I’ve got certain preferences: spicy over subtle, sexy over elegant, Janet over Chrissy. I don’t care too much if it looks great – I want it to smell great, feel great and taste great. After my first visit to Lockwood, I thought the restaurant was too much Don Shula, not enough Mike Ditka. But chef Foss is finding a groove now, and he’s exhibiting a style much more to my liking. jesteinf and dansch joined me for dinner this week, and I thought everything we had looked and smelled a way that said “eat me!” rather than “admire me”. So, eat we did, stuffing ourselves with enjoyable dish after enjoyable dish described below, thanks in part to Chef Foss’s generosity in sending out some starters on the house, and an “intermezzo” of terrific sweetbreads with fantastic, generous shavings of black truffle.
Fig and balsamic glazed Dutch pork belly with rapini ravoilo, black trumpet mushrooms, black garlic, and a sunnyside up egg. Sometimes a chef just nails the perfect set of flavor combinations, and I think that happened here. The glaze tilted toward the sweet side, which might otherwise have turned me off, but here that’s exactly what was needed to balance the strongly bitter rapini. The earthiness of the mushrooms along with the relatively subtle hit of acid from the balsamic brought the dish into even greater harmony. The textures in the dish – succulent, tender pork, mushrooms with a bit of pleasant chew to them, and well-made, al dente pasta – were almost as good as the flavors, with perhaps one miss: the yolk in the beautiful sunnyside-up egg was cooked a little harder than I would have preferred.
Crab Apple – jonah crab meat wrapped in granny smith apple with macadamia nuts and lavender honeyI liked this even if it didn’t excite me as much as the pork belly. The apples had been sliced so thin that they were translucent, so one could see right through them to the strong-flavored, very tasty crab. This was a fun dish to look at and eat.
House cured duck prosciutto, leg rillettes, frisee salad, mandarin orange, tea gel and more The thinly sliced cured duck breast was a beautiful combination of ruby-red, flavorful meat and melt-on-your tongue white fat. This was another dish of great flavor and texture contrasts, with the crunchy frisee dressed with a mustardy vinaigrette, soft and sweet mandarin oranges that I believe were cooked confit-style, and a really interesting, unsweetened (or so it tasted to me) gelee made from smoked lavender tea leaves. That somewhat harsh gelee definitely wasn’t something I’d want to eat on its own, but I thought it worked remarkably well with the rest of the flavors in this dish.
Marrow-crusted sturgeon with pulled osso buccoI had read about this dish, and it was one of the reasons I wanted to return to Lockwood. It sounded great, and it was. Sturgeon is a very meaty, flavorful fish – probably one of a small number that could handle this meat-centric preparation. The crust that topped the fish was earthy, beefy and very rich, and that sat on top of even richer pulled shank meat that was further enriched with some more marrow mixed in. This was about as heart-stopping a fish dish as you’ll find, and it made me very happy.
Rabbit ragout with ricotta gnocchi, La Quercia guanciale, pickled carrots and wilted greensWith so much good stuff in this dish, it might be surprising that my most vivid memory is of the carrots. The pickling must have been very subtle, because I didn’t notice it – instead focusing on how sweet they were, and reminiscent of those early spring carrots I crave. The rest of the dish was quite good – the rabbit especially moist and flavorful - but I did have a quibble – the guanciale was cut into larger pieces than I’d have liked, and its very strong flavor overwhelmed a couple of bites until I started taking more care in cutting and allowing only a tiny bit on the fork with the rest of the ingredients.
4 preparations of Southern style pork with bourbon-cola BBQ sauceIn some ways, this dish is just a layup. I mean, it’s popular cuts of meat (ribs, ham, tenderloin, shoulder) with a sweet bbq sauce made out of Coca Cola – what’s not to like? One could see something like this appearing at Jim Bob’s Fine Steaks & Chops in Wichita, Disney World Family Fun BBQ Restaurant, or on the next Applebees menu. But I’m happy to report that Lockwood did a way better job with it than any of those people could. The collards were especially outstanding, having picked up plenty of flavor from the dark, caramelized glaze that had been scraped from the ham (a delicious, subtly spiced specimen imported from Verona). Those grits – from Three Sisters farm – were wonderful too, and only good chefs understand that it’s worth seeking out such a fine product, even when much cheaper, readily available ones would likely be appreciated nearly as much by the masses.
We had a few desserts too. There was a nice oozy chocolate cake with some very well-made raspberry ice cream. There were lychees encased in lychee jello and served with lychee sorbet that I thought was just a little too bitter, and there was a vanilla-roasted pear with a terrific almond cookie/ cake thing, and brown butter ice cream that had an off-texture. These desserts didn’t wow me, but they were tasty ends to the meal.
I think dansch is going to post pictures of the dishes we ate. I hope he does, but the real goods are in the smells and tastes at Lockwood, which I encourage people to experience for themselves.
...defended from strong temptations to social ambition by a still stronger taste for tripe and onions." Screwtape in
The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis
Fuckerberg on Food