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Posts tagged with: Top 10 Dishes of 2010

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The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #1 New Dish of 2010: Orange Confit with Chocolate Caramel Mousse at Bisato

Okay, so the dish isn’t really new. But the experience of eating it is. Startingly so.

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Bisato

The orange confit with chocolate caramel mousse at Bisato.

Photo courtesy Scott Eklund

What does it say about This Moment in Food that our dish of the year is a six-bite experience priced at $6.50, likely less than you paid to park?

Okay, it’s on the dessert menu. But still. I think it says that small plates, once blithely dismissed as “that tapas trend,” are pretty much here to stay. Small plates are the culinary equivalent of cargo pants—just when you think they’re about to go away forever, they come back in the biggest way. And at this point, we’re as comfortable with the noncommittal joys of a wee composed dish as we are with pockets billowing out from our thighs. Chefs, too, seem to have embraced the opportunity to send out their little works of much-worried-over art.

The orange confit with chocolate caramel mousse at Belltown’s Bisato is not, in fact, a new dish. Chef Scott Carsberg served it at Lampreia, the formal fine-dining restaurant he closed in early 2010, reopening in March with a new menu featuring “Venetian-style light fare.” Here’s what our own Kathryn Robinson had to say about his new place: “In spite of this restaurant’s more casual tone Carsberg still cooks in his arrogant classicist’s style—I say this with all admiration—even pulling the same arch tricks as at Lampreia, only now even trickier.”

The austere minimalism and pure flavors startle as they did at Lampreia, only all the more so since they’re experienced barside, whilst having cocktails with your pals and very likely wearing a pair of comfy cargo khakis.

But about that dish. It’s a two-part plate made up of A. a slice of orange cooked in sugar syrup, its form retained, and B. a quennelle of mousse made from sugar, butter, heavy cream, and chocolate. That’s six ingredients—for those of you counting—plus a whole lot of technique. The confit is sweet and a little sour (you eat the rind); the mousse is gooey goodness. They’re so simply glamorous together, it’s like Brad and Angelina on a dessert plate. And it kind of boggles the mind that you could have one, say, while meeting your girlfriend for a quick glass of wine after work. Or you might pop in hours after dinner, just because you happen to be in the neighborhood. That we get such food as this without committing to a white tablecloth and all the rest—it still makes me a little giddy to think about.

The dish may not be new, but the experience of eating it—an experience that speaks volumes about this particular epoch of the history of Seattle dining—most certainly is.

It’s the most memorable thing we ate in 2010.

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Tags: Belltown, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food, Bisato

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #2 New Dish of 2010: Luc’s Souffle Potato Crisps

Three times fried. Enough said.

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Luc’s souffle potato crisps (Thierry Rautureau’s hat not included).

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

In August, when Kathryn Robinson did her thing at Luc, she dubbed these golden beauts the best appetizers in the city. They’re souffle potato crisps—think puffy French fries—made with taters that are blanched, then cooled, and fried three times.

If that last bit about the frying didn’t have you, consider that Robinson also refers to the chips as “little miracles” with “moist, almost creamy interiors and impossibly crispy crusts.”

A basket of the crisps comes with dipping sauce and costs $8.50.

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Tags: Madison Valley, Luc, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The #3 New Dish of 2010: Hamachi Crudo at the Book Bindery

So many dishes to celebrate at this Fremont bar-raiser, but this one is certainly the most beautiful.

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Hamachi crudo at the Book Bindery.

We’re counting down the top 10 new dishes of the year.

First, nobody was talking about it. (Not to brag, but it was this very blog that first broke news of it).

Then, suddenly, everyone was.

But without question, The Book Bindery has been the most important restaurant opening of the year.

Among Per Se alum Chef Shaun McCrain’s highly lauded dishes: cavatelli pasta with foie gras emulsion, a composed salad of warm apples and pork belly, glazed Cattail Creek lamb shank with artichoke hearts, slow-roasted tomato, lamb jus, and chickpea “croutons.”

But behold, if you will, this hamachi crudo with avocado marble, pickled pearl onions, chili crisps, breakfast radish, and dashi gelée.

The farm-to-table simplicity that Seattle is famous for is wonderful, but this, oh, this! This is art.

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Tags: The Book Bindery, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #4 New Dish of 2010: Pork Chop Over Polenta Cake at Tilikum Place

The brick-lined Belltowner leaves our restaurant critic smitten.

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“Thick and meaty:” the pork chop over polenta cake at Tilikum Place Cafe.

We’re counting down the top 10 new dishes of the year.

Loved for its brunch, homey Tilikum Place Café proves a worthy dinner destination with stunners like the pork chop over polenta cake.

In fact, this savory hunk of comfort food—”thick and meaty, its smokiness brightly balanced by braised greens and lush grilled figs”—was a big reason Kathryn Robinson fell so hard for the Belltown boite. Robinson opened her review with the question, “After 26 years in the game, what makes a restaurant critic’s heart beat faster?” The answer, we come to know, is Tilikum.

The chop currently is not on the menu—bummer—but here’s to hoping Ba Culbert brings its back soon.

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Tags: Belltown, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #5 New Dish Of 2010: Beef Cheeks At La Bête

A precisely executed dish with an ingredient so inspired it actually stunned our critic.

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2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

One of the most exciting openings this year happened in the former Chez Gaudy space on Capitol Hill’s Bellevue Way. The beastly baby of Seattle restaurant veterans Tyler Moritz and Aleks Dimitrijevic, La Bête won fans from the start with its hearty brunches and evening fare- that was sometimes rustic, sometimes refined, but pretty darn delicious in general.

And while some reviewers could not get over the crunchy pork rinds, it was the beef cheeks served atop farro, chard, and porcinis that won over Seattle Met’s Kathryn Robinson. She writes, of the dish: “I found it lovely, executed with precision, until my fork uncovered dark orbs that I figured for olives but turned out to be grapes, at which point it went stunning…”

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Tags: Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #6 New Dish of 2010: Seatown Seabar’s Turkey Pot Pie

A comfort food classic soars at TD’s new Market counter.

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The turkey pot pie at Tom Douglas’s Seatown Seabar, located on the cusp of Pike Place Market.

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

The next time you find yourself wandering Pike Place Market on an inclement afternoon, steer north and hunker down at Seatown Seabar. Order the turkey pot pie. Let it be said, the pie is actually on the menu of adjoining takeout counter Seatown To Go. But the staff here is friendly folk, they’re likely to oblige and serve it to you at Seabar.

The pie is a toothsome five inches, and inside are tender hunks of sage butter turkey—lots of them, swimming alongside assorted veggies coated in a stewy, delicious rue roux. With any exceptional pot pie, the crust is at once flaky and fluffy—it deflates a little with the first puncture of the fork—but chewy-substantial. Is it filling? Oh my, yes.

In short, this pie is the type of food to make one relish rainy days—comfort food at its finest. Scout’s honor, it succeeds much more than the photo skills here might suggest.

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Tags: Pike Place Market, Tom Douglas, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The #7 New Dish of 2010: Steak and Eggs at MistralKitchen

A winner brunch dish at William Belickis’s SLU eatery.

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Mistral

Photo courtesy the restaurant.

We’re counting down the top 10 new dishes of the year.

Meh, brunch. It’s not my favorite meal. And yet, I ate one of my favorite dishes this year during brunch at MistralKitchen.

At risk of making this all about me, may I just say too that it is utterly bizarre that I even ordered steak and eggs. I rarely eat steak unless I’m work-eating, especially before 6pm. Seafood, veggies, and all manner of carb are more my jam, whatever the time of day. Looking back I think I chose the dish because the waiter—sweet, attentive, Don Knotts–ish in gait—told me it came with wilted greens and a carrot puree. (The steak and eggs pictured is a more recent version of the dish.)

Is that weird, to order steak and eggs because you want to try the carrot puree? Like I said, I’m not a brunch lady. Also I had a hunch that William Belickis, the chef-owner of Mistral, wouldn’t put something called “steak ‘n’ eggs” on his menu unless it was some kind of masterpiece.

I remember a juicy cube of beef and how I had to summon a fair amount of discipline not to gullet it in three bites, it was so tender and bloody and delicious. The egg was poached and there. I don’t remember too much more about it, I’m afraid. The Ramos gin fizz (or was it fizzes?) I drank probably have to do with that. The greens I remember: Ordering greens in restaurants is always a bit of a gamble, just yesterday I ate at a hyped restaurant that served me a sad pile of bitter, bitter greens. This was not the case on steak-n-eggs-at-Mistral-brunch day. The greens were sweet and bursting with that vegetal-vitaminy flavor that a good stack of greens should always burst with.

And the carrot puree? I nearly licked it off the plate.

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Tags: Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The #8 New Dish of 2010: Chickpea Puree and Carrots at Sitka and Spruce

A simple lunch item that’s hard to forget.

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Sitka and Spruce moved from Eastlake Avenue to Capitol Hill’s Melrose building this year.

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

I met a friend, a food lover of the first order, at the new Sitka and Spruce for lunch this fall. We opted to share three or four small plates. Among them: a dish of chickpea puree and carrots.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking: “You silly foodies ordered hummus and carrots—a snack one generally eats standing over the sink before rushing off to spin class—at one of the city’s best restaurant. That’s dumb”

But it wasn’t dumb. The carrots were gently softened and served warm over the airy puree and the dish was pinged-up with just enough harissa, a Tunisian chili sauce, and then cooled with fresh mint. We soaked up the puree with crusty bits of Columbia City bread, savoring—really, truly savoring—every bite of lovingly seasoned, expertly textured veg.

We ate other things that day. I believe there was cake at the end of the meal. And we had a bibb lettuce salad, I recall, with some sort of lovely vinaigrette, and medallions of chicken, each wearing a little tent of crackly skin. On other visits to Sitka I’ve had richer fare—a duck that took an hour to cook, beefy scallops, soupy-headed shrimp. But I dunno, the carrots and hummus dish stayed with me, inspired my own humble cooking while helping me better understand what the heck Matt Dillion is up to over there in the Melrose Building.

Carrots and hummus, he served us. But oh, so much more.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Vegetarian/Vegan Whatnot, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #9 New Dish of 2010: Where Ya At Matt’s Oyster Po’Boy

Seattle’s nascent mobile scene got a delicious Creole kick with the inception of Matthew Lewis’s truck.

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Where the ’boy is birthed: the Where Ya At Matt food truck.

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

There are po’boys to be had in this city, but few are spun with more down-south beauty than those of Matthew Lewis.

Lewis, a N’Awlins native, christened his food truck Where Ya at Matt in early August. The maroon kitchen-on-wheels was an instant hit, thanks to the affable Lewis’s long list of Creole staples—and especially, the fried oyster po’boy.

At bites a mess of a sandwich—count ’em, there’s close to 10 oysters there; loads of slippy-slidey Mama Lil’s dressings, too—it makes for a flavor bomb bursting with the brine of lightly breaded bivalves and feisty pickles and peppers. The bread is the stuff of po’boy perfection.

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Tags: Street Food, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #10 New Dish of 2010: Elk Meatball Sandwich at Nettletown

Christina Choi devotes her cozy Eastlake digs to wild edibles.

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Nettle

Nettletown’s elk meatball sandwich.

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

In a strip mall storefront that once housed Sitka and Spruce came Nettletown in March. Teensy in space but big in vision, the casual Eastlake boite would serve as chef and owner Christina Choi’s gastrolab of seasonal, foraged Northwest edibles. (In her review of the restaurant, Kathryn Robinson noted, “Nettletown’s menu reads a little like a botanical survey of the forest floor.”)

Star among the banh-mi–like baguettes and noodle bowls is the lemongrass elk meatball sandwich. The seasoning is just so, the game is tender and flattened to nicely fit into Le Fournil bread. Garnishing it is—what else?—a smattering of gathered vittles. As with all of Choi’s chow, the herbs and pickled vegetables bear delightful freshness. Kind of like Nettletown itself.

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Tags: Eastlake, Nettletown, Christina Choi, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

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