Oysters gets Beard endorsement
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Greer Wylder
Chef Scott Brandon’s Asian-inspired cuisine at Oysters Restaurant is
so provoking that it recently captured the attention of a James Beard
Foundation committee member who dined at Oysters.
The foundation member raved about the food, then personally
invited Brandon to cook at the James Beard House, the country’s only
historic culinary center, in New York. The foundation offers culinary
artists scholarships, educational opportunities and it also serves as
a resource for the culinary industry.
Nearly 100 guests enjoyed Brandon’s dinner in early January. Now
Brandon has cooked in the same league (kitchen) as some of the
country’s top culinary talents, including Daniel Boulud, Suzanne
Goin, Emeril Lagasse, Nobu Matsuhisa, Jacques Pepin, Douglas
Rodriguez, Susan Spicer and Charlie Trotter.
Brandon’s talents are remarkable and enviable. He’s self-taught
and never attended culinary arts school. It’s hard to believe, but
Brandon doesn’t get ideas from cookbooks, cooking shows or food
magazines, Oysters co-owner Cary Redfearn said. He’s gifted with his
own culinary imagination.
“He’s incredibly creative,” Redfearn said. “He can tweak a few
ingredients, and suddenly has wonderful Asian-flavored dishes.”
Redfearn said his dishes aren’t anything you’d expect to find at
typical Japanese or Chinese restaurants. He’ll take a classic Italian
dish, bruschetta con le fave (fava bean toasts) and put his own Asian
take on it, pureeing edamame in favor of fava beans. The result is
one of the popular appetizers, truffle and edamame crostini, shaved
Reggiano Parmigian, white truffle oil and toasted ciabatta ($9)
Brandon mixes unusual and common ingredients, with subtle and
intense flavors. He frequents his favorite Asian market, 99 Ranch
Market on Culver Drive in Irvine, to buy specialty produce, like
tatsoi (baby spinach); enoki mushrooms and togarashi, small, hot, red
Japanese chiles. They even have four to five varieties of bok choy.
Brandon relies on two suppliers for fresh fish selections. Like every
other restaurant, Alaskan king crab, calamari and shrimp are frozen
-- the rest is fresh.
“We have a very small freezer,” Redfearn said. “And our meats come
from the best meat company this side of the Mississippi-Newport Meat
Co.”
Oysters Restaurant has turned the tide since it first debuted 15
years ago. Its lustrous metamorphoses emerged from serving simple,
grilled fresh seafood with side dishes, then to composed seafood
dishes.
“It’s evolved over the years,” says Redfearn. “What we set out to
do isn’t exactly what we have today.”
The changes have been good ones. The independent bistro is an
inviting change from Orange County’s prolific big-name restaurant
chains. Its decor resembles a major-city restaurant, something
straight out of San Francisco.
The entrance features one of the best design souvenirs from the
1920s, white and black hexagonal tiles, that can bring any room right
back to that period. Acquiring the historic bar was a major find for
the restaurant. The bar, built in 1902, migrated here from the
legendary Pump Room Restaurant in the deluxe Ambassador East Hotel in
Chicago. The beautiful Brunswick bar, made of rich mahogany and
cherry wood, features intricate moldings, three arches, and mirrors.
It houses a collection of premium spirits and serves as a relaxing
gathering place for locals. It was once Chicago’s celebrity hangout.
There are practically three environments here within one building.
There’s the active bar room with live jazz or piano, the main dining
room situated close to the bar and the quieter garden room.
On the seasonal menu, the Kung Pao calamari appetizer is most
requested, yet there are 14 other great selections. For oyster
connoisseurs, there are fresh oysters, including Fanny Bay from
British Columbia, and from Puget Sound, Hama Hama, Hood Canel and
Kumamoto oysters. Oyster samplers (two of each) are $16. The oyster
Tom Kha soup combines freshly shucked oysters poached in Thai curry
coconut and lemongrass broth with Asian vegetable brunoise ($9).
There’s a light, grilled pear salad with endive, frisee and
tatsoi; Cabrales bleu cheese, almonds and shoyu (soy sauce) dressing
($9). From the seafood selections, two outstanding choices include
the incredibly thick-cut swordfish that’s marinated in honey and
soy-ginger, and then oak-grilled, served over braised shiitake
mushrooms with baby bok choy. It comes with Thai jasmine rice and
soy-mirin (sweet rice wine) butter ($27).
The flat, iron-seared Hawaiian ahi is first marinated in
ginger-mirin, then seared rare, with jasmine-nori (paper-thin, dried
seaweed) rice. It comes with spinach and soy-chile glaze ($26). From
the steaks and chops selections, choose from wood-fired prime filet
mignon. It’s marinated in ginger togarashi and served with wasabi
panko fries, crisp asparagus spears and a soy-citrus demiglaze ($28).
And, there are the special plum wine-braised Angus beef short ribs,
with roasted Yukon gold potatoes, Maui onions, slow cooked greens and
shiitake mushrooms ($26).
Dessert choices include ginger and five-spice shortcake with wild
berries, Meyer lemon curd, ginger-whipped cream ($8); Fuji apple and
cranberry cobbler, served with vanilla bean gelato ($8); and a trio
of sorbets with fresh fruit ($9). Oysters’ signature cappuccino comes
with tropical liqueurs mixed with house blend espresso, steamed milk
and foam ($8).
Oysters is proud of its prestigious wine award from the Wine
Spectator. It’s one of 500 chosen in the world to receive the “Best
of Award of Excellence” for its wine selections. Because of the
restaurant’s age -- they’ve collected wines for 15 years -- they have
access to hard-to-find allocated wines. A great wine bargain is
offered on Sundays through June 1, from the regular wine list --
bottles are half-off. More than 120 bottles make up that list.
Oysters’ co-owners also have other restaurants and businesses.
Walt and Mona Babcock own Babcock Vineyards in Santa Ynez and Walt’s
Wharf on Main Street in Seal Beach. Cary Redfearn just opened Oceans
33 at the Shops at Mission Viejo.
Happy hour is from 4 to 6 p.m. daily. Live jazz or piano begins at
6 p.m.
* 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.
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