TN: Recette (Dec 11, 2013)

Jeff Grossman

Jeff Grossman
attendees: Jay, Bruce, Jeff

Bruce is in town and he has never seen the cellar before. So, we descend into the relative warmth of the cave (it's a good 20 degrees F warmer than outside), tour a little and slurp a little.

Fontodi 1995 Chianti Classico Riserva "Vigna del Sorbo" - A delightful bottle full of "serious" cherries, still a little tannic rasp, and just one dot of sweetness to complement the whole. Bravo.

Ravines 2011 Keuka Village Red - 60% noiret and 40% cab franc, Finger Lakes region; despite the pedigree of the owner (chief winemaker for Konstantin Frank) this is a troublesome wine: the nose is stinky-lactic (MILK, not popcorn, jeez, folks, get with it), I kinda like the simple duet singing of the tenor cab franc and the baritone noiret but Jay dumps it right out.

Time's up. We walk over to Recette, a vaguely French/New American small plates place. It was last known to me as Jarnac, but Bruce has been here twice already and chats with the owner, Jesse, as soon as we arrive.

We decide on a 7-course menu. The waiter collects ideas for must-have and nice-to-have plates from us, and the service begins:

*- amuse of hamachi with spicy foam
1- beef carpaccio with burrata, tomato jam, porcini purée, basil, watercress
2- roasted cauliflower raviolo with sepia, guanciale, mascarpone, bisque (for Jay)
2- shaved fresh white truffle over egg pasta (for Bruce and me)
3- roasted scallop with baby beets, parsnip, caviar, beurre blanc
4- red snapper with pumpkin purée, root vegetable “napoleon”, chimichurri
5- fregola with braised rabbit, leek fondue, wild mushroom, parmesan
6- berkshire pork belly with rock shrimp, turnips, romesco, sherry caramel
*- palate cleanser of sage gelato
7- dessert: the deconstructed smores
*- and an extra dessert: pumpkin semi-freddo

The rabbit was the only must-have. We paid extra for the truffles.

For us, the best plates were the carpaccio and the rabbit, far and away. (The truffles, naturally, are hors concours.)

And, oh yes, we brought a couple wines with us. Medium-body beverages to go with the varied and variegated plates:

P. Amiot 1985 Gevrey-Chambertin 1er "Les Combottes" - is in similar condition to the MSD from two weeks ago: the sour mash note at first, developing more flavor and vitality as it sits open, pleasant wine but not distinctively Gevrey to me.

Overnoy 2011 Arbois Pupillon - The famed poulsard. Palest radioactive pink, pomegranate-fruity, tannic, jangly, juicy, distant and dusty roses, very tightly wound. I finished it the next day and it had relaxed only a little, showing more fruit and a slightly simpler package.
 
I accidentally cracked the neck of my only bottle of '11 Overnoy this afternoon while not paying enough attention in the cellar... So, it's pop-and-pour night. You're right, the color is quite amazing.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman: TN: Recette (Dec 11, 2013)the service begins:

*-amuse of hamachi with spicy foam
1- beef carpaccio with burrata, tomato jam, porcini purée, basil, watercress
2- roasted cauliflower raviolo with sepia, guanciale, mascarpone, bisque (for Jay)
2- shaved fresh white truffle over egg pasta (for Bruce and me)
3- roasted scallop with baby beets, parsnip, caviar, beurre blanc
4- red snapper with pumpkin purée, root vegetable “napoleon”, chimichurri
5-fregola with braised rabbit, leek fondue, wild mushroom, parmesan
6- berkshire pork belly with rock shrimp, turnips, romesco, sherry caramel
*- palate cleanser of sage gelato
7- dessert: the deconstructed smores
*- and an extra dessert: pumpkin semi-freddo

Sounds interesting...but W-A-Y too many courses for me!

. . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Sounds interesting...but W-A-Y too many courses for me!
It was a single scallop, a single raviolo, a cube of pork belly about the size of a typical cube of jello, the root vegetable "napoleon" smaller than a shortbread finger, etc. Lots of flavors but not really pounds and pounds of food.
 
I'm really getting into Fontodi's Vigna del Sorbo recently. A 1990 2 years ago stood up effortless against a 1999 Soldera and this bottle was just a complete mature Chianti.

The Ravines was ... not my style of wine. Lactic.

The P. Amiot was another wonderfully pleasant surprise given the reputation of the producer. It had that old Burgundy caramel thing going on, beautiful nose, delicious.

The Overnoy was a wild delight. So glad to have the chance to drink one again now that mere mortals such as myself don't have access.

The food at Recette ranged from very good to fantastic with the scallop dish being the only clunker. The beef carpaccio was probably my favorite course closely followed by the rabbit and the hamachi.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:

The Ravines was ... not my style of wine. Lactic.

Jay,
I don't think of lactic notes as pertaining to a particular style of wine, but rather often a characteristic common to young red wines. I especially find it in young Syrah, be it Gonon St. Joseph or a New World example.

Mark Lipton
 
Back
Top