I am not a big fan of haute
cuisine. When I go to a restaurant,
I do not want to be served an aesthetically daring construction of unlikely ingredients
surrounded by drops of a sauce too small actually to be ingested. I want substantial amounts of comfort food
that I can get my hands around. Last night,
I had just such a meal. Susie and I went
to Brasserie Balzar, a classic French brasserie on rue des Écoles
a block east of Boulevard St. Michel. We
booked very early – seven p.m. – and when we arrived we were the only patrons,
but by the time we were ready to leave, an hour and a half later, the entire
restaurant was full.
Brasserie Balzar is two blocks north of the
Sorbonne, and is reputed to have been the regular hangout for professors at
France’s national university until the city, spooked by the ’68 student
uprisings, scattered fragments of the university all over Paris. [The city government also took up the
cobblestones and paved the streets so that students would not have materials
ready to hand for barricades.]
French restaurants seat customers much closer
together than would be acceptable in an American establishment, in part because
a principal amusement for the French is people watching. Since we were first to be seated, I chose
table 36, which is in a corner, half hidden by a partition, but still with easy
sight lines to most of the other tables.
Susie and I spent some time idly trying to work out the family
relationships of a party of six seated nearby.
Grandpa, or so I deduced, had the largest hook nose I have ever seen,
and said virtually nothing throughout the meal.
His son and daughter-in-law chattered away with their two daughters, while
grandma argued with the waiter about her dish.
Susie drank a coupe of champagne while I had a
half bottle of a quite modest and not impossibly priced red Burgundy. One of our very few incompatibilities is that
Susie only drinks white wine and I only drink red, regardless of the food. Hence we can never share a bottle. Susie used to drink Juno white, a cheap wine
sold in half gallon bottles, but I have, over the years, weaned from that and
gotten her onto pretty good Sancerre blanc.
Susie started with six snails served in the
classic manner, and went on to a lovely dish – the special last night – that combined
bar with langoustines, which is to say sea bass and crayfish. It was delicious. I began with paté de foie gras and went on to a dozen snails. We usually do not order dessert at
restaurants, but I have been cooking almost every night and this was a festive occasion,
so Susie had profiteroles and I had café gourmand, which is simply a cup of
espresso [decaf for me, as always] with three or four small portions of
different desserts, all on the same plate.
At one point, my eye caught that of a waiter
who was uncapping three bottles of Coke Zero for a table of young
Americans. I made a little face and he
responded by rolling his eyes and cocking his head, as if to say “What can I
do?”
It was a simple but perfect meal and I left
feeling happy, as always, that we have Paris.
2 comments:
Speaking of creative uses of cobblestones during the 1968 student uprising, they are the subject of a famous affiche from that time: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imagination_Graphique_47_Bulletin_de_Vote.jpg
Professor Wolff --
I am ceaselessly puzzled why you both remain so steadfastly hard line in your wine choices. Why continue to limit yourselves? I know, I know, most of us stick with what we like. Still, bracketing out an entire half of a universe (i.e.: all white wine or all red wine) strikes me as somewhat – for lack of a more effective phrase – “philistine-ish.” I suggest you both split a bottle of a dry Rhone rose and go from there. Better yet, try a rose Champagne or sparkling wine. Now there is a treat.
-- Jim
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