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Restaurants |
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Week
of June 17, 2002 |
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roundup
Do the Clam
As local chefs whip themselves into a summertime
frenzy of boiling lobsters and shucking corn, you don't need
a Hamptons beach house or a week's vacation in Maine to indulge
in the seaside ritual of the clambake. Book a table at any
of these seasonal-minded spots, and the only thing missing
will be the salt air -- and sand in your shoes.
Guastavino's
Chef Daniel Orr's $24.95 Sunday-night clambake features corn
or tomato soup, steamed Maine lobster with clams and potatoes,
corn on the cob, and an ice-cream sundae. Dine on the terrace,
and pity those homebound Hamptonites caught in bridge traffic
above.
409 East 59th Street
212-980-2455
Kitchenette Uptown
The owners of Kitchenette
worked in Tribeca for so long, Morningside Heights probably
feels like Down East to them. Maybe that's why they've instituted
a Thursday-night New England shore dinner at their new uptown
branch: For $32, you get a boiled lobster with eight steamers,
corn on the cob, cole slaw, and -- the pi�ce de r�sistance,
for anyone acquainted with this kitchen's cakes and pies --
blueberry cobbler.
1272 Amsterdam Avenue, near 123rd Street
212-531-7600
Oyster Bar at the Plaza
For this summer's "I Can't Get to the Hamptons" festival,
chef Antonio Cardosa confines himself to using fruit, vegetables,
and seafood that is grown, raised, or caught on Long Island.
The same local pride that governs dishes like clam chowder,
broiled scallops, and a traditional clambake ($30) extends
to the wine list, which offers Chardonnay, Merlot, and Pinot
Noir from the North Fork's acclaimed Bedell Cellars.
768 Fifth Avenue, at 58th Street
212-546-5200
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the underground gourmet
No Pita for You!
The intense Orhan Yegen, chef-owner of
Beyoglu, makes 55th Street's real-life Soup Nazi, Al
Yeganeh, seem like he's got an inferiority complex. Roving
the plush dining room of his second-floor Upper East Side
kebab palace, Yegen, with piercing eyes and an almost menacing
air of confidence, approaches diners to expound on Turkish
cooking: that it's the world's finest cuisine, that there
is probably only one real Turkish restaurant in the country
(this one), that what passes for Turkish cuisine is mostly
inedible, and that it's somewhat crude to ask about the absence
of pita or any other flatbread you might associate with a
Turkish meal at a posh place like this.
He serves only warm
crusty loaves of sliced bread, which raises a bit of an etiquette
problem when the meze arrive -- whether to dip or spread or
just use a fork. However you choose to proceed, you'll be
convinced that Yegen knows what he's talking about: Rich hummus
was one of the best we've ever had, the grilled and mashed
eggplant salad was smoky perfection, and salt-cooked sardines
in olive oil and vinegar were superb. Unusually fresh and
succulent doner kebab (the only entr�e offered), thin slices
of pressed lamb-and-beef shaved off a rotating spit, is served
three ways: iskender-style, with a swirl of subtle tomato
sauce, yogurt, and buttery croutons; with rice; or on a bed
of creamy whipped eggplant. The dish of the night, however,
was the superb yogurt soup, subtle, tangy, and redolent of
fresh mint, which suggests that, similar surnames aside, maybe
there's something to the Yegen-Yeganeh connection.
Beyoglu
1431 Third Avenue, at 81st Street
212-570-5666
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object of desire
Drink
a Peach
Think of the white-peach meisuinoka --
a refreshing chilled drink served in a small, slim plastic
cup with a straw at Minamoto Kitchoan, the midtown
Japanese confection shop -- as a Nipponese Bellini to go.
It's cool, delicately sweet, and slightly gelatinous, like
a sophisticated liquid Jell-O, and, since the list of ingredients
includes an indetectable amount of wine, a surefire way to
beat the heat and the open-container law.
Minamoto Kitchoan
608 Fifth Avenue, at 49th Street
212-489-3747
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Ask
Gael
Has Naples become Manhattan's
new Tuscany?
The city
at Italy's ankle feels fresh again after decades of restoration.
Perhaps that explains a growing pride of spots around
town flaunting its cooking. Chef Vito Gnazzo lights up
tiny Il Gattopardo and its ivy-draped garden with
rustic classics from Naples and its surround -- cabbage-wrapped
meatballs, homey artichoke parmigiana with smoked mozzarella,
and his Neapolitan meat loaf encircling hard-boiled egg
with olive mashed potatoes. An expat pal from Naples is
shocked to find Gnazzo's braised baby escarole filled
with minced black olive, anchovy, and pine nuts "better
even than my mom's." Indeed, Vito's wife, Concetta, forms
the tiny cavatelli herself (using her pinky). Paccheri
is local dialect for wide bands of artisanal pasta, served
here in an oniony meat sauce Naples calls Genovese (alas,
the meat's too tough). Locals who know this Sette MoMA
seedling come by Wednesdays for suckling pig with delicious
broccoli rabe. The ricotta-and-wheat torta called pastiera
is a rare find, but lemon sorbetto seems a saner choice
after this feast.
Il Gattopardo
33 West 54th Street
212-246-0412
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Bites & Buzz Archive
Week of June
10
Brooklyn's Sardinian wine bar; Aquavit's Herring Week; strawberry fever; the Greek yogurt tycoon; Gael finds the perfect spot for t�te-�-t�tes.
Week of June
3
Supper Time; Blue Crab Festival; Godiva's new ice cream bar; Jimmy Rodriguez
heats up 57th Street.
Week of May 27
A (blue) lobsterfest; Restaurant 222's $20 prix-fixe; summer restaurant
week begins; Citymeals-on-Wheels salute; will Butter make Gael phat?
and
more ...
Photos: From top to bottom- Deborah Ory; Patrik Rytikangas
(second and fourth); Kenneth Chen.
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