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Chefs Culture Dining Nutrition NYC Restaurants

Farm to Table: Local Treats

by Sarah Strong

photography by Ryan Liu

This article was published in an earlier issue of Downtown Magazine.

 

NOTHING MAKES US HAPPIER THAN STROLLING through a New York City Greenmarket, accompanied by a chef who is seeking the best radishes or the season’s first ramps. We tapped a few of our favorite chefs, filled our reusable market bags, then headed back to their kitchens to cook with the spoils. All of these dishes made with fresh produce can be modified as peak season for fruits and vegetables come and go, but if you aren’t ready to try your own modifications at home you can visit the restaurants to see what the chefs come up with next!

BOMBAY BREAD BAR: Floyd Cardoz has been a celebrity chef for years, building up an obsessive following at his restaurants in both India and New York City, where he has helmed kitchens such as Tabla, North End Grill, and now Bombay Bread Bar. When we met up at Union Square Greenmarket, he knew exactly where to head: the Mountain Sweet Berry Farm booth. That’s where the well-known farmer and forager Rick Bishop offers delicacies from the Catskills to some of the best chefs and home cooks in the city. Ramps are all the rage, and Chef Cardoz picks up a dewy bunch of them. He also selects wintered-over kale from Migliorelli Farm of Tivoli. Back at the Bombay Bread Bar, Cardoz is prepping a simple side dish he has featured on special menus. He chose the wintered-over kale but says early spinach also works well and is less bitter than the kale. In other seasons, ramps can be replaced with garlic cloves or scapes. The dish, which Cardoz describes as “simple and delicious,” is seasoned with dried Kasmiri chiles (a cross between a New Mexican Chile and a Serrano pepper), ginger, asafetida, cumin, and mustard seeds. He suggests serving the greens, which he gobbles up with his fingers, with roast chicken or a piece of fish. As he wipes off his counter, I ask him about the openmouthed lion painted on his wood-fired oven. He tells me he wasn’t looking for a wood-fired oven in the service area, but the lion sealed the deal. thebombaybreadbar.com

HIGH STREET ON HUDSON: Where can you find a chemical engineer and a would-be forensic psychologist collaborating on a tartine? High Street on Hudson, the all-day restaurant in the West Village, where head baker and partner Melissa Weller and chef Mary Attea have teamed up to revamp the menu. I met Weller and Attea at GrowNYC Grains in the Union Square Greenmarket to pick up 25-pound sacks of einkorn, the world’s oldest known variety of wheat. Weller makes a dense bread with einkorn flour and whole grains that she slices thinly for the base of the tartine she and Attea collaborated on. We also picked up a bunch of breakfast radishes from Eckerton Hill Farm in Berks County, PA and beautiful radish microgreens from Windfall Farms of Montgomery, NY. Weller’s einkorn loaf is best the day after it is baked. The untoasted slices are slathered with a thick layer of butter that Attea has infused with lemon. Chunky slices of pink radishes are topped with shaved breakfast radishes and microgreens. Another splash of lemon covers the dish before Attea cuts open a beautiful soft boiled egg and showers the whole thing in Bottarga, a luxurious cured mullet roe beloved by chefs. The radish tartine is a dish that truly reflects Weller and Attea’s new partnership. highstreetonhudson.com

KHE-YO: Phet Schwader and his family fled Laos when he was only three and ended up in Kansas, where his mother still lives in one of the largest Laotian populations in the US. We started at the Blue Moon Fish booth. Every Saturday Schwader buys enough fish from them to last halfway through the week. They don’t deliver or go to markets any other day. With his fish in tow, Schwader and I headed back to the restaurant to cook up a traditional Lao dish called phoun pa poached fish. A tray of roasted apple eggplants awaited us. While they cooled, Schwader poached the porgy in a fish broth with aromatics like lemongrass and galangal along with plenty of funky fish sauce. Schwader then removed all of the meat from the bones and combined it with the roasted eggplant, some of the poaching liquid, and more funky fish sauce. Once stirred together, the mixture was topped with torn cilantro and tested to see if it needed even more fish sauce. Schwader says you can make this dish with any river fish, and some of his preferred alternatives are black bass or snapper for their chunky flesh. kheyo.com

 

CAFÉ CLOVER: Café Clover is our go-to spot for healthful but flavorful cooking from executive chef Garrison Price. He visits the Union Square Greenmarket, which is quite close to the restaurant, multiple times each week and encourages his staff to visit their local markets and seek out interesting and unfamiliar ingredients. The entire menu at Café Clover changes at least twice a season, but individual menu items can change daily depending on what their local farmer and forager contacts bring them. Global flavors and local ingredients mingle within individual dishes and throughout the menu, showing up in the use of a Japanese robata grill with non-Asian ingredients or Mexican chiles in an octopus braise or burger sauce. The seed crusted salmon with baby artichokes and preserved lemon that Chef Price made for us was just about to hit their late spring menu and highlighted their work to eliminate food waste by doing things like using the entire lemon instead of just the juice and zest in the preserved lemon. cafeclovernyc.com

 

LADUREE: There are many ingredients Jimmy Leclerc, head pastry chef for Laduree USA, can get in Paris but not in New York City, but he likes that challenge. As someone who wanted to be a pastry chef since he was eight and who has been cooking since the age of fourteen, he is definitely up to the challenge. He started with Laduree in 2007 because he knew if he wanted to be great he had to go to Paris and learn from the best. Laduree brings a piece of Paris to New York, especially once you step into their garden café, and Leclerc says it has been an honor and a challenge to represent the brand here and strive to keep the same perfection Laduree is known for in France. His Saint Honore is puff pastry topped with pâte à choux and Chantilly, the combination of which serves as a canvas for seasonal flavors like this strawberry and coconut version, which uses coconut mousse, strawberry glaze, and fresh strawberries. No matter the season, Leclerc says, “we welcome the challenge every day and keep customers happy one macaron at a time.” laduree.us

 

SENZA GLUTEN: A bread boat filled with molten cheese is probably not the first thing you expect to find at a gluten-free restaurant, but chef Jemiko Solo couldn’t not put Georgian cheese bread on his menu as a nod to his first cooking job in the country. He learned to accommodate allergies while cooking beside great chefs, but surprising his friends with Celiac disease with favorites they thought they could never eat again brought him so much joy that he created a totally gluten free restaurant. A lot of people miss Italian breads, pizzas, and pastas when they give up gluten, so Italian cuisine is prominently featured on the menu. This Georgian cheese bread is filled with a mixture of cheeses in a blend that a single variety could never replicate. Because gluten-free flour has such different properties than all-purpose flour, Chef Solo uses a specific combination of gluten-free flours to replicate the taste and texture of the traditional dish. Cheese is never out of season and neither is the crisp glass of white wine Chef Solo recommends you pair with this dish. senzaglutennyc.com

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Bars Dining Featured

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

This article was published in an earlier edition of Downtown Magazine

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

MIKA BULMASH STARTED Wine for the World because there were no companies focused on how winemaking is transforming emerging regions through social and environmental impact. She was working at the United States Agency for International Development and saw an increasing awareness of fair trade and ethically sourced coffee, tea, and chocolate but not wine, so she headed to South Africa to see how they were making wine in the post-apartheid environment. She could see the need to focus on underrepresented winemakers and wine regions that meet strict criteria in the areas of sustainability, social impact, quality, and practice.

Though Bulmash has a background in molecular and cellular biology and international development, her love for wine was never just a hobby. As soon as she discovered how fascinating the winemaking process is, she began a course of self-study and wine tastings that eventually led her to a WSET Level 3 certification. Instead of starting her own vineyard, Bulmash decided to find other winemakers who practiced the ethical and sustainable methods she was seeking. 

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

Wine for the World curates and tells stories through delicious wines, like those of Ntsiki Biyela, who owns Aslina Wines in South Africa. She is the first black woman winemaker in that country and was given a chance through Suo, another brand Wine for the World works with. Many of the wineries Bulmash works with have been named Global Ethical Company of the Year including Ktima Brintziki, Greece’s first green and carbon-neutral winery; Cave Geisse, a trailblazing boutique winery in Southern Brazil leading the way for the country; and Bosman Family Vineyards in South Africa, all of which champion socially responsible and environmentally sustainable practices. Wine for the World is now starting to explore under-the-radar regions in the US as well. 

 

When asked why philanthropy was so important to her endeavor, Bulmush says, “Personally, it’s what motivates me and my team. It’s also what keeps us going strong in an incredibly crowded and complex industry. There’s no shortage of wine in the US, but having the opportunity to meet fantastic producers doing great things, to tell their stories, to see the excitement in our customers’ eyes, to have them become evangelists for the same reasons that motivate us, and then to see how that impacts our producers and their communities—that’s what makes it so exciting and worthwhile. We love to break boundaries, and combining wine and impact is one boundary we are thrilled to break.” DT wine4theworld.com

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

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Chefs Dining Featured Lifestyle Nutrition NYC Restaurants

HIGH STREET ON HUDSON

Where can you find a chemical engineer and a would-be forensic psychologist collaborating on a tartine?

 

High Street on Hudson, the all-day restaurant in the West Village, where head baker and partner Melissa Weller and chef Mary Attea have teamed up to revamp the menu.

HIGH STREET ON HUDSON
Chef Weller By Ryan Liu

I met Chef Weller and Attea at GrowNYC Grains in the Union Square Greenmarket to pick up 25-pound sacks of einkorn, the world’s oldest known variety of wheat. Weller makes a dense bread with einkorn flour and whole grains that she slices thinly for the base of the tartine she and Attea collaborated on.

 

We also picked up a bunch of breakfast radishes from Eckerton Hill Farm in Berks County, PA and beautiful radish microgreens from Windfall Farms of Montgomery, NY.

HIGH STREET ON HUDSON
Einkorn loaf By Ryan Liu

 

Weller’s einkorn loaf is best the day after it is baked.

The untoasted slices are slathered with a thick layer of butter that Attea has infused with lemon. Chunky slices of pink radishes are topped with shaved breakfast radishes and microgreens. Another splash of lemon covers the dish before Attea cuts open a beautiful soft boiled egg and showers the whole thing in Bottarga, a luxurious cured mullet roe beloved by chefs. The radish tartine is a dish that truly reflects Weller and Attea’s new partnership.

High Street on Hudson is an all-day neighborhood restaurant and cafe founded around the love of bread.  Our ovens and bakery are the center of our kitchen starting from the pastries in the morning, freshly baked breads for sandwiches and salads at lunch, to the bread to sop up your chicken at dinner. Our bread, all made from locally sourced grains, is baked fresh on-site daily.  Located in NYC on the border of the West Village and the Meatpacking District, High Street is right off the High Line around the corner from the Whitney Museum of Art.  Pick up a loaf or join us for a glass of wine and cheese.

HIGH STREET ON HUDSON
637 Hudson Street New York, NY 10014
(917)388-3944
info@highstreetonhudson.com

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Bars Dining Featured

Lemon’s at Wythe Hotel is the Place to See and Be Seen This Summer

Stepping out of the elevator into Lemon’s rooftop space at the top of Wythe Hotel is actually stepping into the 1960’s world of Signora Lemon, a fictional housewife who threw lavish and legendary lunches turned cocktail parties at her home in Emilio Romagna, Italy. Just as her home did, Lemon’s will be home to luminaries from the creative and hospitality worlds, a group that now includes you, because once you hear about Lemon’s you won’t be able to stay away. Vintage Nectarine-hued damask wallpaper adorns the venue’s interior walls, complemented by sunset colored cushions on walnut wooden banquettes all meant to evoke coastal Italian soirees.

The space is the brainchild of a dream team of New York hospitality superstars. Jon Neidich and Golden Age Hospitality (Acme, The Happiest Hour, Slowly Shirley) conceived the concept with acclaimed chefs Aidan O’Neal and Jake Leiber (Chez Ma Tante) along with beverage gurus Jim Kearns (Happiest Hour, Slowly Shirley) and Christine Kang (Soho House) to create the ideal warm-weather haunt. Neidich has brought in local Williamsburg cult DJ legends Chances with Wolves to handle all music and programming ensuring that the space will have an old school vibe primarily from vinyl and 45s.

The food menu includes snacks like salumi, raw oysters, and stracciatella with olive oil and bread that will look familiar to anyone who has lazed away a summer afternoon in the cafes of Italy. Options like grilled calamari, sugar snap peas, and tuna carpaccio on cracker crisps run with the light-eating coastal vibe, while a selection of Italian-style toasted sandwiches, topped with ingredients like ham and tomato, offer a few heartier nibbles. 

The beverage program features a selection of low ABV spritz-like cocktails inspired by the culture of Italian Aperitifs that will let patrons experience a tipple or three during the day while still being able to make their evening plans. The venue’s namesake citrus comes in a spiked lemonade served in a vintage pitcher and garnished with lavender. The Capri, Son made with Tequila, grapefruit, calamansi, and honey topped with sparkling wine can be ordered in large format for groups. Lemon’s will also offer a picnic style format, served in lemon yellow, vintage coolers and accompanied by a snack trio. Playful twists show this team can concoct serious cocktails without taking themselves too seriously. For another summer delight, Lemon’s beverage team has partnered with Oddfellows to develop a line of boozy popsicles that will come in flavors like cantaloupe, Limoncello, and Italian citrus.

Lemon’s will definitely have great food and beverages, but the real mission is to create a festive vibe that makes guests feel like they are at a friend’s home. The amazing views both day and night are complemented by a cocktail and a snack plus a hearty side of people watching, because, as we said, Lemon’s is the newest place to see and be seen this summer.

Lemon’s
80 Wythe Avenue, Brooklyn
Monday–Thursday: 5:00–11:00 PM Outside, 5:00 PM – 1:00 AM Inside
Friday: 2:00 PM – 1:00 AM Outside, 2:00 PM – 2:00 AM Inside
Saturday: 12:00 PM – 1:00 AM Outside, 12:00 PM – 2:00 AM Inside
Sunday: 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM

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Dining Featured Indulgence

Your Weekly Indulgence: Honeycomb Latte at Felix Roasting Co.

Your Weekly Indulgence highlights the most luxurious dishes New York has to offer. Use the hashtag #ywidowntown and tag us @downtownmagnyc on Instagram to let us know how you’re indulging!

Felix Roasting Co. on Park Avenue South is unlike any coffee shop you’ve ever visited. The design-forward “experiential” coffee shop conceptualized by hotelier, Matt Moinian, and coffee entrepreneur, Al Ansari, offers New Yorkers the best in innovative espresso drinks, superb quality, and engaging culture. Their menu includes interactive items so instead of just grabbing a coffee you’re having a full-on coffee experience. Starting this summer, Felix is adding grab-and-go dishes from SoHo cafe west~bourne so guests can pair chia pudding or togarashi chex mix with their tonics and coffees. Felix is also now selling their house-roasted whole beans to take home.

The most exciting new development is The Felix Cellar, a beautiful showcase and event space recently unveiled to host workshops, tastings, classes, and more. Complimenting the first floor’s architectural grandeur, the cellar features cavernous design elements as a nod to the great wine cellars of Italy or Napa like vaulted ceilings, antique mirrors, and handmade copper gilded bricks. Be on the lookout for latte art competitions, tastings, cuppings, intensive classes, and workshops or rent out the space for a gathering of up to 50 people.

One of our favorite, indulgent experiences at Felix Roasting Co. happens when you order the Honeycomb Latte with Lavender and Rosemary. The honeycomb is a house made brittle toffee shell that you actually have to smash through to reach the latte underneath, which is made with cacao-nib infused milk, fresh lavender blossoms, and rosemary. Felix offers house-made nut milk and fresh oat milk as a substitution in any of their beverages, stop by to try them all!

Felix Roasting Co.
450 Park Avenue South
Monday–Thursday: 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Friday: 7:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Saturday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Sunday: 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM

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Bars Dining Events Featured

Hendrick’s Gin is Hosting a Midsummer Solstice Pop-Up Near Grand Central

To celebrate the newly launched limited edition Midsummer Solstice GinHendrick’s is bringing vibrant live flower installations to the masses. From Wednesday, June 5th – Friday, June 7th, Hendrick’s Midsummer Solstice will come to life on a grand scale when beautifully colorful botanical displays bloom in NYC at Pershing Square near Grand Central Terminal. Passersby can welcome Midsummer with a stroll through these larger-than-life arrangements, on display for a limited time, just like the gin they represent. Come sip Hendrick’s Midsummer Solstice cocktails while visiting with delightfully odd and unusual characters guiding you through bouquet stations to take home, interactive cocktail making with DIY garnishes, and Instagram opportunities galore! To support this enchanting excitement, Hendrick’s has also partnered with sustainable flower delivery service, BloomsyBox, to offer beautiful custom bouquets ready to order inspired by Midsummer Solstice.

On-site activities include bouquet stations created in partnership with BloomsyBox where guests can create micro arrangements inspired by Midsummer Solstice to take home, plus interactive cocktail making with DIY garnishes. The installations will be live between Wednesday, June 5th – Friday, June 7th with complimentary Hendrick’s cocktails available between 3:00 – 7:00 PM daily with valid ID and proof of legal drinking age for entry. Interested imbibers must RSVP to visit the Midsummer Solstice pop-up location in Pershing Square via Eventbrite here.

Both the Midsummer Solstice Gin and Hendrick’s Midsummer Bouquet through BloomsyBox are available for a limited time only. The bouquet was inspired by the Language of Flowers popularized in the Victorian Era, each selected flower in the bouquet has a meaning and is used to send thoughtful messages to the intended recipient. One might find stems in the bouquet like purple hydrangea, dark pink tinted limonium, eryngium, eucalipto, and other beautiful, finely scented blooms – inspired by the secret floral blend of Hendrick’s Master Distiller Lesley Gracie’s creation from her Cabinet of Curiosities.

Midsummer Solstice was inspired by the actual Summer Solstice, at which time the Earth is tilted maximally toward the sun, impelling all the flora of the hemisphere to attain its peak aromatic prowess. The aromatic notes of the gin include zesty juniper along with hidden undertones of orange blossom and exotic ripeness. This bright take on the rounded Hendrick’s house style complements the gin’s floral character for a liquid that’s splendid in all manner of spring and summer cocktails, from a seasonal Midsummer Spritz with elderflower liqueur, soda, lemon, and a cucumber garnish, to a Midsummer Mimosa or a Salty Dog, bursting with floral and grapefruit flavors. The signature Hendrick’s apothecary style bottle remains with the new Midsummer expression, but has received a purple-hued makeover, from the glass of the bottle itself to the label and logo.