Tag: food

  • Exploring Provence

    From Roman to contemporary times

    A calanque is something between a sheltered harbor and a fjord, with its Mediterranean waters around 60F at the current moment. Marseille itself is located in a giant one but smaller ones notch the coastline in this area. Many have restaurants and fishing villages nestled in them–some accessible overland and some only by boat.

    On the way back from Thoronet, we had a quick dinner in Cassis, which after the deep variety of Marseille, struck Mikie as rather white and manicured, like a New England yacht club. On the drive, Jody reads aloud from books about Roman times here, the political organization, the coups, and the clever management techniques that were key to Roman success in retaining the best legions.

    We took a pastry class and learned to make a lemon tart with meringue topping that came out very attractive and yummy. The teacher’s house was in a more sanitary and safe part of Marseille than ours. We are staying in a famous building that must have seemed a skyscraper as they laid the cornerstone in 1952, but its neighborhood is now a bit mingy in spite of the city’s constant cleaning, maintenance, and public works. It has a certain stately beauty nevertheless and the location is fabulous. Not three blocks from our place is a wonderful combination cooking utensils-home decor-hardware emporium called L’empereur, which is the epitome of good design in the service of useful tools.

    Our dining has been Michelin this and that but we were very fortunate to be invited to the table of a reknowned photographer, whose cooking turned out to be astonishing. We had olive fougasse much crispier than we get in L.A.–more like croissant material than bread–then white asparagus in Sauce Avignon, a loose bechamel with herbs, then a spring lamb roast of the sort American butchers are too “moral” to cut up (as if I went to butchers for their moral example), strawberries and Chantilly, espresso with Mirabelle Liqueur. It was the kind of excellent home cooking that Mikie aspires to. Thanks, Paul!

    On the way back we visited the Pont du Gard, a massive Roman acqueduct in three levels that lasted through the dark ages until the renaissance brought back some appreciation of large-scale engineering projects.

    Not to slight the Michelin crowd, Le Petit Nice by Gérald Passedat offered us a stunning view of the sea and various references to the marine theme unfolding before our eyes. It was influenced by Japan but was not a hollow copy of kaiseki. Each dish explored undersea themes using exotic ingredients on extravagant pottery, and while we certainly have enjoyed wonderful 2-star meals, the 3-star experience is as different as poetry from prose.

    We drove out to Orange for their market day, the first of many such excursions we plan over the next weeks using Marseille as a base for exploring the villages and valleys. I bought a truffle for 3 euros. Orange has one of the oldest stages in the world, built in the 1st century, and the original of the Arc de Triomphe, dating from 19 CE, 2006 years ago.

    Calanques
    Making lemon tarts
    Where we’re staying
    Our view

    Marseille’s famous olive soap

    Pont du Gard, aqueduct from 0CE
    Some Passedat dishes
    2000 year-old stage
    Precursor to Ard de Triomphe

  • Lyon Bouchons

    Lyon Bouchons

    Le Mère Brazier

    Among other attractions, Lyon is famous for a class of inexpensive restaurants called “bouchons.” Literally meaning “cork”, a bouchon usually features a traditional menu at an affordable price. Some of them are over 100 years old. Others fostered many famous chefs as apprentices.

    At the top of the bouchon food chain is La Mère Brazier, named for the formidable founder Eugénie Brazier. She used to own two restaurants and both were awarded three Michelin stars, the only chef to accomplish this in history. After she died, one shop closed and the other was busted to two stars. We had lunch there and it was easily one of the best meals of my life. We ordered two choices of each course and shared them.

    Appies
    – Spider crab and crab with condiments, shell emulsion and Oscetra caviar
    – Roasted white asparagus and confit egg, morel mushroom stew with sorrel

    Mains
    – Crispy pike bread and smoked eel, nettle coulis
    – Mézenc sirloin, baby potatoes with marrow and broad beans, lemon balm and savory Béarnaise sauce

    Desserts
    – Lemon soufflé, Speculoos and vanilla lemon confit, caramel ice cream, Muscovado sugar crisp
    – Green anise shortbread, strawberries and peas, Strawberry sorbet, pod emulsion and Greek yogurt, Pea pod confit with mint, brined lemon

    The Michelin 2 Mere Brazier and the humble place we discuss next is not fair. The budgets are different by 2.5x, the level of service, the servers per diner, the decor, and the ingredients are all wildly different. The very goals of these two places are different.

    Le Canut et les Gones

    Our favorite humble bouchon is called Le Canut et les Gones. Canuts were silk workers and Gones means kids or waifs. They hired a Japanese chef, Junzo Matsuno, who is amazingly creative.

    Reverse Engineering

    These menus are fun to reverse engineer–you try to recreate the menu choices without the actual menus, inventing how the composition might have been served.

    A bit of historical context is that the French were among the first to “discover” Japanese esthetics in a movement called Japonisme. From Van Gogh’s brushstrokes to affordable silk clothing to Monet’s depiction of his wife in kimono with a fan, the list is long. Both cultures are “high-context,” meaning difficult to penetrate, much less understand. In fact, “Japanese” has a meaning in France similar to the way “French” is used to mean “special” in the U.S., at least before Liberty Fries–like French fries, French kiss, French toast, etc.

    Lunch Menu May 21, 2025

    Starters

    – Salmon Gravlàx then house smoked, garden radishes, avocado cream, radish top coulis, Granny Smith apples
    – Calf’s head cooked in broth, served sliced ​​like carpaccio, anchovy ravigote sauce, délicatesse new potatoes
    1 – Artichoke heart veloute, candied purple artichokes, white asparagus, chorizo ​​vinaigrette, Parmesan crumble

    Main Courses

    2 – Cod filet, rope mussels, shrimp bisque, white beans, zucchini, cauliflower
    – Basque pork loin in panko breadcrumbs, chimichurri sauce; potato puree, round turnips, red cabbage
    3 – Veal shoulder confit with lemongrass, reduced cooking juices; red carrot purée with cumin, carrot tops, peas

    4 – As a side dish to share or not! Since 1994, Macaroni gratin 300g…. €12

    Cheese or Desserts

    – Raw cow’s milk tome, black cherry jam
    – 64% dark chocolate mousse, salted butter caramel, cocoa nibs, crunchy peanuts
    – Floating isles, vanilla custard, raspberry coulis, strawberries



  • A Famous Restaurant near Lyon

    Actually, we’re in Vienne, 45 km south of Lyon, paying homage to the ghost of Fernand Point, a portly fellow who is sometimes termed the father of modern French cuisine. The chef is Michelin 2 stars whereas of course Point would have been 3 but a glance at the menu should quiet your fears.

    If this seems like bouchon food with more expensive ingredients, you have to imagine the many levels of tedious preparation that go into each ingredient. All involve a three-year sous-chef working for an hour on some prep stage that’s nearly invisible to the customers but which makes all the difference. We ordered one of each and a half-bottle of M. Bour’s Grignan, couldn’t finish, and all for a hundred bucks each? How do they do it?

    Lyon Olympique Echecs

    I found some time to slide over to the largest chess club in Lyon, 3rd largest in France, and play a game with a young Armenian fellow, Albert Arustamian, rated about 2100. I played a classic Sicilian Nc6 and managed to last about 40 moves but died in the ending. Never mind I look more like Kasparov. I sac’d an exchange and got an advantage but he sac’d one back and evened out into a won ending.

    The established FIDE blitz time seems to be what they played at the Marshall–3/2, which is fast but during which you must give yourself time to think or you just lose, at least to this level of player. We played two such games after our long game but I lost both. I could have played a bit slower.

  • Paris, Briefly

    Musee d’Orsay, Blitz Society

    Only in town for an exhausted evening of sleep, a full day of museum, lunch, and a bit of blitz, and a yoga session before we boarded the TGV for Lyon, .

    The above would have us believe that affiches were a “people’s art”, perhaps in contrast to fantastically expensive oil paintings of mythological scenes like the birth of Venus or historical battles. But to Mikie if not Jody, these affiches represented the ancestors of the billboard, devices to increase sales to the masses, and not their art. Is a McDonald’s ad “people’s art?” Is the famous Apple iconoclastic ad for the people in some noncommercial way?

    A charcuterie shop

    A cheese shop

    A bakery

    For the chess bar, we took no photos so I can only direct you to https://blitzsociety.fr

  • New York

    Smoked Fish and Chess

    While Jody was in Philadelphia, Mikie visited Russ and Daughters, Mahmoun’s Falafel, and he played a bit of chess.

    Mahmoun’s Falafel. I once spent a thanksgiving meal there.

    Marshall Chess Club Blitz tournament, 3 minutes with 2-second increment. I got moidered.