Check out this week's recipe.
My New Orleans restaurant to-do list is almost complete. Actually, it will probably never be complete as there will always be new restaurants to visit and old standbys to re-visit. But the original list I compiled several years ago is nearing the end.
I have
been eating in the Crescent City all of my life, but 40 years ago, when I first
started working in restaurants, I began to dine out differently— using what I
call, “restaurant eyes.” After we fired our chef on opening night back in 1987,
I started making more frequent trips to New Orleans to try and soak up every
bit of knowledge I could about professional cooking.
So, for
the past 33 years I have been eating around that city, not only for enjoyment,
but as serious research and development for our restaurants. Though, in the
last four years— after I finally broke down and got an apartment down there—
the restaurant to-do list grew exponentially. These days— as a part-time New
Orleanian— I’m averaging around 150+ restaurant meals in New Orleans each year.
Four years
ago— knowing that we were going to be spending more time than usual in New
Orleans— I made a list of restaurants I wanted to visit, and restaurants I
wanted to revisit. The new restaurant list was easy to compile and very
extensive. The revisit list it was even easier to compile because I was listing
places in which I would like to return. I had “been there, done that,” but I
wanted more. Some I have returned to with frequency and others I haven't
visited in years.
A
restaurant that has been on my must-visit list for a couple of decades is Mosca’s.
For someone who eats as much as I do in and around that city— and as one who deeply
appreciates the old-line classic restaurants— I’m almost embarrassed to write
that it took me almost 60 years to dine at Mosca’s. I’m also ashamed to write
that I've only crossed the Huey P. Long bridge one other time in my life and
that was coming into the city. I’ve got to get over to that area of the West
Bank more often.
Mosca’s is
a very remote, very simple, white clapboard structure that looks as if it were
a small rural VFW pool hall that was abandoned several years ago. Mosca’s doesn't
even have a sign out front. I love that. The sign must have blown down in one
of the recent storms and just hasn't been replaced. I love that, too. Mosca’s
doesn’t need a sign. They have over eight decades of loyal New Orleans families
dining there. Inside the tables and chairs are as basic as any restaurant
furniture can be. The menu is small, limited, and proudly so. The walls are
hung with mostly family pictures. Oh, and there is a James Beard American
Classics Award framed on the wall, too. That says all one needs to know about Mosca’s.
The
decision to dine there was made at the spur of the moment as my wife and I were
driving down to the city. The lady who answered the phone agreed she could seat
us, at 5:30, but we would have to be gone by 7:00 PM. No sweat.
The menu is
classic red-gravy New Orleans Creole-Italian in origin. There are a couple of
chicken dishes that I will order on return visits, and I definitely will be
returning. But there are two items on the bill that are worthy of note, and
they are the two items that would make me drive all of the way out there again,
and again, and again. Oysters Mosca and pasta bordelaise. That is why I was there,
and that is what I ordered.
I have
collected New Orleans cookbooks and magazines for the past 40 years. Many feature
New Orleans restaurant recipes. A dish that shows up often is Oysters Mosca. The
best I can tell, it's oysters baked with bread crumbs, butter, and garlic. Basic,
but when paired with pasta bordelaise it is a gem of a dish, and most
definitely a New Orleans classic.
The Sicilians
would call pasta bordelaise, “Aglio olio. It's basically Angel hair pasta,
olive oil, and garlic. It sounds simple, but it is very, very good. The key, as
I discovered on my visit, is to take a bite of the Oysters Mosca and simultaneously
take a bite of the pasta bordelaise. Left to themselves, they are perfectly
fine dishes. When eaten together, the pairing becomes New Orleans Creole-Italian
perfection.
As if
Oysters Mosca and Pasta Bordelaise weren’t enough, Mosca’s has a jukebox. I
love a jukebox in a restaurant. I love it so much that, as I type, I wonder why
none of my restaurants have ever had a jukebox.
My life doesn’t
include too many absolutes, but there is one thing that is as sure as anything
in my dining habits: If I am in a restaurant or bar that has a jukebox, I am going
to play it. Always. I think it's a sin too walk by jukebox and not drop money
in it. I’m sure it's in the Bible somewhere.
The Mosca’s
jukebox was exactly what one would think a jukebox at Mosca’s would offer. It was
filled with mid-century crooner tunes— Sinatra, Dean Martin, Bobby Darren, and
the like— which made me even happier to slip a few bills into the slot.
The
selections available on the jukebox impressed me, but what impressed me even
more was a server. I was having trouble flipping the mechanical pages of the
jukebox when a waitress walked by and asked, “What's the problem?”
“I can't
get back to the previous screen,” I said.
“What do
you want to hear?”
“Louis
Prima,” I replied.
“Well what
song do you want to hear? I know them all.” I love that. There have to be 800
songs on that jukebox, and she knew this specific selection numbers of each
one. I gave her six Prima titles and she punched each one in from memory. Again,
I love that.
I am not
sure why jukeboxes have such a special place in my heart. I guess it’s from my
early days eating lunch at the Frostop burger joint after kindergarten. Once I asked
my mother for some change to play the jukebox, but she forbid me to play “Mrs.
Robinson” by Simon and Garfunkel. She wouldn’t explain why, and years later
when I finally saw the movie “The Graduate,” I guess I understood, but no
five-year-old was going to pick up the plotline of the movie from that song.
Nevertheless, as one who has forever been a non-conformist, my jukebox passion—
which continues today— must have started there.
Jukeboxes
make me happy. It’s hard not to be happy listening to Louis Prima. It’s also
hard not to be happy eating Oysters Mosca and Pasta Bordelaise.
Onward.
Marcelle Bienvenu’s version of
Oysters Mosca from NOLA.com
2 dozen freshly shucked oysters, patted dry
1/2 stick butter
2 tablespoons minced
shallots
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
8 (canned) artichoke hearts, drained, chopped
Salt and cayenne pepper
1/2 cup Italian-style breadcrumbs
1/4 cup (or more)
freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Preheat the oven to
375 degrees.
Arrange the oysters in a shallow baking dish in one layer. Heat the butter in a skillet on medium heat. Add the shallots and cook, stirring until just soft, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the lemon juice, and season with salt and pepper. Pour the mixture over the oysters.
Scatter the chopped artichokes over the oysters, and sprinkle with the bread crumbs and Parmesan cheese. Bake until heated through, 15 to 20 minutes. Serve hot.
Makes 4 servings
14 comments:
Absolutely worth the drive to Mosca's. I would agree with your intention to have the chicken dishes, although everything I've had there is outstanding. Best to go with another couple as a lot of the dishes are served family style. Also, recipes for some of their more popular dishes are on their website. Local legend is that this is where local mobster Carlos Marcello would hold court on Sunday afternoons.
No pinball machine to compliment the Rock-Ola?
Phil Harris and his band trump Louis Prima!
" I finally broke down and got an apartment down there "
Must be nice.
I wish I could rent a NOLA apartment and eat at the most expensive restaurants in New Orleans.
marcello would wait on his bag men there every night after they went out and collected the tribute . marcello picked moscas for a reason,,,,,,,,,,good food and its out in the middle of nowhere. it was easy to spot anyone or anything that looked out of place.
its like all the politicians who sit up in the finer restaurants of jackson and madison county and wait for the lobbyists to come grease their ass with booze , food, and women.
I am glad the recipe matched the subject matter. Definitely going to try this oyster dish.
Wondering why he fired his chef on opening night in 1987. Must have been really bad.
Marcello was just an old tomato farmer outside of Metairie in rural Jefferson Parish.
(wink,wink)
Best meal in my lifetime. I recall that the dishes beibg served in ordinary, silver-color, 10 inch baking pans.
I was at Mosca’s with other young lawyers in 1982. We had just begun eating. Some “guys” came in. Our waiter looked at them, then at us, and came over to us and told us that our tab had been paid and we needed to leave, please. We did. Best free food I ever ate.
Does anyone know where I can get fresh oysters in Jackson? I'd love to make this recipe.
@4:29 - We are sorry that you are poor and broke. We are also sorry that you let your pathetic circumstances color your entire world view and prevent you from enjoying anything but your own misery.
Ahem...CASH ONLY...(really)
@7:06, go on over to Deville Plaza today or tomorrow before 5. Duggan's Seafood truck is there every week selling fresh seafood straight from the Gulf. Cash or check only.
"go on over to Deville Plaza"
You forget to tell this lil' one to lock & load.
Hey @5:08, been going to John and his wife for years. No need for handguns. Friendly spot (you’ll always meet someone new in my experience waiting in line) and John manages the area well.
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