Bangkok Post

MIDTOWN MARVEL

LE ROCK IS JUST WHAT ROCKEFELLE­R CENTER NEEDS

- Story by PETE WELLS / NYT TIMES COMPANY © 2022 THE NEW YORK

The dark ages probably began when the Rainbow Room stopped taking reservatio­ns and turned into a wedding space. After that, Rockefelle­r Center went for years without having a restaurant that you’d really go out of your way for. This didn’t strike most people as weird. The Manhattan dining scene’s centre of gravity moved downtown so long ago that mediocrity seems like midtown’s natural state.

But there’s nothing preordaine­d about that, and the evolution of Rockefelle­r Center under its current owner, Tishman Speyer, is the proof. Lodi, the small, Milanese-style cafe that chef Ignacio Mattos opened last year in a spot just south of the skating rink, was the first interestin­g new place to eat on the plaza in ages. With the arrival of Le Rock this summer on the opposite side of the rink, things started to get truly exciting.

The motto of some midtown kitchens might as well be “Don’t frighten the horses”. Not at Le Rock, where there are blood sausages, snails and tablier de sapeur, a breaded and fried plank of tripe straight out of the gutbucket bouchons of Lyon. The menu has a sense of adventure for which you usually have to go downtown, where its owners, chefs Riad Nasr and Lee Hanson, spent most of their careers.

Le Rock is the second restaurant they’ve owned together, after Frenchette in Tribeca. They have expanded on Frenchette’s model; the dining room has more seats by about a third, and the menu is roughly twice as long. Together with Walker Stern, Le Rock’s executive chef, Nasr and Hanson have kept the culinary spirit — brawny but precise — that makes Frenchette so appealing. They added a few embellishm­ents, but the cooking hasn’t been allowed to get too tricky.

Like most French restaurant­s in New York that aren’t chasing after haute cuisine, Le Rock cherry-picks elements from the bistros, brasseries and grand cafes of France. This lets it cater to the all-American demand for lots of choices.

The early part of the meal can go in any number of directions.

Where Frenchette offers six oysters with spicy red finger-length chipolata sausages, Le Rock keeps a whole arsenal of chilled shellfish, like a Boulevard Montparnas­se brasserie, though on a smaller scale. Anyone willing to pay “market price” (US$68, or 2,450 baht, when I had it) can dip into the body of a Dungeness crab for chunks of meat in horseradis­h-mustard mayonnaise, hidden under striped rows of chives, capers and grated eggs.

There is nothing wrong with this at all, but some of the less expensive choices were more dynamic, like a thinly sliced razor clam piled back into its shell with coriander and a trickle of lime juice, or a glistening mound of raw spot prawns in the middle of a pool of lemon vinaigrett­e made with the rich and briny goo squeezed from the prawns’ heads.

Or you could ease into a meal with what the menu calls “amuses”. Frenchette has these, too, but there they are almost the size of the appetisers. The ones at Le Rock are more like bar snacks, and are priced that way: for $6 you can have a creamy little drum of the herbed cheese spread that the Lyonnais call cervelle de canut; a few spoonfuls of rosy chicken-liver mousse under a purple sheet of jellied port; or crisp breakfast radishes with old-guard butter curls. Costing about twice as much, but still cheap by the standards of this menu, are falafel so tender and good that I stopped caring what made them French and some really delightful

LE ROCK’S HEART LIES IN THE ROLLUP-YOUR-SLEEVES, TUCK-A-NAPKIN-INYOUR-COLLAR BISTRO TRADITION

fried ravioli by way of Monaco, stuffed with herbs, chard and ricotta and travelling under the name barbajuans.

These shirt-pocket-size amuses are easy to like, but they aren’t all easy to share, and most aren’t big enough to make an appetiser for one person. Some of the smaller ones get lost in the shadow of official appetisers like the thick plank of pistachio-studded pâté maison wrapped in bacon, or the snails in individual porcelain cups under lids made of toast that will drink up the hot butter, thick with garlic and parsley and bits of fried pancetta. And the leeks vinaigrett­e — roasted leek whites bundled inside leek greens and then grilled before being unwrapped at the table and dressed with an emerald-toned herb oil with, no doubt, even more leeks — could upstage a flambéed duck.

This top-heavy menu can make the meal’s start somewhat chaotic. By the time the main courses rumble to the table, though, it’s clear that Le Rock’s heart lies in the roll-up-your-sleeves, tuck-a-napkin-in-your-collar bistro tradition. There is steak au poivre, of course, but the peppercorn­s are punpickled gent green ones and the meat is a big pan-seared hunk of bison filet with a tenderness you never find in beef. Stern’s kitchen has a deft hand with fish, too. Swordfish comes off a searing-hot grill with its juices intact so they can run into the string beans and dandelion greens below. A thick halibut fillet lies on a bed of spinach surrounded by a completely transfixin­g vin jaune cream sauce.

Credit for the desserts goes to Mariah Neston and Michelle Palazzo, who understand that a restaurant like this must, by law, have profiterol­es; Le Rock does, and the cream puffs are the kind with a crisp, rough, sugary craquelin surface. If you want everybody in the room to stare at you, go ahead and order the mignardise platter holding nine different mini-sweets on three tiers, but I got a little lost trying to keep them all straight.

I’d rather focus all my attention on the baba. Instead of the usual rum, Le Rock’s spongecake is soaked in génépy, an herbal liqueur with a flavour something like absinthe that’s been housebroke­n. One serving is a wedge the size of a chock you’d place behind the wheels of your car while you change a tyre.

The wine list is an adventure of its own, more than 200 bottles, few of which you will recognise unless you stay up nights studying the latest texts on natural wine. Evangelist­s for these wines like to say they taste alive. It’s not always true, but the word fits the ones I drank at Le Rock. They were almost kinetic, which is just right for the food and the room.

A lot of the energy comes from Rockefelle­r Center itself. It’s not just that the base of 30 Rock, at the start of its 70-storey trip to the sky, is visible from any table. Workstead, the design firm, came up with a bar and dining room that seem to be talking to the architectu­re outside the windows. The dim glow of mahogany on the tables and the gentle curves of the green-leather banquettes recall the furniture of Donald Deskey, who worked on Radio City Music Hall’s interiors. Le Rock reminds you of Art Deco without imitating it. It’s a restaurant that borrows from New York and pays its debt with interest. Rockefelle­r Center was built as a vision of what the city could be; Le Rock is a vision of what Rockefelle­r Center could be.

 ?? ?? BELOW Patrons dine at Le Rock.
BELOW Patrons dine at Le Rock.
 ?? ?? LEFT Burgundyst­yle snails.
LEFT Burgundyst­yle snails.
 ?? ?? Walker Stern, centre, who runs the kitchen under the guidance of the owners Lee Hanson, left, and Riad Nasr, at Le Rock in New York, on Sept 28.
Walker Stern, centre, who runs the kitchen under the guidance of the owners Lee Hanson, left, and Riad Nasr, at Le Rock in New York, on Sept 28.
 ?? ?? ABOVE
Leeks vinaigrett­e, roasted in leek greens, unwrapped at the table.
ABOVE Leeks vinaigrett­e, roasted in leek greens, unwrapped at the table.
 ?? ?? RIGHT Barbajuans, fried pasta filled with chard.
RIGHT Barbajuans, fried pasta filled with chard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand