Thursday, December 6, 2012
Remembrance of Things Pabst.
So we come out of the Apple store and decide to just wander around to see what there was to see. We window shopped since all of the stores were closed. We checked out Louie Vuitton, Chanel, Burberry and a couple of other joints down there in Soho. There were a ton of shops but not many restaurants.
We were on Spring St which is sort of the heart of Soho. Back in the day I used to go to this joint called "The Brewery" which was on Thompson St. So we sort of wandered that way even though I think the joint had closed. Soon enough we come to this restaurant that the wife wants to check out. It had a board outside advertising tapas and a line to get in. And you know what. Every jerkoff on the line was texting on his phone. I looked in the window and it had a long bar and the menus printed on blackboards on the wall and little tables crammed one on top of the other. Not my kind of place.
I look across the street and I see this old school looking place. It has cheap Christmas lights strung over the old school awning. We cross the street and check out the menu. We decide to give it a chance.
It is a cute little old school bistro called "Bistro Les Amis." It has all the old school dishes. You know. Steak pom frites. Coq au vin. Filet mignon with bearnaise sauce. You know the works.
We get seated right away and look around. Holy cow. Everybody else is old. Perfect. They are there for the food and not the bar scene. Perfect.
Funny enough we take a table right next to the bar just like we did the night before. It was interesting because we got to overhear the waiters all night. All they did was gossip. Mainly about what the tips were for each table. The waiters were two old guys in their fifties who were professional waiters. They knew what they were doing but they were burned out. That happens sometimes in an neighborhood place. A restaurant has it's useful life. The staff is all hot and eager and ready to go. But the grind of the everyday work eventually takes it's toll. Unless you have a great leader they start to get depressed at same shit different day thing and they more or less start to go through the motions. I mean they will engage with them if you bring something to the table. We knew that if we started going to this place we would own it. I mean I introduced ourselves to the waiter like we always do. We ordered a full meal and left a very, very nice tip. They earned it. My water glass was always filled. That is very important to me because I normally drink about twenty glass of water at every meal. I love to clean my palate to taste the next thing I am eating. Some places hate to give you water because they figure you won't drink alcohol. Most places that know me know that is not an issue. This place did the water thing without knowing that and it was great.
Here the guy was sure to give me a wine list. They had one of my favorites "Santa Cristina" on the menu and I got a bottle. We started with some nice appetizers. I had the Onion soup with the Gruyere cheese. Recently I bought a big chunk of Gruyere and I have been putting it on everything. I make eggs and omelets with Gruyere and even used it on some stuffed mushrooms. So I enjoyed that.
Lisa had the "Salade de chêvre chaud en feuille de brick croutons aillés et lardons." Which is "Warm Goat Cheese Wrapped in a Pastry Leaf. Served with Mixed Greens, Garlic Croutons & Bacon." Very tasty.
Then for the main course I had the sirlion steak in the peppercorn sauce and Lisa had the "Cognac Crusted Filet Mignon with Carmelized Onions & Bearnaise Sauce." Both were very good and cooked to perfection. The bus boys were very attentive and served quickly and efficiently. Both of the waiters came over several times to check on us just the way you are supposed to do.
We topped it off with dessert. Lisa had the chocolate souffle. and I enjoyed the hot blueberry crumble with vanilla ice cream.
We called for a car and when he got outside he texted us. We settled the check and walked to the coat check. When the waiter finished cashing us out he rushed to thank us and shake our hands. I guess when they gossip about our tip it will be a good thing.
It was a nice little restaurant for what it was. I recommend it if you want a no hassle decent time.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
30 comments:
That is very important to me because I normally drink about twenty glass of water at every meal.
You must have a pair of humps like a does camel for storage.
Salade de chêvre chaud en feuille de brick croutons aillés et lardons.
I get more of a lardon from Bearnaise sauce. More perferably, Hollandaise sauce.
I wrote: You must have a pair of humps like a does camel for storage.
Holy Dyslexia!
I just love to drink a lot of water. It goes back to my drinking days. I can ingest a lot of liquid and if you don't start peeing you can hold it for a long time.
Of course once you start you can't stop. But water helps you absorb the meal and adds a lot to the experience. At least for me. I love to clean the palate to taste something new on the plate.
I am not much for the French. In fact I hate them.
Like most French restaurants in New York there are no French people. They were all Mexicans or Puerto Ricans and the one Jewish waiter guy Ben from Queens.
Not a frog in sight.
In ancient times, the French surrendered to thunderstorms.
During the cola wars, France was occupied by Pepsi for six months.
I had a boss who always demanded a pitcher of tea be brought to the table so he wouldn't ever have to wait for a refill. It was funny to watch sometimes when the wait staff argued with him, I guess thinking their tip was going to be cut. They didn't know how much it was pissing him off, and he eventually always got his way.
Glad you had a nice time there.
I order pitchers all the time in my usual haunts. I just say bring a pitcher so I don't have to wait for you to come back and forth. And once I do then other people start doing it and they just start charging for pitchers.
I just like to eat out at a new place now and then.
It is good to mix it up.
I've been married 19 years now (yesterday) and never done that.
WERE THE RICAN BUS BOYS HOT?
I LIKE THAT KIND OF TRADE.
TITS.
I LOVE MIXING IT UP TO.
VARIETY IS THE SPICE OF LIFE.
TITS.
I've been married 19 years now (yesterday) and never done that.
Congratulations on 19 years of never doing something, chickelit, especially so if it involves trust. May the streak continue!
Hmm, I just had my 20th anniversary of being divorced - it just gets better every day!
Happy Anniversary, Bruce. I would have put you longer married.
Hmm, I just had my 20th anniversary of being divorced - it just gets better every day!
With a pair of large 19 inch bowls to celebrate! Clean shaven too and quite possibly oiled if not dipped. Ready for presentation and promotion. Who knew Titus and Sixty shared something in common, with size of the bowls as a difference.
SixtyG, if the inclination to post a picture or two of those creations ever comes over you, I'd find them interesting. If not, I'll continue to celebrate them in imagination.
Remind me where AllenS used to post photos - I am still a private enough person to want to avoid too much exposure on these here interwebs, but I would gladly post pictures if I can do so in a way that will prevent angry y*nkees from hunting me down.
I want to see Sixty's photos! Yea.
I way Prada Sport from Head to Toe for casual Friday. I am looking out my fab bay office window and I can see all the way to the Hancock Tower in Boston.
Totally fab.
How are you?
I have a fucking 4:00 meeting every Friday with the SVP/Director of the Cambridge office. And it can go on forever.
That is what is tough for the fags in the corporate world. They know you will hop on a plane in a second or stay late whenever needed or weekends or any other such bullshit. Yes, you get rewarded for it financially but the straighties with little kids are like it's 4:30 or 5:00 and I am out the door, have to catch the train or pick up the kid.
And the senior leaders know the faggies will stay or do whatever is needed. They got us over a barrell.
tits.
I don't know how to do it myself, SixtyG. I'm hoping elder SonM will be able to show me how to post photos without leaving obvious bread crumbs, when he comes home for Christmas. Yankees aren't the only fools around.
Even if I figure out the way to safely do it, I'm still not listening to the Honey Badger and posting pics of my tits. There's limits to my largess. With Titus panting to see your bowls, maybe waiting until he's looking out another window might be advisable.
MamaM said...
I'm hoping elder SonM will be able to show me how to post photos without leaving obvious bread crumbs, when he comes home for Christmas.
Use a Twitter account to upload them, then link to them.
19 is a prime number.
Whose twitter account should one use?
I use Photobucket. Open an account with an online name so you are anonymous. You can upload directly to Photobucket from your computer. You can also make your albums private so that not just anyone can see what you have there.
Once the photos are uploaded you then can link directly to the photo by clicking onto the code that comes up. And then past the code like this http://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f213/Lugnut67/Ranch-1.jpg
Or create a link like this
Sixty Grit said...
Whose twitter account should one use?
Preferably your own.
Is that a recent Shasta photo, DBQ? Lotsa snow already.
Are you still in a severe drought?
JUST FUCKING GOT HOME, TOTAL BS.
WHERE ARE THE FUCKING BOWLS?
THERE IS A SHOW ON HERE EVERY FRIDAY ON PBS CALLED "BASIC BLACK" AND IT IS ALL THESE UPPY NIGS WHO TEACH AT TUFTS AND HARVARD AND EMERSON AND BU-THEY ARE SO ARROGANT. YOU KNOW THAT STAGE SMELLS.
A COUPLE OF THEM ARE FUCKABLE THOUGH.
NOW WHERE ARE THOSE BOWLS?
@ Chick
No. Not recent. I think late spring or early summer last year (2011). We have been in a drought for quite a while. But..with this last storm Mt. Shasta and Lassen are very much covered with snow. Thankfully. Still not out of the drought though. We need more rain/snow. A lot!
Dumbplumber has had some tough times for his well clients. Wells that previously were 80 ft depth, static water level 30 ft below the surface and pump set at 50 ft are failing. Now 80 ft depth, static water 70 or even 75 ft (YIKES) so we lower the pump to 78 or 70 feet. Basically sitting on the bottom sucking sand. Dire straits for these people. The cost of a new well or deepening the existing one is big. Plus there is no guarantee of water.
BTW: those are shallow wells. Many are over 300 to 400 ft in some areas.
Life in Rubeville :)
But, it is sort of good for us. You can't outsource your plumber or your well/pump guy.
I feel like I'm watching the "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous"
Post a Comment