Small plates of Sage food
Rich Mead is the chef and owner of the 6-year-old Sage Restaurant in
Newport Beach. He’s in the midst of opening a second location, Sage
on the Coast, at Crystal Cove Promenade also in Newport Beach, which
is expected to debut in July.
The new restaurant will differ from the original Sage that serves
creative American cuisine. Mead is developing a menu driven by the
“small plate thing,” where most dishes center on single ingredients.
The build-your-own menu concept has succeeded at other restaurants:
Craft in New York, A.O.C. in Los Angeles and the Red Pearl Kitchen in
Huntington Beach share variations of that theme.
“The idea is to create a menu where customers can order two to
three dishes that focus on simple, incredible ingredients,” Mead
said.
Sage on the Coast will also have extensive wines by the glass.
Sage was Mead’s first restaurant, though he’s opened a half-dozen
restaurants including two that continue to thrive: 17th Street Cafe on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica, and Stanley’s on Ventura Boulevard
in Sherman Oaks. Sage is hidden in nondescript Eastbluff Shopping
Center, yet loyal customers and Zagat’s Survey agree that it’s “one
of the best small restaurants in O.C.”
Sage is a warm and charming restaurant with 30 tables and a back
patio filled with fresh herbs, sage, lavender and rosemary and a
Meyer lemon tree. Mead cooks with ingredients from the patio’s
garden. His partner, Rosemarie Urbananski, deserves credit for the
restaurant’s ambience and appealing decor. Each season, she adds new
touches that enhance the restaurant’s appeal. She even helped Mead
hand paint the chairs sage-green during the initial struggling years.
Mead’s energies focus on creating delicious lunches and dinners,
seven days a week.
“It’s an all consuming job,” Mead said. Once an avid skier (he
cooked and lived in Mammoth for years) Mead doesn’t have any time for
sports now. “In six years I’ve only taken three to four days off.”
Yet, for the first time in Sage’s history, Mead has brought in an
experienced chef, Kris Kirk, to help out in the kitchen. Kirk is a
graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in New York, and a
former chef at Aqua, the formal restaurant at the St. Regis Monarch
Beach Resort in Dana Point.
“Kirk has made me excited about learning again,” Mead said. “I can
develop ideas, read and have energy again.” The two throw ideas at
each other for the new restaurant’s concept.
Mead’s listed among the Great Chefs of Southern California. He
says he never attended culinary school and hasn’t had any formal
cooking training. Everything he knows about foods, he’s learned on
the job. Cooking has been his biggest passion for 30 years.
His interest in food came from his mother, who’s Chinese, and from
the necessity to find work. Mead grew up in Washington, D.C., and has
worked in restaurants since junior high school. His first important
cooking lesson came early.
As a teenager, he was in charge of manning 16 toasters with malfunctioning timers at a bustling Marriott Hotel coffee shop. The
kitchen staff members adored and doted on their young toast
apprentice, but he couldn’t keep the hurried pace. He burnt
customers’ bread, then all pleasantries turned sour, with the
waitresses calling him unprintable names.
Now, after a lifetime of cooking experience, Mead’s most important
advice surpasses rhythmics and organization. He offers no clever,
time-tested kitchen secrets and has no allegiance to products. He
only uses two knives and can’t even recall their brands.
“It just doesn’t matter,” Mead said. “Although I do like pizza
ovens, so I have one.”
His best weapon against disappointing food is basic: He cooks with
premium ingredients. He spends endless hours each week seeking out
the best foods he can find for Sage.
Each Wednesday morning, rain or shine, Mead meets with farmers to
select the freshest, most unusual produce at Santa Monica’s Farmers’
Market. On Saturday mornings he shops at Irvine’s Certified Farmers’
Market, next to UC Irvine. Mead says he’s a big proponent of
sustainable farming; he supports local farmers who practice the
environmentally sensitive program. Their growing practices include
conserving soil and water, reducing chemical use and restoring
natural habitats.
Once Mead returns to Newport with his collection of produce, then
he works on dish ideas. In addition to the regular lunch and dinner
menus, Mead offers a “Features” menu each week that incorporates
in-season items. He recently found pea tendrils, baby brussels
sprouts, wild arugula and “the most incredible raisins you’ve ever
tasted.”
He’s thrilled about the trio of colored beets he’s gathering,
along with peacock kale and winter chanterelles. He says the organic
carrots he buys are incredible, unbelievably sweet. Mead pays premium
prices for meats and seafood, but it’s worth it too him.
“I think my customers appreciate what I’m doing,” he said. Mead
purchases fresh seafood through Santa Monica Seafood, or has fresh
fish flown from Hawaii by FedEx. Prime rib-eye beef comes from
Newport Meat Co.
To construct his menu, he consults his endless supply of
cookbooks. Current favorites are Tom Colicchio’s “Craft of Cooking,”
Nancy Silverton’s “Sandwich Book”; “The Silver Palate Cookbook” and
always Julia Child’s books. He doesn’t have enough leisure time to
spend reading magazines, but he does subscribe to Gourmet, Food &
Wine, and the Wine Spectator. Mead also exchanges ideas with chef
friends and gets inspiration from them. His hectic schedule doesn’t
include dining out frequently, but his favorite local restaurants
include Abe in Newport Beach for sushi, Napa Rose at Disney’s Grand
Californian Hotel in Anaheim, and out of town he praises Campanile in
Los Angeles, Union Square Cafe in New York and chef Susan Spicer at
Bayona Restaurant in New Orleans.
On the seasonal menu, typical starter items include
Prosciutto-wrapped burrata with asparagus, roast peppers, cherry
tomatoes, arugula, roast tomato vinaigrette, basil oil and shaved
parmesan ($12); roasted, stuffed artichokes with pea tendrils, winter
chanterelles, macaroni and goat cheese ($10); or pulled barbecue pork
and corn crepes with Asiago cheese, sweet and tangy barbecue sauce
and creme fraiche ($10).
The entree selections can include roast duck breast with roast
baby fennel and Brussels sprouts, spring onion and carrot, raisins,
roast new potatoes and blood orange sauce ($23) or Panko-crusted
Opakapaka with Asian vegetables, saimen noodles, soy wasabi broth
($25).
The regular menu features an eclectic blend of tastes: grilled
Japanese eggplant salad ($10); pepper-seared Ahi with crispy potato
cakes, mashed potatoes, baby greens and Balsamic glaze ($10); crab
cakes with Creole sauce ($10); an array of gourmet pizzas ($9 to
$14); and classics: herb-roasted chicken ($18); grilled pork
tenderloin with Applejack brandy sauce, braised sweet and sour
cabbage, and parmesan potato cakes ($18); and Sage Cioppino ($23).
* BEST BITES runs every Friday. Greer Wylder can be reached at
[email protected]; at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; or by
fax at (949) 646-4170.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.