Dining review
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STEPHEN SANTACROCE
o7 On July 14, 1789, French citizens, protesting the absolute rule of
King Louis XVI, stormed the Bastille, a state prison that symbolized the
autocratic and arbitrary government, marking the beginning of the French
Revolution.
Today, Bastille Day is a national holiday in France, celebrated with
parades, parties and large fireworks displays, not unlike our own
Independence Day. In Newport-Mesa, several French restaurants are
preparing special menus for the holiday, allowing us to share in Friday’s
festivities.
f7
Bistro Le Crillon (2523 E. Bluff Drive in Eastbluff Center, Newport
Beach, (949) 640-8181) prepares a three-course, fixed-price menu that
features some of chef Chantal’s favorite dishes. The feast will start
with a complimentary glass of French champagne, a perfect complement to
either of the hors d’oeuvres.
Celebrants may choose between country pates served over baby greens
with cornichons, small vinegary pickles, or fresh gooselivero7 foie
grasf7 served with toast points. The o7 foie grasf7 carries an
additional charge of $18 (it serves two), but is well worth it. It’s
perhaps the best I’ve had anywhere.
Entree selections are a rack of lamb roasted in the wood-burning oven
and served with o7 haricots vertf7 (green beans) or breast of chicken
with a morel mushroom sauce.
Vive la difference!
Finally, dessert will be fresh fruit tartlets with lemon custard.
Dinner will be served in two seatings on Friday and Saturday, and will
cost $39.50 per person.
Mistral Restaurant (440 Heliotrope Ave., Corona del Mar, (949)
723-9685) is using the Bastille Day holiday to kick off its summerlong
Tour de France celebration, which will offer various fixed-price menus
throughout the season. The menus will carry two prices, the higher will
include a glass of wine especially paired with each course by owner Ed
Waters.
The holiday menu, which is available Friday only, will start with a
selection of country pates and French dry sausage or a baby-greens salad
dressed with a mustard-vinaigrette and capped with baked brie cheese in
puff pastry.
Entrees include a grilled ribeye steak topped with shallots and garlic
butter. It’s served with o7 pommes fritesf7 (French fries) and o7
haricots vertf7 . The other entree choice is chicken cordon bleu, a
breaded breast of chicken stuffed with smoked ham and cheese, on a bed of
stewed tomatoes.
A caramelized apple tart with vanilla ice cream will top off the meal.
The dinner is priced at $16 per person without wine, or $29 per person
with a glass of wine selected for each course.
Pascal restaurant (1000 N. Bristol Street, Newport Beach, (949)
752-0107) has had a special Bastille Day dinner for the last 10 years. I
was at the first one, and the menu has remained the same since. But I’m
not complaining--it’s as good now as it was then.
Dinner starts with a small tomato tartlet to stir the taste buds,
followed by a raw vegetable crudites basket accompanied by a
mustard-vinaigrette and anchovy sauce for dipping. Traditionally, the
next offering is an array of delicious country pates and rustic sausages.
Diners will have their choice of four entrees: a classic cassoulet of
duck confit, lamb and sausage; chicken fricassee with a tomato tarragon
vinaigrette; or rabbit cooked Provencal style with herbs, tomatoes and
olives. Fish lovers will be pleased with the salmon, which is served in a
puff pastry crust with salmon mousse.
Dinner will be wrapped up with a cheese course and a selection of
desserts.
Expect the owners, Pascal and Mimi Ohlats, to decorate the restaurant
for the occasion, and an accordion player will be on hand to play French
favorites all evening.
The meal, including wine, is $59 per person, and will be served Friday
and Saturday evenings, with an early seating at 6 and another at 8:30.
o7 At the time of the French uprising, Queen Marie Antoinette, is
purported to have said “let them eat cake,” upon learning of the
peasants’ complaint that they had no bread. Before you applaud her
generosity, be aware that this was considered a sarcastic insult.
“Cake” was the name of dough scraps that were “caked” on the wall of
the oven and given out to beggars, as opposed to the baked delicacies
enjoyed by the upper classes. She wasn’t using her head when she said it,
and she certainly wasn’t using it later when it was lopped off in the
guillotine.
Luckily we live in kindler, gentler times where having someone’s head
on a plate is just a figure of speech.f7
At Pinot Provence (686 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa, (714) 444-5900) the
only thing you’ll find on your plate are delicious treats cooked up by
head chef Florent Marneau.
The holiday menu, a three-course affair priced at $39.95 per person,
will be served today through Sunday, along with the restaurant’s regular
menu.
A mixed hors d’oeuvre platter will start the meal, followed by an
option of two entrees. Diver scallops--which have a short season and are
hard to come by--are prepared in a Provencal bouillabaisse with a fennel
confit. As the name implies, they are hand-picked by divers, rather than
commercially farmed. I’ve had them in different dishes previously here,
and they have always been superb.
The other entree, roasted duck breast with a truffle and roasted
shallot au jus, sounds just as good.
Dessert on the Bastille Day menu is a strawberry o7 mille-feuillef7
, a cream-filled layered pastry served with Chambord ice cream.
o7 Sorry, Marie, no cake.
By now you’re probably humming “La Marseillaise” as you ponder where
to go to celebrate. Bastille Day has a familiar feel for us Americans,
coming so quickly after our own Fourth of July. Even the colors are the
same: red, white and blue.
So go out and celebrate and don’t forget to say thank you to your host
for the Statue of Liberty.f7
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* STEPHEN SANTACROCE’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday. He
may be reached via e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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