NYC eats, August 2015.

I’ve got two posts up for Insiders today, one on sustainable breakthroughs so far in 2015 and one on this weekend’s Metropolitan Classic high school tournament.

I had quite a run of food in the city (that’s New York for all you non-New Yorkers; the qualifier simply isn’t required for the rest of us, nor is capitalization) over the weekend, between a pizza pilgrimage, an artisan coffee roaster, and a restaurant crawl with the O.G. Top Chef Harold Dieterle.

Pizza first … I’ve heard for years about Paulie Gee’s, a small pizzeria in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, that’s only open in the evenings and can easily run two-hour waits. They’re considered one of the best pizza joints in the country, including a spot on that 2013 Food and Wine list that I’ve been using as a sort of travel guide. (I’ve now eaten at 25 of the 47 that are still open, including all but one of the NYC entries.) By going solo I was able to get right in and sit at the bar, which had a rather convenient reading light right by my seat. The pizza is thin-crust, cooked in an Italian-built wood-fired oven, with various preset options ranging from the traditional to the bizarre. I went with a mostly traditional option of fresh mozzarella, arugula, and prosciutto, but – and I know I won’t get a good reaction from the crowd with this – the pizza was overcooked. The edges were too charred, and there were small parts of the center of the dough that were burned underneath. I have no complaints with the toppings and it probably would have been outstanding had it come out of the oven as little as 20 seconds sooner. Fortunately for me, they’re planning to open a second location in Hampden near Baltimore, so I’ll get to try them again.

The coffee spot was Blue Bottle, a roaster based in San Francisco with a couple of outlets in the city, and that is some damn good espresso. They offer a number of varietals in pour-overs, but as I was pressed for time both mornings (and particularly desperate for caffeine on the second morning), I went with espresso, which they make with blends rather than single-origins. Their roasts are light (“third-wave”) so you can still taste the flavors of the beans.

Harold Dieterle, the winner of the first season of Top Chef, is a huge Mets fan and reader of my stuff, so we’ve been in touch for a while and trying to get together for a food crawl in Manhattan, which finally happened on Friday night. The first stop was Cata, a tapas place on the Lower East Side where the alcohol consumption began – they specialize in gin and tonics, and I got one with Fever Tree tonic and lavender – and we had a handful of small plates. I’m pretty sure this was the first time I’d had jamón iberico, the Spanish version of prosciutto made from black Iberian pigs, often fed just on acorns. It’s less salty than prosciutto and the meat has a luxurious, buttery character with a distinct nutty flavor. It’s carved to order from a leg that’s sitting on the bar counter and costs $29 for a plate. We tried a handful of other tapas, best of which were the smoked oysters, the patatas bravas (fried potatoes, but not really French fries) served with an aerated aioli, and the marinated anchovy toasts.

Danny Meyer’s restaurant empire continues to grow, as the entrepreneur best known for creating Shake Shack is behind the new place called Untitled at the Whitney Museum. Head chef Michael Anthony (not the guy from Chickenfoot, although that would be cool) has created a vegetable-focused but not vegetarian menu that changes very frequently to reflect whatever’s most in season. We had at least a half-dozen dishes, some of which were gifts from the kitchen (for Harold, not for me), and the standouts included a tomato/melon “sashimi” that highlighted the spectacular tomatoes with just a little salt and I presume olive oil; a plate of grilled pole beans with squid and toasted hazelnuts, presenting a vegetable I rarely see in a way I hadn’t tried before; nectarine “toasts,” again taking a central item from the produce section and making it the runaway star; pork fritters, opulent little balls of shredded pork shoulder just barely breaded and fried, served over a corn relish; and duck sausage with mustard sauce, which turned out to be the second-best duck dish I had on the evening. The only dish I didn’t love was one of their most famous, the smashed cucumbers with black sesame seeds and soba noodles, which ended up lost in the sea of liquid underneath it, a hazard of working with high-quality in-season cukes. The space itself is very cool, with high ceilings and long pendant lights, plus lots of glass looking out on Gansevoort. Chef Anthony came out to chat and is an incredibly nice guy who’s a fairly serious Reds fan.

The last spot, and the most decadent, was Cosme, a Mexican-inspired upscale restaurant that, according to Harold, has one of the best duck dishes in the city: Duck carnitas, a whole braised duck leg served in a cast-iron skillet with thinly sliced onions and radishes, served with blue-corn tortillas, salsa verde, chile de arbol salsa (I tried it; it’s hot), and lime wedges. The duck shreds like smoked pork shoulder, but has a softer, smoother texture, and it stays moist between the braising and the way it’s served under the browned skin. It’s more than enough to share, but it’s also a steep $59. Whether that’s worth it depends on your budget, but I will say it’s probably the best duck dish I’ve ever had in a restaurant.

We also had Chef Enrique Olvera’s now-famous dessert, a pavlova he calls “Husk Meringue with Corn Mousse,” with burned and powdered corn husks in the giant meringue, which is served cracked in half so that the corn mousse (made with mascarpone) appears to be spilling out of the center. You can see pictures of both dishes in the glowing NY Times review from February. If Olvera’s name rings a bell, he appeared as a judge in one of the Mexico City episodes of the last season of Top Chef.

Comments

  1. Whenever Paulie Gees finally opens in Baltimore, across the street is the Charmery, a local ice cream shop that is fantastic. Bring the family.

    Baltimore is a fairly short ride for you, and has lots of great food these days.

  2. Dang, with all this duck consumption I should have directed you to Duck Season, a Smorgasbord booth run by a couple of high school friends of mine. They only make a couple of duck-based items and my understanding is that they’ve been receiving rave reviews from anyone who tries it. Oh well maybe next time.

  3. If it was simply labeled jamon iberico it was likely grain fed, that only refers to the breed of pig.

    If it was labeled jamon iberico de bellota, that means it added over half its weight eating acorns, and it is spectacular (IMHO, vastly superior to any prosciutto I’ve ever had). The fat on jamon iberico de bellota is extrememly high in oleic acid, so it is closer to olive oil than the fat on pigs we get in supermarkets here. It tends to be runny at room temperature (especially in non-AC places in Spain) and when it is hanging it often has a cup dangling underneath to keep oil from dripping on the floor or customer’s heads.

    • This is all correct, but since Harold did the ordering I don’t know exactly what it was. Also I started drinking early without food in me, which does very little good to my cognitive abilities.

  4. I had a very nice pizza in Brooklyn last month at Pizza Loves Emily. Might have been better than my Motorino experience the year before, which was also quite good.

  5. My wife and I honeymooned in NYC a few years ago and we found this street side pizza place outside Little Italy. A complete hole in the wall, in fact we walked right passed it while we searched for it. We literally sat in the street, but the pizza and the tiramisu that followed it was phenomenal.

  6. Keith, I don’t know if you’ve been to Hampden before, but it’s a great neighborhood. Stay for a while and check out both the Golden West Cafe and the Charmery. And get used to people calling you “hon.”

    • Second the Golden West rec. Especially great for kids. Also, The Food Market, Grano (both), Souvlaki, Le Garage, Corner BYO, Spro, and Cafe Cito. Union Craft, Woodberry Kitchen, and Artifact Coffee are almost in Hampden.

  7. Keith,

    Thanks for the recommendation on Cosme, which my wife and I will have to try and huge duck fans. One of our more memorable duck eating experiences was at Salt’s in Cambridge. Had you ever been there when you lived there?

  8. It goes back a while, because I left Cambridge in 2006 and it looks like it may have closed in the past couple of years. Anyhow, here is an old Globe review:

    http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/calendar/articles/2004/05/20/salts_delivers_duck_to_die_for_in_cambridge/?page=full