Serving up some Tastes
The 14th annual Taste of Newport begins Friday at Fashion Island.
Among those serving tastes from their restaurants’ menus is Dennis
Brask, chef at Five Crowns Restaurant in Corona del Mar.
On Friday, City Editor James Meier stopped by Five Crowns to chat
with Brask about his favorite tastes as well as those of the
thousands who’ll sample his restaurant’s tastes.
How long have you been involved with the Taste of Newport?
Since the beginning. Though I was gone for a few years and they
continued while I was gone.
What got you involved?
It goes back to when it was the Salute to the Arts. Of course now
it’s the Taste of Newport. We used to be indoors, with a booth and a
couple other people. And it’s grown to taking up the north end of
Fashion Island and attracting tens of thousands. So, just about from
the beginning.
What do you plan to offer tasters this year at the Five Crowns’
booth?
We do the same thing every year. I’d probably be lynched if I
didn’t do our roasted prime rib sandwich, with au jus and fresh
whipped cream horseradish and we do our signature raspberry creme
brulee.
We’ve added two and taken away from it over the time, but those
are the two things that we’ve always taken and are the most popular.
Like I said, I wouldn’t dare not do it.
What else did you dare to bring?
Oh, we’ve brought crab cakes and pasta dishes, etc., etc., but the
public has always told us, by their participation and what they’ve
bought, that that’s what they want us to bring.
When you’re not cooking or eating own food, what do you try when
you’re at the Taste?
A little bit of everything. It’s a great venue. There’s always the
new people who are there for the first year and I always love to see
what they’re doing. I actually collect a list of hints of the places
to try, the new places on the block, and see what they’re offering.
Then, I go back later for dinner.
Are there any particulars that you forward to every year?
I spend a lot of time in our booth, so I can’t say. Royal Thai is
a great friend. We’ve done a lot of things with them, so that’s a
must touch-base-with, along with Villa Nova.
So, at your booth, do you show people how to make this great food,
too?
Pretty much, the lines are so long and the service goes so fast.
Most of the roasting we do is done here [at the Five Crowns]. We do
finish off the creme brulee at the Taste, which is torching the sugar
on top and caramelizing it, which draws a lot of attention and is
really fun because you get to interact with the public. They say,
“Whatcha doing?” “Well, we burn all of the calories out of it when we
torch it, so you don’t have to feel guilty.” Right, right.
What do you enjoy most about the event?
I think getting in touch with the community, getting out there and
seeing those guests that, from the back of the house, we don’t get to
meet face to face. I think Newport Beach is our community where we
draw our regulars from -the loyal customers, so it’s nice to meet
them and say hi. That’s fun.
Does each year differ that much from your point of view?
Actually, yes. Because you’re outside, you’re a victim of the
weather. Unfortunately, last year, because it was mid-September, it
was actually postponed. But we did get great participation in moving
the schedule back three weeks.
But every year, there has always been a growth pattern. Pretty
soon, it’s going to be like “How can we top last year?” Because we
get to the point where you can’t even move at peak times on Friday
and Saturday night.
But it evolves and the weather changes. If it’s too nice, the sand
and surf have a draw.
Any final thoughts?
Just strictly quantity. It always amazes me. We deal with the
purveyors that we buy stuff from -- 600 to 700 loaves of bread are
delivered to the event. We have our meat shipped in from Chicago in
the morning. Almost a ton of beef. Sheer volume.
Is it more of a challenge serving so many people in so short a
time as opposed to the restaurant where you have fewer customers?
Totally different. The experience that we offer in the restaurant
is from pulling into the parking lot to hopefully a wonderful
experience with the wine service and everything else.
At the Taste, we’re just giving them that little tidbit -- a taste
-- of what we do. We take a facade that looks a little bit like the
outside of the restaurant, but it’s certainly only a nail scratch of
what we’re really offering here [at the Five Crowns].
Do you notice that many people coming back for more at the Taste?
We do offer a bounce back-type offer just to see how many people
we’re touching. It’s a really good response coming back from that.
It’s good public relations from us.
The offer is usually either a buy-one-get-one-free or a complete
dinner for two package that includes first course entree as well as
dessert and wine. We find that when people come in for dinner for two
will just come in and have one entree and another. When we do the
whole package at a great discount, people get to experience our wine
steward coming up and offering the wine -- everything we do, from
salad, entree right on through dessert. We find that a much better
venue for providing an offer.
We’re a great destination restaurant. People on the street will
say they went there for prom or it was their grandfather’s favorite
place to go or they went there for graduation. We’re very well known
in the community as a special occasion restaurant. We just have to
get out and remind people that we’re still here doing the same great
job we always have.
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