December 20, 2009
Journeys
By GISELA WILLIAMS
Jonathan Player for The New York Times
The Butlers Wharf Chop House in London
DURING the holiday season, the already difficult task of deciding where to dine in Europe’s major cities becomes Herculean. Many restaurants, especially the more intimate, independently run places, are closed on Dec. 24 and 25; high-end hotel restaurants are more likely to stay open but can be stiff, expensive and full of tourists.
Owen Franken for The New York Times
The Au Bon Accueil in Paris.
“Although I love Paris 365 days a year, Christmas can be a tricky time to visit,” Beth Marlin, the editor of Paris-Insider.com, wrote in an e-mail message. “The week between Christmas and New Years can be disappointing for tourists who expect everything to be open (museums, restaurants) according to a normal schedule. It is possible to arrive somewhere and find a sign in the window that says ‘Closed until after January 1st.’ ”
That doesn’t mean that tourists should avoid Paris during the holidays. On the contrary, Ms. Marlin writes: “A walk down the Champs-Élysées at night with the trees lit up, or along the Rue du Faubourg St.-Honoré can be downright magical. With the right itinerary, it can be spectacular.”
Sometimes it’s a matter of planning. Take, for example, Le Jules Verne, Alain Ducasse’s restaurant nestled overheard in the Eiffel Tower. While it’s open on Christmas Eve and Christmas, only a few tables are available for lunch on Christmas Day.
Here are suggestions for places to eat in five European cities. Some are open on Christmas Eve, some on Christmas Day, some both. And many are offering special menus. (Call ahead for reservations and to check availability.)
PARIS
Just a skip away from Jules Verne is the well-regarded Au Bon Accueil (14, rue de Monttessuy, 75007; 33-1-4705-4611; www.aubonaccueilparis.com), a modern bistro owned by the restaurateur Jacques Lacipiere. The chef, Naobumi Assaki, turns out precise, elegant food in a friendly setting.
On Dec. 24 and 25, the restaurant will be offering a five-course Christmas lunch menu (60 euros a person, or $87 at $1.45 to the euro, without wine) that brings to mind the sort of fare a food-loving French family might dine on at home, including oysters, chicken with a turnip purée and black truffle jus, a selection of rich French cheeses and a dark-chocolate mille-feuille.
LONDON
The quintessential holiday meal in London is all about mince pies and puddings. Food-obsessed travelers can pick up preordered pies and puddings to go (until late afternoon on Dec. 23) at the widely acclaimed St. John Restaurant (26 St. John Street, EC1M; 44-20-7251-0848; www.stjohnrestaurant.co.uk).
The Christmas Feasting menus being offered by Fergus Henderson, St. John’s pioneering chef, are available only until Dec. 23. But the Butlers Wharf Chop House (36e Shad Thames, SE1; 44-20-7403-3403; www.danddlondon.com) is open on Christmas Eve and for lunch on Christmas Day. Not only does the traditional British restaurant serve up an excellent holiday meal with all the fixings (mince pies included), it’s perched on the Thames and looks out over the Tower Bridge. The three-course meal is £170 for two, or $272 at $1.60 to the pound.
STOCKHOLM
On setting alone, Stockholm’s grand Operakallaren (The Royal Opera House, Karl XII:s torg; 46-8-676-5800; www.eng.operakallaren.se), situated near the banks of the Norrstrom and next to the Royal Palace, is a winner. But when it comes to the Christmas Eve Julbord — a holiday version of the traditional smorgasbord that includes specialties like glazed ham and rice porridge spiked with cinnamon — it’s the dining room of choice for many local families. In fact, according to the restaurant’s chef, Stefano Catenacci, a reservation there for lunch on Christmas Eve is so sought-after that the next opening for a table in the main dining room is in 2011.
Fortunately the Operakallaren has a lot of extra rooms. “We have space left, but not in the main dining room,” Mr. Catenacci said. “There are tables upstairs in the banqueting room, and just yesterday we chose to open up the opera bar, a small room where you sit up to 80 people.” The Julbord at Operakallaren starts at 750 kronor to 980 kronor a person, or about $110 to $140 at 6.95 kronor to the dollar.
ROME
Though fish plays a part in the Swedish Julbord, Christmas Eve in Rome takes it to another level: a seven-course dinner in which each dish contains a different type of seafood.
Jessica Stewart, the Rome manager for Context, a boutique travel company that organizes urban walking tours, recommends Casa Bleve (Via del Teatro Valle, 48-49; 39-06-686-5970; www.casableve.it), a palatial winte bar within the former courtyard of the 16th-century Palazzo Medici Lante della Rovere.
This is the first year that Casa Bleve will be serving its version of the traditional Christmas Eve fish feast (for 145 euros a person), and it sounds like one worth seeking out. Courses include a seared mackerel with buffalo’s milk burrata and roasted tomatoes, an octopus and chanterelle mushroom soup with fried purple potatoes and pasta stuffed with red shrimp on a bed of artichoke cream.
On Christmas Day, when most Roman families are eating leftovers at home, Ms. Stewart suggests booking a table at the popular Hostaria dell’Orso (Via dei Soldati, 25C; 39-06- 6830-1192; www.hdo.it), which is open on Dec. 24 and 25.
MUNICH
Around Christmastime, this Bavarian city becomes a winter wonderland, with its Baroque architecture and twinkling markets filled with red-cheeked locals catching up over sausages and mulled wine.
It’s also famous for one of the most decadent and delicious Christmas meals Europe has to offer: the traditional holiday roasted goose, typically served with dumplings and red cabbage. The century-old restaurant Spatenhaus an der Oper (Residenzstrasse 12; 49-89-290-7060), in an elegant historic building overlooking the opera house, will be offering freshly cooked goose on Dec. 24. Try it at lunchtime so you have a chance to walk off those calories. A meal is 24.90 euros a person.
Still hungry on Christmas Day after all that goose? Head to the city’s historic center to join the locals for a glass of beer and weisswurst at a beer hall like the Ratskeller (Marienplatz 8; 49-89-219-9890; www.ratskeller.com) or Weisses Bräuhaus (Tal 7; 49-89-290-1380; www.weisses-brauhaus.de).
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Sunday, December 27, 2009
Inside Union Square Cafe
Since the restaurateur Danny Meyer opened Union Square Cafe in 1985, it has been as influential as just about any other New York restaurant, for the way it melded not only casual and sophisticated notes but also American and Mediterranean styles.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Italy plays a bigger role than France at this "international bistro," reflecting the culinary strengths of Michael Romano, a partner with Mr. Meyer in the restaurant since 1993.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
An appetizer of fried calamari.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Spinach risotto with bacon and poached egg.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Frank Bruni, The Times's chief restaurant critic, writes, "Union Square doesn't encourage you to take mincing bites of measured portions. It exhorts you to dig in."
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
The restaurant has a cozy setting; a series of rooms and nooks that impersonate a country inn.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Capellini with flaked cod, broccoli rabe, garlic, chili and bread crumbs "had that irresistible broccoli-rabe bitterness, coupled with a faint, fugitive heat," writes Mr. Bruni.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Mr. Bruni writes that a dish of grilled lamb chops were "butchered, seasoned and grilled in a flavorful fashion." But, he notes that "the menu and cooking aren't particularly adventurous or inventive, putting a real premium on execution."
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
A banana tart dessert.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Union Square Cafe
related Article: The Corner of Solicitude and Plenty
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/08/05/dining/20090805-rest-slideshow_index.html
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Italy plays a bigger role than France at this "international bistro," reflecting the culinary strengths of Michael Romano, a partner with Mr. Meyer in the restaurant since 1993.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
An appetizer of fried calamari.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Spinach risotto with bacon and poached egg.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Frank Bruni, The Times's chief restaurant critic, writes, "Union Square doesn't encourage you to take mincing bites of measured portions. It exhorts you to dig in."
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
The restaurant has a cozy setting; a series of rooms and nooks that impersonate a country inn.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Capellini with flaked cod, broccoli rabe, garlic, chili and bread crumbs "had that irresistible broccoli-rabe bitterness, coupled with a faint, fugitive heat," writes Mr. Bruni.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Mr. Bruni writes that a dish of grilled lamb chops were "butchered, seasoned and grilled in a flavorful fashion." But, he notes that "the menu and cooking aren't particularly adventurous or inventive, putting a real premium on execution."
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
A banana tart dessert.
Photo: Lee Clower for The New York Times
Union Square Cafe
related Article: The Corner of Solicitude and Plenty
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/08/05/dining/20090805-rest-slideshow_index.html
27/12 On the Historic Trail of a Parisian Gourmand
Alexandre-Balthazar-Laurent Grimod de la Reynière, a French aristocrat during Napoleon's reign, was the Tim Zagat of his era. A true gourmand, he financed his voracious appetite by writing a series of guidebooks to the Paris's finest culinary establishments. Two hundred years later, some of his favorites like Au Rocher de Cancale, left, are still thriving.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
A painting at the Musée Carnavalet in Paris is believed to be of Grimod. Whether or not it's in his actual likeness, the portrait captures the eccentric, omnivorous spirit that made him the gustatory symbol in the Paris of his day and the grand-père of all modern food writers.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
La Cordonnerie dates back to 1690 and serves cuisine de marché, fresh market food. There are fewer than 20 seats in this intimate space.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Foie gras in housemade chocolate sauce at La Cordonnerie.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Founded in 1784, Le Grand Véfour is the oldest continuously operating restaurant in Paris. Napoleon and Josephine used to meet here for trysts.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Escargot at the venerable Procope, which was once frequented by revolutionary heroes like Danton and Marat.
Photo: Andrew Testa for The New York Times
If Grimod had a favorite street, the fashionable Rue Montorgueil might have been it, with its upscale vendors.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Fresh shellfish for sale on Rue Montorgueil.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Paris's finest bookstore for gastronomic history, Librairie Rémi Flachard, has a boxed, leather-bound set of all eight of Grimod's Almanachs in pristine condition.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Lapérouse is a lavishly decorated old restaurant on the Left Bank. In the 1800s, the restaurant used to maintain private rooms, left, upstairs for married gentlemen to discreetly entertain the courtesans of Paris with Champagne, delicacies and expensive gifts.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Stohrer is the oldest remaining pâtisserie in Paris, with a multicolored array of pastries and glazed fruits.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Au Rocher de Cancale is a lively lunchtime bistro. It moved from one side of the Rue Montorgueil to the other in 1846.
Related: Interactive Map
Photo: Andrew Testa for The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/11/22/travel/20091122-paris-slideshow_index.html€
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
A painting at the Musée Carnavalet in Paris is believed to be of Grimod. Whether or not it's in his actual likeness, the portrait captures the eccentric, omnivorous spirit that made him the gustatory symbol in the Paris of his day and the grand-père of all modern food writers.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
La Cordonnerie dates back to 1690 and serves cuisine de marché, fresh market food. There are fewer than 20 seats in this intimate space.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Foie gras in housemade chocolate sauce at La Cordonnerie.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Founded in 1784, Le Grand Véfour is the oldest continuously operating restaurant in Paris. Napoleon and Josephine used to meet here for trysts.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Escargot at the venerable Procope, which was once frequented by revolutionary heroes like Danton and Marat.
Photo: Andrew Testa for The New York Times
If Grimod had a favorite street, the fashionable Rue Montorgueil might have been it, with its upscale vendors.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Fresh shellfish for sale on Rue Montorgueil.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Paris's finest bookstore for gastronomic history, Librairie Rémi Flachard, has a boxed, leather-bound set of all eight of Grimod's Almanachs in pristine condition.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Lapérouse is a lavishly decorated old restaurant on the Left Bank. In the 1800s, the restaurant used to maintain private rooms, left, upstairs for married gentlemen to discreetly entertain the courtesans of Paris with Champagne, delicacies and expensive gifts.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Stohrer is the oldest remaining pâtisserie in Paris, with a multicolored array of pastries and glazed fruits.
Photo: Ed Alcock for The New York Times
Au Rocher de Cancale is a lively lunchtime bistro. It moved from one side of the Rue Montorgueil to the other in 1846.
Related: Interactive Map
Photo: Andrew Testa for The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/11/22/travel/20091122-paris-slideshow_index.html€
27/12 Sydney’s Bohemian Center
In the Potts Point district of Sydney, gorgeous Art Deco apartment buildings and Victorian terrace houses sit amid new restaurants and cafes where hipsters and celebrities mingle.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Becker Minty sells upscale clothing and accessories.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Another brand that has a strong presence in the neighborhood is Fratelli Fresh, where you can shop for everything from fresh passion fruit to two dozen types of house-made pasta.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Diners at Fratelli Paradiso.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
A fountain at the top of Macleay Street, the main artery of Potts Point.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Grandiflora specializes in exotic flowers.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
The latest addition to the local dining scene is No. 9, a popular breakfast and lunch spot that has the feel of a classical French library.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
The Champagne bar Velluto attracts the fashion set in the evening. Order a flute of vintage Krug alongside a plate of tasty French and Australian cheeses.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Becker Minty sells upscale clothing and accessories.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Another brand that has a strong presence in the neighborhood is Fratelli Fresh, where you can shop for everything from fresh passion fruit to two dozen types of house-made pasta.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Diners at Fratelli Paradiso.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
A fountain at the top of Macleay Street, the main artery of Potts Point.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Grandiflora specializes in exotic flowers.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
The latest addition to the local dining scene is No. 9, a popular breakfast and lunch spot that has the feel of a classical French library.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
The Champagne bar Velluto attracts the fashion set in the evening. Order a flute of vintage Krug alongside a plate of tasty French and Australian cheeses.
Photo: Tony Sernack for The New York Times
Beirut’s High-End Mezze and Old-School Classics
With a rich agricultural bounty packed into the farms, orchards, vineyards and waters of their tiny Mediterranean nation, Lebanese chefs have an impressively vast array of raw materials to valorize. Left, Abd el Wahab is a top destination for mezze, the catch-all term for an array of appetizers that range from grilled chicken livers to exotic bread dips.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
A view of the dining room at Abd el Whab, where the hummus is creamy and flavorful.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
A bowl of molasses and sesame paste, which is swirled together and eaten with a sweet dessert bread.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
With kefta meatballs, lamb cutlets and grilled chicken wings, the menu at Istambouli is designed for carnivores.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
Hummus and bread at Istambouli. Around the world, in cities from Paris to Dubai to Melbourne, the best Middle Eastern restaurants are turning out food from the Land of the Cedars.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
Le Chef is an old-school home-style joint niched like a fossil among the trendy new bars and sleek restaurants of the fast-rising Gemmayzeh neighborhood. Order lamb over rice, laced with nuts and raisins, then the get the aromatic rice pudding for desert.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
A view of the dining room at Abd el Whab, where the hummus is creamy and flavorful.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
A bowl of molasses and sesame paste, which is swirled together and eaten with a sweet dessert bread.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
With kefta meatballs, lamb cutlets and grilled chicken wings, the menu at Istambouli is designed for carnivores.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
Hummus and bread at Istambouli. Around the world, in cities from Paris to Dubai to Melbourne, the best Middle Eastern restaurants are turning out food from the Land of the Cedars.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
Le Chef is an old-school home-style joint niched like a fossil among the trendy new bars and sleek restaurants of the fast-rising Gemmayzeh neighborhood. Order lamb over rice, laced with nuts and raisins, then the get the aromatic rice pudding for desert.
Photo: Tamara Abdul Hadi for The New York Times
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