Category Archives: Chefs

SPQR Is PDG

Squid ink spaghetti with Dungeness crab.

Before you scratch your head too much, that would be SPQR, the popular Italian restaurant in San Francisco, whose name stands for Senatus Populesque Romanus or “The Senate and People of Rome.”

And PDG, my play on acronyms, would be “Pretty Darn Good,” as in what I thought of the restaurant when I was invited to dine earlier this month.

Executive Chef Matthew Accarrino, who just took over the helm there, had a hard act to follow. After all, he was succeeding the one and only Chef Nate Appleman, whose popularity and way with food had foodies nearly weeping when he departed for New York this summer after winning the James Beard “Rising Star Chef” award. Appleman’s new Manhattan pizzeria is set to open any day now.

Bay Area gourmets needn’t have worried, though. Accarrino boasts quite the lineage, too — having graduated from the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, apprenticing in Italy, and working with the likes of celeb chefs Charlie Palmer, Todd English and Rick Moonen. That was followed by a stint as opening sous chef at Per Se in New York, then off to work at Tom Colicchio’s New York empire of Craft, Craftsteak, and Craftbar. Most recently, he was chef de cuisine at Craft Los Angeles.

On a blustery evening, nearly every table was occupied in the warm, wood-accented narrow dining room. Patrons seem to have embraced the new menu, which is more refined than the rustic dishes of the past.

Accarrino makes his own ricotta daily from milk and buttermilk, and the creamy, spoonable fresh cheese shines in quite a few dishes.

Ricotta fritters. Can't eat just one.

We started off with one of them — spiced ricotta fritters with smoked maple syrup ($7). These were like little donut holes — tender and fluffy on the inside, crispy on the outside, with just a little sea salt over the top. They would make a most excellent brunch nibble.

Don't get squeamish, but yes, underneath all this are crispy bits of pig's ear.

Next, we had the crispy pig’s ear ($8), well, just because it was on the menu. I’ve only had pig’s ear served Chinese-style before — basically, boiled and chopped into little, crunchy pieces. This was quite a different rendition. The texture of the triangular pieces was crispy, then almost gelatinous on the inside — like cracklings with molten fatty goodness.  Served with pickled jalapeno slice and radishes, these would be great with cocktails. But then, what fried food isn’t?

Baked ricotta with braised leeks.

Accarrino also sent out a long rectangular wedge of baked ricotta topped with melty braised leeks, balsamic brown butter, almonds and chickweed ($13). This dish really let the ricotta shine through.

SPQR makes all its own pasta and it shows.

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Thomas Keller’s Book-Signing Event at Ad Hoc

Ad Hoc Chef de Cuisine Dave Cruz (left) and the one and only Chef Thomas Keller (right).

Enjoying nibbles of the fabled fried chicken and perfect little meatballs, a throng queued up happily at Ad Hoc restaurant in Yountville on Saturday morning.

They were there for Chef Thomas Keller’s signing of his best-selling “Ad Hoc at Home” (Artisan) cookbook. The invitation-only event was for “friends and family” of the restaurant. And yours truly was lucky enough to be one of the guests.

Inside the restaurant...

...all set up for the book signing...

A restaurant mascot.

Keller, looking dapper in a sports coat, sat at a back table with Ad Hoc Chef de Cuisine Dave Cruz, as both took turns signing each book.

Keller’s always had an uncanny ability for nailing all the little details. The book signing was no different, as a hostess actually took the time to announce the name of each guest to Keller as he or she stepped up to the table to greet the world famous chef, who signed each book with a script as stylish in form as calligraphy.

A lollipop version of the fabled Ad Hoc fried chicken.

Crisp, seasoned beautifully, and moist and juicy as can be.

Cruz, who was born in the Philippines, chatted with me about how he only came to cooking nine years ago. Prior to that, he worked the front of the house instead. And before that, he was an engineering student — a field no stranger to anyone raised by an Asian parent, we both chuckled.

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Enjoy Yourself at the Top Chef Cookbook Party

Meet San Francisco Chef Jamie Lauren. (Photo Courtesy of Chronicle Books)

Fans of Bravo TV’s wildly popular “Top Chef” show will want to head to the Purcell Murray Culinary Amphitheater in Brisbane, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Dec. 8.

Former Bay Area contestants, Jamie Lauren, Jennifer Biesty and Ryan Scott will be on hand to do cooking demonstrations and signings of the book, “Top Chef: The Quickfire Cookbook” (Chronicle Books).

Chef Ryan Scott (Photo courtesy of Chronicle Books)

Chef Jennifer Biesty (Photo courtesy of Chronicle Books)

What’s more, you can enjoy sips of the new Top Chef Quickfire Wines (hmmm, wonder how well those go with vending machine fare?).

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Holiday Cocktail, Wine Deals, High Tea, Restaurant Openings & More

The Gentleman Jack Frost cocktail at Fleming's. (Photo courtesy of the restaurant)

You don’t have to be a gentleman to enjoy a Gentleman Jack Frost at Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar in Palo Alto and Walnut Creek.

The new $10.95 holiday cocktail is a warming blend of bourbon, hard cider and cinnamon. It’s available through the end of the year.

Sent Sovi restaurant in Saratoga will team with its neighbor, Uncorked! wine shop, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 6 for the second annual “Wine and Dine” event.

The soiree, held at the wine shop, will offer a chance to sip some fine wines and sample gourmet eats such as Dungeness crab and compressed apple eclairs with 2007 Ceja Sauvignon Blanc, Sonoma Coast. The shop also will be offering some good deals on wine for holiday gift giving.

Tickets to the event are $65 and must be reserved ahead of time by calling (408) 867-3110.

More wine deals can be had at Brix in Yountville. Throughout December, the restaurant will slash prices half-off every bottle of wine at brunch, lunch and dinner. Who wouldn’t want to drink to that?

Dec. 14 at Coi restaurant in San Francisco, meet one of the most colorful and pioneering figures in wine, Randall Grahm of Bonny Doon Vineyard.

Grahm will read from his new book, “Been Doon So Long” (University of California Press), as guests enjoy passed hors d’oeuvres. A four-course dinner prepared by Chef Daniel Patterson will follow, which will be paired with Bonny Doon wines.

Price is $175 per person, which includes a signed copy of Grahm’s book.

Tea-totalers are in for a treat Dec. 4 when the Old Mint Building in San Francisco hosts a holiday high tea.

Seatings are available between 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at this national historic landmark that was once home to one-third of the nation’s gold reserves.

Enjoy tea, coffee, finger sandwiches and precious sweets in this awe-inspiring setting.

Tickets are $75 per person for members of the San Francisco Museum & Historical Society; $85 for non-members; and $45 for children. For reservations, call 415-537-1105 x100.

If you’re one of the many foodies who fell in love with the flick, “Julie & Julia,” you can now own it on DVD ($28.96) or Blu-ray ($39.95).

Special features on both include commentary by writer-director Nora Ephron, as well as interviews with the cast and crew.

The Blu-ray version also comes with a tour of Julia Child’s kitchen now at the Smithsonian, and cooking lessons with Child, Jacques Pepin, Mark Peel, Suzanne Goin and others.

Baker & Banker has opened in the old Quince restaurant site in San Francisco by the couple, Chef Jeff Banker and Pastry Chef Lori Baker (hence the name).

Settle into a comfy espresso leather banquette to enjoy grilled hangar steak with red wine-marrow butter, cast iron potato gratin and sauteed spinach; dayboat scallops with caramelized sun choke puree; and pumpkin cobbler with cinnamon brittle ice cream.

Bottega in Yountville celebrates its one-year anniversary in posh style with a week of white truffle dinners, Dec. 7-13.

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Howie’s Artisan Pizza Delivers on the Crust

Wild mushroom pizza at Howie's Artisan Pizzeria.

It’s high and puffy on the edges, with airy, rolling caverns that provide great chew and crunch.

It’s thinner, yet still crisp, in the center. And when the wheel of a pizza cutter slices through it, there’s a distinctive “crack, crack, crackle” sound.

“The pizza talks to me now,” says Chef Howard Bulka of the just-opened Howie’s Artisan Pizza in Palo Alto’s Town & Country Village.

Indeed, it does.

After decades of running fine-dining restaurants in the Bay Area, Bulka has what he has always dreamed of — a top-notch pizzeria he can proudly call his own.

It may have opened less than two weeks ago, but Howie’s is already selling up to 250 pies a day now and packing in the crowds for his version of East Coast pizza modeled after Frank Pepe’s of New Haven, Conn., which Bulka worships.

Chef Howard Bulka talks pizza.

The Rolls Royce of New York pizza ovens.

Cheese pizza made with Grande mozzarella of Wisconsin, the cheese of choice of East Coast pies.

But dough is a funny thing. It’s a living, breathing, finicky mass that can be as unpredictable as Kanye West.

“I’ve been cooking 30 years, and I’ve never been perplexed as I have been by pizza dough,” says Bulka, who invited me in for a taste last week.

He’s still making subtle tweaks to the bread flour-dough, which takes two days to mix and proof before being turned into pies that are baked in a gas-fired brick oven at 600 degrees for 5-6 minutes.

The crust is already a winner in my book. This is a pizza crust with real character. It has that nice fermented flavor of artisan bread, and there is a variance of textures that holds your interest bite after bite.

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