1 post tagged “mistral seattle dining”
After many days and nights with no heat (and no electricity, but it was the cold that really did me in) we journeyed with our friends Pavel and Kathleen to the Belltown area of Seattle for a previously planned visit to Mistral. My husband and I had a bad reaction to the candle on the table since we'd been eating that way for the past few nights, but we got over it quickly as the experience began.
Mistral is rated #1 in Seattle by Zagat, the main reason we ended up there over our other selection, Rover's (which we'll get to one day also). Chef and owner William Belickis opened the restaurant in 2000. There's no menu at Mistral. You decide which tasting menu you want (# courses) and if you'd like to add the wine flight or order anything by the glass or bottle from the wine list. We decided to go for the big one: Mistral's Experience, 9 courses. Kathleen asked if they could write everything down for us and towards the end of the meal the waiter handed us a hand-written (and signed!) list of the dishes and wines. Oh, and I almost forgot to mention...the four of us were the only diners in the restaurant the entire evening. I doubt the service and food would vary much with more patrons but we certainly had their full attention.
Breads served were from Macrina and very thinly sliced to help us leave room for the meal.
Courses:
Bluefin Tuna with watermelon radish, fennel, and celery froth: A nice little starter with a foam of celery sitting on top of the veggies. A refreshing way to get ready for the meal to come.
Seared Sea Scallop with sunchoke and vanilla soup: The scallop was perfectly cooked, crunchy on the ends and tender with the right amount of "give" on the inside. There was a bit of citrus dust on top. Kathleen thought the vanilla was a little sweet for the rest of the flavors. I thought the combination worked well since I consider scallops to be a "sweet" seafood. This was one of my favorites with the texture of the scallop and the wonderful flavor of the soup.
Black Bass with roast peppers, pinenuts, brussel sprouts, burnt leek and blood orange vinaigrette: The bass had great contrast with a crunchy skin and tender flesh. The peppers were in a small cube dice and very sweet with no bite, like how bell peppers really should taste. I've never been a brussel sprout fan but I can't say I know how to cook them properly. These were a few leaves and sauteed, so they were a nice accompaniment.
Roast Swordfish, abalone mushroom, bluefoot chanterelle, horseradish puree: The swordfish was fine, but boy do I love mushrooms. I could've just eaten more mushrooms for this entire dish and left everything else out.
Seared Foie Gras with acorn squash puree and passionfruit juice: I've had foie gras at Cafe Juanita a few times and, yes, I'm aware of the controversy over its production, but I'm not going to get into that here. I remember enjoying the foie gras at Cafe Juanita, but this was more memorable perhaps because the contrast of texture was very striking. The seared exterior and the warm fatty interior -- yummy.
Anderson Farms Lamb with fingerling potato puree, thumbelina carrots, red chard: What a lovely rack of lamb that must have been. The meat was dark pink and I believe our server said the exterior was coated with truffle salt. The potato puree tasted like it was 50% (or more) butter (not a complaint). The carrots and chard were lovely, not a hint of bitterness.
Cheese Course: Pierre du Jaquin, Tomme de Fedoo, Valle de Valdeon, Brillat Savarin, Beaufort. YUM. I LOVE CHEESE. All meals should have a cheese course. These were all excellent.
Blood orange granita with pineapple, passionfruit, and orange sorbets: A real winner. There were small shards of pinky red granita on the bottom of the dish and a sorbet quenelle pyramid resting on it (pineapple and orange on bottom, passionfruit on top). Everything tasted like the fruit it came from and the passionfruit flavor was especially strong and striking. We enjoyed each flavor separately and also all combined together with the crunch of the granita.
Almond Financier, Vanilla Creme Brulee, Coffee ice cream, Mint ice cream, chocolate croquant: The creme brulee was the star here with just the right amount of torched top (I dislike it when it's a thick stained glass window) and tons of vanilla bean; you could see black specks everywhere. The financier was a little mini-muffin and was tasty but didn't knock my socks off. The ice cream flavors held true to their origins with the mint hailing from the herb garden. And I used up my spare brain cycles wondering how to make a chocolate croquant; it was a crispy treat that the server said reminded him of Cocoa Crispies cereal (and he then confessed that the chef had asked him to please not repeat that out on the floor, but he did mean it as a compliment).
Kathleen and I got the wine flight, which you can hopefully read off the right side of the menu below. I'm not a very educated wine drinker so I'm not going to attempt to describe them. Pavel also got the Tokaji which was fruity and yummy, just his kind of wine.
Overall, we had a wonderful time and enjoyed the food very much. Service was attentive (easily so with the empty place) our bread was refilled, water kept magically appearing in my glass, and our server was appropriately chatty while being considerate of our own conversations and very knowledgeable about the wine. When he brought the bill he asked if we had Passport cards (which we did from our employer) and thus saved us a good chunk of change too!