Tag Archives: kaizen

SUSHI MAGIC WITH ANTONIO PARK

Montreal is a inspiring restaurant city but attempts at beautiful sushi have always fallen so far below my expectations. The one obvious exception to this rule has been the terrific and sophisticated Kaizen, which, until this year, was the only acceptable spot in the city for artful sushi. (Though Kaizen’s recent addition of former French Laundry chef Noam Gedalof has tweaked its menu into sublime French-Japanese territory, making classification for this fun and creative spot totally impossible.)

Park Restaurant, opened in February by former Kaizen and Le 357c chef Antonio Park, is wonderful addition to Montreal’s still-growing sushi community. Chef Park takes a hybridic, slightly whimsical approach to traditional sushi, adding subtle global flourishes to traditionally austere Japanese dishes. (Park is Korean by lineage, Brazilian and Argentinian by birth, and has lived and trained all over Japan and North America.) Park’s cultural mash-up is subtle, understated, and inspired — imagine pearlescent sashimi, dabbed with chimichurri; coins of fish soaking in a ceviche broth; tender, vermillion uni blooming from a bed of halibut “rice”. The core is Japanese, but the execution is Park’s vision alone.

On a recent evening, we visited the cheerful Westmount restaurant and sat at the five-seat sushi bar, where Park personally attended to us with tempting single-bite morsels of sashimi and sushi that he prepared as we watched. The dining room is studded with easter eggs that hint at Park’s obsessive attention to detail — like the scuffed knob of chartreuse wasabi, sitting on a small wooden paddle coated with shark skin. It’s gorgeous food that’s memorable, not just perfunctory.

Park insists on making nearly everything in-house, like the mayonnaise and soy sauce that laced this shrimp salad appetizer. The kimchi — which graces daytime dishes like Park’s BLT — is his mother’s own recipe. (He sent us home with a big tupperware of the stuff, since it wasn’t on our tasting menu that night. It was the best I’ve ever had, and so dramatic too — he didn’t cut up the cabbage beforehand so it sat in the container in frothy, wild tufts.)

Of course, the sushi is world-class. Park privately imports fish and seafood from a community of Japanese fishermen based near Tokyo, and receives shipments every single day.

Park instructed us on how to eat his sashimi, telling us that certain fishes — if prepared properly and bought at peak freshness — would leave behind a lingering sweetness. A soft, pleasing aftertaste of sugar and flowers coating the tongue and rushing to the head.

My favorite moment of the evening was sampling the kinome leaf, which renders your tongue numb and tingling — a little like a visit to the dentist and getting a shot of novocaine.

Later, we tried the shiso leaf, with yellowfin tuna and a scoop of caviar.

Park busted out the blowtorch for this salmon toro, lightly coated in his house-made soy sauce.

This is harder than it looks. Park can make the pad of rice that sit one-handed, with the inside of his palm and a thumb. It was hypnotic.

Is there any other food that so perfectly works as a one-bite wonder? That we only had one piece each emphasized the sashimi’s incredible, supple ephemerality — it’s here, then it’s gone forever.

Park’s Peruvian-inspired sashimi ceviche was a sublime explosion of acid, salt, and sweetness.

Somehow, I managed to stuff this sashimi bursting with halibut and uni into my mouth. It was not easy.

We finished dinner with a tropical fruit and strawberry rice pudding, studded with tiny pearls of grapefruit consomme. It was an incredible, invigorating meal: light and full of character, and those magnificent fish dancing in the ocean just hours earlier still felt so vital that night. Forget Montreal — this is some of the finest sushi that I’ve ever had, anywhere.

A NEW KAIZEN

Like many people, I’ve never been to a Thomas Keller restaurant, but I often fantasize about his magical, creative food. I wonder what it would be like to be fed by his team, to eat the beautiful dishes that I have admired in books, magazines, and, of course, the internet. (Making his perfect carrot cake is a small consolation).

So I totally did a little dance when I heard that Canadian-born chef Noam Gedalof, fresh from the French Laundry kitchens, was the new executive chef at sushi spot Kaizen. The restaurant’s sommelier, Cassady Sniatowsky, invited us to try the newly-revamped menu, one that reflects both Gedalof’s time at French Laundry and the restaurant’s Japanese roots. The dinner was a spectacular, surprising explosion of texture and flavor. It was just the right amount of experimental — everything still felt really heartfelt, thoughtful, and measured. There were so many beautiful touches, likes a whisp of radish, clinging to the side of a bowl, or oyster leaves, dancing across the plate. The poetic details were really seductive. I can’t wait to go back!

A small scroll of uni, poised expectantly in a porcelain tureen, was presented alongside a tiny pitcher of murky broth.

As the pitcher slowly emptied its broth, I saw that the soup was shockingly opaque — gorgeous, like thick green paint.

The taste of this cold soup was surprising, too. I was expecting something heavy, but the soup was cool, delicate and light, channeling the ethereal, vegetal essence of nasturtium and urchin, garnished with edible nasturtium flower petals. It was an enthralling beginning.

Wafer-thin crackers, dusted in seaweed powder, were gone in moments. (I love eating crackers at restaurants).

Cassady made some killer wine selections, including this tremendous Jacques Selosse champagne — apparently one of the most sought-after champagnes in the world. I adore champagne, and this was the nicest one I’ve ever had, a lively biodynamic version that was full of mineral and citrusy notes, and bubbles that disappeared rapidly.

Quebec Snow Crab, Razor Clams, Radish, Fuji Apple, Scallion, Tatsoi and Daikon Sprouts, Cara Cara Orange, Navel Orange, Blood Orange

Adam has eaten this radish and apple salad at the restaurant before, and requested it again so that I would have a chance to try it. I’m so glad he did — the salad was an effortless blend of delicate, sweet, and bitter flavors. If only there was a setting on my mandoline to get my sliced radishes looking that translucent!

Even better were the tiny pearls of crisp apple nestled in the salad. I kept picturing the world’s smallest melon baller punching out these adorable shapes.

Oyster & Pickled Cucumber: Lebanese Cucumber, Kumamoto Oyster, Dill, Crème Fraiche, Oyster Leaf, Pea Tendrils, Bachelor’s Buttons

Appearance-wise, this cold oyster salad was my favorite of the night. I loved the dashes of creme fraiche, and the dancing forms of oyster leaves. Unfortunately the slices of pickle overwhelmed my palate. When it comes to oysters, I don’t like much interference.

The champagne long finished, Cassady pulled out a 2007 bottle of Domaine Roulot Les Luchet Meursault, one of my favorite regions in Burgundy. I was thrilled at how well this Japanese-inspired food went with our French wines.

Egg, Uni Sauce, chard, eryngii mushrooms

Urchin made another appearance, this time as a silken bed of puree, upon which a slow-cooked poached egg (six hours in a specially controlled warm water bath!), chunks of oryngii mushroom, and a swiss chard quenelle (genius!) were perched. As much as I love a properly cooked hard or soft boiled egg, I have yet to taste an egg with as smooth or uniform texture as the one I had at Kaizen. The yolk was so creamy and soft — almost like a fresh, slightly firm tofu.

I couldn’t resist swirling the components into a confetti-like mess. Unfortunately, I was so seduced by the next dish that I must have forgotten to take a photo, but imagine a tangled nest of soba noodles, glistening with butter, served with little neck clams, Isle Magdellan mussels, rice lettuce, and shirako, or deep-fried fish sperm. Oh yes. First time for everything! The sperm? Deliciously crisp and salty!

 Lobster, romaine, buttermilk vin, cauliflower, almond, carrot

For the final fish course we were presented with lobster two ways. My plate featured a “deconstructed lobster roll” (my words), with cold, poached lobster topped with thinly sliced carrots, cauliflower, romaine lettuce, and a delicious ranch-like buttermilk dressing. It was like the best Caesar salad ever.

Lobster, glazed sweetbread,braised salsify, crispy bone marrow, arugula

But it was Adam’s lobster, thickly glazed and paired with sweetbreads, braised salsify, and crispy bone marrow, that I really loved.

A dinner with Adam wouldn’t be complete without at least a few bottles of pinot noir. We adored this 1999 Domaine G. Roumiere Chambolle-Musigny.

Glazed terrine of foie gras, umeboshi glazed, pickled eggplant, turnip, beech, asian pear, mizuna

The final savory course was foie gras, presented two ways. I was served the chilled foie gras dish, plated with tiny mushrooms and pickled eggplant.

Sautéed foie gras, black garlic, roasted sunchoke, black trumpet, celery, almond

Adam’s foie gras dish, with its black trumpet mushrooms, roasted sunchokes and celery, was much more robust in appearance and flavor. Though both were memorable, I slightly preferred the heady, bitter flavors of the mizuna and radish in mine, which cut through the foie gras’ richness.

Thankfully, our dessert was simple — a fluffy chocolate souffle with an airy crumb — served with a beautiful Hungarian dessert wine.

For me, a visit to French Laundry is still a wild fantasy, but now I have something even better, a place right in Montreal that truly delivers boundless amounts of imagination, elegance, and surprise. Most tasting menus in Montreal leave me overwhelmed and uncomfortably full — endless iterations of venison, beef, foie gras, and cheese — but Adam and I sailed out of Kaizin feeling inspired and happy. I’m so excited to see what Noam will do next — I have a feeling he’ll make quite an impact on Montreal’s already-incredible food community.