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Holiday foods

’Tis the season for chefs and guests to celebrate with a host of festive dishes


By MIKE  DEMPSEY



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(Dec. 22, 2008) From a Christmas Eve seafood feast with an eye toward sustainability to a brunch with a focus on easing Champagne hangovers on New Year’s Day, chefs’ holiday menu promotions aim to drive restaurant traffic and sales by inspiring budget-conscious consumers to treat themselves.

At Oceanaire in Washington, D.C., chef Rob Klink is celebrating Christmas and New Year’s Eve with farm-raised barramundi.

Chef Rob Klink of Oceanaire in Washington, D.C., for example, is offering a Christmas Eve menu called the Sustainable Feast of Seven Fishes. As the name suggests, widely available seafood species will be featured, along with local touches. For $55 a person, seven different types of fish will be spread out over the four courses, starting with an amuse bouche of mussel chowder with Virginia smoked ham and ending with roasted Chesapeake Bay striped bass with braised cabbage and house-made apple butter.

Sustainability is an important issue for Klink, from both an environmental and fiscal point of view.

“One, it is great for the environment; two, it is good for business,” he says. “If we are not protecting the oceans, we will not be in business very long.”

With that in mind, Klink is using Australian barramundi in dishes for both the Christmas Eve feast and a New Year’s Eve menu. He says the barramundi he is using is farm-raised in Massachusetts by a company Klink says has a very eco-friendly outlook. It is a flaky white fish, similar to sole, that can be pan-seared, sautéed or roasted. On Christmas Eve, Klink will serve the barramundi with acorn squash risotto as a first course.

For New Year’s Eve, Klink has a three-course offering planned, priced at $85 a person, that uses much of the same seafood as the Christmas Eve menu, with land-based options as well. On both nights, the full dinner menu will be available as well. On New Year’s Eve the barramundi will be grilled and served with mashed sweet potatoes and maple-cider glaze. The menu also will offer a dish with sea bass from South Georgia Island, a region near New Zealand and Australia. Klink says that sea bass is certified by the Marine Stewardship Council.

Klink hopes the $55 price point for the Christmas Eve menu will draw customers.

“We’ve never opened up on Christmas Eve before.” Klink says. “It is something different. I wanted to make it accessible to everybody. It will probably be cheaper than if you had an appetizer, entrée and dessert off the menu.”

At blue on blue in the Avalon Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., chef Scott Garrett will be serving a prix-fixe menu for Christmas and New Year’s Eve, but it is a special brunch menu for New Year’s Day that he hopes will turn into a regular feature.

“Usually New Year’s Day is completely dead,” Garrett says. “It’s a ghost town, even if we have 100 people in the hotel.” Garrett is offering a Hangover Brunch for Jan. 1 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

“Nobody really wants to get up and go downstairs to eat,” he says. “So it is going to be things that they like to eat. We are going to try to make it as interesting as possible. Maybe it could be something that could stick around for a while and be a huge success.”

While New York-based salad concept Tossed will offer health-conscious guests the Resolution Salad, starting January 5.

Two dishes Garrett will be featuring are a breakfast quesadilla and an Italian version of a Mexican egg dish. Both dishes are priced at $12.

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