Paris Notebook


Le Dauphin, Inaki Aizpitarte’s new tapas place in Paris

Inaki Aizpitarte is not a chef whose cooking leaves you indifferent.  To some he’s a culinary genius and one of Paris’s most interesting chefs, to others his reputation is overrated, inflated by adoring fans*.

I’m not sure that I would consider myself a fan, but I do like Aizpitarte’s cooking.

Aizpitarte got started in the restaurant business late in life while travelling in Israel of all places, where he worked as a dishwasher and then later behind the line.  It was enough to get him hooked on cooking and learn the basics before returning to Paris where he worked in Gilles Choukroun’s popular Café des Delices on the rue d’Assas.

He eventually branched out on his own as chef of La Famille, which is where I first heard of him and tried his cooking. He then moved for a short stint at Le Transversal, the restaurant within the MAC/VAL modern art museum in Vitry-sur-Seine. I still remember my dinner there, a ten-course set menu for 38 €, which was my first introduction to modernist cuisine and very different from most of what was going on in Paris at the time.  The first course was a lone apple seed on a large white plate, followed by a succession of interesting small plates like a cod-liver macaron, calamari with a  « chorizo » foam, and a playful deconstructed pot au feu.  I went with a group of French friends who absolutely hated it, but I was delighted to try such remarkable flavours, some delicious, some not so delicious, but interesting nonetheless (I wrote up the experience on eGullet at the time and was happy to see that the account, including other’s impressions, can still be found here.

Transversal didn’t last long however and Inaki had already moved on to open Chateaubriand some 6 months later.  I have eaten at Chateaubriand a handful of times and some of the dishes I have had there have been startling, while others were less memorable which explains why it gets such mixed reviews. Placing 11th in Restaurant Magazine’s  World’s 50 Best Restaurant list, ahead of Gagnaire, Robuchon, Barbot and Troisgros, didn’t help as Chateaubriand became a dining destination attracting culinary globetrotters with high expectations.  But for 45 €, I think it is worth the gamble, as when his food is good, it is very good.

Aizpitarte recently took over Le Dauphin, a non-descript café a few doors down from Le Chateaubriand. He kept the name, called in Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas who gutted the place, transforming it into a modern white cube carved from Carrara marble, and serves small tapas-like plates and natural wines. It may be tapas, but it is definitely French.

The menu, which seems to change often, includes Inaki’s modern and playful take on traditional French dishes like brandade, bÅ“uf bourguignon, blanquette de veau, oxtail with carrots, oysters, steak tartare, and pig’s feet.  The steak tartare, with hand-cut steak, capers, fresh herbs, deep purple greens and crosnes, was outstanding and showed what good ingredients can do for a dish. The delicate ceviche with cucumber water was another standout, along with the crisp pig’s feet with oysters and seared pluma with radicchio. Each original, potent bite had us trying to guess what a particular herb or flavour was and my only complaint is that there wasn’t more.  Desserts included Aizpitarte’s take on French classics like apple tart, chocolate mousse, and a Saint Honoré.

I loved Le Dauphin but can already see the naysayers coming and imagine that some people who travel great distances to taste Aizpitarte’s cuisine will wonder what the fuss is about.  With such high expectations, it’s easy to be let down. I understand the criticism but even when Aizpitarte misses, I like what he’s trying to do. After all the media buzz that Chateaubriand has gotten, clearly he could have set his ambitions on a more well-heeled crowd, but I’m happy he chose to stay in the still-somewhat-scruffy part of the 11th, turning out his own style of inventive cooking, using exceptional ingredients, at affordable prices.  In doing so, he makes avant-guard cooking, a little more accessible to all.

Le Dauphin
31, avenue Parmentier
75011 Paris
Métro: Goncourt
01 48 06 58 41

Prices: small plates for 8-12 Euros, reasonable wine list with natural wine

*For some reason if you’re a woman and you like Aizpitarte’s cooking, you’re a groupie or fan–If you’re a man, well you just like his food. Go figure.

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Restaurant Saturne, a New Restaurant/Wine Bar in Paris

Sven Chartier and Ewen Lemoigne have taken the concept of cave à manger to a new level with Saturne, a beautiful, spacious wine bar and restaurant located steps from the Bourse in Paris’s 2nd arrondissement.  Both were most recently at Racines, a wine bar in the Passage de Panorama known for its almost militant adherence to natural wines and impeccable products. Saturne offers much of the same, but in a much grander setting. Click Here To Keep Reading

The Reopening of Spring Restaurant in Paris

Photo: Meg Zimbeck, Paris by Mouth

To say that the reopening of Daniel Rose’s Spring, in its bigger, more upscale location, has been getting a lot of attention would be a definite understatement.  The pre-opening press was a feeding frenzy as journalists, bloggers (myself included) and food forums all wondered when Spring II would finally open and more importantly how they would get a reservation.

That day finally came on 14 July, or Bastille Day as Americans call it, and ever since there has been no shortage of press, including a thorough accounting by Meg Zimbeck for Blackbook and a piece by Alexander Lobrano in the New York Times blog The Moment.

This second coming of Spring is more polished than the original—the pocket-sized restaurant on the rue de la Tour d ‘Auvergne in Paris’s 9th arrondissement where Daniel Rose, the young chef from Chicago, working alone in his tiny open kitchen, charmed French critics with his modern take on French cooking. Click Here To Keep Reading

Rino

Posted in 11th Arrondissement,Hot Spots by Phyllis Flick on March 29, 2010
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Stray a few blocks from the marché Aligre, one of Paris’s most interesting markets, and you’ll find Rino, a newly opened, pocket-size restaurant, which happens to be one of Paris’s most exciting tables of the moment.

The simple dining room seats all of 20 or so diners, with a few high tables over looking the slender, open kitchen, and then another eight or so tables in the sparsely decorated modern dining room with its wooden tables, cherry red banquettes and matching light fixtures. And in case you didn’t get a look at the menu, the funky music wafting into the dining room and the waiter/sommelier with 3-day stubble, cool retro glasses and a charming Italian accent are all tell-tale signs that this is not going to be your run of the mill Paris bistro.

And ordinary it is not. The chef, Italian born Giovanni Passerini, has an unusual culinary background, especially for France where chefs enter the profession at a very young age and go through rigorous training. Self taught and late to the game, he started his career in 2002 at a hip, yet elegant, 16 seat Michelin-starred French restaurant in of all places but Germany. He then went back to Rome for a stop at Uno e Bino, a highly-regarded Italian wine bar, before landing in Paris where he did very brief stints at both Arpege and Chateaubriand before settling in with Peter Nilsson at Gazetta, arguably one of Paris’s best modern bistros.

His daring market-based cuisine is light without the use of heavy sauces, using the best of seasonal ingredients including stunning vegetables by Annie Bertin. A recent lunch began with a brightly colored barley risotto with carrots, vinegar-soaked bulots (sea snails), and grated bottarga. Main courses included a choice of superbly cooked grondin, a very nicely prepared colin, and crispy fried lamb sweetbreads, all served with Bertin’s spectacular beets and roasted endive. Desserts were equally good with a choice between a simple caramelized apple tart with tangy fresh cream and hazelnuts or a delicious financier with a delicate, creamy blood orange ice cream. We shared a very good bottle of “I Feudi di Romans ” refosco, chosen by Pietro Russano, who has put together a very reasonable and interesting wine list that strays from the usual suspects so often found on Parisian wine lists. And to finish, not surprisingly, some very good coffee.

I am anxious to return in the near future for dinner, with its 4 or 6 course tasting menu which, I am told, is a real expression of Passerini’s passionate and inovative cuisine.

Lunch menus: 18 and 22 €; dinner: 38 € and 50 € (4 or 6 dishes, no choice).
Wines: Most bottles under 30 €, wines by the glass between 4-6 €

Rino
46, rue Trousseau, Paris 11th. Métro : Ledru-Rollin.
Reservations: 01 48 06 95 85. Closed: Sunday, Monday
Map

More Photos Here

www.rino-restaurant.com

L’Agrume

Posted in 5th Arrondissement,Bistros,Hot Spots by Phyllis Flick on March 6, 2010

This small néo-bistro located in an out-of-the-way neighbourhood in the 5th may have only opened in late December, but it’s already getting lots of press, and with good reason. The simple, modern dining room may not be much to look at, but the food more than compensates and the prices are unbeatable considering the quality and attention given to the food.

The night started on a low note. Our hard-to-get reservation at the counter overlooking the open kitchen was botched and we ended up in the dining room. A round of drinks and many apologies followed however and our disappointment vanished with the first course of the 35 € tasting menu, a delicious combination of creamy buffalo mozzarella, shavings of black truffles and a fragrant asparagus coulis.

The next course was just as good with delicate shredded crab, “petites legumes”, and a hint of tart green apple and lime.

The third course was perfectly cooked roasted merlu (hake) served with celeri rave and a delicate sauce scented with orange zest.

Next came chicken poached in a ginger infused kombu broth, probably my least favourite of the night, but still good.

We finished with two desserts, a silky vanilla panna cotta with a raspberry coulis and a chocolate mousse “boule” floating in a mint “nage”

The counter seats finally vacated and we had coffee at the bar and got the chance to talk to the charming chef who offered limoncellos as he finished up for the night. He told us about his stint at Le Bernadin in New York and generously showed off many of the products he uses each night.

This is definitely a restaurant I would return to and quick, especially knowing that once word gets out in the mainstream Anglo press, this bargain gastro bistro could soon become a very hard reservation to come by.

L’Agrume
15, rue des Fossés-Saint-Marcel
Paris, 5th
01 43 31 86 48
Métro: Les Gobelins / Saint-Marcel

Lunch: Plat du Jour: 11 €, Plat, wine and coffee: 14 €; Plat, dessert: 14 €; à la carte: 35-45 € for 3 courses
Dinner: 5 course tasting menu: 35 €; à la carte: 35-45 for 3 courses

Closed Sundays and Monday for lunch.

See it on the Map

L’Agrume in the press

John Talbott’s Paris
Fooding
Table de Decouvert