|
Holiday foods
’Tis the season for chefs and guests to celebrate with a host of festive dishes
By MIKE
DEMPSEY
Garrett starts the breakfast quesadilla by preparing a potato, bell pepper, onion and jalapeño hash, tossing it with scrambled eggs and cheese and putting the mixture into a folded tortilla. He then puts the tortilla on a flattop to melt the cheese and grill-mark the quesadilla. He serves the dish with guacamole, sour cream and shaved Spanish ranchero cheese on top. His Italian version of a classic Mexican dish of scrambled eggs with salsa, peppers, cheese and tortilla chips, will feature roasted red peppers, Italian sausage, scallions and a fire-roasted tomato salsa. To mimic the corn tortilla crunch, Garrett will take fresh sheets of pasta, cut them up and throw them on the flattop to crisp up. “It’s kind of a play on a completely classical Mexican dish,” Garrett says. “Once you fold the pasta into the scrambled eggs, it will get softer, but it will be a completely different texture. And the edges will still be crispy.” The New York-based salad concept Tossed has created an offering that will be available even once the holidays have passed. The Resolution Salad, designed to appeal to health-minded consumers during a time of year known for personal vows to hit the gym, eat better and shape up, will be available from Jan 5. to March 1. Eric Clark, chief operating officer of the 14-unit chain, worked with two of his chefs to come up with the Resolution Salad, priced at $5.95 or $6.95, depending on the market. The salad is made with hearts of Romaine, baby rocket or arugula, mandarin oranges with a little bit of their juice, jícama, diced tomatoes, sliced carrots, and slightly steamed sugar snap peas and mixed with the chain’s proprietary strawberry-balsamic vinaigrette. Clark uses the slightly bitter arugula to provide a different note for the Resolution Salad. “With salads nowadays, the lettuce is the base of consistency, but it never has great flavor,” he says. “We are fans of arugula.” Clark and his team are going for the healthful angle to capitalize on guests who want to turn over a new leaf, so to speak, as 2009 gets underway, but he was intent on giving consumers a good deal as well. “It’s the lowest-calorie thing we got out there, “he says. “We kind of tossed the food costs thing away. We took some expensive ingredients. I said, ‘Let’s not calculate the food costs until we are done.’ If we lose money, it is all about giving back.” Additionally, the restaurant is holding promotions in different markets throughout the week of Jan. 5-8, in which the Resolution Salad is free for a single day, and all the proceeds from other sales that day go to the stores’ favorite local charities. For some restaurateurs, however, it’ll be business as usual during the holidays. Marc Murphy, chef at Landmarc in New York, says he sticks to what he does best, rather than try to squeeze people for every last dime by offering only a special, multi-course menu. “Everything is available,” Murphy says. “We do that at Christmas. We do that at New Year’s. “You come into my restaurant on New Year’s Eve at midnight, you can have a frisée salad with lardon, have a beer and you can go home,” he says. “I am not going to put the screws to you and make you buy a six-course menu and a full bottle of Champagne and charge you 500 bucks.”
|