Sunday, March 27, 2011

Osteria Coppa

Slowly becoming one of my favorite local haunts, Osteria Coppa never disappoints. This gem can be found in downtown San Mateo, CA. Housemade pastas, house cured salumi, fresh farm to table ingredients, and simply what good Italian food for the soul should be. The menu changes several times a week, and I haven't had anything more than once before it disappears from the menu. I've been frequenting this fairly new restaurant, and the following is a compilation of my several visits.

Let's start off the with the anitpasti. Most importantly, the house cured salumi platter.
Just look at it. What a thing of beauty. Served with their delicious, crunchy breadsticks, this is hog heaven. Salty and fatty bits of dried and cured meats, just scrumptious.


On a separate occasion, another amazing platter. This time with duck liver pate and mortadella studded with pistachios. Creamy decadence!

Other antipasti: Marinated beets, asparagus, potato, horseradish, and miner's lettuce
Not your everyday kind of salad. I've never even had miner's lettuce until now. The beets were perfectly roasted and sweet as honey. The horseradish added great contrast with a little kick.

Local halibut ceviche
Eat with your eyes!

Leek and potato soup, lemon thyme, pain de mie croutons
A very creamy, smooth, and velvety soup. The added crunch of the croutons and pop of lemon thyme in the soup made for a very fun soup to taste. My taste buds were quite entertained.

And now, the pastas. All housemade, all fresh, all blow-your-socks-off-amazing.
The very first pasta I ever had at Osteria Coppa is the wild nettle pappardelle with mushrooms and lobster sauce. And it really did blow my socks off.
Tender sheets of pasta sauced with just the right amount of cream, perfectly flavored with savory mushrooms. 

Tagliatelle Bolognese
They make one mean Bolognese paired with perfectly al dente noodles.

Tajarin with black truffles
The smell of truffles was intoxicating. They didn't skimp on the expensive ingredient and chopped it up into a fine butter. This will leave you licking the plate.

Cannelloni of suckling pig, savoy spinach, and black trumpet mushrooms
Savory, spicy, well balanced.

Secondi. Meatballs anyone?

How about slow cooked pork shoulder, creamy polenta, and heirloom organics broccoli?

Or seafood brodetto, local rock cod, clams, mussels, in a tomato-saffron broth?

But the absolute best secondi Osteria Coppa ever served me was a petrale sole served on a bed of cauliflower and fava beans in a lemon sauce.
Moist, tender, delicate, well-flavored, and well-portioned. The entire dish was executed flawlessly.

And last but not least, Dolci (desserts). A staple in any Italian restaurant, the panna cotta. Each and everytime, I must have one for dessert if it is offered on the menu. And Osteria Coppa offers a different kind each visit.

The classic. Vanilla bean panna cotta with huckleberries

Meyer lemon panna cotta with bluberries

Persimmon panna cotta

Orange peel marmalade with mandarins
All the panna cottas are creamy, thick, and rich. I love each and every type of fruit topping that they've used.

The meyer lemon sorbet
Tart and sweet. Lemony and refreshing.

And now, sinful desserts. What's great about them is that they serve delicious flavors of ice cream from the ever so beloved Bi-Rite Creamery from San Francisco.

Blackout chocolate cake with Bi-Rite coffee toffee ice cream

Chocolate lava cake with Bi-Rite roasted banana ice cream

Sea salt pot de creme with cocoa nibs
See what I mean about SINFUL?

Osteria Coppa: A little bit of surprise, enjoyment, and excitement. Creative yet consistent. Different yet dependable. Till we dine again, my trusty friend.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Warm Chocolate Brioche Bread Pudding

One of the best things I remember eating was from Emeril Lagasse's Delmonico Steakhouse, located at the Venetian, Las Vegas
Behold, the Warm Chocolate Brioche Bread Pudding

Here is what best describes what it tasted like: It is like waking up to a phone call from the Queen of England, wishing you a "Happy Birthday". You get up and find yourself laying in bed next to _______(insert name of your most fantasized person here). You glide down the stairs of your millionaire mansion to find a Bugatti Veyron. You jump in and turn on the radio when it is announced that you have found the cure for cancer.

Yup, it tasted just like that.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

The French Laundry

It is only fitting to start a blog with an extraordinary experience. And I don't think there is anything better fitting than Thomas Keller's French Laundry located in Yountville, California wine country.

It's been five years since my first visit to the French Laundry. The journey of procuring a reservation is an experience in itself. After dialing the reservation number non-stop for three hours only to hear the busy tone, I was able to get into a queue. Yes, that's right, three hours. After holding for fifteen minutes, I finally spoke to a live reservationist. All this was done exactly two months to the day prior to our actual visit. Then two months of anticipation, and we finally made a revisit to one of the most highly acclaimed restaurants in the United States, perhaps the world.

Was it worth it? Every second. Every penny.

As the skies gifted us with a heavy early spring downpour , we were warmly welcomed by the impeccably well dressed staff. Each hair on each staff person's head was neatly in place, their suits well-fitted. We were seated in the center table of the room on the ground floor of the quaint country home. Presented with daily changing menus, we made our course selections, and the beauty that can only be found at the French Laundry began.


The very first bite, and perhaps the best bite, came from a salmon cornette.
The finely chopped salmon was smooth as butter, flavored with the intensity of chives. A creme fraiche surprise awaits in the perfectly crisped cone spreckled with black sesame seeds. A dozen of these would make a lovely snack.

Cheese puffs
Light puffs filled with a savory creamy cheese merely melt in your mouth.

A half bottle of 2007 Chassagne Montrache
Let's get this thing started!

The first course, appropriately named "Oysters and Pearls"
A sabayon with tapioca pearls, Kumamoto oysters, and white sturgeon caviar. Creamy in texture like softly steamed eggs with little pops of salty caviar in each bite.

A salted butter from Vermont and a creamy unsalted butter from Petaluma.
Nothing like bread made from brioche dough as a butter vessel, made from their sister bakery, Bouchon. Simply fluffy as clouds.

Moulard Duck "Foie Gras au Torchon"

Smooth as silk, the foie gras could have passed for butter. Spread on fluffy and lightly toasted brioche, it was an outstanding combination. The baby turnips were picked farm to table the same day. Even the greens were tender enough to eat.

Finishing salts for the foie gras
Salts from the Philippines, Brittany, and even a 40 million year old salt from Montana.

Pea Veloute with Truffle Ravioli and Fried Onions
A very strong and concentrated pea flavor rounded out with pungent and earthy truffles filled in a tender pasta shell. The way our server gingerly poured the pea soup around the ravioli was like an artistic performance.

Frog legs made into a sausage with trumpet mushrooms, pepperlade, and meyer lemon


Not my favorite of the dishes. While every part tasted fine, the flavors were not special and I found the frogs legs to have a grainy, almost sandy consistency.

Alaskan Halibut, Chanterelle Mushrooms, and Radishes

Tender and flaky, the white fish was nicely accompanied by softened and savory chanterelles. Even the radishes were delicately cut and fluted into flowers.

Sweet Butter Poached Maine Lobster

Micro cauliflower florettes were nicely charred and nutty. The toasted almonds crunched easily between the teeth. Green grapes and Belgian endives added contrast to the sweet and buttery lobster tail.

"Langue au Veau" aka Veal Tongue

If you like pastrami, you will love this. Thin slices paired with dijon make for a mouth watering combination. Micro lettuce and grilled white asparagus finish off the dish. A sandwich lover's dream come true.

"Poularde"

Juicy and moist chicken with a savory jus. Lightly tempura'd brocollini and Asian pear shock the taste buds and turned this "ordinary chicken" into haute cuisine.

The largest course was a lamb saddle

The freshness of the ingredients is indescribable. I've never had artichoke hearts as full of flavor yet perfectly tender as this. The lamb was a nice and warm medium rare, wrapped in its own fat. I was not a fan of the tomato jam, as I am not a big fan of tomatoes, and this jam was exploding with concentrated tomato flavor.

The cheese course. Cowgirl Creamery

One of the less stinky cheeses, the cavatina was not too hard. The mild cheese went well with the apricot compote, dried apricots, roasted beets, and bacon. Yes, bacon.

Banana Sorbet with banana bread and ginger beer foam

Amazingly fragrant and refreshing, the sorbet was more like an ice cream due to the creaminess of the banana. The ginger beer foam tingled and playfully lightened the spongy banana bread on the tongue.

A cappuccino

What delicious, rich, strong coffee! I'm glad the foam lightened it.

And now my favorite part of every meal, DESSERT! Here is the Lemongrass "Cremeux"

The bottom was lined with Sicilian pistachios which added texture to this refreshing dessert. Granny Smith apples and Shiso sorbet brought the "tang" while the lemon granita contributed the "zing".

Delice au Chocolat a la Menthe

A chocolate torte topped with a beautifully cannelled mint ice cream which was very minty. Definitely reminiscent of an Andes mint.

Cappuccino Semi Freido

A thick coffee flavored cream with the density of a pot de creme topped with light foam. If I had known they would be serving such a thing, I could have skipped on the real cappuccino.

Tasting of Truffles

From left to right, top to bottom: apple cider, burgundy cherry, thai coffee with cardamom, malted banana, peanut butter, hazelnut. We were too full to go on this adventure, so the waiter courteously packed it in a box tied with a royal blue ribbon to go.

Warm donut holes rolled in cinnamon sugar

How can you possibly resist?

Chocolate covered macadamia nuts

A tad hard when popped into the mouth. Great exercise for your teeth.

And finally, a sweet parting gift of shortbread cookies

Can't wait to have these for breakfast or tea tomorrow.

Throughout the entire meal, the wait staff orchestrated the serving and clearing of the dishes in synchrony. They were all professional and knowledgeable about everything served. The bill was cutely presented as a laundry ticket order, inclusive of the "day of pick up". Chef Thomas Keller has put much thought into every part of the French Laundry. The flawless attention to minor details is what gives this top restaurant the amazing reputation and the three Michelin Stars that it truly deserves.

Before we part ways, take in the view of the well manicured French Laundry garden
Now, what's not to love?