Saturday, October 1, 2011

[EID Feature] Chateau de Leelanau: An old winery in an even older barn gets a facelift with new owners

All photos by Nicole Rupersburg.

If you're driving up M-22 on the Leelanau Peninsula to do a little tour of Leelanau's roughly 20 wineries, you'll pass right by Chateau de Leelanau. And if you're anything like me, as you're passing by you'll think to yourself, "Well what the hell, it's right there," and you'll stop in to check it out. And that's kind of what they're banking on.

New owners Matt Gregory, his brother Andrew, their uncle Don, their cousin’s husband Mark Miezeo, and the "wine scientist" Roger Veliquette took over this musty old winery in February 2010 and opened in June 2010. "Musty" refers less to the wines - which Matt admits were decent enough - and more to the whole brand overall. The Chateau de Leelanau label was still stuck in that stuffy faux-"fancy" font that tends to signify an amateurish idea of what good wine should look like; the tasting room itself was cluttered with trinkets and tchotchkes that looked like the attic/basement/garage/living room of a crazy old cat lady. Sure, the blue hairs vacationing in wine country loved it, but that image wasn't exactly going to endear the winery to the new era of young wine connoisseurs curious to explore what northern Michigan has to offer.

Owner Matt Gregory with Ann Hoyt, cheesemaker for the Leelanau Cheese Company at Black Star Farms.

"I call it the seven-dumpster remodel," Matt jokes. When they bought the winery they inherited everything - the tanks, the barrels, the juice, the remaining bottle inventory, and the cluttered tasting room which happens to be in a prime location. Anyone making a trek out to visit prominent LP wineries like Black Star Farms, L. Mawby or Shady Lane Cellars will inevitably pass right by this place, conveniently located directly on M-22 in a plaza which is actually a 150-year-old barn. They gutted the place entirely, opened it up and made it feel fresh and fun. "We wanted to make this a younger, more fun place to hang out," Matt says.

Freshening up the image also meant doing a bit of re-branding. Their new wine labels ditch the fussy old cursive font in favor of a more playful logo which features a simple image of a barn with a wine bottle as a silo (paying homage to the barn they're in as well as their own farming history, and just the slightest bit of playfulness with the whole traditionally snooty Chateau concept).


The Gregory family has a long history as area farmers. They are fruit farmers - cherries, apples - with vast amounts of property on the Leelanau Peninsula just north of Suttons Bay (they also sell some of their Cherry Bay Orchards products in the tasting room, and if you're going to try anybody's cherry wine it should be theirs). Growing grapes was simply a natural progression from there. "We had an opportunity to get into an existing business [with Chateau de Leelanau]," Matt explains. "Their [farm] property was right next to the property we already owned." When the opportunity presented itself for them to purchase Chateau de Leelanau, it just seemed serendipitous.

Their first vintage was 2009, a tough growing year which most wineries struggled to make the best of. When they inherited the inventory, the juice was already in the tanks and barrels but they were at least able to finish them to their own tastes, and in doing so also inadvertently introduced what would become some of their signature wines.


"Hawkins Red," named for the 150-year-old barn in which the tasting room is located built by the Hawkins family, came about by accidental necessity. Because 2009 was such a rough year - the grapes just didn't ripen as they needed too, particularly the red - they knew that their Pinot Noir and Cabernet Franc would sell out fast (because there was so little of them) but still needed to have a red wine available for people as they came in. When they inherited the place, the only red in the tanks was the Regent grape, a hybrid used almost solely for blending purposes and almost never as a stand-alone varietal. Since they had nothing to blend it with, they took a (big) gamble and made it into a varietal wine called Hawkins Red. The end product is very similar to a Shiraz: a light body with notes of strawberry and a peppery finish. It has a little bit of an unexpected kick to it, which is exactly what Matt and Roger try to achieve with their wines to set them apart.

Bianca.
Hawkins Red has since become one of their flagship wines that no one else is even making. Another flagship wine unique to Chateau de Leelanau is Bianca. Bianca is a hybrid Hungarian strain of the Bouvier grape (which is grown primarily in central Europe). It's a hearty little grape that resists frost and ripens early, a common sense grape for this region. However, Chateau de Leelanau is currently the only winery that is growing it. But Bianca is a lovely mistress - similar to a Sauvignon Blanc, Bianca is a soft, light white with notes of tropical fruits like mango and tart citrus balanced out with crisp pear. She's a sleeper grape, and one that will surely command some serious attention for Chateau de Leelanau. (Another fun note: when ripe, Bianca is fluorescent orange.)

With the 2010 vintage Chateau de Leelanau was 100% harvested, pressed and blended by the new owners and the label became entirely their own. People are still learning about this "new" old winery, and one of the most important things they want people to know is that they're in it to have fun. "If you want to talk about the idiosyncrasies of wine that's fine," Matt says. "But if you want to just drink and hang out, that's cool too."

I did a little of both. After talking idiosyncrasies and the history of the winery, I drank and hung out, then Matt and I climbed into the Chateau de Leelanau van and took a trek out to the vineyards to see the grapes at work getting all fat and juicy (the growing season isn't quite completely over, but it's looking like 2011 will be a good year). There are certain wineries that are "musts" if you're making the trip up to the Traverse City's wine country; Chateau de Leelanau needs to be added to that list, and with its convenient location there's really no reason not to. Stop in, say hi to Matt (he's pretty much the "face" of Chateau de Leelanau and handles all the marketing and sales), hang out, drink some wine. It's fun without the fussiness; exactly what a wine country experience should be.

Want to see more? Check out the Flickr set here.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

[Metromode] Chicks Roux! Metro Detroit's Women Chefs

"If a woman’s place is in the kitchen, where are all the girls?

'Making dinner for the family is perfectly acceptable 'women’s work,' but when it comes to heading up high-profile kitchens and overseeing dozens of employees in the high-stress restaurant industry, it seems like women are still treated like delicate flowers who can’t carry their weight in 40-qt. stock pots.

'In metro Detroit, there are only a handful of females in coveted executive chef positions, but these girls gone gastronomic are making a serious impact..."

Meet these women in the kitchen; read the rest of the story here.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

[New York Post] Harvest Time in Michigan Wine Country

The vineyards of Chateau Grand Traverse. All photos by Nicole Rupersburg.

The car is cresting over the hills of Old Mission Peninsula, whipping around curves at 70mph. It is a clear, late summer night, 80 degrees. The air is damp, perfumed with burning wood and a hint of fall. Top down, music blaring, I look up to my right to see the stars of the Little Dipper burning white hot through ink-black sky. There are few perfect moments in life. This is one of them.

Old Mission Peninsula is nestled in the “pinkie” of the Mitten, on the west coast of northern Lower Michigan (got that?). It is the crown at the head of Traverse City, recently famous for Iron Chef Mario Batali’s unabashed love affair with it and for being named one of Bon Appetit Magazine’s “Foodiest Towns in America.” OMP splits the Grand Traverse Bay into East and West Bays. It is 19 miles long; at its widest point it is three miles wide, at its narrowest you can park your car on the side of the road and drink in panoramic views of sloping vineyards and sparkling bays on either side.

Michigan is not without its share of beautiful places. The state has the longest coastline in the continental U.S., all freshwater and blessedly hurricane-free. Good Morning America recently named Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore on Michigan’s west coast the “Most Beautiful Place in America,” but if Sleeping Bear Dunes is the most beautiful place in the country then Old Mission Peninsula should by rights be able to claim to be one of the most beautiful places on the planet.

This is my fourth trip up here in as many years. As a native Michigander, traveling “up North” (that directionally imprecise catch-all moniker used to describe the entire northern half of the state plus the Upper Peninsula by everyone who lives within 100 miles of a state border that isn’t Wisconsin) is a rite of passage and summertime tradition. Around here, they call it God’s Country.

During the summer, it sparkles with every conceivable shade of blue; sapphire and cerulean on a clear, sunny day; pale lapis in hazy light; brooding indigo in the rain. The sky transforms from rosy pinks and pastel yellows at dawn to turquoise smudged with glowing white by day to fiery oranges and reds and deepening violets at sunset. Trees and vines are brilliantly green.

The winter landscape is reminiscent of the massive glaciers that cut this Paradise straight from cold rock. The vines and trees are bare, coated in a layer of perpetual snow. Even on clear days, dusty powder dances lazily across the landscape that’s like an untouched frozen tundra. The world is white. The sky is gray. The water is an impossible silver.

Read the rest of the story here.

2 Lads Winery and tasting room.



MORE RESOURCES:

Old Mission Wineries: 2 Lads Winery, Black Star Farms Old Mission Tasting Room, Bowers Harbor Vineyard, Brys Estate, Chateau Chantal, Chateau Grand Traverse, Peninsula Cellars

More Food and Drink:

7 Monks Taproom: So new you can still smell the paint drying, 7 Monks serves beer from around the world, including a solid show of rare Michigan brews, as well as all seven authentic Trappist ales brewed in ancient monasteries in Belgium and the Netherlands. The beer flows from 46 taps with gastro-brasserie food to compliment it.

The Cook’s House: Even other area chefs call the Cook’s House the best restaurant in Traverse City. Chef Eric Patterson serves regional new American cuisine, sourced 100% locally in the summer and 80% in the winter. His 28-seat restaurant (which recently acquired a full liquor license) is always full, but is well worth the wait.

Old Mission General Store: The Old Mission General Store has been around since the mid-1800s and still operates very much as a “general” stores: coon-skin hats, brake fluid and antiques intermingle with Michigan wines and beer, open barrels of peanuts and their own private label preserves. They serve Moomers Ice Cream, a Traverse City-based ice cream company recently featured in USA Today and Good Morning America, as well as from-scratch soups and sandwiches on bread baked fresh daily.

Peninsula Grill: For casual fare, the Peninsula Grill offers classic American grill cuisine of serious excellence (try one of the flatbreads), along with a solid selection of local wines and beers. Longtime bartender Johnny even promises he’ll remember what you drink for next time.

TASTES of Black Star Farms: Try the Matterhorn Grill Dinner, where you’ll grill up fresh vegetables and sausages in the Swiss DIY style, then pour melted raclette cheese from the Leelanau Cheese Company (located in Black Star Farms) over top. Their aged raclette was named “Best Cheese in North America” by the American Cheese Society cheese competition in 2007.

Trattoria Stella: Two-time James Beard-nominated Executive Chef Myles Anton describes the menu as “northern Michigan Italian.” They make everything in-house from scratch, including the breads, pastas and desserts. In the last year Anton has even started butchering his own animals. “It’s the next level of feeding locally,” he says. “It’s turned into this revolutionary thing in my life and my cooking, and does awesome justice to the animal.” They have won the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence every year since they’ve been open thanks to Amanda Danielson’s meticulous organization of her wine list, balancing a robust selection of wine from nearly every region of Italy with probably the largest selection of Michigan wines of any restaurant in the state.

Also: Amical, Bardon’s Ice Cream, Bay Leaf, The Boathouse, Folgarelli’s Market and Wine Shop, North Peak Brewing Co., Patisserie Amie, Phil’s on Front, Red Ginger, Right Brain Brewery

More Lodging:

Chateau Chantal: Sometimes the floral look can be pulled off in a way that is charming (and not in that way when people say “charming” just to be polite): at Chateau Chantal the rooms are all designed around a particular French impressionist painting, so you get floral patterns that aren’t offensive to your eyes or age range. Each suite has its own color theme: Rosé = pink, Merlot = purple … it’s like Sesame Street’s House of Seven Colors! (But, you know, classy.) The Inn is also connected to their tasting room, and guests are free to conduct their own wine sampling after-hours (again, this is northern Michigan, where people still believe in the honors system). Chateau Chantal boasts what might actually be one of the most stunning patio views in the state, and they also host prix fixe seven-course wine dinners every Wednesday and Friday through October.

Grand Traverse Resort and Spa: About 15 minutes from the base of Old Mission is the Grand Traverse Resort and Spa in Acme, a beautiful 900-acre property with three golf courses, tennis courts, a full spa and a private beach club. (GTR was named one of the 75 best golf resorts in North America in 2009/2010 by Golf Digest and one of the top 50 tennis resorts in the country by Tennis Magazine in 2000 and 2002.) Aerie Restaurant & Lounge is located on the 16th floor with OMG views of Grand Traverse Bay (have dinner at dusk and watch the sunset over the bay). Certified Executive Chef Guillermo Valencia brings a new Latin fusion to Aerie’s menu while still emphasizing local, seasonal products. Boys get golf, girls get pampered , you still get that big hotel feel and you might even find a wild turkey roaming around in the parking lot but it’s cool, it’s all part of the northern Michigan experience.

Also: Chateau Grand Traverse, Holiday Inn West Bay, Park Place Hotel, Wellington Inn
Hotel Indigo coming soon


Want to see more? Check out these three Flickr sets: Traverse City 2009, Traverse City 2011, Mission Table

Monday, September 26, 2011

[HOT LIST] Wineries of Northern Michigan

All photos by Nicole Rupersburg.

If you ask any native New Yorker (if there is such a thing), they've probably never been to the top of the Empire State Building. The thing is, when you live in a place, you tend not to look at it with the wide-eyed wonderment of your average tourist. And that's a shame, really: metro Detroiters will dump thousands of dollars on plane tickets to France, cooking classes in Burgundy, guided wine tours through Bordeaux, butler-tended lodgings in centuries-old chateaus ... and they'll spend just as much to get shuffled like cattle through Napa Valley.

But just four(-ish) hours to the northwest there's Traverse City, a cosmopolitan community in the middle of farmland that's been getting some serious national attention lately. And on either side of Traverse City along the shoreline of Grand Traverse Bay lies the best of Michigan wine country.

There are several wine trails in the state of Michigan, but this northwestern corner (comprised of the Leelanau and Old Mission Peninsulas) is cranking out the wines that are making a strong name for Michigan in the world market. Next time you want to book a romantic getaway to wine country, look no further than your own backyard.

#1 Black Star Farms Leelanau Peninsula (farm, vineyards, winery, tasting room); Old Mission Peninsula (tasting room)
Black Star Farms bills itself as an "agricultural destination." Their property on Leelanau Peninsula in Suttons Bay is a working farm and equestrian facility with a winery, distillery, tasting room, creamery (the Leelanau Cheese Company; their Aged Raclette was named "Best Cheese in North America" in 2007), casual cafe and wine bar (the renowned Hearth and Vine Cafe,) and Inn. For the full agro-tourism experience, stay at the modern yet comfortable Inn. Wander the property, visit the tasting room, pet the horses, and enjoy their evening wine receptions and truly farm-to-table gourmet breakfasts - eggs, meats, greens and produce all come straight from the farm right outside your window.
Wine rec: Leorie Vineyard Merlot Cab Franc; Isidor's Choice Chardonnay

#2 L. Mawby Vineyards Leelanau Peninsula
There isn't a winemaker in Michigan who doesn't think Larry Mawby is a genius. He makes sparkling wines and ONLY sparkling wines, and was really the first person in Michigan to not only say it can be done, but that it can be done REALLY freaking well. He's been proving his point with both estate-grown and outside-sourced grapes since 1978 using 100% Pinot Noir and Vignoles varietals as well as blends under two distinct labels.
Wine rec: Talismon; Blanc de Blancs

#3 2 Lads Winery Old Mission Peninsula
The newest of the seven wineries currently operating on Old Mission Peninsula, 2 Lads Winery is an ultra-chic modern/industrial winery and tasting room that specializes specifically in cool climate reds and sparkling wines. The "two lads" - winemaker Cornel Olivier and operations manager Chris Baldyga - both believe that Michigan's wines can be on par even with Bordeaux's (both wine regions rest of the 45th parallel). They designed a facility to maximize their estate-grown grapes' potential with a much gentler and environmentally-friendly gravity-flow system, but what you'll care most about is the stunning view of the vineyards and East Grand Traverse Bay from the tasting room.
Wine rec: Cabernet Franc Merlot; Cabernet Franc Rosé

#4 Bowers Harbor Vineyard Old Mission Peninsula
Bowers Harbor Vineyard has a totally chilled-out vibe and family feel. It could be because proprietor Spencer Stegenga refers to one of his employees as his "Director of Bro-motions," or because the award-winning Erica Vineyard was named for his wife on the plot of land where he proposed to her, or maybe because the family dog Brix is always running around waiting to be petted by the nearest friendly hand. Regardless, this is a fun place to hang out on the patio, chat with the staff, even Dine in the Vines (dates throughout the summer). And they're also kicking out some truly outstanding reds.
Wine rec: Erica Vineyard Cabernet Franc; 2896 Langley Meritage

#5 Shady Lane Cellars Leelanau Peninsula
This may not be one of the best-known wineries in the area, but with just over 52 acres of vineyards they aren't exactly small, and connoisseurs already know the name well. Shady Lane is considered one of the best wineries in Michigan for their delicate wines that elegantly represent their land. They are known specifically for their dry Riesling (this is Riesling country, after all), but in keeping with the apparent overall theme of "Michigan Reds Rock" here, their Blue Franc is a unique beast of dark berries and spice and they are one of only two area vineyards producing this varietal.
Wine rec: Dry Riesling; Blue Franc

Bubbling under Chateau Chantal (OMP), Forty-Five North Vineyard and Winery (LP), Chateau Grand Traverse (OMP), Gill's Pier Vineyard and Winery (LP), Left Foot Charley (Traverse City), Brys Estate (OMP), Bel Lago Vineyard and Winery (LP), Circa Estate (LP)

Saturday, September 24, 2011

The 5 Days of DRW: 24grille

All photos by Nicole Rupersburg.

From the very beginning, it seems that 24grille inside the AAA-four-diamond Westin Book Cadillac has been plagued with issues, not that your average restaurant-goer would know that. Despite problems with partners and upper management on all conceivable levels of common-grade restaurant industry salaciousness and scandal (you've read Bourdain, no?), their initial delay in opening (a full 6 months after the hotel - and Roast - opened), and their struggle to really define themselves in a culinary scene not wanting for lack of steakhouses and contemporary American cuisine, 24grille has survived the rough waters of these past two and a half years and now finally has a strong team in place that will guide it to its greatest potential.

The staff over the past year has changed almost entirely, which includes the addition of Executive Chef Christian Borden and General Manager Nicole Nassif. "She is insanely smart," says Borden of Nassif, and it's hard not to notice: after sitting in on part of the DRW staff training, I can plainly see this is a woman who runs a tight ship, takes no BS, and is exactly the kind of firm-handed manager this high-volume, high-profile restaurant desperately needed.

But solid management can only take a restaurant so far. There needs to be a chef in the kitchen equally as focused, talented and committed for the restaurant to surpass merely "good." And that is where Borden comes in.

Chef Christian (center)


You may recognize his name from Atlas Global Bistro; in fact, many people seem to think he's still there (an easy mistake to make, considering their new chef is also named Christian). Borden is the one who made Atlas what it was. It was his inventive menus, his truly global fusion flavors on every plate, his simply superior food that drove diners out to that desolate stretch of "Tween-town" (that lonely mile between Fox Town and Midtown that has some really nice condos and not a whole lot else). But after five and a half years, Borden was ready to leave, and an opportunity at 24grille presented itself at just the right time (actually, it was around the time of the Fall 2010 Detroit Restaurant Week).

Borden has been here a year now and has spent this time reconceptualizing the menus, redefining the brand, and generally acclimating to the significantly faster pace. We spoke a few days before the Fall 2011 Restaurant Week started; the hotel was at 100% occupancy and they were slammed every day, lunch and dinner, seven days a week, nonstop. And it's been that way since he started.

"It's a completely different world than Atlas," he says. "We're just a mile down the street and it's completely different." He is referring both to the pace and to the volume; there is simply no downtime to be had here.

Which is fantastic news for him, really. While he made a name for Atlas during his years there, 24grille is the place where he can really make a name for himself. The restaurant has an automatic built-in clientele of wealthy traveling businessmen, socialites and celebrities who, let's just be real here, aren't going to be taking casual strolls down Michigan Ave. to see what other options are available (and it's a long walk to Slows). Despite being good-with-so-much-potential-to-be-better, the restaurant has never hurt for business, and that means Borden's food now has more visibility than ever before, and people from all over the world can experience it.

It's also time for 24grille to step out of Roast's robust shadow. While the menu concepts are entirely different, the general appeal is the same and the individual "looks" aren't too drastically different (oh, sure, 24grille is a little more tempered glass and industrial chic, Roast is a little more plush leather and textured walls, are we really going to split hairs here?). 24grille tries to have a little more casual appeal (and their $8 "lunch sac" really just can't be beat), but the menu still boasts decidedly not-casual items like pork belly and duck confit (at the very least, these aren't meant for the "casual" diner). There is a nice mix of small plates and full entrees that will satisfy every appetite and craving, and the menu is also quite approachable: think steaks and seafood, but steaks and seafood done in a way you've never seen around here.

But for Detroit Restaurant Week, Borden is going balls-out. There are no salmon filets, no short ribs, no chicken sous-vide on this menu. It is 22 items of Borden's mad culinary genius, flirting with South American, Asian, and French traditions with influences of the American South and Gulf coast, all prepared in a way that honors Michigan's regional flavors and with an unapologetic disregard to your culture-shocked palate. Just eat it, Detroit. There are 21 fantastic restaurants participating in this season's Restaurant Week, but this is one not to miss.

Crackle sausage.


FALL 2011 DRW MENU
FIRST COURSE

Crackle Sausage
(Spicy homemade sausages, crispy vermicelli noodle and sweet chile sauce)
-or-
Three Sisters Soup
(Prepared with sweet corn, Michigan white beans and butternut squash)
-or-
Michigan Sushi
(Prepared with polenta cakes, succotash and sashimi tuna)
-or-
Yucatanian Pulled Pork Tacos
(Three crispy tacos with three garnishes)
-or-
Poached Pear and Goat Cheese Salad
(Petite herb greens, pomegranate, crispy walnut and Valencia honey vinaigrette)
-or-
Chinese Barbeque Pork
(Cha siu-glazed pork belly, ginger, shallot and lychee)
-or-
24 Caesar Salad
(Baby romaine hearts, croutons, Parmesan cheese, toasted tomato and citrus-anchovy dressing)
-or-
Michigan Corn Crêpes and Wild Mushrooms
(Thin French pancake, seared mushroom, shallot and herb vinaigrette)
-or-
Watermelon Salad
(Local melons, ricotta salata, mint, macadamia, 20-year cherry-oaked balsamic)
-or-
Salmon Gravlax with Jalapeño Waffle
(Toasty waffle, tangy radish salad and cool lemon cream)

SECOND COURSE

Georges Bank Diver Scallops with Ruby Red Grapefruit
(White cocoa butter-seared mammoth scallops, zucchini pearls, bitters and ginger blanc)
-or-
White Marble Pan-roasted Pork Tenderloin
(Spiny pepper-crusted pork, Maytag bleu, wild huckleberries, toasted pistachio and Port reduction)
-or-
Duck Breast on Roasted Italian Plum
(Slow-roasted boneless duck breast with stewed Italian plum jam)
-or-
Lamb Leg on Roasted Vegetables
(Lamb rolled in coffee and vanilla, pickled thyme, roasted shallot, radicchio, Parmesan, shiitake and chives)
-or-
Florida Skate and Minneola Citrus
(Seared, flaked southern coastal fish, Florida citrus, jicama and fried capers)
-or-
Angus Coulotte with Cotton Onions
(Chargrilled steak, Virginia onions and green peppercorn butter)
-or-
Chicken Saltimbocca
(Amish chicken, prosciutto and herbs with white wine-Marsala braise)
-or-
Ratatouille
(Seasonal vegetables, fresh herbs, Calabro ricotta and tomato-Chardonnay butter)

THIRD COURSE

Gingersnap and Apricot Cheesecake
(Peppery gingersnap crust, smooth cream batter and local stonefruits)
-or-
Five and Dime Milkshake
(Vanilla bean gelato, malted milk, whipped cream, scoop straw and sprinkles)
-or-
Soda Jerk Float
(Cherry-vanilla syrup, ice cream, Coke in a bottle, whipped cream and maraschino)
-or-
Bread Pudding
(Nutmeg custard, banana bread pudding, walnut streusel and English toffee)
-or-
Summer's End Blackberry Panna Cotta
(Honey and black pepper Italian custard and minted blackberry-orange compote)
-or-
Scoops
(Chili, lime and lemongrass sorbet, chocolate sea salt gelato, lychee and strawberry ice cream)

Want to see more? Check out the Flickr set here.

24Grill Book Cadilac Westin on Urbanspoon

Friday, September 23, 2011

The 5 Days of DRW: La Dolce Vita

Vitello Piccata. All photos by Nicole Rupersburg.
Words like "hidden gem" and "urban oasis" get tossed around a lot when talking about La Dolce Vita, and with good reason: located in a very unlikely spot at Woodward and McNichols in Detroit's Palmer Park neighborhood, the restaurant is surrounded by a whole lot of bleak-looking nothing (plus a strip club).

If it sounds seedy ... well, a rose by any other name would surely smell as sweet as a sweaty perfume-soaked stripper, right? But LDV owner Enrico Roselli has somehow managed to create a tranquil little corner of serenity here. Natural light floods the interior of the restaurant through arched windows, reminiscent of Old World European restaurants that you'd find tucked away in the corner of the Tuscan countryside. The stamped concrete patio is enclosed in ivy-covered brick, completing the Euro-bistro motif and creating a pocket of halcyon urbanity.


Operating as La Dolce Vita since 1995, this is the kind of place that's a really well-known best-kept secret made popular largely by word of mouth. Their Sunday bottomless mimosa brunches and Tuesday night dance parties on the patio during the summer are hugely popular events, and the rustic Italian dinner cuisine is a constant draw - Roselli was born in the Calabria region of Italy, then moved to Piedmont while in his teens, so the menu reflects the traditions of both northern and southern Italy.

Executive Chef Steve Siekierzynski continues LDV's Italian traditions. He has worked all over metro Detroit directly under such acclaimed chefs as Brian Polcyn and Jimmy Schmidt and has never had a job outside of the restaurant industry. "It's a calling," he says of being a chef. "It's not something you choose; it chooses you."

Penne Norma

The Food Network has made the career of the chef seem glamorous and romantic, showcasing people like Emeril Lagasse and Wolfgang Puck as celebrities instead of working men ... what it doesn't show is the 20-30 years of hard work, lost sleep, sweat and sacrifice it took to get there. "I call my wife a 'culinary widow,'" Siekierzynski jokes. "11 hours is a short day." Like anyone else who has taken the vow of chefdom, he does it for the love of it.

This season's installment of Detroit Restaurant Week marks the first time LDV is a participant. "It's a way for us to show ourselves off to a lot of people who wouldn't otherwise come here," Siekierzynski says. "$28 is a good way to get people in who think it's too expensive to eat here - which it's not."


The DRW menu is full of items selected from their regular dinner menu, so even after DRW ends guests can come back again and again for their favorites. Portions are also the same - bountiful Italian-sized portions that is, making the $28 a real value. You'll find some traditional Italian favorites as well as some new concepts. "We continue to try new things," says Siekierzynski. "We can't rest on our laurels, but we're still rooted in the basics."

Siekierzynski is excited to be working with Detroit Restaurant Week, knowing how huge the event has grown in the last two years since it's inception and how it has been able to introduce so many new faces to Detroit's finest establishments. "Detroit is very underrated culinary-wise," he states. "There are some phenomenal chefs in Michigan and Detroit. Events like this really get your face out there a little."

Pollo Marsala

FALL 2011 DRW MENU
FIRST COURSE

Minestrone
(The Classic)
-or-
La Mista
(Baby greens with balsamic vinaigrette, tomato, cucumber, red onion and shaved carrot)
-or-
Portabella Mushrooms
(Roasted portabella mushrooms with balsamic reduction)
-or-
Bruschetta
(Roasted red bell peppers and Parmesan cheese)
-or-
Calamari
(Fried crispy and served with spicy marinara, basil and olives)

SECOND COURSE

Filetto e Scampi
(Tender filet and jumbo scampi with chevre cheese and Marsala cream reduction)
-or-
Vitello Piccata
(Tender veal scallopini with artichokes and mushrooms in lemony sauce)
-or-
Pollo Marsala
(Sauteed chicken breast with porcini mushrooms, in a light Marsala cream)
-or-
Ravioli d'Aragosta allo Zafferano
(Saffron pasta stuffed with lobster and served with Palamino sauce)
-or-
Penne Norma
(Penne pasta tossed with marinara, ricotta cheese and roasted eggplant)
-or-
Salmone alla Griglia
(Grilled salmon with grain mustard and honey glaze)

THIRD COURSE

Choice of a Selection from the Dessert Cart
(Please ask server for details)

La Dolce Vita on Urbanspoon

Thursday, September 22, 2011

[HOT LIST] Detroit Restaurant Week

The bar at Roast. (photo by Nicole Rupersburg)


Launched in 2009 at a time when the city needed a lift even more than usual, Detroit's Restaurant Week has grown from modest beginnings into something approaching a full-on celebration of the city's diverse and worthy dining scene. From tomorrow through Sunday, October 2, you'll be able to choose from 21 city restaurants offering special prix-fixe menus at the discounted price of $28 per person. Since there aren't 21 days to try them all, we've gone ahead and selected five of our favorites for this round, plus a few more to have your eye on.

#1 The best one Iridescence
Restaurant Week is the perfect time to dip your toes into the water at this fine-diner, located high atop the Motor City Casino. Their fun and accessible special menu includes pork buns, a kobe burger, an upscale twist on the classic perch plate and dessert from award-winning pastry chef Patricia Nash. Ask for seating on the upper level to take advantage of those great skyline views.

#2 The hip one Roast
Michael Symon's spectacular Washington Boulevard spot has been a downtown favorite since the day it opened, thanks to their housemade charcuterie, their talent for finding great meat and cooking it simply but beautifully, not to mention those fun desserts. Incidentally, you'll be able to sample all of the above, off their special menu for the week. Make sure to book a table, to avoid disappointment.

#3 The surprise one Wolfgang Puck Grille
The man has his name on cans of soup at the grocery store. He probably has to use Google Maps to find his way to his own restaurants, there are no so many of them. How good could this one be? Thanks to a talented team in the kitchen at this MGM Grand sleeper, the answer is, happily, quite. A simple but tasty special menu includes staples like ricotta gnocchi, ribeye steak and dobos torte for dessert. There – that's your dinner sorted.

#4 The secret one La Dolce Vita
Too many Detroiters don't even know about this Palmer Park jewel, hiding in plain sight just off Woodward Avenue near Six Mile. A holdover from a sweeter time, the menu is Italian, the indoor-outdoor atmosphere is just a tiny bit SoCal, though maybe that's just their Sunday Brunch scene that's clouding our judgement. A first-timer to the DRW, and a must-experience.  
#5 The classic one Roma Café
Serving up Italian food to hungry Detroiters since 1890, this Eastern Market stalwart is one of the oldest surviving restaurants in the entire United States. The menu sometimes reads like something you'd find in a museum – we'll have the perch meunière, please – the same museum that loaned out some of the restaurant's déco. And waitstaff, come to think of it. As befits a setting like this, you want to go classic all the way – minestrone, some pasta or some chicken parm, an order of cannoli and un 'spresso. Done.


BUBBLING UNDER: Caucus Club (for its classic appeal), Atlas Global Bistro (for interesting cooking), Saltwater (for good seafood), Angelina Italian Bistro (for its pleasing, modern rustic Italian ethic). 

For menus and information for all participating restaurants, visit detroitrestaurantweek.com