Los Angeles Times

OUR PLATES WERE FULL

This month, The Times’ Food Bowl has been replenishe­d nightly with incredible dishes. Here’s what we’ll remember.

- JONATHAN GOLD

RESTAURANT CRITIC >>> I’m not sure what you’ve been doing this month. I’ve been spending most of my evenings at the first edition of Food Bowl, The Times’ month of food events that’s been a welter of special dinners, film screenings, art displays, farmers market events, visiting chefs from some of the best restaurant­s in the world, panel discussion­s on everything from Filipino cooking to sustainabl­e seafood to the problem of food waste, and a vast night market in the glow of City Hall. I’ve mourned dozens of dinners and events I was unable to attend. And I’ve eaten really well.

Suckling pig

Fergus Henderson, chef of St. John’s restaurant in London, has probably been, at least on the food end of things, one of the stars of the month’s festivitie­s, a smiling, bespectacl­ed presence responsibl­e for astounding feats of carnivorou­sness. He persuaded hundreds of people seated around the long tables at Beast Feast, one of the events, to gobble sliders stuffed with thin, chewy slices of grilled ox heart when they were expecting beef. At Animal, a meal featuring grilled quail with favas and a lovely version of his iconic roasted marrowbone with parsley salad was accompanie­d by a suave, creamy gratin of tripe and onions almost good enough to reverse every grisly thought you may ever have had about that particular part of the bovine anatomy.

But the highlight of Henderson’s visit came near the end of a long, lovely evening at Redbird, in an upstairs dining room carved out of a former cardinal’s quarters in the deconsecra­ted cathedral. Beautifull­y roasted suckling pigs were carried to a stout side table. Chefs ceremoniou­sly sliced them open, and an impossible number of quails tumbled out of the animals’ cavities: seasoned with grainy mustard, fragrant with garlic and wet with piggy juices, like something from a Roman feast. (I was thinking of the orgy scene from Fellini’s “Satyricon”; others contemplat­ed the notorious medieval feasts featuring pigs stuffed with live birds.) The surprise was that the sharp, gamy pungency of the quails flavored the pork as much as the pork flavored them, an ancient taste that I had never suspected existed.

Beautiful, psychedeli­c, spin-painted ‘veal,’ not f lame-grilled

Beef, transforme­d into “veal” by a soak in smoked milk, is rolled in vegetable ash poached in a plastic bag with charcoal oil, and sliced. It is black-edged but not grilled, redrare but not, and arranged on a plate splashed with colorful sauces in a manner inspired by the spin paintings of British painter Damien Hirst, although the version I saw looked closer to 1960s paintings of abstract expression­ist Joan Mitchell. You swirl the “veal” through the sauces, flavored with various herbs and aromatics, and the flavors come together in new and startling ways. Massimo Bottura, whose Osteria Francescan­a in Modena, Italy, was named the world’s best restaurant in 2016, spent much of his time at the festival addressing the subject of food waste in fairly packed auditorium­s, but the “veal,” prepared at a joint dinner with Michael Cimarusti at Providence, demonstrat­ed one of the tastier uses to which carrot peelings, blemished celery and ragged parsley might be applied.

Smoked marlin tacos

If you were of a particular persuasion, there may have been no pleasanter way to spend a warm evening than at the Night Market wandering among the barbecued brisket at the Bludso’s booth, the cold Sichuan noodles at Mian and the Hainan chicken rice at Side Chick, all splayed across the length of Grand Park by City Hall. You could stroll uphill for lobster nachos at Lobsterdam­us or delicious, ecofriendl­y ice cream made from blemished strawberri­es at Salt and Straw. Jitlada served its vaguely larb-like Jazzburger­s for the first time outside the restaurant. But the place I couldn’t stay away from was the Coni’Seafood concession for the shrimp ceviche called aguachile, for the delicate ceviche tostaditas, but mostly for the crisp little tacos stuffed with a spoonful of smoked marlin. A splash of tart habanero salsa didn’t hurt the marlin at all.

Mouth-watering chicken

It is occasional­ly difficult to imagine visiting a Sichuan restaurant without ordering at least one portion of this dish, which is not uncommonly translated as “saliva chicken.’’ The cold, sliced poultry, served in a broth of oil, vegetable broth and a few different kinds of chiles and tingly Sichuan peppercorn­s, is almost impossible to resist. But I’m not sure I’ve ever had a better version than the one cooked by Szechuan Impression chefs Kelly Xiao and Lynn Liu at the One Night in Sichuan dinner at Daw Yee in Silver Lake. The chicken was just slightly rare, with the floppy, juicy texture of the best Chinese poached chicken; the presentati­on in an oversized martini glass was unusual; and the oil-free poaching broth, spicier and a bit saltier than usual, was light enough to enjoy as a soup.

Lamb à la ficelle

Beast Feast was like a big, meaty garden party in the Coral Tree Plaza, a pocket park hidden above the Border Grill downtown, and the long tables seemed to stretch into infinity. Kevin Bludso barbecued brisket and rib tips crusted with a thick, pebbly layer of peppercorn­s, and if you were lucky enough to snag a plate of the oxtails — they were even better. Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger of Border Grill served beautiful grilled quail with bread salad; Dario Cecchini, the Dante of Tuscan butchery, made a beef salad; Michael Puglisi of Electric City Butcher dismantled a pig; and Fergus Henderson provided the heart sliders. Was everyone still happy to see the herby, drippingpi­nk roast lamb from April Bloomfield of New York’s Spotted Pig? Indeed they were.

Taco salad bowl

Rosio Sanchez is a Chicagorai­sed Noma veteran, owner of what I am confident in saying is the best taqueria in Copenhagen and just off of a run at Noma Mexico. Jessica Koslow of Sqirl is a master of jam, grain bowls and toast. In their collaborat­ion in the parking lot of an art gallery deep downtown, they made ... a grain bowl, kind of, with fermented things, spicy things, grilled vegetables, some greens and a crunchy tortilla that rode above everything like a sail. Did it resemble what you might get at a place like Sweetgreen­s? Superficia­lly. But also, kind of not.

Green salad

Imagine yourself still at the Beast Feast. Imagine that you have eaten 3 pounds of meat. Imagine how good a perfectly made green salad might taste at that point, shiny with a tart vinaigrett­e, whispering of citrus and Middle Eastern herbs, alongside a bit of soft grilled eggplant. Kismet’s Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymanson, whose vegetable-intensive Levantine cooking neatly splits the difference between Alice Waters and your favorite street-corner joint in beachside Tel Aviv, tend to be good like that.

Tacos dorados de camaron

Wherever Raul Ortega and the Mariscos Jalisco truck happen to land, their crunchy shrimp taco, moistened with fresh tomato salsa, is likely to be the best thing you will eat that day. At the food-on-film event at the Wiltern, a thoughtful panel discussion with Bottura, Milliken, Magnus Nilsson from Sweden’s Faviken, Roy Choi, Niki Nakayama, Dominique Crenn and directors Jon Favreau and David Gelb, the Mariscos Jalisco taco was the exclamatio­n point to a splendid evening.

Hush puppies

At Food Bowl’s opening night party at Manuela. In proximity to good bourbon.

 ?? Frank Ochoa Jr. ?? LAMB àla ficelle, made for Beast Feast by April Bloomfield of New York’s Spotted Pig.
Frank Ochoa Jr. LAMB àla ficelle, made for Beast Feast by April Bloomfield of New York’s Spotted Pig.
 ?? Amy Scattergoo­d Los Angeles Times ?? THE CHICKEN made by Szechuan Impression for the One Night in Sichuan dinner was truly mouth-watering.
Amy Scattergoo­d Los Angeles Times THE CHICKEN made by Szechuan Impression for the One Night in Sichuan dinner was truly mouth-watering.
 ?? Amy Scattergoo­d Los Angeles Times ?? ROSIO SANCHEZ and Sqirl’s Jessica Koslow created a satisfying grain and taco salad hybrid that united their strengths.
Amy Scattergoo­d Los Angeles Times ROSIO SANCHEZ and Sqirl’s Jessica Koslow created a satisfying grain and taco salad hybrid that united their strengths.
 ?? Mariah Tauger For The Times ?? SHRIMP tacos from Mariscos Jalisco served at a food-on-film happening proved this crunchy treat will never let you down.
Mariah Tauger For The Times SHRIMP tacos from Mariscos Jalisco served at a food-on-film happening proved this crunchy treat will never let you down.
 ?? Providence ?? SPLASHES of color and flavor defined the artful veal from a Massimo Bottura-Michael Cimarusti pairing at Providence.
Providence SPLASHES of color and flavor defined the artful veal from a Massimo Bottura-Michael Cimarusti pairing at Providence.

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