Sunday, March 24, 2013

Iron Chef Battle: El Baqueano vs. Mocoto


That's the high end restaurant.  Seriously.
Ten course dinner at El Baqueano.  You say it like it’s written.  But first, the cab ride.  It was way, way, way far away, in San Telmo, the other side of the centre, and although there are wide boulevards and most of the city is on a one-way system, the traffic is beyond belief.  30 cents a litre for gas doesn’t help.  To say there are lanes would be generous.  The old Montreal fear about right turns on red plays out for real here.  Our cab hit speeds over 90 kmh, in the city, at least twice—I mean only after I started looking at the speedometer out of curiosity.  The speed, the braking, the proximity to other vehicles—not just in front but on the sides—was so outrageous you simply had to shrug.  I think that’s why Diana wasn’t wearing a seat belt in Paris; if you travel the world you get used to the bravado and somehow you can’t imagine a crash.

The dinner was in a dodgy neighbourhood where the front door of the restaurant was locked; you had to ring a bell.  The decor, an unusual clash of French bistro and contemporary gone wrong, was comfortable if nothing else.  But the food...well that’s a different story.  The evening we went, there was a ten course tasting menu paired with five wines by two chefs.  The Argentine Fernando Rivarola, and the Brazilian Rodrigo Oliveira.  They alternated courses, Iron Chef style, and it was quite a trip.  It was too dark to take pictures...

1 Aperitive
The theme was textures.  The ingredient was corn.  So there was a corn soup with a corn mash, a corn tuile and the bowl was dusted with corn powder.  It looked unusual and actually not that appetizing, but tasted amazing.  There was one flavour that made you think of Kellog's Corn Flakes, another of popcorn, another of candy another of johnny cake.  And the bread came with three olive oils; Italian, Spanish and, believe it or not, and indigenous Argentinian oil.

2 Jamon de rio
It was not ham.  When I struggle with a menu I revert to Jamon.  But here, they slipped me up.  It was a river fish, ham of the river I guess, smoked, and served ultra thinly sliced like a transparent filet.  I don't know what to say about this.  Probably too refined and delicate for me although SS thought it brilliant. He suspects it was eel.

3 Dadinhos de tapioca corn queijo de coalho e pimento agridoce
Hey Rodrigo: Thanks for playing the part
So of course we never had any idea what we were eating, which was made worse by the menu being in, alternately, Spanish and Portuguese.  That said, on the dishes made by the Brazilian, he came out and explained them to us personally.  (He was personable, I give him that.)  This was basically a square that looked like tofu but was in fact corn and cheese curds on a light pickled pepper puree which resembled Thai hot sauce.  We ate it with our hands.

4 Carpaccio de llama con gelificado de alcoparras y texturas de questo
When it was the Argentine chef we got a translation from the servers and their English, while admirable, wasn’t totally, um, particular is I guess is the word.  All I can tell you is that this was the first time I’d ever eaten llama, that it was also the first time I’d eaten it raw, and that it was delectable.  It was very similar to beef carpaccio but perhaps not quite as hearty.  There were capers and tiny dollops of cheese and mustard along the sides of the plate.  Silly in its goodness.

5 Saldinha de pirarucu con farinha d’ague e feijao manteiguinha
We got a lengthy explanation which in the end went past me, but this was a Top Chef finalist sort of dish.  Uber simple to look at; basically a salad with tiny beans and some vegetables and maize, but with all sorts of delicate flavours, a very light but distinctive vinaigrette, a few minced pimentos for bite.  Ridiculously complex on the palate.  I could have eaten it by the truckload.  Rodrigo's finest hour.

6 El yacaré en su habitat
This was silly to look at, the chef playing with themes and food.  The title translates as a yacare in its habitat.  There was water (a pea puree) and earth (crushed cacao, very lightly sweetened), and the yacare was “buried” in a foam.  It was quite wonderful but we differed on whether yacare was chicken or a crustacean and in the end we found out yacaré was a local caiman and we were eating the tail, the tenderest part.
They call him Wally.  Has a voice like Ed Wynn

7 Cabrito guisado com cuscus de milho e folhas do mato
Braised goat on couscous.  Sounds sort of unappealing but it wasn’t.  Except that it was described to us as “like lamb” and so I sort of had my hopes higher.  This was perhaps the only dish we coud approximate at home.  It was also the least fussy.  But when you're eating in a "competition" I would say this was below the bar.

8 Nandu grillado con papa fondant y espuma de chimichurri
It's my three toes that make me special
Our neighbours were “ahead” of us one course.  When they got this dessert item on a black slate plate it looked like a selection of chocolate.  I thought: Well, SS will be happy. But I noticed the servers didn't remove the bread.  The otherwise exquisite service fails!  Then we got our chocolate sampler. It was in fact meat and potatoes.  It was a star of the evening.  The chocolate square was a caramelized potato square.  When you cracked the caramel the “yolk” that poured out was truffle oil; those three combinations, starch, burnt sugar and aromatic truffle were sinful.  It was ingenious if a monster to create.  The meat was nandu.  I had to Wikipedia it.  Like an ostrich, native to these parts, only three toes.  Go figure.  So, first time for llama, first time for caiman, first time for nandu.  The meat sat on a spicy but not overbearing chimichurri with a small candy cane coloured salsa.  All delectable.  We are about to have the Chairman award it to El Baqueano...

9 Limpiaboca
This was a palate cleanser.  They gave it to us and said mango sorbet.  But it was so much more.  It had shredded kumquat in it and about three different textures.  Sweet, sour, tangy, I could have licked the bowl.

10 Sorbet de caja, mana, baunilha do cerrado e coco
A mango soup; pureed to within an inch of its life.  Floating, a scoop of caja fruit sorbet (caja is a mango-like fruit grown in the rainforest, and while the flavour is like mango, it’s not as sweet and is a beautiful tartish counterpoint to the cloying mango).  Toasted, chopped coconut was sprinkled to the side for crunch, with a few coconut flowers for decoration.  Truly, after all the other dishes, this was pretty much the proverbial icing on the cake and, yes, Fernando takes it in five.
Caja.  Who would have known?

We also had coffee and “bon bons.”  

Our reservation was 9:30 though we arrived before 9.  People were still arriving at 10.  We didn’t finish until past 12:30 (and I find it hard to get to midnight on NYE, a miracle!).  But the kicker was this: The cab ride home, at nearly one in the morning, took longer than getting there, that’s how crazy the traffic is and how many people stay out late here.

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