Monday, October 11, 2010

Still Digesting Montreal

I decided 3 weeks ago after being in a real mental and physical rut that I needed to take a step back and really evaluate what I was doing with myself and my company. Many people talk about the hardships of owning a business, however outside of financial insecurity long hours and hard work are what the culinary trade was founded on. The great chefs of past and present became great after years and years of study and practice. Only being 24 I know that I am farther behind my peers but make the best of books, trial and error. After not reading, working out, sleeping or eating properly for 3 months I knew it was time. I had hit a massive road block in what I was trying to get done as every meeting or attempt at a project was like walking through newly poured cement. So I knew a trip to Montreal was just what my brain needed.

Montreal for me has always been the greatest canadian culinary city in my mind. I live an hour away from Toronto but there was something from a cooks perspective about the city that really spoke to me. It was not until my visit last week that I realized we shared one great thing in common, our passion. Our passion to eat, drink and entertain those that walk through our doors whether a restaurant or our home. On the trip I started to write my thoughts, ideas and creations again which I had not done in a long time. There was this sense of freedom again even though I am fully aware of my inability to write, print and spell. So as the Blarney Stone intended for the Irish to have the gift of gab for 5 Days in beautiful Montreal that is what I did. From 9am until 1am the next day I had food in different restaurants and had discussions with patrons, employees and people on the street to get a pulse on what the Montreal culinary scene represents.

What were the lessons that Montreal could teach me in my quest to own my first restaurant?

Leaving Friday afternoon there was a sense of accomplishment but regret as well. Regret that I was coming back to Niagara, a place that I am not yet able to do what I want to do. For me Niagara is one of the truly blessed regions in the world. The fact that 2.5 years ago I couldn't close my right hand or move my arm kept me here instead of the Michelin kitchens around the world gave me time to appreciate it. A 7 month lay-off allowed me to study the area and hone my knowledge in food, wine and spirits. After the 7 months the carpel tunnel was not that bad and it became easier to cook and so was born Artisanal Palate with the goal of "Bringing Passion Back to the Table". I look around Niagara however and I don't see this passion. In a few bright eyes among the masses can I catch a glimpse of it. For having some of the most diverse growing conditions and products available it is amazing that we are still mostly a "chain" restaurant city. The donought capital of the world...........hurray!! From where I was staying the ratio to chain vs privately owned restaurants and cafes was amazingly lower than Niagara. So for me the trip was not only to regain my passion but find ways and concepts that will work here. What concepts can I bring to Niagara that will give us the recognition it deserves. When I ask people outside of this city or people that come to visit we are usually called boring and lack diversity. For me I see a lot of similar restaurants with an unpassionate work force and at times mediocre talent because of it. I have had so many good meals and so many bad ones in this area and it has to stop.

With such a great pool of talented chefs in this area there needs to be a connection. A connection between what the great producers here like Tree and Twig have and "value" restaurants. It has become more and more apparent that everyone is wanting more of a local cuisine but how in tough economic times do we convince everyone of it. Just because we can charge higher prices does it really mean that we have to? Does $0.25 a lbs food cost have to reflect $4.00 on a menu? Great food does not have to be expensive. I have many great lessons from Montreal that I will share. Call it my journal, call it rambles of a horribly grammatical flawed Irishman, what ever you want to call it maybe you might gain some ideas yourself and maybe even bring your own passion to your tables at home.

I hold nothing back as I am not a political man. But an argument or discussion to me on what we can do for Niagara is better then standing around while another McDonald's or Swiss Chalet goes up.

So care to join me?






When you have nothing

My friends have long made fun of me for some of the creations I come up with when it comes to having nothing. The idea of a chef is not just someone that can take the best ingredients and make something great its the ones that can take "nothing" and make something great out of that.

So you have a can of tuna and pasta on the stove from last night......I know a very tasty start. You see this is what I had to start with as I was hungry but had no proteins. So I went through the fridge to see what I had available to me....which as most bachelors isn't much.

What did I create?



Tuna Pasta with a Spicy Curry Rose Sauce....College students just got a little more refined because of this dish.



Who says you can't be creative with left overs!!

As my family is visiting the relations and I am here working, I am sure that Ill put something together out of the large amounts of turkey coming back. Should create the "Reality Cookbook", a book designed around making food out of left overs and scraps..now that is real family cooking!

Slainte and Happy Thanksgiving

Thursday, October 7, 2010

A Hurricane of Ideas



So I am day 3 into my stay in beautiful Montreal and yesterday was an eye opening experience. When I look at the landscape of restaurants and bars in Niagara there is much to yearn for. Yes Niagara has great places like the Merchant Ale house and The Office but what do we have that is different? To me Niagara is a hard nut to crack in how you make yourself unique and get the local crowd to buy into your concept. Montreal has given me a lot of concepts and ideas that I plan to implement into Niagara's restaurant. A restaurant that gives Niagara what it is lacking in cocktails, food and wine.


Now to read wine may be surprising to many people. Yes we have lots of wine 28,000+ acres of it in fact but go into a restaurant and find the Niagara wines. There are very few restaurants that have a strictly Niagara wine lists (Rest/Stone Road Grill in NOTL). In Montreal I have noticed that they support local without regret or remorse. In Niagara we have amazing products that I am certain that we as an area can make big changes.


Yesterday I visited a bar that put my concepts into practice, La Distillerie. I am going to do an entire post on this place as there was so much to learn. I did a kind of case study with the people and employees in the small bar about cocktails, upgrading and taste. I got some amazing feed back and hope the same study can be done in Niagara...however we do not have any good cocktail places.


With so many ideas for menus, restaurant concepts and things to study this trip is worth more then anyone can imagine for Artisanal Palate. To succeed in this business you have to be different and be the best.....I hope next February is the beginning.


Slainte

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Day 2 of Sabbatical


I suppose sabbatical is not the proper term when you are still connecting with the outside world but this is what this trip has been for me. The chance to get out of Niagara to learn and get some break has been what I needed. The weather yesterday was absolutely amazing so I hopped on my bike and decided to get "lost" in Montreal and find out what Montreal is about.




After meeting up with a friend who just moved here we walked up St.Laurent and I happened to walk into the famed Schwartz's charcuterie shop. I was told about this place by a number of people and was taking pictures when I stepped back and saw the name on the top part of the building. If you love seeing your meat aging in a store window then this place is your dream. I will be going today to pick up a number of meats to enjoy while working in the hotel today as well the pastry shop that we visited earlier for a pastry.


When I look at Montreal as a whole I think that it is easy to say that they are a lot more laid back then we are in Ontario. The people I have met are very friendly and are passionate about food and as I experienced later in the day drinking. The pastries and bread at this shop were absolutely amazing and as I didn't have my book with me yesterday I will write down the name later today. The pastry was perfect in every sense, the dough was from a croissant with sliced apples and pastry cream. Crisp on the outside and beautifully tender and flaky on the inside.




I visited 3 restaurants yesterday and will do a separate post on my experiences there as I feel that they have some great ideas and philosophies.




NYK-S Bistro Pub: similar look to the Mansion House with garage style doors and some nooks taht have booths in that looked very cozy. All local beers minus 5 imports and none of the typical Molson or Labatt. Most of the food was made in house though the great venision sausage I had was brought in from a local butcher.




Boucherie Charcuterie: Alimentation Generale: This place is absolute heaven if you are a fan of Charcuterie and France. This place offers much of the Basque classics and its 90% classic charcuterie. I will be going back before I leave.




Garde Manger: If a restaurant had life this place would have a massive ego. Beautiful on the inside with maybe 40 seats there are absolutely no markings what so ever. The only way I found it was I actually saw the chef (Star Chef Chuck Hughes of Chuck's Day OFF). I loved the menu of this place and it was good to see a place that is along the lines of look and feel that I hope to have in my first restaurant.




The plan is to work a lot more today on the business but I am going to enjoy breaking down all my experiences here and what it will translate for Niagara and the moves that AP is going to make in the future.


As far as the new set up for the site (http://www.niagaracatering.ca/) I am still fighting my technically challenged brain to get things moving. I am hoping to be able to complete everything in 2 weeks time.


Slainte










Tuesday, October 5, 2010

My Sabatical

It has been 5 years since I have taken any kind of "break" from working. As I write this I am sitting in an awesome "hotel" room in Montreal. I decided that I needed to get away from Niagara for a few days to think, learn and unwind.

I decided yesterday that I was going to spend another day in Montreal so instead of stopping half way I drove right here. For anyone driving in Montreal you should probably park outside as the parking here is pretty much non existent. A minor dent in what has been an awesome time so far.

The brew pub culture here is phenominal and unlike anything I have ever seen in Ontario. I have always said the french understand simplicity and quality, and there is an abundance of it here. My first stop was "Le Cheval Blanc" a 80 year old tavern right around the corner from where I am staying. Everyone was very friendly but even though the tavern itself looked kind of like a cheesy dive the product is the best. Even at the Merch in Niagara I have never had beer on this level and I will be visiting again later today to try more of their beers. My favourite part was their "menu" as it was only 8 items! I had a panini with goats cheese and mushooms on the side was a pickle and kalamata olives. It was perfectly cooked and it was not even the typical bread. Simple ingredients and cost efficent (the whole sandwich was only $5.95).

The music scene is also completely different here. I met a young band with an amazing amount of talent and sound (I picked up a cd to bring back with me). The atmosphere was great and remember this is Monday night and there are 80 people in this place. At this location I had a great local cider that reminded me a lot of Ironwood from Sunnybrooke in NOTL in that you could really taste the apples.

My last and most interesting stop was a hooka bar called Cafe Gitana. This was place was very interesting with this comfortable room right in the back. They had a great cigar collection as well. What struck me about this place was the concept itself of flavoured pucks being smoked as if it were going out to dinner. You walk in and 20 people are smoking these various hookas with 20+ different flavours. I was giving their most popular on recommendation which was "double apple" and to pair it I decided to enjoy a double cognac. The flavour was interesting and really got me thinkin as to how I could work something along these lines for a dinner. I plan on doing some research on this and seeing what can be done.

As I am in Montreal there is a lot of work that has to be done for Artisanal Palate. I will be posting later my 2nd week notes on my tastings with Winemaker Jeff Innes at Palatine Hills, Photos from the ultimate wedding and our cocktail/hors d'oeuves pairing as well as information about our new upcoming site.

Tonight the plan is to go to Garde Manger on recommendation as it is a completely open concept restaurant. This is the kind of place that I am looking to open so I look forward to taking notes. Montreal is also my charcuterie heaven as I am only 2 minutes away from famed Shwartz's and their amazing smoked meat.

Lots to come as I get down to work.

Merci beaucoup mes amis and slainte

ps...sorry about the spelling etc the spellcheck and others do not want to work today