April 06, 2006

Vendana - Texas Culiary Academy Shines

Ventana - Prosciutto Cod

Back in New York, I’ve on many an occasion, have dropped in to dine at L’Ecole – the restaurant attached to the French Culinary Institute. It’s always exciting to see what the students concoct and the low prices serve as a great encouragement to eat up. I’ve never been disappointed and if anything, my worst experience there could be considered uneventful, but certainly not poor.

So when my friend’s boyfriend, who’s kindly taken me under his wing as his lunch ward during my sojourn in Austin, suggested that we go out for lunch at the Texas Culinary Academy restaurant Ventana, I jumped at the opportunity. The menu, coupled with some of the lowest prices for classical French cooking, seemed like a winner and a treat!

We arrived at an unassuming location that was part of a developing land – apparently a fancy mall will be built there. The restaurant itself is bright, spacious and simple. Students in the program wait on tables and are eager to explain the menu, if you so desire. Never confounded by fancy ingredients we ordered a salad, a prosciuto-wrapped cod and a pan-fried trout.

Ventana - Salad

The salad, made with greens harvested that morning from the Culinary Academy’s own garden, blew us both away. Simple greens with figs and pears, drizzled with a 30 year old balsamic vinegar and garnished with orange zest. Light, crisp, with multi-dimensional flavors, the salad was one of the best and simplest I’ve ever had. No need to drench the greens in a complex, heavy dressing – let the greens speak for themselves. The figs and pears added the sweetness as well as different textures to the greens. The orange zest, not to be forgotten, gave a much-needed bite.

Ventana - Trout

Our main course dishes did not disappoint. The prosciuto-wrapped cod came on top of a corn and clam chowder resting atop toasted bread. It is common practice to wrap cod in bacon or other kinds of cured pork – the dish was balanced and solid. No deviation from the tried and true – something the students need to learn how to cook – classic dishes everyone knows and enjoys. My dish, the pan-fried trout came with green beans, semolina fried onions and sauce Choron. While haricots verts would have been a better-suited choice, the green beans proved tasty, albeit a smidgeon too soft. Keeping vegetables crisp can be a matter of a couple of seconds, really – two extra seconds can send your vegetables from being happily crunchy to a tad mushy. What I didn’t understand was the sauce. Choron sauce can be either a hollandaise or béarnaise sauce that has been tinted pink by the addition of tomato puree. I didn’t mind the sauce over my pan-fried trout, but then again, I didn’t see any point to it. Trout is one of those fish where a simple frying and the addition of salt and pepper will do the trick – the fish stands on its own without any complex acrobatics. Don’t get me wrong – the sauce wasn’t a bad addition, but I just didn’t understand its role in the dish. It was there, somewhat piquant, over my fish, its flavor completely unrelated to the rest of the meal.

It would have been lovely to stay for desert – as I always save room for it under normal circumstances. However, my friend’s boyfriend had to get back to work. Something about contributing to the bottom line – something us vacationing folk can’t understand this week. And so we adjourned without any dessert. Given how hot it was outside, we also abstained from sampling their wines, sticking instead to water. I know, it’s very gauche to have gourmet food and no wine to go with it, but such was the case.

Ventana’s menu changes daily, and they are open only a few select days a week. Give them a call to find out their schedule before driving out to the location. However, it’s definitely worth a trip and a sampling. Perhaps, you can do me one better – and order wine as well!

Posted by radish at 12:21 PM | Comments (2)

April 04, 2006

Pok-e-Jo's - BBQ Galore

BBQ - Pok-e-Jo's

Upon recommendations from multiple folks, including my Austin friends, we took a short drive to Pok-e-Jo's last night for some good old fashioned BBQ. When Texas, do like the Texans.

The first thing you notice when you enter the eatery is the smell that makes your mouth salivate and your knees weak. The meats are plentiful. You can have your pick of beef, pork, chicken and sausage in various preparation methods; a choice of two sauces: regular or spicy; and a wholes slew of sides: cornbread, mac-n-cheese, cole slaw and other toppings.

Never to be scared into submission by large hunks of meat (man that was fun to write), I proceeded to order a two meat combination: a pork loin and a beef brisket. My friends went for sausage, chicken and a pork loin. I tore through my pile of meat as if it were my last dinner for a long while. The pork was flavorful, with a deep flavor of having been roasted a long time. The beef melted in my mouth, cooked through, juicy and tender. I had corn and cole slaw for sides - the corn could have been better - it felt like canned corn heated up. Not bad, but not great either. But the cole slaw was perfect - crisp cabbage, carrots, a little dressing. All in all, for less than $10, drink included - I wound up with a standard Texan fare, stuffed to the gills.

BBQ - Pok-e-Jo's (1)

It was fantastic. New York, as good as it is with food, just doesn't offer the kind of BBQ you can get in Texas. It's just something about the open skies, the big spaces and more relaxed spirit that allows for the BBQ to be just right. It takes time to get the meat perfectly roasted, the time we often lack in the big city, as we feel rushed and behind schedule in our personal and professional lives. The best BBQ houses in New York weren't nearly as good as Pok-e-Jo's, which isn't even considered to be the top of the BBQ line.

Given that Pok-e-Jo's is a local chain, you can visit several locations while in Austin. And since I've got another five days in Austin, I can't wait to see what other local eateries we can explore.

Posted by radish at 10:14 AM | Comments (1)