Saturday, August 27, 2011

Atelier Crenn - 08/26/2011

3127 Fillmore Street
San Francisco, CA 94123
(415) 440-0460

Only open a year, Atelier Crenn immediately stands out even in a city with many as many avant garde restaurants as San Francisco. The brainchild of Chef Dominique Crenn, Atelier is named as an homage to Dominique's adoptive father, a politician cum artist who called his studio the "Atelier" and his art decorates the walls in the main dining room. Chef Crenn's own poetry decorates the walls in the back room, a zen like space that marries a garden with a dining room.

Dominique grew up in a household that celebrated food and art, her mother was a wonderful cook in her own right and exposed Dominique to a variety of cuisines at a young age. By 8 years of age she was eating at Michelin-starred restaurants and by 9, she started cooking at home. After graduating with a degree in economics and international business, Crenn moved to the States to pursue her true passion, food. After spending a decade working as a line cook in various restaurants throughout SF, Crenn took a detour to La Bruschetta in Jakarta where as the first female executive chef in Indonesia, she led a brigade of all female chefs. Upon returning stateside, Crenn spent 8 years as the Executive Chef at the Manhattan Beach Country Club before striking out and opening her first restaurant, Abode in 2007. After its abrupt closure, Crenn returned to the Bay Area and earned a Michelin star during her 4 year run as Executive Chef at Luce. While at Luce, Crenn also competed on Iron Chef America, competing against Michael Symon and winning by a whopping nine points! Crenn isn't the only superstar working at Atelier joining her is Pastry Chef Juan Contreras. Contreras was an LA native who worked at Alinea before joining Dominique at Crenn. Given the similarities between the two restaurants, his talent and creativity are a welcome addition.




Bread - Brioche
The bread service felt a bit simplistic for a restaurant as adventurous as Atelier Crenn but the basic brioche was warm, airy, and fiercely buttery; a childhood favorite of the chef and I can certainly see why.


Amuse 01: Summer Corn - Coconut
The first amuse demonstrates the sheer versatility of corn with an initial expansive sweetness heightened by the coconut that gradually takes on a gentle savory tinge. The bits of puffed quinoa supply a sharp textural contrast to the corn and coconut base while the micro cilanto adds a bright green zestiness on the finish.


Amuse 02: Kir Breton
Our second amuse was the restaurant's "aperitif," a variation of a Kir Royale, a popular French cocktail that is often served before a meal. The Breton named for Crenn's hometown of Brittany, uses apple cider in place of wine, and encapsulates the liquid in a thin shell of white chocolate. The sphere is anchored in place with a thick cassis jam and topped with more of the same for color. The outer layer of chocolate shatters with a light glassy crunch which releases a torrent of ripe apple tinged with menthol. The chocolate lingers on the palate a moment longer giving the morsel a buttery sweet finish.


01: "Ocean and Land" - Wagyu Beef, Smoked Sturgeon
NV Jean Babou, Cremant de Limoux
The first course of the night was a contemporary take on steak tartare. The shaved Wagyu flank steak is joined by classic accompaniments of onion, mustard, cornichon, capers, and horseradish reimagined while the spheres of sturgeon cream add a potent smoky twist belied by their miniscule size. This course perfectly captures the draw of modernist cuisine, the flavor is coherent and grounded in tradition but reinvented texturally and presented as a visually stunning feast for the eyes as well as the palate.


02: Oyster "Japonaise"
2008 Domaine Vocoret et Fils, 1er Cru Chablis
I thought this course drew inspiration from The French Laundry's Oyster's and Pearls but the rest of the table disagreed. The Kusshi Oysters were poached in sake with beurre blanc. I was expecting the butter to temper the oysters and while the richness was apparent, the bivalve brine was brash, clean, and completely unadulterated. The dish was finished with a lemon foam which cut right through the butter as well as the expressive salinity of the oysters.


Supplement 01: New Potato "Mémoire d' enfance" - Pea, almond, Comté crisps
In addition to the tasting menu we ordered an extra 4 course menu to sample some of the more interesting courses off the a la carte menu. When we found out one of our selections was already included we went with our waiter's recommendation to try the chef's updated take on a childhood favorite. Eating this I find myself intensely jealous of the chef's childhood, the heady fingerling confit reminds me of a grown-up tater tot while the bright grassy peas brings a vegetal constraint. If I had to find one fault, and it is a small one, it would be the fact that the peas and potatoes overwhelm the subtler flavors on the plate.


03: Foie Gras "Log"
2008 Domaine Sylvain-Gaudron, Vouvray Demi Sec
Rather than go with a traditional cold foie preparation like a torchon, the liver is sous vided then refrozen giving it a luxuriously smooth uniform mouthfeel as well as a more nuanced butteriness. Foie is typically paired with a sweet accompaniment, though more recently aromatic and bitter contrasts have been en vogue. Crenn manages to draw effectively on both schools in the form of vanilla cream and Thai basil gel. The interaction between the vanilla, basil, and foie is absolutely transcendent and the whole dish feels almost ethereal. Demonstrating such finesse with such a heavy ingredient was truly marvelous.


Supplement 02: "Le Jardin" and its soil, pickled vegetables
Chef Crenn has an exclusive agreement with Gouge Eye Farms with 60% of her produce coming from the farm presently and the goal of raising that to 100%. Typical Gargouille presents the vegetables with minimal adornment making Crenn's emphasis on acidity a nice from the norm. That isn't to say the dish doesn't still celebrate the beauty of the produce. The tomatoes and pea shoots provide the traditional vegetal base while the carrots, radishes, and beets give the dish a succulent multifaceted crunch but for me the pickled brine made the dish so much more appetizing and approachable. I typically loathe beets but the pickled beets in particular were beyond amazing, easily the best vegetable on the plate and far and away the best beet I've ever eaten.


Supplement 03: "The Sea," Loch Duart Salmon - mussels, smoked oysters, sand
Next up was the chef's attempt to capture the essence of the ocean. Starting with immaculately fresh sea food representing the ocean, we find the salmon's clean salinity elevated by the oysters and mussels then juxtaposed with the sweet creaminess of the uni. The sand is a blend of lemon, anchovy, and sesame that provides a grounded earthy sweetness. Again the lemon "sea" foam provides the perfect denouement cleansing the palate following the symphony of seafood.


04: "Walk in the Forest" - Textures of mushrooms, pine, hazelnut
2007 Sierra Madre Vineyards Pinot Noir, Sata Maria Valley
The "Walk in the Forest" has been on the menu since Crenn opened and is the closest thing the chef has to a signature dish and with good reason. With multiple preparations and species of mushrooms, the dish is at sublimely toothsome and supple with varying degrees of earthiness and a piquancy from a single morsel of pickled mushroom. The fungi are tempered with a "soil" of bruleed pine meringue, the interaction between the herbaceous sweetness and gravitas of the mushroom was nothing short of majestic.


Intermezzo: Apple, Celery, Melon
We got our first look at Pastry Chef Juan Contreras with this intermezzo ahead of our final two savories. The bracing chill of the dessert was quite refreshing though I thought the celery was a bit heavy-handed the sweetness from the fruit intertwined nicely.


05: Salmon "Basquaise"
2009 Christian Verger, "Saint Lager," Brouilly
The Basque style salmon is accompanied by a vibrant sauce of roasted red pepper coulis, tomato, and a pearl onion, effectively a deconstructed Romesco. The light dusting of Bottarga augments the salmon's flavor giving it the strength to stand up to the expressive sauce. I noticed my piece of salmon was substantially thinner than my companions' and in the only real execution fault of the night my fish was a touch overdone.


06: Guinea Hen - "Thailandaise"
2007 Solter Sekt, Riesling Brut, Rheingau
Surprisingly the final savory was a chicken dish paired with a light sparkling white wine. The guinea hen was noticeably leaner than the typical chicken but with a fuller richer flavor between typical chicken and a game bird like squab. Light fragrant accompaniments of basil, coconut, ginger and lemon zest are perfect in keeping with the delicacy of the bird but still felt a bit simplistic compared to the earlier courses.


Intermezzo 02: Essence of Eucalyptus
Chef Contreras described this course as "driving towards the city." The pastoral aroma of eucalyptus was immediately apparent; on the palate the herbaceousness is appreciably mellowed by honey and lemon.


07: "Olives" - Fennel, Lemon, Almond
2006 Von Hovel, Riesling Auslese, Mosel
From the conception, presentation, and execution this was easily one of the most impressive desserts I've ever encountered. The story behind the dessert is a olive fresh off the tree. Instead of a true olive the focus of the dish is an EVOO ice cream reconstituted on an olive branch. Accompanying the "olive" are a lemon ice, fennel jam, and almond nougatine. Don't as me how it works out so well, but combination is absolutely spectacular. This might be the best dessert I've eaten all year.


Supplement 04: Tomato, Basil, Mint
The final supplement of the night was a play on strawberries and basil. The dessert starts with a basil ice cream sphere dipped in an admixture of tomato water and strawberry. The fruity sweet ice cream is paired with a base of tomato ice and a "sand" of savory basil cake finished with a hint of toastiness from the pine nuts on the finish.


Mignardises
Composed among a living Douglas Fir Bonsai tree this was dessert was stunningly beautiful with a soothing Zen vibe. We were advised to eat the various treats in the following order:
Virginia Blood Cedar Pate de Fruit: This was my favorite of the candies, sugary sweet with an aroma of spiced sandalwood.
Strawberry Pate de Fruit with Coriander: Seductively sweet and jammy with an aromatic accent, an adult fruit roll-up.
Kalamasi Marshmallow: Spongy and airy with a crystaline note of citrus aroma.
Salted Caramel with Maldon Sea Salt: A textbook caramel, initially chewy and sticky the heated sugar becomes creamy upon mastication. The flavor is delightfully savory sweet with toffee and coffee notes that come in and out of focus.
White Chocolate Ganache with Sweet Orange: Contreras described this as a take on creamsicle. The ganache had a slightly jellied texture with seamlessly balanced orange and chocolate.
Milk Chocolate Ganache with Passion Fruit: Surprisingly bitter for a milk chocolate, the monolithicity of the chocolate is broken by the pop of acidity from the passion fruit
Chewy Nougatine with Cocoa: A very delicate nougatine, the dark chocolate gives it an almost palpable savory smokiness.
72% Dark Chocolate with Gold: The thin pieces of chocolate dissolve on the tongue leaving a tangy bitterness on the palate.



It has been a while since I have left a restaurant with such a feeling of wonderment and joy. Visually stunning, intellectually stimulating, and absolutely delicious, Atelier Crenn takes the idea of food as art to a whole new level. The food at Atelier Crenn tends toward the lighter side, with grace and finesse being the watchwords of the day. Simply put, Atelier Crenn is my new favorite restaurant in the city and I fully expect Dominique to capture at least two Etoiles next time in the next Michelin Guide.




13 comments:

Sam C. said...

These dishes look awesomely stunning and beautiful...and taste good. Great coverage man!

Anonymous said...

This is well written, with elaborate descriptions and pictures.

Nice job.

Rodzilla said...

Damn this looked like fun, very cool to see french cooking done in both a modern and lighter style. Glad to see the trip has started off so wel.

Epicuryan said...

Sam,

Thanks the meal was incredible easily my favorite in the city!

nuraman,
Glad you liked the review, I thought the meal was so good that it deserved my best effort on the write up. Though personally I recommend you try it for yourself!

Roddy,
Yes if you ever get a chance to go up there add it to the list along with Laundry.

uhockey said...

Excellent post. I've long had you bookmarked under the blogs i follow and just recently figured out how to create a blogroll only to discover that you'd just dined at the spot I'll be visiting Saturday evening.

Nice writeup, as always.

Epicuryan said...

Glad you liked the post, hope I didn't provide too many spoilers. You hitting up any other restaurants while you are in SF?

uhockey said...

Didn't see your response till now - I went to a number. (Kakui, Bi-Rite, Ici, Smitten Ice Cream, Christopher Elbow, Frog Hollow Farms, Boulette’s Larder, Knead, Dynamo Doughnuts, Model Bakery, Bouchon Bakery, American Cupcake, Tartine, Four Barrel, Yountville Coffee Caboose, Ritual, Cheeseboard Collective, Pizzeria Delfina, Una Pizzeria Napoletana, Roli Roti, Zuni Cafe, Olivetto, Saison, Meadowood, Cyrus, Atelier Crenn, Commis, Redd, Benu, Plum)

Reviews are slow in coming to the blog due to work, but Crenn was #3 on the trip (behind Saison and Benu) - Her work is very impressive but the Salmon dish, imo, was terrible.

Will be in your part of California in November.

Epicuryan said...

Damn that is one hell of a list. How long did it take you to go through that.

Sorry to hear the salmon was terrible. I quite enjoyed it I wonder if some of the seafood wasn't fresh when you were there.

Where you visiting when you come to So Cal?

uhockey said...

That was 6 days - many were just bites, but 8 were proper meals. Slowly filling them into the blog.

In LA I'm thinking Red Medicine, Animal, Providence, Hatfields, and Ink. for dinners. I actually posted in Kevin's blog that if anyone would be interested in meeting up for the kaiseki at Ink. I'm shooting for 11/13.

For lunches thinking AOC Brunch, Gjelina, and perhaps Mori for sushi.

As for Crenn's salmon - I'm not sure - I just found the vegetables to entirely overwhelm the fish and given her decision to sous-vide without searing the scales the fish itself was like mashed potatoes with a fishy funk.

Epicuryan said...

I'll look forward to reading your thoughts.

Sounds like a great slate of restaurants in LA. As for omakase at ink, I don't think the challenge will be getting reservations rather than finding people to go with you.

Interesting you felt the salmon was too soft, I thought mine was overdone.

S Lloyd said...

Added to my list of restaurants to try on a next tour of SF. How were the flavors generally? Very tasty or not acquired?

Jai said...

Just got her 2nd star... good call. She is now deserving enough to be my wife.

Epicuryan said...

Haha two details you might want to consider first:

1. Did you work this out with Rose.

2. You might have to steal her from Kevin if this picture is anything to go by http://files.kevineats.com/pics/2011/110826-AtelierCrenn/DSC00095.jpg