A great chef + new chapter

Every chef has a number of challenges in any given day.  The biggest challenge is do what you want or do what the customers ask you to do.  When you get the chance to fulfill both of those on a day to day basis.  You are a lucky chef.

With this in mind, I want to congratulate, my friend, Mike Philips on his latest project Green Ox.   

I have known Mike since he went and opened Chet’s Taverna too many years ago that I want to remember.  The restaurant was the reason that I got my job at the Modern Café.  Mike had worked with Jim at the Modern and when they opened Chet’s a job opened up at the Modern.  (They just celebrated 16 yrs. You should have been at the Quinceanera, last year. Wow.) So, I guess if Mike and Jim would not have opened Chet’s, who knows what I would be doing right now.  

As we all know, Mike is a “meathead” and that is a huge compliment. This is a guy from IOWA that will not stop defending his very flat state.  He has been working towards this goal of in his words “…. just making meat all day” for a very long time.  He is a true craftsman.  Now he will get to continue his craft on another level and the Minneapolis area will be a better place for it. 

I know I have said this to you a number of times.  But really, nice work my friend, now get back to making meat. 

You know the phrase “… be like Mike”?  It has a whole new meaning to me now.

Scott.




What do you do with all that Kale and Kohlrabi?

 

Hey everyone, I know this summer is busy for everyone.  If you are looking for a little help with that CSA box that you have been getting, here is a great opportunity.  I am working with Tangletown Gardens (site of our first Tour de Farm this year, btw.) this year and we are trying to do everything we can to make it easy for you to have some new tricks up your sleeve to handle all that beautiful produce.  

This little note is from their newsletter.  If you get a chance, give us a call and come on in. 

We know you love receiving your Farm Fresh Food shares every week. We know that it’s a treat to be learning about new vegetables like scapes and kohlrabi….but, really, what do you do with three different kinds of braising greens in one week? 

 Join us at Tangletown Gardens on July 7th at 6:00 PM to learn how to make the most of your vegetables. Pampuch will demonstrate strategies and techniques intended to inspire new ideas for using and preserving the vegetables in your share. Space is limited, so make your reservations now by calling the Corner Table Restaurant at 612.823.0011. $55 We hope to see you there. 

 Deadline to sign up is Monday the 5th, 2010.




Thank You City Pages! I Think?

So, a couple of weeks ago, Corner Table was given the award :  BEST RESTAURANT WHEN SOMEONE ELSE IS PAYING.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I appreciate the thoughts on the award and the recognition but there’s one teensy tinsy little problem: they’re not talking about the restaurant, they’re talking about one very special meal offering we have available. It is, is $125 per person for dinner, which is steep, but you, the diner, is in control of how much you eat. We feed you courses, not from the menu, but off of the top of our heads – with wine and beer pairings – UNTIL YOU TELL US TO STOP. Most people are eating somewhere between 15-20 courses. And as everyone likes a free meal, then of course it’s the best MEAL if someone else is paying. But really, you’re getting several meals.

Since the award came out, we have had customers now calling and emailing wondering what has changed with the menu?  Why are we so much more expensive?  WE’RE NOT, I PROMISE.

Our menu is still very diverse with offerings from $4 to $25 with tasting menus from $55 to $125. There’s a bit of something for every budget.

Thank You, City Pages for the award, really. We’re proud to say that people sure do agree with you on the ‘best’ part and so far nobody has complained about the price tag.

These two photo’s are of a chalkboard that customers at the end of the meal are able to give us some feed back.

So, far, so good.




Remembering what Jon taught me.

Jon Radle worked at Corner Table and it was some of the best food I have tasted anywhere.

Jon had applied to Corner Table, and I wondered why someone of his skill level would be applying to my restaurant.  I soon realized that he had so much to teach me, and he was always looking to learn.  We tied short ribs during his interview.  I will never forget that talk.   In the short time that I got to work with Jon, I realized that he was going to be an amazing chef. 

Restaurants in Minneapolis are better because of the food that he made and the skills that he taught others around him.  He will always be a one of the best cooks I know.

In Remembrance 

Date: Monday, April 26, 2010 Time: 7:00pm – 11:00pm

Location: Grand Café Street: 3804 Grand Ave S , Minneapolis, MN 

The Grand Café is deeply saddened to share the news of the unexpected death of our executive chef, Jon Radle. Jon’s unpretentious style and enthusiastic love of food and cooking infused the café with a warm and welcoming air. An award-winning chef, Jon was modest and hardworking. He had no taste for the role of celebrity. His graceful leadership set the tone at the café making it an intimate community working together. Jon was an integral part of this community and family. He will be deeply missed. Grand Café will be closed until Friday, April 23. It will reopen for business with associate chef Ben Pichler at the helm. We are very grateful for the unwavering support of Ben and all of the staff at the Café during this difficult time.

Sincerely, Mary and Dan Hunter

For funeral arrangements see www.oconnellfuneralhomes.com

In addition : In remembrance of Jon there will be a gathering at Grand Cafe, Monday Evening April 26th @ 7:00. InfoContact: Mary Hunter 612-822-8260 (Café) or 612-616-4168 (Cell) staff@grandcafempls.com GRAND CAFE 3804 Grand Ave. SMinneapolis, MN 55409 612.822.8260




Want to eat more local foods? Here’s how you start.

Every solution starts with someone taking the first step.

I have been having a lot of conversations these days about food.  I know that may not seem like such a big deal for a guy who owns a restaurant but these are bigger food conversations.  Things like:

”What is wrong with the food system, if anything?”

“Does ‘local’ food really matter?  Maybe it is just a trend.”

”What is local food?”

“All food is local, somewhere, right?”

”Isn’t eating locally really expensive?  I can’t afford it.”    And so on and so on.  Some of these questions come from customers, some come from peers, some come from friends, some are conversations in kitchens, and others are conversations in my head that have happened over the last five years.   They are all valid questions, and I have a bit of knowledge on some of them but I DO NOT HAVE THE ANSWERS.  (If I did, more people would be reading this blog, or I would have multiple books and you would see me on many talk shows, and we don’t want that, now do us.)

The thing that intrigues me so much about local food is that it does affect so many people and so many other parts of our lives.  It is energy. It is economics. It is the opportunity to share food with someone and ultimately develop community. It is sometimes the opportunity to be alone and just be in the moment all by ourselves.  Food is pleasure. Food is a challenge.  Food is art (if you work at it or get lucky.)  Food is very important to me.  This is why I spend so much time thinking about it.    This is how you can take that first step.  Just think about it.  Think about food.  Think about where it came from. Who grew it? Where did the seed come from?  What is the story behind that food? Who handled it along the way?  How many miles did it travel?  How many hands – how many people touched your food before it touched you? That food is yours, right in front of you.  Every time you choose to eat something you have bought all of where it’s come from.  Think about it.

Here are some ideas of what you can do to get the ball rolling.

1. Eat something you have never eaten.  Learn about it. Read about it.   Food Timeline and History

2. Take a friend to lunch,  even something small and simple, don’t talk about food, and just enjoy the time with that person.

3. Find a recipe for something you had eaten a long time ago and make it again.  Learn everything you can about that food.  If it is important enough that it is still in your memory, get to know it better.

4. Enjoy a guilty pleasure.  Find something, one bite of something that makes you just crazy.  Just one bite.

5. Find a server in a restaurant and talk to them all night long about food.  Servers know a lot and they are willing to share.  If that server does not know, they will find out and you will have helped them out with their knowledge as well.

6. Email a chef.  Send them a note about a meal you had, were it great, and were it bad, something, starts a relationship with a restaurant.  It will make you both appreciate the experience of eating in a restaurant that much more.

7. Email a farm, really.  Find out where you can get there food, buy a CSA. If you don’t know what a CSA is, look it up.  Ask that farmer more about why they farm.  GO, and help them, volunteer to work a day or make a visit.  (At the same time, respect the farms time, be creative, and maybe bring some friends and help for a day, of if not, just get to know them the best you can.)  Land Stewardship CSA List

8.  Foster creativity and curiosity in a child by introducing them to a new vegetable.  Let them eat it raw, the cook it, and let them see the difference.   Lyndale Youth Farm and Market Project 

I am going to end there, some of you may want to go to a top ten list or maybe 15, or 20, who knows, and I will let you fill in the rest.  Answer back and give me some of the things that you think about with food.  Try some of these things and see what happens.  In the end.  We all have to eat, so why not truly enjoy the process?




What’s a Corner Table Cooking Class Like?

This is the coveted pork belly class.  We had so much interest, so, keep an eye out, this class may show up again in February.   Or it might not…

The first thing we should mention is that this isn’t your normal cooking class.  For one thing it’s in the kitchen of a rather busy restaurant during dinner service.  Another thing is that you’re greeted with the first course of your dinner for that night, a “nosh plate” with beer or wine.

Behold our featured ingredient for the night,  the pork belly.

Mise en plase,  if you cook, you should know this phrase.  If you don’t, look it up.

Salt is very important.

Oops – the wifi went out so Chef de Cusine, Jorge Guzman, filled in talking about pickling while it was being fixed.  Just a little bonus since pork belly goes so well all things pickled.

And, again, the importance of salt and the two best tools in the kitchen.  Your hands.

Did we mentinon that you get dinner along with your class?  Yeah we did.  We’re going to mention it again. You get dinner along with your class.  This course was warm celery root and parsnip soup with bacon, pancetta, guancalle and fresh pork belly garnished with sweet red pepper and lemon simple syrup.

It appears that it was good to the last drop.

Not your traditional piece of fat to make lardo, but in the interest of using all parts of the belly, this is a quick verson of the traditional Italian ingrediant.

Ah, this is the joy that is pancetta.

This course is bacon and eggs: fresh pancetta, poached egg, spicy dark cherry + honey gastrique.

pork belly: braised

Hidden Steam Braised pork belly, butternut squash puree, Ames farm caramelized apples, creamy heirloom beans from Riverbend Farms.  Dessert had very little to do with pork belly, but it does speak to the balance betweena rich full dessert and citrus.  Rogue chocolate ganache with lemon curd, candied walnuts and chili sweet sauce.




Vino + Vinyl is Moving

 

Wondering what we are doing with Sunday nights at the restauarnt.  Well, here you go.  Vino + Vinyl is moving to Thursady nights.  We already do $1.00 corkage fee on Thursday nights, so we are going to break out the turntable and spin some records as well. 

Sadly, we are going to close on Sunday nights.  We thank all those that walked in fromt he neighborhood, and spent Sunday nights with us.  We are going to have some new and exciting things happening at Corner Table. 

Stay Tuned.




Minneapolis, New Years Eve, Thank you

Blue Moon, Corner Table, Tour de Farm Tent

I just wanted to take a moment this morning to thank everyone who grew, cooked, decorated, served, ate, drank and in any other way were involved in the wonderful evening we had last night. It truly does take a leap of faith to come out on one of the coldest nights of the year to a tent set up in the middle of a Minneapolis street, and that’s just what you did. You’re amazing. Thank you all.

Here was the menu from the night

Amuse

Family style

Hidden Steam Pork Belly and Lutsen maple gastrique

1st course

Larry Gates in Kellogg Warm Sweet Meat squash soup, allspice Castle Rock cream, Ames Farm Apple and northern Lites Blue cheese

Wine Course

Morin “Olympe” Chitry 06

2nd course

Cured Star Prairie Tout, crème friache, poached potato in PastureLand butter

Cono Sur Riesling 2009 from Argentina

3rd course

William Yoder Roasted beets, Riverbend farm polenta, Star Thrower farm Sheep’s milk ricotta

2005 Vina Alarba Old Vines Grenache

4th course

Thousand Hill braised grass-fed brisket, Rutabaga puree from Elizabeth Emerson in Castle Rock  Cream + pickled mustard seed

Bordeaux- Cotes de Bourg, Domaine Peychaud, old vines Merlot 2006

5th course

Rogue chocolate ganache cakes, warm Pepin Heights Apple cider crème anglaise + Honey caramel sauce, Sweet braised beets

Lustau Pedro Ximenez San Emilio Sherry




Minnneapolis, New Year’s Eve, Blue Moon

Yes, the ground is frozen

“Once in a Blue Moon…” Right? That is the saying. Well, that is kind of what I am thinking right now about putting this tent up. While everyone is cozy and warm there are about six hard working guys putting up a tent and getting ready for dinner tonight.

You have to have a velvet rope for New Year's Eve

We also are going to have a number of Farmers with us tonight. Thousand Hills Cattle Company, Dragsmith Farms, Pastureland Butter and our friends at Tangletown Gardens will be joining us for dinner as well. We can all sit around and talk about local food and what we are going to plant in the spring.

Why don’t you come and join us tonight to see how it all turns out. New Years Eve Dinner




Minneapolis – this New Year’s Eve… Celebrate Local!

If you would like to have an evening like no other in Minneapolis on New Year’s Eve, you need to get your seat at our Tour de Farm Table! It is very easy to do and you will never forget it. You will be greeted at our reception area at 6:00pm with beer from our newest local brewery: Fulton and their IPA, Sweet Child of Vine. (It’s good.) You will nosh on appetizers made from the finest artisanal meat and cheeses Minnesota has to offer. There will be some guests of honor at the event: Yes, our farmers! Come and find out the answer to, “What do I do with rutabaga?”

Then you will move out to the (yes, big HEATED) tent to be dazzled by the amazing food stuffs Minnesota has to offer over the next 5 courses + the starting amuse featuring (YES!) house made bacon produced from Hidden Stream pork. Then we move on to dishes created with: Sweet Meat squash, Cedar summit cream, Ames Farm Apples, Northern Lites Blue cheese, Star Prairie Tout, PastureLand butter Riverbend farm polenta, Stickney Hill farm goat cheese, Thousand Hill braised grass-fed brisket, and produce from Elizabeth Emerson Farm.

And we finish on a dessert featuring: Rogue chocolate, Pepin Heights Apple cider and Garden Frame Honey.

So where are you going to be this New Year’s Eve? (You should be here!)