L’Espalier, Back Bay, Boston

L’Espalier is a perfect place to celebrate occasions and have memorable meals. I have had special dinner at the original and romantic Gloucester Street location, a work lunch for Restaurant Week at the Mandarin Oriental location and Sunday time with some intelligent and accomplished ladies in the main dining room. Additionally, I have enjoyed Wine Mondays in the library room and a one on one presentation with an impressive sommelier and living encyclopedia of wine.

Every meal had top-notch service, the service was accommodating and the staff warm. What I enjoy most is the meticulous food and pairings. At L’Espalier you are signing on for a culinary adventure, they offer care and thought behind each component of the meal and every instance and interaction.

The Boylston Street view

Fresh breads

Pretzel rolls, these were my favoriteCreamy risotto
Sweetbreads with polentaDuck roasted to perfection, tender and crispy skin
Cheese plate Honey, pecans, bread and dried apricotsAmazing and elegant dessert plate, sorbet, chocolate cake

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Espai Sucre, Barcelona

Espai Sucre (Sugar Space), on Princesa, 53 in La Ribera,  was one of the most memorable gastronomic experiences we have ever had in Barcelona.  The experience pushed our boundaries in terms of texture, flavor and possibilities of food.

Espai Sucre is run by genius Jordi Butron, who worked at El Bulli, and has been endorsed by El Bulli’s Alberto Adria’s as best desserts in Spain. During the day, the restaurant transforms into a cooking school.

I loved the orange ant logo. This white, simplistic, but elegant restaurant space is by reservation only, offering two seatings per evening evenings. To enter, you have to ring the doorbell and they lock dinners into the restaurant! I loved the large glass jar of biscuits. I may have to use this idea myself. The main room only has capacity for 30 people.

One of the neighboring patrons, she exclaimed she came here 2 years ago and had to come back. We tried the big dessert menu and tasting menu. There are multiple iterations of menus sweet and a combination of savory and varies in number of courses. If you don’t appreciate foams, complex layers and obscure flavor combos, Espai may not be the best restaurant. It is cerebral and a form of entertainment in itself.

The big menu for approximately 50 Euros and for an additional charge, wine was 4 euros also included Espaisucre starters. Every course challenged the palate and had a surprise which created a smile from ear to ear.

I can not reiterate how well timed our courses were and how attentive and knowledgable, all black adorned staff. Our first course was an homage to chorizo and pan, a rye cheese biscuit cracker and warm broccoli and cheese soup. The soup had mustard flavor and cream cheese on the bottom. My dining partner exclaimed, this was the most memorable.

Chorizo paste and thin cracker

Ginger ale and melon foam, cucumber cannelloni and pineapple-tarragon sherbert

Cod rice with tomato ice cream, artichoke and honey. The cod rice was luscious, cut by the cold tomato ice cream and was juxtaposed the thin cod crips.

The most flakey, delectable croissant like roll. They were crispy, buttery and we wanted to take a basket home.

A very thin extra virgin olive oil cake, white peach jelly, green olive oil and “San Simon”

Passion fruit-coffee, lemon-cress and mint sorber Keffer

Sobao with salt, lime and basil

Coconut tapioca, burnt yolk ice cream and “orujo de Galicia

Red wine baba, pear and saffron. I felt the wine flavor in the cake was overbearing.

Truffle mushroom, butter, hazelnut, cocoa

Empireumatic 3 Chocolate, prune, oak, rum and tobacco. It was amazing to taste the tobacco smoke and the other aromatics. Briliant.

The denouement was a menagerie of a homemade Petit Fours Tray filled with a piruleta, shortbread, bonbons, pate de fruit, marshmallow and chupito.

I loved the lime and rosemary piruleta, sesame liquorice paper wafer, butter and salt shortbread, chocolate and smoked tea bonbon, the coffee and anise pate de fruit, the peanut and curry cookie, the cocoa and green cardamom marshmallow and the green apple and laurel chupito.

All of them were delicious, but my favorites were the sesame item and peanut curry cookie.  The peanut curry cookie simply wowed me. I wish they have these at the supermarket.

The Green apple and laurel leaf shot was amazing. The refreshing flavor was like an icey green appletini.

The Piruleta jelly covered in white chocolate, but had an intense lime and rosemary flavor.

The sesame sugar crisp’s flavor of the crisp reminds me of the Asian sesame chewy candies.

Espai Sucre was a memorable and lovely meal  for 110 Euros for 2 epople. One for the memory bank and we hope to return.

Salts Restaurant, Cambridge

The moment I walked into Salts Restaurant, I knew I was in thoughtful hands. The service is world-class and the wait staff, chef Gabriel and owner Analia are evidently passionate and proud of the work they do. I would describe this meal as elegant, but unpretentious, the right cross between familiarity and being highly memorable.

We had a reserved corner table covered with silver confetti (to denote the celebration) near low lit candles.  We decided to indulge in the tasting menu with wine pairings. and every seat in this little house was filled.

Our server was from Columbia and she was very informed about the locale and origins of every wine. The meal was like a great story, captivating introduction, incremental and steady steps to the peak of the mountain and a careful descend to the end. My senses were evoked and I really appreciated how well the meal was orchestrated.

My two favorite wines served were 2006 Rene Mure “Tradition”, Pinot Gris Alsace, France and 2008 Foxglove, Chardonnay Edna Valley, California. They have fruity tones; melon and pineapple and paired well with the hamachi and beet salad.

The first course was the fresh hamachi, with a citrus soy and paper-thin cut radishes. There was nice balance between the salt of the fish, tang of the citrus and saltiness of the soy. Most of the seasonal produce of our meal is from a farm in Canterbury, NH, near the Shaker’s Village.

Wild Japanese Hamachi

The goat cheese bavois was an airy and was paired with walnuts and three types of beets; golden, red and striped beets. The red were the most sweet of the three and the vegetables were also served with a curry wine reduction jam.

Roasted Heirloom Beet Salad Goat Cheese Yogurt “Bavois”

The local cod was a sophisticated version of fish and chips with coleslaw. The soft carrots, turnips paired well with the mustard seeds and cabbage slaw.

Roasted Local Cod and Petite Root Vegetables

Various salts including red clay Hawaii, Lebanon and Israel

Our next course was engulfed in a glass cover which held smoke. The chef unveiled the beef with a mushroom, carrot puree and a short rib cannelloni. My favorite salt with the smokey beef was the red clay, bringing out the earthiness of the meat.The short rib cannelloni was a thin potato wrapping around shreds of short rib. Within the complexities of this entree, I wish I had more cannelloni.

Painted Hills Organic Beef, Short Ribs Potato “Cannelloni”, King Oyster Mushroom, Carrots, Sauce Bordelaise

Cookie crumb and ice cream, nice intermission before the real dessert. The cool tangerine sorbet was surrounded by green tea flavored cookie crumbs.

Matcha cookie powder and tangerine sorbet

The almond milk flavored ice cream and a sweet pastry crust and almond clafoutis.


 Assorted chocolate and brownies, compliments of Salts.

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