My family and I had an enjoyable dinner at Café des Architectes yesterday. Often, I don't want to like hotel restaurants and dismiss them prematurely as offering more style than substance in both décor and food. But I was pretty psyched to eat at Café des Architectes. I believe it's the first Pierre-Yves Rochon space I've visited (I stayed at the Hotel Sacher in Vienna before he worked on Restaurant Anna Sacher) though I've admired from pictures many of his restaurant projects. Rochon has many imitators among restaurant and bar designers. Café des Architectes is the real deal.
The space is at once intimately cavernous and open, mostly warm with cool accents. I liked the sight lines I was able to steal, and the acoustics were excellent. The restaurant was full at our 6:15 seating, with a steady buzz of conversation spiked by holiday cheer, but the volume remained relatively quiet the entire time we were there. Overall, I was really impressed by how relaxed Café des Architectes felt. I don't usually associate that type of comfort with such refined spaces.
On to food. Our meal started with an amuse-bouche of
foie gras with red onion purée and star anise.

Both Mama happy_stomach and I love foie gras, so for us it's basically always an excellent way to start a meal. And it was here. I thought it might be a drier bite with the coarse dusting of star anise, but the red onion provided welcome sweetness and textural contrast. As much as we liked the amuse-bouche, it also foreshadowed two of the weaker aspects of our meal overall, which were the excessive use of (albeit fresh and often beautiful) greens and, to a lesser extent, plates that made certain foods challenging to eat.
The microgreens with the foie gras provided color and, by hiding the red onion, made the sweetness something of a surprise. I wasn't crazy though about the feeling in my mouth of the stems against the smoothness of the foie. Also, I've grown tired of hors d’œuvres served in what I call wonton spoons*. The plating choice struck me as particularly gimmicky in this case. By including a fork, the kitchen acknowledged the fact that the amuse-bouche was more food than one could consume in just one spoonful. The dish would have been stronger if it were truly a one-bite teaser.
First Course:Roasted Sunchoke Velouté: Brown Butter / Glazed Quince / Salad of Microgreens
I've had sunchokes on the brain since recently re-reading Kennyz's post on
sunchoke gratin. This velouté was an excellent use of the vegetable--very smooth ("velvety," indeed) and nutty with a subtle sweetness. Also, it was served at an ideal temperature--still very warm at my first taste despite the soup being photographed after all of the other starters at our table.
Peekytoe Crab Salad: Piquillo Pepper Purée / Local Radish / Seedling Farm Apple Gelée

I wanted to like this dish, but I couldn't get past the cover-up: a criminal amount of parsley concealed by an apple screen-façade. The crab by itself was fresh and bright--a profile particularly pleasant after the velouté--and the inclusion of piquillo was promising, but the greens seemed to wash out all of the flavors in this dish. Also, the plate was too narrow for that many greens, once toppled.
Homemade Potato Gnocchi: Rock Shrimp / Glazed Salsify / Lobster Tarragon Emulsion
I didn't try this dish, but my sister's boyfriend was "eh" about it. He liked the novelty of seafood with gnocchi and didn't seem bothered by the greens.
Prime Short Rib: Caramelized Turnip / Hillside Orchards Glazed Chestnut / Daikon Radish Salad
This was another excellent dish--very tender and not too sweet. I loved the daikon. Also, the portion was generous. A few more ounces and, my sister said, she would have gladly had it as her entrée.
Second Course:Nichols Farm Beet Salad: Capriole Goat Cheese / Truffle Oil / Hazelnut Vinaigrette
This salad was one of the less satisfying dishes of the evening. Typically, I prefer beets either thinly sliced or pureed because I find it difficult to eat chunks of beet and taste anything else in a dish. That was the case here with the goat cheese. I could taste the truffle oil only because there was too much of it. Though I suppose I could have cut the beets into smaller pieces, eventually, I found myself abandoning the vegetables and eating just the goat cheese. I liked the textural contrast provided by the beet chip, but I wished it were placed differently. It had a patina to it that detracted from the vibrant colors underneath.
Artichoke Salad: Blood Orange / Tempura / Pleasant Ridge Cow's Cheese Shavings
I don't know if Mama happy_stomach ate all of the artichokes before letting me taste her salad or if they were just covered up by the pyramid of greens. I forgave the cover-up in this case because the dish looked like a Christmas tree, and I was able to taste the Pleasant Ridge shavings, a cheese I like very much but have never used in salad.
Third Course:Walleye Pike: Confit of Cabbage / Andouille Sausage / Rhubarb Emulsion
I only had a small bite of this dish since I had fish for breakfast and lunch yesterday (another story for another time). The pike seemed dry, but the accompaniments were interesting and tasty.
Roasted Venison: Persimmon / Celery Root Purée / Black Peppercorn Sauce

This was my favorite dish of the evening. Despite its deconstructed appearance, all of the components worked together beautifully. The venison was gorgeous and silky. The dried fruit here was used more as a partition than a screen, I thought, to visually-arresting effect. And they went easy on the frisée.
Swan Creek Guinea Hen: Mushroom Stuffing / Brussels Sprouts / Verjus Reduction
This was a solid, comforting dish. The bird was moist, and the other components, while more conventional than other dishes that evening, were well-prepared.
Beef Tenderloin: Parsnip Purée / Braised Oxtail / Shallot Reduction
The tenderloin was cooked to the requested medium rare--one of the waiters helping us checked with me twice to make sure I was happy with the doneness--but it was surprisingly tough. Our waiter had brought us a steak knife for the venison but not the beef, though it was only the latter that needed the sharper implement. The oxtail redeemed this dish for me. I love meat on meat, especially oxtail on almost anything, and once I got the hang of cutting the tenderloin--the plate here seemed too big since the beef slid as I tried to cut it--the dish overall was quite enjoyable.
Not having seen photos of the food at Café des Architectes before our visit, I was hopeful that there might be something uniquely architectural about Chef Noguier's food. Unless Chef and his team are picking up on the increasing interest in urban vertical gardens, there was no new architecture here. The desserts were
pièces montées in the vein that desserts in so many restaurants are these days--Hot Chocolate/Mindy Segal, Takashi/my friend & former pastry chef Catherine Miller, the pastry chefs with the Boka Restaurant Group...sometimes elegant but rarely anything new.
Desserts:Coconut Panna Cotta: Marcona Almond Financier / Glazed Pineapple / Kaffir Lime Sorbet
I felt bad for this dessert because the waiter who brought it to our table handled it rather clumsily, and all of the parts slid half way across the plate before it actually touched the table. Then it remained more or less neglected; no one at my table took to it. I only tasted the sorbet, which I wanted to be much more tart. Architecturally, it brought to mind two structures:
1. The oculus of Mario Botta's Museo di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto
2. The Brazilian from a recent visit to Perennial
Not a fan of coffee-soaked cake, I only had a bite last night of the
Opera Cake: Espresso Soaked Almond Cake / Vanille Royal Sabayon / Chocolate Ganache, too.
Pear Ginger Crème Brulée: Poached Pears / Valrhona Caraibe Cremeux / Almond Phyllo
I suppose this was the most architectural dish of our meal, either in the Laugierian sense of columns and lintel or as modernist pile dwelling. I liked the crème brûlée liberated from the ramekin, though the crème, probably for structural soundness, was stiffer than I usually prefer. I would have liked it silkier for greater contrast with the crunchy components. Overall, this was yummy though.
Buche de Noël: White Chocolate-Rum Ice Cream / Amarena Cherry Parfait / Bittersweet Chocolate Cake
This was my favorite dessert of the night. I wasn't sure at first what I thought of the alien appearance, but then it brought to mind one of my favorite structures of recent years:
Renzo Piano's California Academy of Sciences
The Buche de Noël had a lot going on, but it was all delicious. I didn't want to share it.
Café des Architectes is expensive, but I liked it a lot for a special occasion meal. The service was friendly and more or less attentive but scattered. By the end of the night, it still wasn't clear who our waiter was as we had 3-4 different people helping us, none of whom offered much information about the food or drink. I was in the mood for wine last night but was underwhelmed by the list. My drinking started and ended with a single Dark and Stormy because I didn't want my annoyance with the gendered cocktail list (gendered palates are one of my hot buttons) to taint my otherwise very positive experience of the restaurant. I hope I have occasion to visit Café des Architectes again.
*As a kid, I'd only eat wonton soup my mom made at home if I had the same kind of spoon I got to use in Chinese restaurants.{Edited to correct typo}
Last edited by
happy_stomach on December 26th, 2009, 11:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.