|
Restaurants |
|
Restaurant Openings & Buzz |
 |
EDITED BY ROB PATRONITE
AND ROBIN RAISFELD
Week of June 16, 2003
|
|
openings |
Ulysses
Cross an Irish publican and a Greek-American
restaurateur, and what do you get?
Ulysses’, a sprawling new pub and
extension of the financial-district fiefdom that
encompasses Bayard’s, Financier Patisserie, and
Harry’s at Hanover Square. Peter Poulakakos (son
of Harry) and partner Danny McDonald have equipped a
onetime banquet room with a profusion of County Clare
sandstone, wooden ceiling beams, and a 130-foot bar.
That’s where McDonald will demonstrate the
award-winning Guinness-pulling technique he honed at
Puck Fair and Swift’s Hibernian Lounge, both of
which he co-owns. Bayard’s chef Eric Lind
oversees the cafeteria-style carvery and raw bar. And
to make Wall Street more accessible—or just to
facilitate pub crawls—free shuttle buses
transport customers between Ulysses’ and
McDonald’s other establishments.
58 Stone
Street
212-482-0400
Zerza Bar
The sign outside Zerza Bar attracts attention
first because it proclaims in huge letters CASABLANCA
MEETS NEW YORK CITY ON 6TH STREET, and second because
that’s the last place you’d expect that
cross-cultural encounter to take place. Owner Radouane
Eljaouhari was undaunted by the prospect of running
the only non-Indian restaurant on the block.“It
changes the flavor of 6th Street,” he says of
his triple-tiered space outfitted with Moroccan tiled
tables, a cozy lounge, and walls painted a distinctive
Marrakech red. Eljaouhari’s day job in guest
relations at the Plaza has prepared him well for the
demanding life of a New York restaurateur, and
probably accounts for his crowd-pleasing decision to
broaden the menu, placing Mediterranean meze like
Greek saganaki and Israeli spinach-and-feta bourekas
alongside the traditional tagines and couscous. A
North African flavor still predominates, especially in
the evocative remixes of Middle Eastern music
Eljaouhari brought back from Paris, the mint tea he
pours with the meze, and the spit-roasted lamb he
plans to start serving for brunch. And then
there’s Saturday night’s belly
dancer—as strong a statement as the sign
outside.
304 East 6th Street
212-529-8250
Pepe Rosso
This endearingly uncompromising Italian chain began in
Soho and spread its “no Diet Coke, no skim
milk” doctrine all over town. This week, the
newest branch brings its signature focaccia sandwiches
and great pastas to the food court at Grand Central
Terminal, where commuters will also find breakfast
frittate and gelati.
Dining Concourse
Grand Central Terminal
Shore
The owner and chef of Fresh expand their Tribecan
piscine pursuits with this casual oyster bar and
tavern (formerly Rosie’s). Whitewashed and
wooden-beamed, the barroom’s decorated with
photos of coastal New England, and the menu reinforces
the nautical theme: Choose among oysters and
littlenecks, clam rolls and finnan haddie, and a slew
of baked, stuffed, and batter-fried seafood.
41 Murray St.
212-962-3750
|
|
best
of the week |
The Cafeteria at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Displaced to the basement to make room for a new
Roman-sculpture court, the cultural cafeteria’s
new location features vaulted ceilings, contemporary
furnishings, and chef Jayson Brown, fresh from
catering to the Condé Nast cafeteria’s
finicky hordes. Here, he presides over self-service
stations for pasta, pizza, salads, and sandwiches
meant to appeal to a multicultural clientele of art
lovers and devotees of From the Mixed-up Files of
Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. •
1000 Fifth
Ave., at 82nd St.
212-535-7710
|
|
object of desire |
Down East Update
Forget top-loading versus side-loading: In a break
with New England lobster-roll tradition, Mermaid
Inn chef Michael Price challenges hot-dog-bun
hegemony by serving his lusciously meaty, relatively
lightly mayoed lobster salad on a round,
butter-toasted brioche bun. Served with fries
and—gasp!—cut in half like any
other sandwich, it’s daringly just this side of
unwieldy.
Mermaid Inn
96 Second Avenue
212-674-5870 |
|
tasting |
Like Buttah
For years, Coach Farm has catered to the
cholesterol-phobic with its delicious sideline of
low-fat fromage. Now, though, perhaps inspired
by fat’s newfound good reputation, the Hudson
Valley cheese-maker has launched a new product at the
other end of the dietary spectrum. Coach Farm
triple cream goat cheese, the company’s
first new product in about eighteen years, boasts a
remarkable 75 percent butterfat content and a
buttery-smooth texture and earthy goat’s-milk
flavor. Ironically, Coach’s triple cream is the
serendipitous result of making low-fat logs: the
skimmed cream by-product is poured back into regular
curds for an exceptionally unctuous effect. Mario
Batali, lucky enough to marry into the Coach Farm
family, showcases the cheese at Otto Enoteca Pizzeria,
where it’s served with razor-thin ribbons of
rhubarb in syrup and a pinch of thyme-tinged sea salt.
Also available at
Fairway.
Otto Enoteca Pizzeria
1 Fifth Avenue
212-995-9559
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
takeout |
Cookies ’n’ Cream
Pastry chef Karen DeMasco already supplies her
sandwich-crazed boss, Tom Colicchio, with cinnamony
coffee cake, buttery blueberry scones, and luscious
lemon bars for Craft’s soup-and-sandwich
spinoff, ’Wichcraft. Now she’s
really getting into the act, with these delectable
ice-cream sandwiches. For maximum enjoyment, try to
let them warm up a bit before you devour them.
’Wichcraft
49
East 19th Street
212-780-0577
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
Ask Gael
Shall I run with the bulls at Dos Caminos
Soho?
Even before the margaritas kick in, our savvy posse is
impressed by just-smashed guacamole (we like ours
torrid), lush shrimp-lobster tacos, and an elegant
play of citrus and sweet in all three
seviches—red-snapper-scallop tickled with spicy
mango and passion fruit, the lime-cilantro-marinated
Gulf shrimp, and sensational tuna with avocado.
Indeed, starters at the crowded Dos Caminos
Soho, especially the complex chopped salad and a
brilliant toss of sautéed and fried calamari with
chorizo, are more thrilling than bland Chilean sea
bass, or even fine seared tuna—though the sweet,
smoky ribs with black-bean chili is quickly ravaged,
and I’d want dos enchiladas if only for that
remarkable mole. The amiable servers are trained by
the Book of Hanson (my longtime pal, I confess).
Luring pastry master Wayne Harley Brachman aboard
could mean a shot of good old American excess in the
Mexican theme here. So far, the triumph is his fruit
seviche with retro sherbets.
Dos Caminos SoHo
475 West Broadway
212-277-4300
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the Archives
June 9, 2003
Kitsch, Ida Mae Kitchen-n-Lounge, Summit Restaurant and Lounge, Westville; Chocolate Bar's sweet treats; Monkey Bar's great steak.
June 2,
2003
SheepMeadow Cafe, Alma Blu, Ruth Chris Steakhouse; Rocco DiSpirito Q&A, Sidecar at P.J. Clarke's; new Sullivan Street Bakery pizza.
May
26, 2003
Max Cafe, Flatiron Lounge, Eleven Madison Park Hotdog Cart; Aigo;
Morrells Restaurant's Friulian pancakes; Fauchon's summer sorbets;
Gael is Amuse'd.
More
Openings & Buzz
Photos: Carina Salvi, Patrik Rytikangas (2, 6), Ellie Miller (3, 5), Kenneth Chen.
|
|
|