Monday, October 24, 2011

Pork-A-Palooza: Butchering 101

 by Rachel Boothby, L'Etoile server


Butchering 101
The pig lay in “primal” pieces on the butcher-block countertop. A head, a shoulder, a side, a butt, two hooves, appearing much too dainty to have carried the two-hundred pound Mangalitsa pig displayed in front of me. Skin, shaved smooth, covered fat in some places several inches thick, deposited through months of eating whey and acorns.  By all accounts present, this pig was a perfect specimen. I found the carcass, while unsettlingly raw and pink, somehow beautiful.



The painstaking process of skinning
During “Butchering 101,” Chef Tory Miller and friend of the restaurant Pete Kelly led the L’Etoile staff through the process of breaking down several pigs obtained from Uplands Dairy in L’Etoile’s kitchen. Having already perfected the art of creating raw milk from Jersey cows (the envy of all dairies in Wisconsin) and produced two highly sought-after award-winning cheeses, Uplands Dairy had expanded its operation to recapture some of the waste produced during the cheesemaking process. 
Pigs, as it turns out, love the whey that is produced in abundance by Uplands cheesemakers. And when pigs love something, they consume it by the trough-ful, becoming the obese individuals that chefs prize so dearly. These pigs had spent their lifetime eating, and now the tables had turned. 

Stephen working with the handsaw
Chef Tory explains the different cuts
Using handsaws, we cut between the vertebrae. Carving through the massive proportions of fat, we revealed the pork chops—thirteen ounces of delicious meat. The trimmed-off fat was set aside, saved for later use. Two tenderloins were peeled from the inside of the ribcage, and sculpted into bright red cylinders. Sheets of fat were layered with peppercorns, salt, juniper berries, grated nutmeg and placed in the walk-in refrigerator to cure. Bacon was packed in brown sugar and spices, salt and maple. Brine was poured from 5-gallon buckets, submerging juicy, tender cuts of meat.
Brigitte works on skinning a leg

Each staff member, server and line cook alike, wore a white coat as we worked side by side to transform the pig into the various elements of charcuterie. Several months later, we knew we would painstakingly slice and arrange the coppa, prosciutto, lardo and pâté on a plate, carefully carry them a table, introduce them with pride to our guests, and watch as they are savored slowly by a group of friends. 

Rachel preparing pork chops
For those of us who work at L’Etoile, whether in the kitchen, on the floor, in the office or behind the bar, what we do each day is a labor of love. When we create a plate of charcuterie, or any other dish, the raw ingredients come from friends whose farms we’ve visited and whose products we are intimately familiar with. We are respectful of our food, the people who grow and raise it, and, in this case, the pig whose life had ended to make our artistry possible.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Three Boys Named Sous

 by L'Etoile cook, Marcelle Richards
Meet Mike, Aaron and Ryan, L’Etoile’s sous chefs past, future and present.
On Saturday, L’Etoile said goodbye to former sous chef Mike Balistrieri, as Aaron Mayhew makes his debut this week to work alongside L’Etoile veteran Ryan Klawitter.
Outside of the restaurant industry, I find that people are sometimes unclear about what a sous chef does, and they do a lot. 
While Chef Tory takes care of the grand picture for both restaurants, the sous chefs are the less publically known but ever-present support who hold L’Etoile’s standards high even when Chef Tory is out of the kitchen. 
“If Tory was the head of the kitchen, the sous chefs would be the hands and the cooks would be the fingers,” said Mike Balistrieri as he flashes a smile.  “I’ve been thinking of that one.”
Despite the physicality of their work, it’s a great deal of heart that keeps them in it.
They’re the ones who are often at work by late morning before the line cooks arrive and they often stay just as late, making sure the restaurant is not only prepared for that day’s service but for long term needs as well.
Mike, and now, Aaron, function as on-line (as in on the cooking line) leader, helping cooks during rushes, or filling in for stations and helping with prep needs.
Ryan more so takes care of much of the restaurant’s ordering, purveyor relations, plus tasting and checking food as it’s prepared and sent out.  With a relish for pickling, preserving, and charcuterie, he loves to dabble with seasonal produce and items that might otherwise be wasted, like offal or meat scrap, to utilize products to their fullest potential.

Between he and Jed Heubel, he says they make about 90 percent of the restaurant’s charcuterie: pâtés, sausages, and cured meats. “That’s definitely one of my favorite things, right there,” he said. 
sous chef Ryan and his pig head
Ryan looked like a kid at Christmas when six Uplands whey-fed, acorn-finished hogs arrived on Friday, only inside his box were six, dare I say, smiling, pigs heads.  They really did look happy, as I would be too, I thought, if I had been fattened on Uplands whey. 

“TV makes being a chef a glamorous thing but it’s really hard work.  It’s also really rewarding especially if you love what you do,” he said. 
Aside from a sense of duty and working for a chef he greatly respects, he’s found that he also enjoys the teaching aspect, which perhaps is something I’ve benefited from most directly as an intern. 
When I think of Ryan, he’s the person who’s made me a better taster.  When I bring something to Ryan to taste, I may have to make corrections, or even start over, but each is a learning experience that’s helped me better understand the nuances of what makes flavors balance.  It’s Ryan’s eagle eye for detail, too, that’s really hit home the mantra that I believe does separate L’Etoile from others, and that is, as he’s said to me and others: “If it’s not right, don’t send it out.”
Ryan likes Ben and Jerry’s, Danzig and Pickles and Preserves by Marion Brown.
Mike has been somewhat of the mother hen figure to me.  On the line when I’ve felt like the rush was getting the better of me, Mike has been there to say, “We’re going to get through this.  It’s fun.”  There’s a calm about working with Mike, and I think most will agree, that makes him a person who leads by quiet example. It’s he who helped me to learn to keep calm and carry on...and to have fun. 
One of my favorite memories of Mike is of him shouting German sentences in the kitchen on request – it’s quite possibly the only time he’s seemed remotely scary.

Mike likes mushroom foraging, roux and his Jeep, Andy.  
sous chef Mike and his cleaver

I know we’ll all miss him and his beloved cleaver.  Most chefs use…chef’s knives – which Mike does use sometimes, he says, but even at the expense of some good-humored jabbing, the cleaver is still his baby. 
The whole cleaver trend started, Mike said, when the kitchen was more crowded and the blunt-headed cleaver seemed like a less potentially pokey tool to wield.
“It just feels right in your hand,” he said emphatically.
Mike is moving to Appleton to be with his other love, his fiancée Janine.  He doesn’t yet know where he’ll be working but he knows he’ll stay in the restaurant industry. He says he’ll miss the team mentality at L’Etoile – a rarity in a kitchen, he notes. “This is by far the most professional, driven kitchen I’ve worked in…we’re all here because we want to make this restaurant the best we could,” he said.
Aaron shares in Mike and Ryan’s appreciation for the hard-working environment that is the L’Etoile kitchen and loves developing relationships with farmers and working with the top-notch products they provide.  He graduated from the Culinary Arts program from Madison College in 2008 and has been at L’Etoile since August 2010. “It’s finally an opportunity – seeing as I kind of came up from the bottom – to instill the knowledge I’ve been taught and pass that onto others,” he said.

new sous chef Aaron
Although I haven’t yet worked as closely with Aaron, in my eyes he’s been a big contributor to the team environment in the kitchen.  When I first started out, I remember Aaron going out of his way to check in about how I was doing on the line and gave me encouragement after some tough nights.  As a cook, he wants to know from the front of the house how diners are enjoying their food and experience, and he communicates with other cooks to make sure everyone is feeling ready for service.
Given the decision to hire from within versus without, Chef Tory notes that “it’s always best when someone knows the restaurant, knows the system, knows how I like things done…plus Aaron’s a good guy.”
Aaron’s goal is “to not have this restaurant skip a beat” as he steps in to help the restaurant continue to develop systems and “achieve even higher quality.” 
His cousins recently dined at L’Etoile and they said it was one of the best meals they’d ever had, and knowing that his food will mean something special to those who eat it is one of the job’s greatest payoffs to him.  He said he always tries to keep that in mind, and that’s really what the job is all about.

Aaron likes – no, loves – the Packers.  Crispy duck skin and Phish are right up there as well.
So what is it that sous chefs here do?  They do things right.

Friday, October 14, 2011

James Beard House Dinner, October 6th, 2011

by Brigitte Fouch, L'Etoile cook

This last week, L'Etoile had the honor of cooking at the James Beard House in New York City.  The foundation hosts 200 dinners each year and Tory, being nominated for Best Chef in the Midwest, was asked to be a guest chef. So, we packed some coolers with some of the best products Wisconsin has to offer and set off for the Big Apple.


We were waiting nervously at the baggage carousel in LaGuardia airport and, almost in unison, let loose a sigh of relief when all four of our checked coolers and bag of dry goods and chef coats arrived, completely intact. After checking into our hotel in Brooklyn, we departed to meet up with Chef Tory (who was already in New York for Autism Speaks and Star Chefs). We caught our first glimpse of the island city skyline as we approached the Williamsburg Bridge. Taking a taxi into Manhattan in the middle of the afternoon proved to be not the most efficient mode of transportation, but we were all happy to take in the sites while stuck in traffic. We met Chef Tory at his friend's restaurant, Brasserie 8½ and went over the menu for the dinner, taking inventory of all the items we would need.

photo credit Brigitte Fouch
That night we had an amazing meal at one of Chef Tory's favorite spots, Diner. The food we ate and service and hospitality we experienced put us all in the mood to spend the next day in the kitchen! ...Which is exactly what we did.

Chef and Aaron started early and transported all the coolers from Brasserie 8½ to the James Beard House located in West Village. The rest of us arrived a bit later and began prep. Between the six of us and three volunteers from a local culinary school, the kitchen was packed. We had a comfortable amount of time to prep and handle any unexpected obstacles, which are inevitable in the kitchen. 

photo credit Tom Kirkman
Each of the five courses featured local products sourced from both Wisconsin and New York and was expertly paired with some of L'Etoile's favorite wines. We also prepared five hors d'oeuvres to serve during a cocktail hour as guests arrived.

The James Beard House is in fact the town house which James Beard once lived in. Because of this, dining arrangements are...creative. Tables are set up throughout the house in various rooms and guests must pass through the kitchen in order to reach the dining areas. Guests began to arrive around 7pm and enjoyed hors d'oeuvres until the first course was served promptly at 8pm.

Here's what we dished up:

photo credit Tom Kirkman
Pleasant Ridge Reserve Gougères with Prosciutto and Jam
Pheasant Pâté with Dijon Mustard and Pickles
Smoked Trout with Crème Fraîche, Chives, and Gaufrettes
Dunbarton Blue, Pleasant Ridge Reserve, Alpine Renegade and Petit Frere with Honeycomb and Candied Hickory Nuts
Deviled Eggs with Crispy Pork Belly and Smoked Paprika
Nigl Sparkling Grüner Veltliner NV

Fountain Prairie Farm Beef Carpaccio with Pea Vines, Pickled Mushrooms, Crispy Shallots, Brioche Croutons, and Dunbarton Blue Cheese
Comtesse Bernard de Cherisey Red Burgundy 2008

Butternut Squash Parmigiana with Mozzarella, Duck Confit, and Spiced Tomato Sauce
Casanova di Neri Sangiovese 2008

Orecchiette with Homemade Sweet Sausage, Autumn Chicories, and Bleu Mont Dairy Raw Milk Cheddar
Selbach-Oster Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling 2008

Dry Aged New York Strip Steak with Sweet Potato Puree, Brussels Sprouts, Spicy Peanuts, and Buttermilk Blue Cheese Crumbles
Turley Howell Mountain Rattlesnake Ridge Zinfandel 2009

Apple Brown Betty with Hook’s 15-Year Cheddar, Bourbon Ice Cream and Bacon Brittle
Warre’s Otima 10-Year-Old Tawny Port NV

After the last dish left the kitchen, confident that we did the Dairy State proud, we raised our glasses for a staff toast, gathered our things and headed out for our own celebration dinner at Fatty 'Cue.

photo credit Brigitte Fouch
photo credit Brigitte Fouch
On our last day in the city, we split up and all tried to take in as much as we could...and as much food as we could. Erin, Nic and Brent were able to have lunch at Per Se, a Thomas Keller restaurant in the Time Warner Building where one of our former sous chefs now works. I grabbed lunch to-go from Bouchon Bakery and found a spot in Central Park to enjoy my sandwich, macaroon and latte. While Aaron found a long line of patrons stretching out of a deli, figured it must be good, and joined the line. I know that none of us were disappointed in any of the food we enjoyed while in the city and I'm not sure how New Yorkers do not eat themselves broke in a city full to the brim of such wonderful food and restaurants.

Needless to say, we boarded the plane with full bellies and tired legs. We arrived to our connection in Milwaukee just in time to watch the Brewers secure their place in the League Championship Series before boarding our final plane back to Madison.

photo credit Tom Kirkman


I think I can speak for the entire group when I say this was a trip I will never forget. I feel honored to have been a part of the team and immensely grateful for the opportunity cook at the James Beard House. On a personal note, I enjoyed working with everyone and enjoyed even more the dinners and drinks we shared while out on the town.