The chances of being in the presence of genuine, iconic, living, breathing, legends are few and far between, if ever at all. I don’t have many regrets in life, but I had several chances in my late teens to see blues master, Muddy Waters. The same goes for Willie Dixon. I passed at the time because I assumed there would be other likelihoods. I once gave a friend my Stevie Ray Vaughan concert tickets because I wrongly supposed that there would be plenty of other opportunities to see that guitar giant in upcoming decades. He died in a helicopter crash several months later.
There are some artists I could have seen, masters even, who were alive during my lifetime, but I had yet to appreciate their music during their era. I would have loved to have seen Louis Armstrong in concert in the 1960s. The same goes for Miles Davis, Count Basie, and Duke Ellington in the 1970s.
My mother
dragged me to see a touring production of “The King and I” in my late teens. If
you would have asked me that day, I would have told you there were a few thousand
other things I would rather have been doing than sitting in the Saenger Theatre
in New Orleans watching a musical. Thankfully, she made me go and I was able to
see one of the 4,625 performances of Yul Brynner’s king, in one of the stage’s
most iconic roles.
I’ve seen almost
every rock act I have wanted to see in my lifetime except the Beatles. Of the
people I consider true American icons, I have seen Ray Charles, Willie Nelson, and
dozens of others.
In the
culinary world, I have checked a lot of chefs and restaurants off my list over
the past 40 years from Paul Bocuse to Thomas Keller. I’ve shared a couple of
breakfasts with Julia Child and Jacques Pepin and have met and visited with
many others. Restaurants and chefs hold just as iconic place on my wish lists as
entertainers and musicians.
I have
always considered myself blessed to have grown up, and lived, 90 minutes from New
Orleans. For the past several years, I’ve been a part-time resident of the city
that most consider to be one of America’s top three restaurant destinations.
Though I
have often been guilty of chasing the shiny new culinary distractions and occasionally
disregarding the classic icons of the New Orleans culinary scene. Early in my
restaurant career, when I was in the kitchen every day and working as an active
chef (something I haven’t done for decades), all my go-to restaurants on New
Orleans culinary research and development visits were places that were on the
cutting edge of new culinary trends.
I had grown up eating at all the old-line restaurants, and in the 1980s and 1990s,
I was doing everything I could to soak in all the knowledge about where the industry
was headed at any given moment. When it comes to food and the restaurant
business, looking forward is not always the best move. Sometimes visiting back
yields more inspiration and appreciation.
One day in the early 2000s, as matter of time and convenience, my wife and I zipped
into lunch at K-Paul’s. It had almost been 20 years since I had eaten there. It
was not on my restaurant to-do list as I, at that time— very foolishly— looked
at Chef Paul Prudhomme as old news (my close friends will know how painful it
was to type the previous sentence). We sat down and ate one of, if not the,
finest meals I had ever eaten in New Orleans. It was seriously perfect in every
aspect. At the end of the meal, I just sat in my chair, mentally kicking myself
for taking such a great restaurant off the to-do list in favor of the newer,
trendier, shinier places. In that moment, I revised my thinking and added many
of the old-line mainstays back into the rotation.
Over the
past 20 years, I have wisely kept those heritage places in my rotation and near
the top of my New Orleans Restaurant To-Do list of re-visits. Thanks to that
new dining paradigm I ate at the Bon Ton during their final week, I visited
with Prudhomme a few months before he passed away, And I dined in the Upperline
a few weeks before the global pandemic shut it down. I had always assumed JoAnn
Clevenger would reopen. But after learning of the restaurant’s permanent closing
last week, I was grateful to have dined in one of New Orleans’ great
neighborhood restaurants, run by one of New Orleans’ greatest restaurateurs.
After Ella
Brennan’s passing several years ago, Clevenger became the grande dame of the
New Orleans restaurant scene. The Upperline, a favorite of mine since the
1980s, was a classic Uptown restaurant whose dining room was skillfully managed
by Clevenger. But she was much more than a dining room manager. She was a master
restaurateur in every interpretation of the term. One doesn’t have to work a
line shift in the kitchen to create a great dining establishment. Most great
restaurants don’t put the owner behind the line.
In the
months after Hurricane Katrina, our staff and management at The Purple Parrot
(another Covid casualty) got to know Clevenger and her husband, Alan Greenacre,
as they spent a lot of time at their farm near Columbia. They were Monday night
regulars who spoke highly of our soft-shell crab and— according to one of our
managers— “ [Clevenger] was just as gracious and effervescent as a guest as she
was a host in her own restaurant.”
Every time
I ate at The Upperline over the years, her dining room demeanor was always
affable, calm, and confident. That’s not always an easy task to pull off in a
hectic restaurant environment. She did it with the ease of a pro, which always
let me know that everything— from the dish stewards to the chefs, to the
bartenders— was being handled and the place was always spinning in greased
grooves.
JoAnn
Clevenger was— and is— most certainly a genuine, iconic, living, breathing, legend
of the New Orleans restaurant scene. The Upperline will be missed, and I am
reminded, once again, to never get distracted by the shiny things, lest I miss
golden opportunities to be in the presence of greatness.
Onward.
Crawfish CardinalA staple from my catering days. This can also be spread on slices of French bread, topped with shredded cheese, and baked.
3 Tbl
unsalted butter
1 /4 cup shallots, minced
1 /2 cup onion, chopped fine
2 tsp minced garlic
3 Tbl all-purpose flour
2 Tbl tomato paste
2 cups heavy cream
1 /4 cup white wine
1 /4 cup
sherry
1 Tbl lemon juice, freshly
squeezed
1 /2 teaspoon salt
1 tsp Creole seasoning
1 pound boiled crawfish tails, rough chopped
1 /4 cup green onions, chopped
1 Tbl parsley, chopped
In a large sauté pan, melt butter over medium-high heat. Add
shallots, onion and garlic and cook, stirring often, until soft, about three
minutes. Add flour and cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Add tomato paste
and cook one more minute. Add the wine and sherry and cook 3-4 minutes. Whisk
in the cream, lemon juice, salt, and Creole seasoning and cook for 6-7 more
minutes. Stir often to prevent sticking. Add crawfish tails and cook until
warmed through, 2 to 3 minutes.
Sprinkle with the green onions and parsley just before
serving.
Serve with French bread croutons for dipping.
6 comments:
Do you have any BB King?
Got to see Altar Bridge at the fair a couple years ago by chance. Never figured that ! I would recommend to anyone who loves "rock" music to check out Mike Tremonti's band. Good gawd ...what a talent in every way !
I really enjoy these columns.
Great dish and story Robert. I too, have missed incredible opportunities to see performers I later regretted missing through my own stupidity.
Chicken and Crawfish Rolls with Spinach and Mushrooms:
- 2-4 boneless skinless chicken breasts, pounded flat (put fully thawed breasts between pieces on plastic wrap and beat then with the bottom of a flat bottomed pot until they flatten out.
- 12 ounces Crawfish (Frozen crawfish in a bag work well as long as the are USA product and not from China. Chinese crawfish taste like muddy ditch water.
- 1 cup raw baby spinach leaves, chopped
- 1 cup whole mushrooms, sliced very thin
- 1/2 cup shallots, diced
- 1 cup parmesan cheese
- 1 cup mozzarella cheese
- 1/2 cup cooked pork sausage, crumbled and well drained
- Splash of white wine
- 1 Tablespoon minced shallots
- a few slithers of fresh mushrooms
- 1 Tablespoon butter
- 2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
- Some butcher's string
- 2 or 3 servings Angel Hair Pasta
Directions:
Season breasts with pepper and a little Lawry’s garlic salt and then layer mozzarella cheese, spinach, shallots, mushrooms, sausage and parmesan cheese on top of the flattened breast.
Season with a light dusting of Creole seasoning, carefully roll the breasts and tie with a piece of string.
Cook the rolled breasts with a little olive oil in a hot sauté pan, rolling them as the sides brown until all sides are cooked. Cook slowly enough that the inside ingredients cook. This was not difficult as all of the ingredients cook quickly and the sausage was already cooked.
When the portions are cooked, remove them from the pan and deglaze with a little white wine, add a tablespoon of minced shallot, a few slithers of mushroom and a pat of butter.
This makes a good sauce to go over the chicken, which is plated on a little angel hair pasta.
Serve with crusty bread, a cold beer, and a green salad.
I always enjoy Robert's column and recipes. New Orleans is a shadow of what it used to be. Husband and I spent a day there last week. Many restaurants are closed, perhaps to never reopen. Damage from Hurricane Ida is evident everywhere with lots of blue tarped roofs and closed streets. Even Central Grocery is closed and boarded up. Orleans Parish requires a Covid vaccination card to enter restaurants which is fine with us since we are vaccinated. It was depressing.
Upperline was soooo good. Very much missed.
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