This year, my brother and I have decided to begin a new family tradition where we eat our way through our respective cities. I'm six months late in recapping our inaugural
whirlwind tour of Chicago, I did manage to take some notes and snap some blurry photos of our dinner at Cafe Boulud.
Sadly, I forgot about my camera and neglected to take pictures of the Amuse & the Appetizers.
Amuse BoucheRisotto Croquettes (?) (no photo)
I wish I could give a better description, but, for some inexplicable reason, I decided to pop the entire thing in my mouth at once, resulting in my saliva sizzling inside as I burned a hole in my cheek. Yes, I'm an idiot. What little I tasted before swishing it around my mouth with ice water was very nice, though.
AppetizersWinter Squash Veloute (Cranberry, Ginger, Celery Branch)
This was maybe the best soup I've ever had - I sopped up every last drop with my bread. Rich, balanced, and silky smooth, the flavor & texture melded perfectly - it tasted like a spoonful of winter.
Sea Scallop Crudo (White Miso, Crispy Aromatic Salad, Warm Scallion Vinagrette)
Excellent, but... such little portions. There was aybe 1/2 of a scallop on the dish, total. I know, I'm a barbaric American phillistine, but... we just paid $22 for four razor-thin slices of scallop, pounded even thinner.
Belgian Endive Salad (Port Wine Poached Pears, Toasted Walnuts, Blue Cheese, Sherry Vinaigrette)
Delicious, but... it's a salad. And as a wise person once noted, salad is stupid. It served its purpose, though - we ordered it primarily as a light palate cleanser for the main courses, which it did admirably.
Main CoursesWild Mushroom Risotto (Aged Parmesan Froth, Chervil, Olive Oil)

Atrocious photo, delicious dish. I didn't think the Parmesan foam added much, but the broth was very rich and paired nicely with the mushrooms, giving it a nice earthy balance.
Pomegranate Glazed Duck (Sweet Potato, Spinach)

This was my favorite dish of the night - is there anything in this world better than a nice, medium-rare piece of duck with crispy skin? The tartness of the pomegranate glaze cut nicely against the fattiness of the duck, but what I liked most is they didn't try to do too much. The duck was the star, and they let it shine.
Braised Short Rib (Potatoes, Glazed baby Beats, Horseradish Sauce Bordelaise)

Once again, I apologize for the horrible photo. That log with the exploded Peep in the middle is actually a beautifully braised short rib with a horseradish sauce on a black piece of slate which seems to have thrown off my camera's autofocus.
I'm relatively new to this whole fine dining thing, so I don't always describe things as well as I'd like. One of my biggest troubles describing the difference between something that's refined, versus something that's very good. There's some overlap, obviously, but I don't have the right words to make the proper distinction - not everything refined is good, and not everything good is refined. This short rib kind of gets at that difference.
A braised chunk of meat is one least refined foods I can think of. In this dish, however, the sauce from the braising liquid was as earthy and rich as you'd expect, while the meat itself somehow tasted lighter and more delicate. The horseradish sauce unified the whole plate, cutting into the richness of the meat and carrying the flavor into the potatoes and vegetables. It wasn't overpowering, but added just enough heat and acid that it helped balance out the dish. The potatoes, meanwhile, were my favorite component of the dish. Each little disk was nicely crisped on the outside, but chewy on the inside, like a savory potato cookie.
A Potato Cookie. Meat & potatoes are a natural accompaniment, of course, but this carried the idea on an entirely different level.
I still don't know how to explain what I mean by refined, but now, at least I can point to this photo of the Loch Ness Monster and proclaim, "Like that!".
Warm Apple Tatin (Puff Pastry, Graham Cracker Tuile, Bourbon Ice Cream)

The apple tatin tasted like an entire bushel of apples reduced down to 1/4 cup. It was apple, with an exclamation point on it - not just sweet, not just tart, but the entire complex essence of apples in a concentrated form. It was lightly spiced - I can't recall exactly what I tasted, but they mostly stayed out of the way and let the apples take over.
Vanilla Bavarois (Speculoos, Poached Pears, Chocolate Ice Cream)

I'm not sure how to describe this - it looks really simple, but the flavors were just really clean and well balanced. It was definitely a case where the sum was greater than the individual components. The poached pears might have been a bit superfluous, but vanilla was incredibly rich, and managed to stand up well against the chocolate crumbles & ice cream. I don't know what speculoos are - that might actually be a typo from the website, as I neglected to snap a photo of the menu.
Lemon Madeleines (no photo)
What can I say? Madeleines are my favorite cookie. Lemon is my favorite fruit. Lemon + Madeleine = A Very Happy George. I think these were meant to go with coffee, which we skipped because we wanted to hold on to the flavors still in our mouths. The incredibly light & airy madeleines were perfect in that regard.
"I've always thought pastrami was the most sensuous of the salted cured meats."