For the 22 years I have written in this space, I have always reserved the final column inches of the year to list my top ten meals of the previous 12 months. Here's this year's list.
10.) Trattoria Mario, Florence— I
first ate at Mario in 2011 with my wife, 14-year-old daughter and 10-year-old
son. We broke one of my typical travel rules which is to not revisit a
restaurant twice on the same trip. In that Florence stay over we ate lunch at
Mario three times. Not a rare feat as we met locals who had eaten there every
day for almost 20 years.
These days I bring groups to
Mario for lunch while we’re in Florence. Their lasagna— and the one at Leonida
in Bologna— are the best examples of Italian lasagna I know. They make it
special for us as it’s not on the menu. The kitchen at Mario is very small for the
volume they do. Actually, almost all of the kitchens I frequent in that part of
the world are very small. They get a lot done in small spaces.
9.) Trattoria
Del Pesce, Bargino, Tuscany— For a long time I stayed away from seafood in
Tuscany. I always preferred the seafood I grew up with from the Gulf of Mexico.
It took me a while but I have now become a huge fan of the seafood that comes
from the Mediterranean, especially in Tuscany. They prepare it so simply. Trattoria
Del Pesce’s sauteed mussels and pasta with clams are unmatched in my opinion. Trattoria
Del Pesce is a very nice restaurant in the middle of nowhere, in the very small
Tuscan country town of Bargino. Most people would pass this place 99 times out
of 100. It would be their loss.
8.) Restaurante Las Bellotas,
Jabugo, Spain— If you ask me where to find the greatest ham in America, I can
easily say that my friend Alan Benton in Tennessee cures the best country hams.
If you ask me where the best overseas ham comes from, that's an easy one, too.
The Jamon Iberico in Jabugo, Spain is unmatched. This past spring I led 25
people through Spain. While some of my guests toured Seville, I took a dozen
people out into the countryside to see how the black pigs are raised. We walked
among them as they ate acorns under the cork trees. From there we had an
excellent lunch and the best pork dishes I've ever eaten.
7.) Piccolo Buco, Rome— I have been eating at this restaurant since 2011. My all-time favorite pizza in Tuscany comes from a place called Vecchia Piazza. My all-time pizza anywhere comes from Piccolo Buco. Luca Issa is a master of pizza. His buffalo mozzarella is shipped from a small farm South of the city every morning. During this meal in October my wife Jill and I sat with our friends Jesse and Marina. It was great catching up, just the four of us. The fact that we were eating world-class pizza during the visit made it that much better.
6.) Tapeo, Barcelona— It looks
like 2022 was a year for me to revisit several of my all-time favorites across
the world. I fell in love with Tapeo over a decade ago. During my first visit
to Barcelona I met chef Daniel Rueda and dined with him several times. Since then,
I have sent hundreds of people to that restaurant. It's my favorite tapas bar in
a country filled with tapas bars. His patatas bravas is among the best. But the
way he cooks pork ribs is outstanding. I've lived in the South all my life.
People take pride cooking ribs in this part of the world. To my taste, no one
can match what Daniel does in a small space off a small street in Barcelona.
5.) Osteria Le Logge, Siena— As
I was reviewing the notes in my 2022 food journal, the note under this
restaurant read, “This braised beef cheek might be the single best dish I have
eaten in Italy. Ever.” Le Logge is a restaurant my friend Marina has been trying
to introduce me to for five years. I had a favorite in Siena, and I couldn't
quite let go. My mistake. I should have listened to her much earlier. This meal
was made special since my travel groups had gone home, and a group of our close
friends had flown over to spend a week with us. We shared this meal at lunch,
and it was outstanding.
4.) Alla Vecchia Bettola,
Florence— Before heading off to culinary school this fall, my son moved to
Florence and spent several months cooking in the kitchen of one of my friends.
While my wife and I were over there hosting tours we met our son for lunch at Bettola.
It's a locals-only restaurant just outside the old city walls in Florence. It
is also the birthplace of penne alla vodka. It is outstanding and has quickly
become my favorite restaurant in Florence. He had already been there a month
when we arrived and had discovered Bettola on his own. There's something
special about us sitting there with him enjoying world class pasta in a real,
authentic, environment.
3.) Enzo, Ridgeland— Due to
schedules it had been a while since my wife, son, and daughter had all eaten
together, just the four of us. I cherish those times. A few days before
Thanksgiving my son flew home from culinary school and my daughter and wife
drove up to Jackson where I was already working at the new Italian restaurant.
They picked him up at the airport and brought him to Enzo where the four of us
shared a meal. It was the first time we had all dined together in that space.
2.) Pre-Welcome-Conference Dinner,
An Apartment Somewhere in Chelsea, Manhattan, New York— In any other year this
would, by far, top my list of favorite meals of the year. Though there's
another entry ahead of this one. Actually, there should probably be a 1A and
1B.
I was asked to speak at Will Guidara's
Welcome Conference in September. It was a huge honor, and I took a quick break between
opening a new restaurant and getting ready to leave to work overseas for six
weeks to share my “One Thing” concept with an international audience at Lincoln
Center. I really knew nothing of the Welcome Conference before I was invited to
speak and flew up a little naive as to the scale and scope of the event.
Speaking at Lincoln Center was a
great experience. Though the dinner the night before was one of the more
memorable moments of my 60 years on the planet. Those who were scheduled to
speak the next day were there, along with those who would introduce us, a
couple of sponsors and the four organizers of the conference. The gifts they
gave out to the speakers were the most unique and well-thought-out personalized
gifts in the history of speaker gifts, each distinctive with a unique backstory.
The dinner was marvelous, the desserts were excellent, but Guidara’s heartfelt presentation
in announcing each gift will be something I will never forget and almost too
personal to share in this space.
1.)Per Se, New York—My wife, daughter and I flew up to New York last week. My son had just finished his first semester of culinary school upriver in Hyde Park. He took the train down to meet us in Manhattan. We spent the next five days and four nights— just the four of us— eating our way through Manhattan and enjoying each other's company. The highlight of that week— more accurately the highlight of the year— was dinner at Thomas Keller’s Per Se. I had eaten there before and have eaten at the French Laundry several times. But never with my wife and two kids. We are a restaurant family. We dine out together all the time. This meal was next-level good. Actually, it was at the top level of all levels. It truly doesn’t get any better. The evening finished with a tour of the kitchen. Perfection.
Bring on 2023
Onward!
Spinach Soufflé
1/3 cup Butter
1/4 cup Shallot, minced
2 tsp Garlic, minced
1/3 cup Flour
1/2 tsp Creole Seasoning
1/2 tsp Salt
1/4 tsp Black Pepper, freshly ground
1/8 tsp Ground Nutmeg
1 1/3 cup Milk, heated
2 tsp Hot Sauce
4 large Eggs, separated
2-10 packages Frozen Spinach, thaw and squeeze out as much water as possible
1/2 tsp Cream of Tartar
2 Tbl Unsalted
Butter, softened
Preheat oven to 350
Heat butter in a two-quart sauce pot over medium heat. Cook
shallots and garlic for three minutes. Blend in flour and cook for 4-5 minutes,
stirring often to prevent burning. Add Creole Seasoning, salt, pepper and
nutmeg, blend well. Gradually add in the heated milk, stirring constantly with
a wire whisk. Remove from the heat. Stir in the hot sauce.
In a small bowl, beat the egg yolks until light and frothy,
fold the yolks into the sauce mixture. Add the spinach to the sauce mixture.
Using the whip attachment on an electric mixer, beat the egg
whites with the cream of tartar until stiff peaks form. Stir one quarter of the
stiff egg whites into the spinach mixture. Gently fold in the remaining egg
whites.
Butter a two-quart round Pyrex baking dish. Pour the spinach
mixture into prepared baking dish.
Place the Pyrex dish in a water bath with 2 inches of water.
Bake for one hour and serve immediately.
Yield: 8-10 servings
13 comments:
Sounds delicious. Now if we can just find the ingredients without a few hours of driving around.
Robert St. John, please rewrite your menu at Enzo and correct the misspelled Italian words and grammar. Yes, I speak Italian. Yours could use a little improvement.
Oh, and please don't serve dry Tagliatelle alla Bolognese that apparently has been left under the heat lamps too long.
Service was excellent. Background music too loud.
Ate at Enzo last night. The service was excellent but the food needs to improve. I’ve had Italian food all over the country and in Italy. This was below average.
I had high hopes for it after reading these blogs and because of RSJ’s disappointment.
Service was A+ which is extremely rare these days. Food was a C. Please work on the recipes and the menu. Perhaps look into the chef and/or kitchen staff.
We ate at Enzo a few weeks ago. I agree the service was great and some of the same folks were kept on staff. The chicken was dry and tasteless . My wife had a decent salad. Robert the menu needs some work and more options.Ive been to some of your other restaurants and know you can do better.
Each location noted. I'll be visiting all of them once another covid check comes my way.
I expect that it's difficult, if not impossible, for a restaurant owner to open a new place while at the same time running off to NYC and Italy. The previous comments seem to confirm this thought.
RSJ, Sid Salter and Bill Crawford.
There has to be a better way to internet.
Are the restaurants he says are in Florence on Hwy 49 or White Rd.? I am looking forward to some good food down that direction.
Robert - It wuld be nice to see your ten favorite Central Mississippi Restaurant/Meals. As you know, there are several really nice places in the Jackson area.
This one goes back to the University Club downtown. I had so many elcellent meals there and fantastic service.
This is probably the best recipe we have in our collection. Thanks to the folks at University club for the recipe. If MR kingfish would allow photos, I would share some for this dish.
Chicken Bayou Lafourche - Crawfish and Crab stuffed Chicken with Andouille Tarragon Cream Sauce
This recipe serves four
You'll need:
2 boneless chicken breasts – pounded flat and thin.
Stuffing for the chicken:
4 ounces (medium fine chopped) crawfish tails
4 ounces Crab Meat
1/2 Tablespoon Sherry
1/2 teaspoon Pernod (anise flavored) liquor
1 Tablespoon finely diced shallot
3 Tablespoons finely diced celery
3 Tablespoons finely diced red bell pepper
1 teaspoon diced garlic
1/8 teaspoon fresh basil, chopped
1/8 teaspoon chopped fresh rosemary
1/4 teaspoon tarragon, chopped
2 Tablespoons chopped green onions
2 Tablespoons chopped parsley
1/4 cup bread crumbs
1/2 cup (thick) Béchamel Sauce
Salt and black pepper to taste
1/2 cup, AP flour to coat chicken roll
1/4 cup vegetable oil to fry the rolls
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Lightly oil a baking pan and set aside.
Pound the chicken breasts between two layers of plastic wrap to flatten to 1/8 inch. Season the chicken with salt and black pepper.
Prep the stuffing ingredients.
Shallot, Good unflavored bread crumbs, Crab meat, Garlic, Tarragon, Rosemary, Basil, Celery, Green onions, Red Bell Pepper, Parsley, Crawfish
Make (thick) béchamel.
2 Tablespoons butter
2 Tablespoons AP flour
A pinch of salt and 1/8 teaspoon black pepper.
Cook flour about four or five minutes at med/low heat. Add salt and pepper, 1/2 cup heavy cream and stir until a thick and smooth white sauce forms. The béchamel serves as a binder for the stuffing and needs to be thick.
In a mixing bowl, combine all the stuffing ingredients, Pernod and Sherry. I seldom use salt or pepper in my stuffing.
Portion an equal amount of the stuffing onto the center of each breast, roll into a cylinder shape. Dust the stuffed chicken rolls lightly in flour and sauté them until they are browned on all sides.
Place the stuffed chicken portions on pre-oiled baking pan and finish cooking by baking in preheated 375 degree F oven for 10-20 minutes. Drain on paper towels for 5 minutes after baking).
Slice and serve on top of Andouille Tarragon Cream.
One chicken roll makes two portions (serves two)
Andouille Tarragon Cream Sauce
You will need:
3 Tablespoons unsalted butter
1 teaspoon dry tarragon
1 Tablespoon shallots, chopped
1 ounce white wine
1 teaspoon garlic, chopped
1 cup heavy whipping cream
2 Tablespoons andouille sausage, (removed from casing and crumbled)
Salt and pepper to taste
To make the Andouille Tarragon sauce:
Sauté shallots garlic and andouille in butter. Add tarragon and deglaze the pan with white wine. Add heavy whipping cream and reduce by one half. Season to taste using salt and pepper.
Serve with the Andouille Tarragon Sauce on the plate under the Chicken and lightly over the top of the dish.
This is a wonderful unique dish. With crawfish, crab, béchamel, andouille sausage and herbs - how could it not be good? The stuffing alone is worth all of the trouble this dish is to prep.
This dish has a difficulty rating of maybe 8 or 9, but worth it.
5:23. Why did you do all that? Are you trolling for a job?
OMG I remember the senior attorneys at the firm I worked for all had membership at the University Club and ate lunch there quite a bit.
I enjoyed Enzo. The food was very good. Please add some material to absorb the noise. I could understand less than half of the conversation in the business lunch. You are forcing me to dine elsewhere simply due to the restaurant being so loud.
7:55 I am retired and not loking for anything. I just like good food and also like to share my knowledge on how to cook it. My personal recipe file has maybe 4,000 recipes, man of them are my personal recipes, not published anywhere. By the way, what did I do?
8:55 Just an opinion - in it's day, The University Club was the best restaurant in Jackson, followed very closely by Nick's. Jackson Country Club might be the next in line. After those, there were several that were excellent restaurants. I would have recommended all of them. Some are still in business.
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