Ronna and I indulged our Mado fetish for New Years Eve. We've been to a few family dinners at Mado, but this NYE edition may have been the best. Like all of Mado's family dinners, communal seating and shared plates are the thing, and since everything is offered in such generous quantities, pacing and restraint are key. And, best of all, even though it was New Year's Eve, the atmosphere was relaxed and low key. Jeans were acceptable attire and everyone was in a great mood, happily sharing plates as well as BYO wine and beer.
We started with two generous charcuterie platters, once with cured meats and one with cooked. Rob pulled out all of the stops for NYE and served the best charcuterie assortment that we've ever received at Mado. The cured plate included bresaola, genoa salami, and a hot copa. The bresaola was deliciously beefy and had just the right amount of chew. The flavor of the genoa was spot-on -- a really a great example of this type of salami. T his was our first time trying Mado's hot copa. It was well-seasoned and just slightly spicy, with a wide strip of lardo-like, melt-in-your-mouth cured fat.
The cooked plate included ciccioli and a pork and pistachio terrine. The ciccioli was deliciously gelatinous and porky. The pork terrine was another winner, and was as tasty as it was pretty. It had a country pate center, surrounded by mortadella-like emulsified meat, studded with bright green pistachios.

The antipasti course featured smoked sturgeon with blood orange, buckwheat crespelles, and braised cauliflower and fennel. The lightly-smoked sturgeon was delicate and fresh and went well with the sweet and tart oranges.

The crespelles were a fine example of Mado's keep-it-simple style: buckwheat crepes were smeared with crème fraiche, folded into triangles, and topped with another dollop of crème fraiche and caviar. The quality of the ingredients were really allowed to shine.

The braised cauliflower and fennel was served slightly warm, and topped with a decadent truffle fonduta.
The next two courses were linked - - the pasta and the meaty main course, the gran bollito misto. Quoting the Mado website: "The bollito misto is a traditional Northern Italian celebratory dish. A variety of meats are simmered together and the resulting brodo is served as its own course. To follow, the meats are served with garnishes." Rob explained that the meats (veal breast, chicken, cotechino, beef tongue, and shortribs) were cooked in series. The veal breast was braised in stock. Then, that braising liquid was used to braise short ribs, and so on. Ultimately, the result was a rich, deeply complex broth, which was served with (way too many) herb-filled, house-made tortellini.
Just as we started to get full, the platters of meat showed up. Fatty veal breast, moist short ribs, juicy chicken, corned tongue, and pork-skin studded cotechino. Dishes of house-made condiments arrived, including salsa verde, pear mostarda, horseradish cream, and thick, garlicky aioli. Then, sides of crunchy, roasted fingerling potatoes and honey braised lentils were delivered. We were in over our heads. We loved the tongue and cotechino. We dipped roasted potatoes in aioli, we sampled each of the meats with each of the condiments. Then, we hit the wall.
At this point, we worried that we were too full for Allie's desserts. We needed a break. Thankfully, our neighbors weren't in any hurry to leave either. We cheered the arrival of 2010 and four of us sat, and drank, and nibbled for a couple more hours. Rob and Allie assured us that we should stay and enjoy. Our platter of sweets and another of cannoli were empty by time we left (as were many bottles of hooch). The cannoli were perfect - - not too sweet, with a nice subtle sourness from the ricotta, and a crisp shell. The candy platter included amazing, soft, buttery pistachio cookies (that (we hear) are likely to replace the shortbread on the regular dessert menu), chewy marcona almond nougat, super-sour and perfumy candied grapefruit peel, and crisp hazelnut cookies. All gone, all thoroughly enjoyed.
We had planned on a quiet New Year's at home. We're so glad, though, that we changed our minds at the last minute and spent the evening at Mado. After so many memorable meals at Mado in the last year, and so much warm service from Rob, Allie, and their team, it only made sense for us to close out 2009 there.
--Rich
Last edited by
RAB on January 9th, 2010, 8:52 am, edited 1 time in total.
I don't know what you think about dinner, but there must be a relation between the breakfast and the happiness. --Cemal Süreyya