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Saturday, January 30, 2010

Cafe D'Alsace

Restaurant Week is perhaps the only time of year when college students can have a gourmet meal for a reasonable - or semi reasonable - price. (Okay, so I've persuaded myself it's reasonable, although to be honest $35.00 for dinner... actually, I'm not gonna go there. It's reasonable.)

Last night ten of my friends and I went to Cafe D'Alsace on the Upper East Side for a meal that not only broke up the monotony of cafeteria food but took my taste buds to places they had never before ventured.

For an appetizer I had a poached egg with artichoke fricassee and melted Morbier cheese. I was a little hesitant at first, having never had "artichoke fricassee" (I'm not gonna lie...I didn't quite know what fricassee meant) or morbier cheese. However, it was truly a lovely concoction. The cheese melted onto the poached egg and the fresh, flavorful artichoke perfectly complemented the dish.

Okay, time for a confession... I'm not normally a meat eater. That is, I eat chicken and fish, but rarely wander into the red meat territory. I know, I know, how can one be a food writer and not eat red meat?! I decided it was high time to change this, and venture out of my culinary comfort zone. "If I'm going to be a food writer I need to eat everything," I told myself, and bravely ordered the steak frites.

It was a bit intimidating to have a huge piece of red meat plunked in front of me as if was something tame as chicken noodle soup, but I had to admit it was very, very good. I have had steaks before and this was one of the best I've ever tried. The frites were reminiscent of those I had in Paris. I'm a bit of a french fry snob but these met my high criteria - not too greasy, not too thin. Thick enough to really taste the potato and thin enough to be light, crunchy, and delicate in a melt-in-your-mouth kind of way. These were the kind of fries that people around you just can't help but steal from your plate. (Heck, I don't blame them, I would have done the same if I'd seen these on someone else's plate.)

Dessert truly made the meal. I had the warm, flourless chocolate gateau with raspberry coulis and pistachio ice cream. It was very similar to a chocolate souffle; when poked with a fork, the chocolate oozed out. Halfway through eating the gateau, the chocolate inevitably mixed with the raspberry coulis, and the pistachio ice cream melted slightly into the gateau - a happy occurrence indeed! Usually the first bite of dessert is the best, but in this case the dish just got better and better as the flavors combined forces.

The waitstaff were extremely friendly towards us. I have too often been treated disrespectfully when out to eat with friends - perhaps the waiters assume that because we are college kids we won't tip well. But at Cafe D'Alsace we were all treated with the utmost respect and kindness.

We all left smiling at the end of the meal, tummies full and content, faces glowing with the triumph of having managed to eat a delicious meal outside the brutal cafeteria world we live in. Perhaps $35.00 isn't reasonable for a college kid, but it was still worth every penny!





3 comments:

  1. Katherine! This sounds absolutely amazing, I am so jealous I wasn't able to go out for restuarant week! Fun fact: I also do that weird thing where I eat poultry or fish but usually not red meat, purely as a taste preference, but steak frites are the best. And that dessert looks and sounds fantastic.

    If you're looking for somewhere similar that's a little closer to the 'Nard and a little less expensive, I can't recommend Le Monde (Broadway and 112) enough. I've been there twice for special occasions- it's $21 for their dinner Prix Fixe menu and everything tastes like it was cooked in heaven (exaggeration? probably. but the food is damn good).

    Love reading this can't wait for more!

    -Claire

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  2. *prix fixe is a three course meal

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  3. Thanks for the recommendation!!!! $21.00 is quite reasonable - I will definitely go there soon.

    The next restaurant week is in June, but maybe we can have a Barnard get-together with people living in the tri-state area!

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