Showing posts with label Bonny DOon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bonny DOon. Show all posts

Monday, December 19, 2011

Good Things Come in [Freddy] Smalls Packages

Freddy Smalls opened up last week on Pico Blvd in West LA, just down the block from Mori Sushi.  In a small lowprofile space that formerly housed El Serape, some big players have come together to create something special.  The chef is Charlie Parker, who previously was the chef at the Cellar Door at Bonny Doon winery in Santa Cruz; consulting is Jeremy Fox, the former executive chef at Ubuntu.  Also in the mix is Mario Orellana, formerly of Chimu, who has been consulting and cooking as well.  Fox and Parker worked together at Manresa in Los Gatos, for their mentor Chef David Kinch.

I had the pleasure to eat at the Cellar Door several times when Parker was the chef and it was delicious and casual but perfectly executed.  The atmosphere at Freddy Smalls is also low key and the menu is attractively priced, but most importantly the food is flavorful and not shy.  With Fox associated with the restaurant some might assume that it is vegetarian.  It is most certainly not; meat has a pride of place on the menu and some of the best dishes are nothing short of decadent.


Another key player in Freddy Smalls is manager David Fleisher, who previously played that role at Seven Grand.  As such, it is no surprise that the cocktail list includes touches such as house-made tonic and grenadine.  The cocktail list includes about a dozen choices, priced at $10 - $12, and among the highlights is the Mayberry Smash, made with Death’s Door Gin, fresh berries, sage honey, lemon juice and mint leaf garnish.


The Chicken Liver Mousse ($8) is served with crispy bread, red wine and shallot marmalade (center) and violet mustard (right).  The mousse itself was rich and creamy and spread luxuriously over the warm toast.  The marmalade was an unusual touch and and the mustard brought a sharper element to the dish.  They brought more bread without us having to ask for it, when our waiter saw that we still had mousse left after finishing the toast.


Deviled Eggs have been having a very long moment in foodie circles, and the epicenter of their rennaisance has been at gastropubs.  Here, they are Buffalo Deviled Eggs ($6), with crisp chicken skin, Point Reyes blue cheese and CP's Hot Sauce all incorporated to liven up the dish.  The chicken skin was the hook and it got us to order the dish.  The chicken skin was great, but overall the eggs were fine, not of note.


The pièce de résistance of the menu and our recent meal was the Reuben's Gluttony ($19).  A board arrived at the table groaning with gluttonous delights including corned beef (more brisket style in my opinion), bone marrow, yorky pudding, kohlrabi kraut and a selection of mustards.  The corned beef brisket was rather tasty and the yorky pudding when topped with bone marrow was outstanding.  Overall only a shmear of mustard was left on the board when my hungry posse was done with it.  A must order.


The Flash-Grilled Steak Tartare ($12) is topped by a smoked egg yolk, and is accompanied by Worcestershire fingerling potato chips.  Incorporating Worcestershire sauce into the potato chips used to eat the tartare, rather than into the tartare itself, was an inspired idea.  The smoky yolk mixed in nicely and enriched the dish.  Another must order.


It wouldn't be a Jeremy Fox menu without some vegetable dishes.  The Beets & Avocado ($9) was served on a bed of red quinoa, fuyu persimmon and pistachio nuts.  A pleasing assortment of flavors and textures that also looked too good to eat.


The Mushroom and Farro Porridge ($16) is another vegetarian dish sure to please.  The base is caramelized onion consomme, with winter vegetables, miner's lettuce and a slow cooked egg.  A runny egg makes everything better and this dish tasted very meaty for a vegetarian option.  Note that the egg is $3 additional (to the $13 base), but I consider it an essential ingredient.


The dessert menu is short and sweet with only three options.  One stands out and practically demands to be ordered: Belgian Waffle ($8) served with grilled lady apple, bacon butter and bourbon-maple syrup.  The bacon butter was served on the side for us and the waffle, grilled apple and bourbon maple syrup was a heady combination.  It left us happy as we headed out into the winter's night.

Freddy Smalls is indeed small and is likely to be extremely popular once word gets out.  So go now and beat the rush while you can.  Good things do come in Smalls packages.

Freddy Smalls: 11520 W. Pico Blvd, West LA.  Phone: 310.479.3000 | Website: www.freddysmalls.com

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

LA Natural Wine Week: Natural Wine Symposium


On Sunday a symposium on natural wine was held at LACE in Hollywood as the culmination of Los Angeles Natural Wine Week. Lou Amdur of Lou on Vine moderated the panel of wine experts Jonathan Gold and Alice Feiring, and vintners Randall Graham of Bonny Doon, Abe Schoener of the Scholium Project, Jared Brandt of A Donkey and a Goat, and Hank Beckmeyer of La Clarine.

Photo above: the full panel. Photo below: moderator/organizer Lou Amdur.


A full room of wine enthusiasts, including a large contingent from Venice's the Tasting Kitchen, filled the seats in the art gallery to taste some of the panel's wines and hear their opinions on natural wines and what makes them special. Feiring said, "Give a shit about natural wine because if you really want to taste terroir, get a terroir driven wine."

Many on the panel espoused the merits of dry farming (not irrigating the vines). Amdur noted that the fruit has more flavor when it is dry farmed. Graham said that "irrigation is not compatible with terroir," and Schoener said "for me, the most important question is irrigation."


Beckmeyer commented on how it can be difficult to change the prevailing momentum to continually be doing something to the vines/farm, "I look to do as little as possible, because I'm basically lazy. The natural tendency is to do things all the time."

Now that the market for natural wines is growing, not only can biodynamics make the vineyard more itself, as one winemaker noted, but as Brandt said "biodynamics can help sell wine."

Photo above: Beckmeyer and Graham. Photo below: Schoener, Feiring and Gold.


The panel had a spirited discussion about sulfur, which is the only additive that many of the winemakers on the panel use. Sulfur acts to preserve the wine and without it, most white wine would turn brown. Additionally it prevents some bacteria from forming or making a presence in the flavor of the wine. Graham said, "Sulfur adds a predictable trajectory," and Feiring commented that "not using sulfur can obscure terroir."

Natural wine does not have to mean funky, although some wines do fall into that category and they have their fans, including Gold. He said, "There is a certain time at which you just have to embrace the baby diaper. Wines with a little something rank in them are those I tend to love the best."

Note that LACE is having a benefit art auction Thursday May 20th - click here to learn more.