.com. SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO Restaurant 1919 December finally sees the reopening of the Vanderbilt Condado Hotel—a Spanish-revival landmark built by the namesake family back in 1919. Already open for more than a year, however, is the aptly named Restaurant 1919, where local-boy-made-good Juan José Cuevas oversees the formal dining room and power-dining lounge bar. Cuevas spent decades on the mainland—studying at the CIA before training under New York greats like Alain Ducasse at the Essex House, Christian Delouvrier at Lespinasse and Dan Barber at Blue Hill. Now back home, Cuevas has reimagined 1919 as Puerto Rico’s first mostly organic and locally sourced restaurant, where dishes such as duck with pastel de arroz, peppercorn-spiked ricotta ravioli and chayote salad with avocado are comprised of ingredients he personally discovers from small-scale farmers island-wide. Vanderbilt Condado Hotel, 1055 Ashford Ave.; 787-7241919; 1919restaurant.com. SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE, MEXICO SAO PAULO Moxi Enrique Olvera—whose 300-day mole and baby corncobs dusted with powdered ants have helped make his Pujol in Mexico City an international sensation—has gotten lots of press lately for braving New York City with his new Cosme. Before opening that, though, he installed this impeccable dining room at the Hotel Matilda, this colorful art colony’s only contemporary-style lodgings. San Miguel’s large American expatriate community considers Moxi a little too pricey, but food-loving visitors, even those not staying at the Matilda, consider it essential. Try the huitlacoche (corn fungus) enchiladas with guacamole and Oaxacan cheese and you’ll know why. Aldama 53; 52-415/152-1015; moxi.com.mx. SAN SEBASTIAN, SPAIN A Fuego Negro In San Sebastián, gastronomic capital of Spain’s Basque country, tapas—and especially the toothpick-skewered varieties known as pintxos—are about as traditional as food gets. Except at A Fuego Negro (The Black Fire), the city’s hippest tapas bar (with black walls, dim lighting, a clock set to midnight), where the whole concept of these little plates has been reinvented. The results range from Kobe beef sliders in ketchup-flavored buns to a parfait of tomato puree, baby mussels, béchamel foam, pork cracklings and toasted bread crumbs. Tasting menus at $45 and $65, respectively, are the way to go. Calle 31 de Agosto 31; 34-650/13-53-73; afuegonegro.com. SANTIAGO, CHILE Boragó Peers praise Rodolfo Guzmán for artistic compositions, but there’s wariness as well: “Among the best in the world,” says a fellow Santiago chef, “but the guy’s a little nuts.” By his own admission, Guzmán is obsessive. He frets about Chilean soil and its produce, traveling to the farthest reaches of a long, thin country to forage bark, flowers, fungi and moss. Most of his finds are unique to Chile and esoteric in the extreme: berries from high-altitude Andean peaks or seeds from Atacama flowers that seldom bloom. A believer in total dedication, Guzmán crafts some 300 new dishes a year; each is a work of sublime art. Av. Nueva Costanera 3467, Vitacura; 56-2/2953-8893; borago.cl. 56 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 In this sprawling, crowded, business-minded city, it’s difficult to stand out. But three restaurants have made themselves very well known. D.O.M. It’s hard to imagine a more complete metamorphosis. Alex Atala was a tattooed, part-time DJ on a road to nowhere, yet an aimless drift through European backpackers’ hostels illuminated the São Paulo native’s true vocation. From odd jobs in darkened French kitchens, Atala soon catapulted himself to the high end of Brazilian gastronomy. Finding inspiration and new ingredients in the Amazon basin, he’s put his native land’s vast biodiversity to work and has introduced innovative dishes to Brazilian menus: baru nuts, tambaqui river fish and desserts fashioned from bacuri, a yellow fruit favored for its sweet, gummy pulp. Rua Barão de Capanema 549, Jardins; 55-11/3088-0761; domrestaurante.com.br. Epice Chef Alberto Landgraf was born in southern Brazil, went to culinary school in London and apprenticed with Gordon Ramsay and Pierre Gagnaire before ending up in Brazil’s gastronomic capital. The famous name in town is Alex Atala, whose D.O.M. is consistently rated among the world’s best places to eat—but in this stylish restaurant (whose name is French for “spice”), the 33-year-old Landgraf creates a cosmopolitan cuisine very much his own, using everything from pickled melon and Creole celery to foie gras and Angus beef. The long, narrow, warmly lit dining room is always packed with upscale Paulistanos. Rua Haddock Lobo 1002, Jardins; 55-11/3062-0866; epicerestaurante.com.br. Mocotó In the mid-1970s, when José Oliveira de Almeida migrated south to peddle starchy soul food and cachaça in a humble bar outside São Paulo, Vila Medeiros was little more than a pastoral country settlement. Today, the village has succumbed to urban sprawl, yet Almeida’s once-lowly bar now ranks among Brazil’s top eating spots. Blessed with natural culinary spark, José’s son, Rodrigo, retooled the hearty recipes of his father’s native Pernambuco state, turning home-style favorites such as cheese pasties, rice and beans and jerked beef with creamed manioc into delicately balanced, edible gems. Av. Nossa Senhora do Loreto 1100, Vila Medeiros; 55-11/2951-3056; mocoto.com.br. COURTESY THE RESTAURANT AT MEADOWOOD tions, drop by a few hours before you want to eat, put your name on the walk-ins list and grab cocktails on Fillmore. 1529 Fillmore St.; 415-795-1272; statebirdsf.com. A custard made with foraged morels and greens created by chef Christopher Kostow at Meadowood in Napa Valley, California B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Bicena Chef Jenn Louis The executive chef and coowner of Lincoln and Sunshine Tavern, both in Portland, Oregon, takes us on a culinary world tour. ISRAEL Israel’s rich, deep flavors are intense and speak volumes. The best bagel is at Abulafia Bakery in Tel Aviv and the best falafel is on the way to the Dead Sea on the side of the highway. MAINE, USA Lobster dinner, fresh blueberry pie and clam bakes are a part of everyday dining here. My favorite spot for lobster is the Lobster Shack at Two Lights in Cape Elizabeth. ROME I love the story of the Vatican and nobility getting the prime cuts and the rest of the city perfecting the use of offal. But there’s so much more! My go-to pizza is at Pizzarium; fried fish at Dar Filettaro a Santa Barbara; and gelato at Punto Gelato. OAXACA, MEXICO Oaxaca cheeses, mezcal, tamales, breads and moles are a strong and complex tradition. At Itanoní in Colonia Reforma, be sure to try the tetela: a triangular masa pocket filled with delicious things. It’s easy to find chile- and garlicflecked joy all over Seoul, as well as endless barbecue, bibimbap and bulgogi. And there’s no end of highend, kaiseki-style places to choose from, too. But what Bicena does is celebrate the great regional and historic food of Korea, modernizing it without ever losing its soul. The restaurant is slick and comfortably contemporary, and the kitchen highly skilled. And it’s cool without ever being arrogant. The porkback ribs are a classic, as is the redpepper-paste stew. What you get is uncompromising, authentic Korean cooking of the very highest order, all in the most civilized of settings. 2F, 267 Itaewon-ro, Yongsan-gu; 140-893/027-496-795; bicena.com. SHANGHAI On the Bund and beyond, the city’s gastronomy shines on a global scale—from Taiwanese to Spanish to Italian to French. Art Salon Restaurant Located on (comparatively) sleepy Nanchang Lu, this restaurant is loved as much for its decor as its cuisine. It has beautifully worn wooden floors recycled from razed lane houses, as well as a collection of period pieces like antique sewing machines and refrigerators. Owner Xie Chengcheng is also an avid art fan, and beneath the space’s high ceilings and chandeliers are large oil paintings, all for sale. Art Salon serves predominantly Shanghainese food, with some other Chinese favorites thrown in, such as spicy Sichuan dishes and those cunningly camouflaged mock meat dishes. 164 Nanchang Rd., Huangpu district: 86-21/5306-5462. The Commune Social Former Gordon Ramsay protégé Jason Atherton (who was also the first British chef to complete an apprenticeship at the dearly departed El Bulli) serves tapas-sized plates at this narrow two-story space in an unpretentious Jing’an neighborhood. Atherton first came to Shanghai to helm Table No. 1 at the hotel Waterhouse at South Bund, and at the Commune Social he has continued to develop dishes that help redeem Britain’s boiled and battered culinary reputation. Offerings are listed under headings such as Eggs and Grill and include baked smoked bone marrow and braised pork belly. Kim Melvin is in charge of an excellent dessert bar, where the PB&J—peanut ice cream, salted peanut caramel, berries and jam—is a staple for regulars. The restaurant does not take reservations, so come early. 511 Jiangning Rd., Jing’an district; 86-21/6047-7638; communesocial.com. Crystal Jade The heritage is a little confusing, perhaps, but the most famous Cantonese dim sum destination in Shanghai is run by a Singaporean company. There are several locations in the city, but the best of them is the Xintiandi flagship. It’s situated on the second floor of a shopping mall, just a stone’s throw from the beautiful old gray brick shikumen houses. Among the top plates are crispy pork belly, shrimp dumplings, pulled noodles, mango pudding and, yes, xiaolongbao, the Shanghainese soup dumplings done so well by Singaporeans (and Taiwanese—see Din Tai Fung). The decor is Chinese opulence, all red wood and maroon carpets, with a selection of different table types to suit whatever company is joining you. 2nd fl., Bldg. 6-7, Xintiandi South Block, 123 Xingye Rd., Huangpu district; 86-21/63858752; crystaljade.com. Din Tai Fung It would seem like sacrilege to recommend ordering Shanghai’s most iconic dish at a Taiwanese restaurant—had Din Tai Fung not so consistently served up some of the city’s best xiaolongbao. These soup dumplings, each sealed with exactly 18 folds, are traditionally filled with pork or pork and crab meat, but here there’s a longer list of ingredients, including 58 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 black truffle, chicken and goose liver varieties. Great complements to the dumplings are the chopped wild vegetable and bean curd, and the black fungus in vinegar sauce. For an authentic contemporary Shanghai experience—dining in one of the city’s cathedral-esque shopping malls—try Din Tai Fung’s latest Shanghai location at IAPM. IAPM Mall, 3rd fl, 999 Huaihai M. Rd., Xuhui district; 86-21/5466-8191; dintaifung-china.com.cn. El Efante Spanish transplant Willy Trullas Moreno’s celebrated bastion of “sexy cooking” has a long-legged Mediterranean menu featuring almost 100 items, including an epic list of imported cheeses and charcuterie, plus stews, seafood and tapas. Try the Italian burrata salad (mozzarella, rocket, green cherry tomatoes and pine nuts), the huevos fritos with three-year-old jamón ibérico and a croque-monsieur made with fontina, mortadella sausage, truffle and piadina bread shells. Then again, don’t miss the pork belly, quite possibly the best in Shanghai, and the lobster paella. Generous jugs of sangria make an ideal accompaniment. When the weather permits, ask for a table on the patio outside. 20 Donghu Rd., Xuhui district; 86-21/5404-8085; el-efante.com Chef Julien Royer at Jaan in Singapore Franck Bistrot Franck Pecol studied cooking in Marseilles, spent two decades working around the globe and finally settled in China in 2004. He founded his bistro, Franck, in 2007, situating it on Ferguson Lane, a former French Concession lane repurposed as a hub of design stores. (Ferguson Lane is home to the city’s best bakery, Farine, also opened by Pecol, which bakes the restaurant’s bread.) The decor is traditional, with a chalkboard menu and Art Deco armchairs, and the dishes are similarly on point. Appetizers include terrine de campagne, charcuterie and fresh oysters, while signature mains might be the côte de boeuf or the poulet rôti. Dessert is a don’t-miss—get the crème brûlée or a fruit sorbet. 376 Wukang Rd., Xuhui district; 86/1582167-6767; franck.com.cn. COURTESY JAAN AT SWISSÔTEL THE STAMFORD SEOUL B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Mercato Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s stylish Italian restaurant has been a hit ever since it opened, with the housemade ricotta with strawberry jam on sourdough becoming an instant icon. A wood-fired brick oven at the heart of the kitchen sends out pizzas with thin, well-charred crusts with toppings such as garlic, chile and tomato; classic prosciutto and four cheeses; and the impressive broccolini and spicy salami. The sea bass in an almost weightless batter with summer peas is another fabulous choice. The interior, by celebrated local design team Neri & Hu, features a forest of exposed wood and low incandescent lighting. 6th fl., Three on the Bund, 3 Zhongshan Dong Yi Rd., Huangpu district; 86-21/6321-9922; threeonthebund.com. Mr. & Mrs. Bund Buzzing the door of what looks like a chic Shanghai apartment is the way into this fantastic French bistro on the Bund. It’s not chef Paul Pairet’s most elaborate offering— for a high-tech cinematic experience visit Ultraviolet—but it still reveals plenty of surprises, including a spectacular tuna foam served in a tin, a dish that symbolizes Pairet’s philosophy of fantastic food minus the pretension. (The waitstaff here wear Converse sneakers, of course.) The meunière truffle bread may be Pairet’s greatest invention to date, and the long-short rib is as delicious as it is huge. One of the best desserts is the lemon-and-lemon tart, a lemon sorbet served in candied lemon peel. Those in the know turn up for late-night two- and threecourse menus served until 2 a.m., Thursday to Saturday, or make a night of it at the ironically hip bingo nights. 6th fl., 18 Zhongshan Dong Yi Rd., Huangpu district; 86-21/63239898; mmbund.com. Scarpetta Trattoria Californian John Liu didn’t have any experience in restaurants before he opened Scarpetta, but he did have a background as an investment banker that made him an obsessive analyst. He researched 1,400 recipes before creating the menu here, laying it out only after reading a Ph.D. thesis on menu design. The results of his investigations are impressive. Dough goes through a four-stage leavening process before it enters the imported pizza oven, emerging with wide bubbling crusts cooked to a smoky char. Other nice details include fried whitebait in the Caesar salad, and a squid ink aioli and cod roe served with calamari fritti. Best of all is the orecchiette alla Bolognese, ear-shaped pasta topped with Bolognese, surrounding a fat upright bone filled with creamy roast marrow. 33 Mengzi Rd., Huangpu district; 86-21/33768223; scarpetta.cn. Ultraviolet Cooking doesn’t get more meticulous than this. There are just ten seats in Ultraviolet, where a 20-course multi-sensory meal is produced by Paul Pairet. Curating diners’ “psycho taste” for each dish, Pairet makes precisely timed changes to the room’s audio, visuals and even the scent, thanks to four dry-smell projectors concealed in the ceiling. You smell the ocean before the oysters arrive. You see chickens being spit-roasted on the walls and hear the fat crackling before the chicken with foie gras and grapevine smoke is served. The dishes surprise as well as dazzle, and we don’t want to give too much away, other than this: Book months in advance for a chance to travel to an undisclosed location and succumb to Pairet’s whims. Meet at Mr. & Mrs. Bund, 6th fl., 18 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu, near Nanjing Dong Lu, Huangpu district; uvbypp.cc. B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE toque at Siem Reap’s historic Hotel de la Paix before opening Wat Damnak in 2011. Since then, Rivière’s refined take on classic Khmer dishes—a brothy nom ban chok with steamed lobster; a seared beef tenderloin with housemade oyster sauce and wild mango kernels; braised pork with star anise and caramelized palm sugar and fresh coconut tree heart— have lured travelers from their former hotel comfort zones. At barely $35 for a meal, it’s hard to imagine Wat Damnak can turn a profit; nonetheless, there’s enough left over to fund Rivière’s second passion, the Sala Baï Hotel and Restaurant School, which trains young locals in the hospitality and culinary arts. Wat Damnak Market St., Sala Kamreuk Commune; 85-5/77- 347-762; cuisinewatdamnak.com. SINGAPORE A culinary crossroads, Singapore is perhaps best known for its street fare. But its burgeoning fine-dining scene is more than worth the attention. Yong Foo Elite This staggeringly beautiful, Spanish-style villa began as a grand home and later served as the consulates for the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and Vietnam. Colorful silks draped from the building set off its lush, dark wood. In keeping with the historic architecture, Yong Foo Elite is crammed full of furniture and curios from the Qing Dynasty and the early 20th century, before war and communism put the breaks on Shanghai’s roaring hedonism. In the tranquil garden, magnolia trees tower over carp ponds and dinner dishes such as smoked codfish in Qimen black tea and braised duck with mushrooms are delivered with requisite pomp. While the food is well above par, the real star is the building itself, worth a visit even if it’s just for a coffee or a cocktail. 200 Yongfu Rd., Xuhui district; 86-21/5466-2727; yongfooelite.com. SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA Cuisine Wat Damnak First there’s its location: a trio of contemporary-designed dining rooms set in a traditional Khmer home and gardens about five minutes from the city center and the iconic ruins at Angkor Wat. Then there’s Joannès Rivière, who comes from a family of Loire chefs and farmers and made his name as top Gunther’s Gunther Hubrechsen doesn’t get as much glory as the showier chefs in Singapore, which is a travesty because his contemporary European food is superb and his eponymous restaurant makes a refreshing change from all the shopping mall and hotel setups in the Lion City. Instead, Gunther’s is based in a converted shop house on a historic side street. A tiny but cute Belle Époque–styled bar leads to a surprisingly modern dining area. This being Asia, there are three private rooms, crucial for a power meeting; the local tycoons’ favorite is room number 2— the most intimate, and complete with chandelier. Cold angel hair pasta in truffle jus topped with osetra caviar and a wafer-thin apple tart are signatures, but wait until you’re shown the ingredients of the day in raw form—which may include Wagyu beef, lobster, king crab legs and Spanish ham—before deciding. Alternatively, Hubrechsen will create a custom tasting menu for you around an agreed-upon budget; for that, each course promises to be a surprise. 36 Purvis St.; 65-6/338-8955; gunthers.com.sg. Jaan Restaurants with a knockout view usually don’t bode well on the food front, but that’s not the case with Jaan. All the tables at this compact 70th-floor restaurant are cleverly set up to take advantage of the twinkling city lights, but the very best is number 11, peering onto the river, marina and beyond to the Singapore Straits. At dinnertime, it’s tasting-menu-only, with an emphasis on high-end French dishes done up with enough contemporary trickery to elicit lots of admiring “aahs.” From the canapés such as smoked unagi with pickled apple and kombu jelly, to a rosemary-smoked egg that comes to the table shrouded in mist, then is cracked and poured into a dish in front of you, the food is a magical complement to the location. Swissotel The Stamford, 2 Stamford Rd., Level 70; 65-6/837-3322; jaan.com.sg. Sky on 57 You’ll need to contend with an army of tourists in the Marina Bay Sands hotel elevators to reach the 57th floor, but Justin Quek’s cooking is worth the jostling. Local enfant terrible Quek trained with some of the best chefs in France and now mixes Singaporean Chinese flavors with traditional French techniques, and vice versa. A particular triumph is JQ’s beef broth with braised tendon, ribs and slices of Wagyu beef. The chef says it’s inspired by Singaporeans eating beef noodles at hawker stalls at the end of a night out to avoid a hangover the next day. Level 57, Sands Skypark Tower 1; 65-6/688-8888; marinabaysands.com. SONG SAA, CAMBODIA Vista at Song Saa Private Island Resort Song Saa island lies a 35-minute privateboat ride from the port of Sihanoukville, within a string of lost-feeling, barely inhabited islands. It’s a unique ecoresort: No money is used; you pay everything in advance. Chef Neil Wager has been brought in to make your meals— either in your room, on a remote beach or at the Vista restaurant over the water. Wager knows Cambodia and its often-overlooked produce inside and out. Should you come all this way, don’t miss his broth made from the slightly salty coastal green coconuts and served with yellowtail or green peppers from Kampot on the mainland near Kep (it’s excellent with crab). There’s a wood-fired pizza oven on a separate little beach on the island for a change of pace. The resort staff can also set up a beach dinner on one of the uninhabited islands nearby, which takes the surreality to the next level. You can walk around Song Saa in about ten minutes, but the ocean lends the place a feeling of wild immensity that makes its faultless luxury seem less obtrusive. 85-5/236-860-360; songsaa.com. STOCKHOLM SYDNEY The last decade has seen a food revolution in Sweden, with cooking that transcends tradition. Witness the following three restaurants. Two neighborhoods in particular, Potts Point and Bondi, feature a variety of adventurous dishes with equally stimulating scenery. Matbaren The Apollo Matbaren (“the food bar”) is the more casual of Mathias Dahlgren’s two restaurants in the Grand Hôtel, and though it shares an entrance with the high-end Matsalen, the similarities end there. In his bistro, Dahlgren delivers unfussy food with precise and clean flavors. Simple, über-Swedish ingredients like smoked herring make regular appearances in sophisticated dishes, while deceptively simple desserts reveal intense, complex tastes—sea salt and olive oil are woven into a perfectly smooth mandarin orange sorbet, for example. It may be an informal place to eat, but meals here are meant to last. So come early for lunch (the better for snagging a seat) and let the afternoon unfold as it will. Södra Blasieholmshamnen 6; 46-8/679-3584; mathiasdahlgren.com. Australia may be firmly rooted within the Pacific Rim, but Greek immigrants have had as much impact on the nation’s cuisine as newcomers from across Asia. Case in point: Sydney’s The Apollo—a modern take on the taverna in the city’s Potts Point waterfront district. Manned by the Greek Australian duo Jonathan Barthelmess and Sam Christie, with spare concrete and marble interiors by fellow Greek Australian George Livissianis, The Apollo has an expansive à la carte menu that heaves with Hellenic crowd-pleasers—from sumac-spiked grilled calamari to lemony lamb shoulder laden with Greek yogurt. But the restaurant’s best option is its Full Greek menu: Eight courses, from olives to entrées, arrive with theatrical aplomb and range from briny taramasalata and hearty Greek salad to walnut phyllo pastry stuffed with coffee cream. 44 Macleay St.; 61-2/8354-0888; theapollo.com.au. Matsalen Cooking with the best seasonal Swedish and European ingredients, chef Mathias Dahlgren has made his haute cuisine haven into a modern adventure in a city that reveres tradition. There is a five-course menu designed daily to introduce even regulars to new flavor combinations that dazzle and delight, and the select offerings have been quite a success (note the two Michelin stars). Dahlgren isn’t just trying to elevate Swedish cooking at his modestly named “dining room”; in the Ilse Crawford–designed restaurant, he’s giving it a whole new identity. Södra Blasieholmshamnen 6; 46-8/679-3584; mathiasdahlgren.com. Oaxen Krog & Slip Good news for all citizens of Stockholm: Oaxen, the beautiful restaurant located in the southern tip of Sweden’s archipelago, has just reopened in the capital proper in what was once a shipyard. Now with two distinct dining experiences—the “krog” and the “slip”—chef Magnus Ek and his wife, Agneta Green, offer guests everything one could ever want in a restaurant. Have a boisterous night out with modified bar bites and come back the following evening for a New Nordic meal that rivals its Copenhagen brethren in farm-sourced fare with flair. If you’re wavering between meat and fish, go for the seafood—you’re sitting right along the water, after all. Beckholmsvägen 26; 46-8/551-531-05; oaxen.com. 60 61 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 Cho Cho San Bijou neighborhood Potts Point grabs the brass ring with white-hot, minimalist cocoon Cho Cho San, named after Madame Butterfly’s heroine, but with the promise of a much happier ending. Inspired by Japan’s after-dark watering-hole izakayas, where sake and beer become the grace notes to delicious small plates, Asia Australian head chef Nicholas Wong adds a modern spin, frying chicken in rice-bubble batter and reimagining miso in an eggplant dip. His king crab omelet with Japanese curry and soy-glazed Wagyu beef are new power players; young Sydney is flocking to the monastic, cooler-than-thou space that equally shrugs off Japanese clichés. 73 Macleay St.; 61-2/93316601; chochosan.com.au. Fratelli Paradiso The people-watching in Potts Point percolates on Challis Avenue, where Fratelli Paradiso reigns supreme with straightforward yet superb osteria food and old-school career waiters who flit like hummingbird’s wings. With the inky intimacy of dark wood interiors and doors that open out to the street, this Italian haven is the ideal perch for both gossipy inside lunches and peering through oversized shades at the passersby. Don’t worry about being boring when you B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Mr. Moustache When Sydney’s beach culture swings into summer (christened “silly season” locally) no one’s going anywhere; after all, tossing down cocktails is never easier than in a locally designed, billowing caftan. With its hip, edgy take on Mexican street fare, this Bondi bolt-hole is attracting after-work partiers, food bloggers, beach bunnies and the gents who adore them. How can you not love warm corn esquites topped with mayonnaise in a jar, raw tuna tostadas, unusual mezcals, pisco or tequila cocktails and gimmicks (we’re serious: latex gloves for your braised-pork sandwich and, yes, electric-shock therapy), all with an oddly classy twist? 75–79 Hall St.; 61-2/9300-8892; mr-moustache.com.au. courses, best enjoyed over an afternoon watching the hypnotic surf roll in. 270 Campbell Pde.; 61-2/9365-4924; seanspanaroma.com.au. TALLINN, ESTONIA Tchaikovsky Beneath the glass ceiling and an opulent chandelier, diners are serenaded by the sounds of classical music, including pieces by the restaurant’s namesake. It could be surmised that each dish here is like one of Tchaikovsky’s compositions: both inventive and captivating while also traditional in the style of the Russian and French greats. Start with a blini served with whitefish roe, followed by Salmon Ballotine with lobster, cucumber and horseradish cream or roast lamb fillet and lamb neck confit with onion and juniper sauce. Tallinn doesn’t have any Michelin-starred restaurants (yet), but romantic Tchaikovsky is the nearest a visitor can get in this town to experiencing a similar culinary indulgence. Vene 9; 37-2/600-0610; telegraafhotel.com. Quay The sense of occasion begins with Quay’s blue-ribbon setting at The Rocks, the convictbuilt heritage neighborhood and Sydney’s first harborside settlement. Yes, the views over Australia’s iconic jewel, the Sydney Opera House and the Sydney Harbour Bridge, are spectacular. But executive (and celebrity) chef Peter Gilmore is famous for never resting on these laurels. A knowing artifice is coupled with edible botanicals in his world-class creations: The humble chestnut is as prized as a rarified miniature fairy rose. Go on, order the iconic snow egg dessert—after all, you waited six months for a table. And watch Sydney’s hoi polloi celebrate; whether signing a billion-dollar mining contract or celebrating an anniversary. Upper level, Overseas Passenger Terminal 5, Hickson Rd.; 61-2/9251-5600; quay.com.au. Sean’s Panaroma Nothing warms the cockles of a Sydneysider’s heart like harborside and coastal locales— water views are the gold standard here. Sean Moran’s added value: You’ll feel at home in this stunningly located Bondi institution overlooking Australia’s most famous sandy horseshoe. The Bondi beautifuls—models, photographers, surfers and beach-enhanced youth—shake the sand from their hair and float in for Modern Australian dishes crafted with seasonal produce straight off Moran’s farm in the hinterland. Postsurf Sunday lunch with housemade lemonade is a ritual. Juicy roasts, fresh seafood and herb-flecked vegetables add heart and soul to a chef’s degustation with five wine-matched TEL AVIV, ISRAEL Catit Tel Aviv’s restaurant scene may be small, but it’s notoriously fickle. Which makes the decade-long success of Catit all the more remarkable. Now set in its third home—a bijou dining room next to its more casual sister eatery, Mizlala—Catit’s newest incarnation builds upon chef Meir Adoni’s mastery of rigorously sourced local ingredients and global flare. Adoni’s style mixes and mashes genres: The milk-fed veal with cocoa sponge and foie gras parfait has a dash of molecular gastronomy, while the charcoal-grilled lamb with goat yogurt crème and okra chips celebrates Israel’s neo-Levantine cuisine. Three-, four- or five-course menus are on offer; and Catit’s polished, polyglot clientele is, perhaps, the most stylish and sophisticated in town. 57 Nahalat Binyamin; 972-3/510-7001; catit.co.il. TOKYO From the world’s largest fish market to high atop the Park Hyatt Hotel, the Japanese capital offers every kind of dining experience. Den There’s something truly unique going on at Den, one of Tokyo’s current It establishments. Chef Zaiyu Hasegawa is taking the country’s 62 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 coveted kaiseki cuisine and flipping it on its head by reinventing classic dishes and playing with their appearance. In a way, his meals are the ultimate embodiment of the city itself: relentlessly traditional yet always pushing the limits of modernity. Hasegawa very seriously considers the happiness of his customers and endeavors to instill certain bespoke elements throughout the evening, from the use of pottery crafted by local artisans to carving out diners’ initials in fresh-picked vegetables. 2-2-32 Jimbocho; 81-3/32223978; jimbochoden.com. Ginza Enji Ginza is a trove for great food, especially great sushi. But sometimes one wants something a little different. Enji sits on the ground floor of the Juno Building, discreet, luxurious, intimate, a small restaurant arrayed around a fabulous whiskey bar. Many items served here come from the strange, European-style ski resort town of Karuizawa in Nagano, and much of it is smoked. Smoked bacon, smoked cheeses, smoked takuan pickles, smoked fish, all of it served with exquisite precision. With this connection to that small town, Ginza Enji is a prime example of the Japanese fetish for locality and terroir; the menu has an intense coherence and integrity. This is why you have to call ahead for a table and bring a well-stocked wallet. We recommend getting eight or nine small dishes and pairing them with different world-famous Japanese whiskeys. It doesn’t get more artisanal than this, even in Tokyo. Juno Building, 1st fl., 8-7-7 Ginza, Chuo-ku; 81-3-5537-5300; kazenoshiwaza.com/enji. Kozue Ever since Scarlett Johansson’s ingenue with a serious case of ennui karaoke-ed her way across the screen in Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation, the tip-top of the Park Hyatt Tokyo hotel has been known for two things: smoky jazz and really good steaks. Most people, however, don’t realize that an incredible kaiseki restaurant sits a few floors below. Same views, same stark interiors, but at Kozue you’ll be treated to a multicourse menu that samples some of the strongest culinary traditions in Japan. The resident chef Kenichiro Ooe, originally from Yamagata, is an ardent supporter of the rehabilitation of the north and uses certified produce from the Fukushima region for special occasions. 3-7-1-2 Nishi Shinjuku; 81-3/5323-3460; tokyo.park.hyatt.com. MAGNUS SKOGLOF inevitably order the lasagna along with the political, business and fashion glitterati. It’s divine, and the street theater is exciting enough. 12–16 Challis Ave.; 61-2/9357-1744; fratelliparadiso.com. One of chef Mathias Dahlgren’s signature dishes—a smoked-pork bun—at Matbaren in Stockholm B E ST R E STAU R A N T S I N T H E WOR L D • T H E C E N T U R ION GU I DE Kyorakutei Quiet Kyorakutei is hidden down the backstreets of Kagurazaka—it’s practically impossible not to imagine the brilliant geisha robes catching the wind as they swished by so many years ago. The restaurant’s simple concept holds quite true to the common mistranslation of its name: The “music box” is a wee little thing, and when you open it up, there’s a delightful surprise inside. But rather than a tiny dancer and some saccharinesweet music, Kyorakutei presents bowls of delicious soba. Japan’s almighty buckwheat noodle is cooked to perfection here and served both hot and cold with a variety of dipping and marinating sauces. Bring a local friend—English speakers are pretty thin on the ground. 3-6 Kagurazaka; 81-3/3269-3233; kyourakutei.com. Nakamura The Japanese take their online reviews very seriously. Rarely does a discerning diner award an establishment with favor. So when you surf the virtual pages of Tabelog, the country’s version of Yelp, and an establishment soars beyond a four-star rating, it’s worth taking note. This 10-seat restaurant ranks among Tabelog’s best spots for sushi in Tokyo—the tuna, sourced from two locations, and the uni are of particular interest here. The added bonus? Nakamura is nonsmoking, a welcome change from most of the city’s dining establishments, which haven’t caught up to the rest of the world when it comes to indoor cigarette laws. 7-17-16 Roppongi; 81-3/3746-0856. Sushi Dai, Tsukiji Tsukiji Market is one of those tourist attractions that are actually deserving of the hype. The biggest fish market in the world wakes up before the crack of dawn to move thousands of pounds of seafood throughout Japan and beyond. Bidding wars ignite on the loading docks for those precious slices of blubbery tuna; then everyone retreats to the adjacent restaurants for their breakfast of champions: fresher-than-fresh slices of practically flapping fish served omakase (chef’s choice). Search for the green door under wavy noren (curtains), but you’ll likely stumble upon the long lineup first. Don’t leave without trying the chu toro (fatty tuna). 5-2-1 Tsukiji-Shijo; 81-3/3547-6797. Tempura Tsunahachi An address on most travelers’ must-try list, Tsunahachi has two floors that are filled with a welcome mishmash of patrons—mostly Japanese businessmen and gaijin (foreigners) who waft competing plumes of cigarette smoke at one another. Go for the bar seating (there’s plenty of it throughout) and watch as your chef practices the delicate art of tempura with a variety of vegetables and shrimp. Stick to the set menus and pair your order with a frosty local beer. Tsunahachi’s success has spawned a few offshoot locations, but for the full experience, we recommend hitting up the mothership, though at peak eating hours you’ll have to wait in line outside. 3-31-8 Shinjuku; 81-3/3352-1012; tunahachi.co.jp. Chardonnay and mineral-rich Syrah garner awards and accolades in equal measure. Equilibrio, a restaurant at the Valle del Rosario vineyard, is open to the public; we prefer to eat more privately in La Casona, the property’s patrician guesthouse, where chef Matías Bustos is on hand to explain just why he matches giant Chilean scallops with the buttery white and pairs a ginger-marinated duck with Matetic’s star varietal, the Syrah. Fundo El Rosario, Lagunillas; 56-2/2611-1501; matetic.com. VILA NOVA DE GAIA, PORTUGAL The Yeatman Tonki Tonki must be doing something right: 75 years strong and not a single thing has changed on the menu. In fact, it doesn’t look like the decor’s changed either—the wallpaper is gently crinkling, and the wooden seating is undeniably creaky. It’s got all the trappings of a hole-in-the-wall, but the delicate slices of famous tonkatsu have turned the place into more of a meat mecca than a den of iniquity. And there’s another uncanny phenomenon at play beyond the delicious plates of breaded pork: The waitstaff has an incredible ability to memorize exactly who among the throngs of diners is due for the next table, without a pencil or paper to be seen. 1-1-2 Shimo-Meguro; 81-3/3491-9928. UBUD, BALI Naughty Nuri Bali’s enchanting spiritual culture, gentle people and jungle topography all come together in the lush streets of Ubud. You’ll eat, pray and eat some more at Nuri’s streetside tables with her legendary barbecue pork ribs and Javanese home cooking. The martinis? Not so gentle. The assorted expats and intrepid travelers who make Indonesia’s Hindu hideaway home may come for the (excellent) oxtail soup, but they’ll stay to party. And if you’ve come for a life-changing religious experience, Nuri’s BBQ sauce may just be it. Jl. Raya Sangginan; 62-361/977-547; naughtynurisbali.com. VIÑA MATETIC, CASABLANCA VALLEY, CHILE La Casona A decade ago, aficionados scoffed when Matetic Vineyards and other trailblazers began to plant vines near Chile’s Pacific shore. Today, the vineyard’s fresh, fruit-laden 64 BLACK INK FALL/WINTER 2014 The Yeatman is a luxury wine spa in the town where the world’s most famous dessert wine— Port—is aged. The property is owned by the Taylor Fladgate Port house, in fact, and is where the company entertains the international wine-buying community in high style. Happily, the place is also open to anyone else who likes good modern European fare—thus this formal dining room with its blue-chip menu (think lobster carpaccio with razor clams and caviar sauce). The real draw here, though, is—no surprise—the wine, especially the exquisite Portuguese vintages made from grapes with mysterious names (Loureira, Arinto, Fernão Pires…). The charming female wine stewards help diners make sense of it all. Rua do Choupelo 88, Vila Nova de Guia; 35122/013-3100; the-yeatman-hotel.com. Z URICH, SWITZERLAND The Restaurant at the Dolder Grand The views over Zürichsee are enough to inspire awe, not to mention the fairy tale castle, circa 1899, that has been majorly updated by Foster + Partners. But then comes the meal: course after course of meticulously composed set pieces crafted by chef Heiko Nieder, presented in a room so gilded it seems to shimmer. Unlike so much of the clockwork meals one comes to expect in this Swiss town, the Restaurant Dolder Grande bucks tradition to grand effect. A course of tuna comes with cucumber, apple and wasabi granita. Langoustines, those sweet and rich crustaceans, are paired with acidic vinegar-infused strawberries. Finish with a plum and beetroot potpourri drenched in Port wine and lavender, then retreat to the terrace and watch the city sparkle beneath you. Kurhausstrasse 65; 41-44/456-6000; thedoldergrand.com