Category: <span>NY Eats</span>

In a city where everything is overpriced, a 3 course lunch under $40 at a 3 stars restaurant is consider a steal. No, it is not restaurant week yet, I’m referring to Nougatine @ Jean-Georges. They actually have a fairly good deal for lunch. 3 courses Pre fixe is $38/pp with 5 appetizers and 8 entrées, 2 desserts to choose from. That is actually more choices than a lot of place during restaurant week. See menu here

We chose the tuna tartar and shrimp salad.  Both were ok. I guess we shouldn’t expect top sushi grade tuna (but why shouldn’t we?). The radish was supposedly spicy, but we couldn’t tell. However the ginger marinade balanced the whole dish well. Shrimp salad was a little fishy when the plate set down, and I wish the vinegar would stand out more.

Tuna Tartare, Avocado, Spicy Radish, Ginger Marinade

    Tuna Tartare, Avocado, Spicy Radish, Ginger Marinade

Shrimp Salad, Avocado, Tomato, Champagne Vinegar Dressing

    Shrimp Salad, Avocado, Tomato, Champagne Vinegar Dressing

Sea Bass, like the shrimp, smelled a little fishy, but the skin was perfectly crispy. I can actually hear the “crunch” when my fork tried to break it. Cauliflower  must have just been re-discover, every place we have been to this winter had in cooperated cauliflower in their dishes, which is a good thing. Veal Milanese was decent. Of course we can’t compare to the one at Carbone, that wouldn’t be fair, it’s not the same thing, not even the same cuisine. This veal Milanese was a little thin. There was actually air/space between the veal and the batter created during the deep fried process. Almost like a puff.
Sautéed Black Sea Bass, Caramelized Cauliflower, Poppyseed-Buttermilk Vinaigrette

    Sautéed Black Sea Bass, Caramelized Cauliflower, Poppyseed-Buttermilk Vinaigrette

Veal Milanese with Parmesan, Pecans, Escarole and Lemon

    Veal Milanese with Parmesan, Pecans, Escarole and Lemon

Jean-Georges Warm Chocolate Cake, Vanilla Bean Ice Cream

    Jean-Georges Warm Chocolate Cake, Vanilla Bean Ice Cream

Frozen Toasted Almond, Lemongrass Infused Juice and Candied Orange

    Frozen Toasted Almond, Lemongrass Infused Juice and Candied Orange

The frozen almond mousses with orange was very colorful and eye pleasing. As I was having that, with the sun shining into the window and lite up the place, for a second, I almost forgot we are in the middle of winter.  We had an early lunch, it was just after noon when we sat down. People started to flood in as we were leaving around 1:30. I was a little surprise given it was a weekday. Everything was good, not outstanding; but great value. (Jan, 2015)
Nougatine @ Jean-Georges

Opened just two months ago, Shuko is one of the hottest place in town, especially after having named one of the “best new restaurants” by New York Magazine, and raved by all big name critics in the city. We have been to Chef Nik Kim and Jimmy Lau’s Neta when they first opened in 2012, so our expectations were high coming to Shuko.
nakazawa
Behind an unmarked, warm lighted door, is the 20-seat bar orchestrated by the Masa vets. On the night we were there, both renowned chefs were occupied by VIP guests, we were sat in front of the third chef. We decided to go for the more pricy Sushi Kaiseki ($175) upon the promise from our waiter that all sushi pieces would be the same. The non-sushi portion of the meal was 7 courses, follow by 13 pieces of sushi. Here it is from start to finish.

Mochi with shiso, miso and pistachio

    House made mochi with shiso, miso and toasted pistachio
    Miso sauce was too salty; pistachio was a bit strong for this mini bite size snack, suggest to crush the pistachio and sprinkle it on top.

West coast dungeness crab cucumber salad and sunflower in Yuzu soba sauce

    West coast dungeness crab cucumber salad with chrysanthemum in tosazu sauce
    The tosazu sauce tasted like a soba sauce with yuzu. We felt that there were a bit too much sauce, which overpowered the sweetness of dungeness crab, we think if cucumber were marinated in the sauce then drained it out before mixing it, would compliment the crab better.

Toast with toro & caviar

    Toro and caviar with toast
    Toro and caviar were almost like the one from Masa. Top grade fatty toro tartare with caviar, the whole thing was just lavish. While the toast was perfectly crunchy, it was unnecessary. Toro and caviar was good by itself, we ended up eating the toast separately.

Tasmania sea trout and trout roe and yam

    Tasmania sea trout and trout roe with yam— again sauce was too salty

Bake lobster with cauliflower, smoke bacon, mushroom and shaved truffle

    Bake lobster, cauliflower, smoke bacon, mushroom with shaved truffle
    Lobster was perfectly cooked. Absolutely love the cauliflower. But truffle was a waste. Perhaps not in season, truffle only add sense of fragrance but no taste. It is not necessary here. Just adding $$$.

Union sq vegetables Karaage

    Union sq vegetables Karage
    Vegetables were stacked together, but it’s too thick and a bit too oily.

Miso soup

    Matsutake mushroom in dashi soup

Roast squab, sunchoke and scallion

    Seared squab with sunchoke
    Great! Squab was perfect. Star of the night!

Then the second part of dinner starts. SUSHI!!!
There were 13 pieces. While the rice was perfectly cooked, the sweet and sourness of vinegar were missed. We thought the wasabi was very unique. We also spotted a little stove hid behind the huge butcher block counter, Chef Kim & Chef Lau were using it for toasting the seaweed to archive the crispness, but it was not very successful.

Blue fun toro

    Blue fun toro

Sea trout sea salt and yuzu pepper

    Sea trout sea salt and yuzu pepper
    Sea trout was velvety, and yuzu pepper added a very nice kick.

Shima aji

    Shima aji

Kinmedai with Lemon juice and zest

    Kinmedai with Lemon juice and zest
    This was interesting, since at most places, Kinmedai was usually torched. Kinmedai tasted as if it was marinated, nice!

Kama toro

    Kama toro
    Kama toro is neck of tuna, this was lightly torched. Absolutely melty

Sea beam with plum and shiso with sea salt

    Sea beam with plum n shiso with sea salt
    Plum and shiso creates a refreshing taste profile, but sea salt was a little on the heavy side

shuko16

    Hokkaido Uni

Toro with pepper n scallion

    Toro with pepper and scallion
    Thai chile pepper garnish was very clever. Toro was torched which added a nice smokey taste, but seaweed could be crispier.

Shitaka mushroom

    Shitaka mushroom
    Spicy again, not sure from what but it was good

Sirako

    Sirako
    It’s actually cod sperm, but it was deep fried, so basically just tasted like a deep fried batter…

Matsutake mushroom with spice and scallion

    Matsutake mushroom with spice and scallion

tuna roll

    Tuna roll
    I have to say, although it was actually the same thing, the Neta roll was somehow better.

Shiso leaf roll and plum sauce roll in Lotus root

    Shiso leaf roll in Lotus root with ume sauce
    This is also very similar to the one Masa offers. It is eye pleasing, but I can only taste the shiso, and nothing else.

After the full Omakase, we were less than satisfy, plus we saw some other parties have pieces we didn’t have (we were told both menus have the same pieces?!), we asked the chef for more. We were definitely missing any kind of shell fish, so when we saw other people have scallop and clams, we have to have it.

Scallop with yuzu and sea salt

    Scallop with yuzu & sea salt
    Maybe it’s not in season, we felt we could get better scallop at $3/p establishment,… and this was $10 a pop. Sea salt again was on the heavy side.

Mirgkai

    Mirgkai (giant clam)– very very thin… 🙁

Needle fish

    Needle fish with ginger garnish

As dinner coming to the end, we saw Chef Kim gave some VIPs “VIP” treatments. He added decent amount of uni on top of the lobster truffle dish. Also there were a trout skin with roes on top of it, we couldn’t tell what it was, but it sure was something we didn’t have, of course, we asked for it. We were told there were limited amount of certain things, and was sold out. But when a celebrity VIP came in, it magically have two more portion. Well, we are no celebrities… …
Disappointed, we were approached by Chef Lau, whom offered each of us a piece of Giant clam with giant clam liver. It was very interesting and exotic. Soft & crunchy, sweet, refreshing yet rich. I’d have to say that was the best piece of the night.

Giant clam with giant clam liver-

    Giant clam with giant clam liver

Before moving onto dessert, I have to mention, I had failed to take pictures of 3 pieces included in the Omakase, which were: Sawana with matsumaezuke ginger, Aji with ginger garnish, and a piece of pickle. The Sawana was nice, and ginger garnish on top was crunchy enough.

Concord grape granite

    Concord grape granite
    It did remind my of Wlech’s grape juice, then I remember Neta had a granite too. It was plum granite with crispy duck skin. On granite, Shuko vs Neta, Neta won.

Apple pie with vanilla ice cream

    Apple pie with vanilla ice cream
    Granted this baked in-house apple pie was very good but really? Serving apple pie at a refined Japanese sushi bar? Very un-traditional, i felt a bit disconnected, but it sure filled my half empty stomach.

Having been to Neta, it is very difficult not to compare. The two sure have similarity, and shadows of Masa can be easily spotted. Overall, it was good, but lavish. Was it worth the splurge?! Adam Platt gave it a total 4 stars (2 stars for sushi, and 2 stars for non-sushi); in my opinion, 2 +2 doesn’t = 4. (Jan, 2015)

15 East main dining room
After about 3 weeks I started this blog, one of my friends asked me, “what happen to 15 East? I’m surprise you don’t have it up yet.” The reason this was a question is because anyone who knows me knows that I’m crazy about sushi, and 15 East is my favorite sushi place in NYC so far. The truth was there are too much materials and I don’t even know how or where to start.

Over the years, we have been to numerous sushi places in the city, but not one has satisfy us the way that 15 East does. Time after time, we keep going back and Chef Masato continues to impress us. Like most Japanese sushi chef, Chef Masato devoted a lifetime to his skill and never stops thriving for better. That was very well communicated via his food. Every time, there was always something new, something exciting, something better.

May it be a new taste innovation, a new presentation, a new flavor combination or something we have never seen before, Chef Masato never failed to surprise us. Before the meal even ends, we were already planning our next visit.
Scallop with uni hand rollTomago
If you have watch the film “Jiro Dreams of Sushi”, you would know just how important and how much time it takes to master a simple tamago or the crispiness of the seaweed. To some places, they were almost afterthoughts, which they don’t pay attention to. But at 15 East, these were just the two of many examples proving they are continue to improve. I have to be honest. Several years back when we first went to 15 East, the tomago was very ordinary, the hand roll lacked that crunchiness of the seaweed. But half a year later, when we went back, the seaweed was as crispy as a potato chip. The Tamago, although it was not yet the “Jiro/Nakazawa” standard, it was petty close.
Slow poached octopus Grilled Japanese conch and grilled smelt
Omakase starts with Chef Masato’s signature soft poach octopus. Tender, juicy, full of favor, it was better than steak! The “30 minutes massage” preparation really pays off. If you are not having omakase at 15 East, please, order it, this is a must have! It would change your mind about octopus. But if you are at 15 East, why would you not grab the seat in front of Chef Masato and let him take care of you?! From the first piece on, he pays attention. He notices without asking what makes you smile and what kind of flavor and texture impress you, then he would go on and adjust/ tailor the omakase to fit your taste. I mean, isn’t that what omakase supposed to be?

Uni (Santa Barbara)

Yes, you might be able to get the same kind, same grade of fish elsewhere, or even the same flavor combination, but you cannot get this kind of service and attentiveness. And the food is absolutely exceptional! Melt in your mouth Toro, crunchy sweet clams, everything was dreamy. Every piece was artfully crafted. Sushi rice was cooked just right and perfectly balanced; fishes were top grade, lightly press onto the rice and slightly brushed with soy sauce, or sea salt, or yuzu. And then, there were pieces that were so rare and exotic, that I have only had it here at 15 East on this side of the globe. Not only sushi is extraordinary, if you still have room for dessert, the tofu is must have. House made, dense but soft with red bean sauce pour over. And don’t forget the soba, freshly made in-house daily, the night I had it, it was pair with ikura and uni. Soba was just al dente, certainly better than some of the most raved ramen places in the city. We call it our bowl of happiness. At 15 East, every bite is memorable. We are in a sushi heaven when in 15 East and I can’t wait to go back.

michelin 2015 new york stars
michelin3stars

Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare
Eleven Madison Park
Jean Georges
Le Bernardin
Masa
Per Se

michelin2stars

Aquavit
Atera
Blanca
Daniel
Ichimura
Marea
Momofuku Ko
Soto
Jungsik

michelin1star

15 East
Ai Fiori
Aldea
Andanada
Aureole
Babbo
Batard
Blue Hill
Bouley
The Breslin
Brushstroke
Danny Brown Wine Bar & Kitchen
Cafe Boulud
Café China
Casa Mono
Case Enrique
Caviar Russe
Carbone
Del Posto
Dovetail
Gotham Bar and Grill
Gramercy Tavern
Hakkasan
Jewel Bako
Juni
Junoon
Kajitsu
Kyo Ya
La Vara
Lincoln
Meadowstreet
M. Wells Steakhouse
Minetta Tavern
The Musket Room
The Nomad
Piora
Pok Pok Ny
Peter Luger
Picholine
Public
The River Cafe
Rosanjin
Seasonal (closed)
Spotted Pig
Sushi Azabu
Sushi of Gari
Take Root
Telepan
Tori Shin
Torrisi Italian Specialties (closed)
Tulsi
Wallse
Zabb Elee
ZZ’s Clam Bar