Chef Robin Song's housemade Korean pickles at Hog and Rocks |
Living in New York City, we’re pretty spoiled when it comes
to food. But after a long weekend in San Francisco, it’s clear the hilly city
by the bay gives even Brooklyn a run for its money in any DIY/small
batch/pop-up/locally-sourced throw down.
Add the unfair advantage of year-round great produce, and all of New
York City (of the bleak mid-winter farmers market) is really on the ropes.
You can barely turn around in the Bay Area without bumping into something good to eat. You walk into a store to get
change for San Francisco's annoying parking meters (only about a quarter of them
accept credit cards) and it turns out it’s Gourmet and More, home to a pop –up fresh pasta shop spread out in
the back patio room. Just the fact that there is a “back patio room” is enough
to make me want to live in SF.
A small portion of the cheese cave at Gourmet and More, in the Hayes Valley neighborhood. |
Mattarello's uova da raviolo: if only there had been a pot of boiling water in the back patio! |
Then the Mattarello pasta people, John Pauley and Anna Li, who learned how to make San Domenico-style uova da raviolo from a Bologna master, tell you you have to walk across the street to taste one of the best cakes in the city, 20th Century Cafe’s Russian honey
cake. Hypnotized, we did just that. At that point we felt like we had to get
off the street fast or the hand-crafted food would never stop flying at us.
20th Century Cafe baker-chef-proprietor Michelle Polzine's Russian honey cake. |
So we had much stand-out food and drink of all varieties,
but I’ll fill you I on just two more places, since they fall into that most
beloved (by me) of categories, Asian American soul food. Since writing this
story about that stinky, spicy and delicious category I’ve seen the trend get bigger and more ubiquitous.
Technically, though, I don’t think that one of the two
places, Pim Techamuanvivit’s Kin Khao, really
qualifies, since the proprietress of this self-described “Thai eatery” was born
and raised in Bangkok, and her food shows no signs of Americanization. But after
tasting the restaurant’s burnt eggplant salad with soy lime dressing, toasted
coconut, shallots, mint and cilantro; its elegant green curry with rabbit loin
saddle and meatballs, and a gutsy pad kee mao with ground pork, bird’s eye
chili, bell peppers and holy basil, we begged Pim to bring her show to
New York. I’m saying it again, Pim. Please.
Looks like confetti but it's really delicious sashimi. |
The next night there was no doubt we were in AA soul food
territory at chef Robin
Song’s Hog and Rocks in the
Mission District. You might think the place is a run-of-the-mill, albeit
handsome, sports bar until you taste the grub. Excited Giants fans watched
their team shut out St. Louis for the first game of the National League’s
championship series, so the mood was festive to begin with. We relied on Song’s
unerring aim for the spicy-sour-sweet pleasure receptor zone to put us right there
alongside the stoked Giants fans, but in a baseball-free way. The first clue
that we weren’t in the Double Play Bar
and Grill came when a dish of freshly caught Channel Islands yellowtail
sashimi showed up accompanied by roasted purple yams and dressed with, among
other things, sudachi, the mouth-puckering citrus fruit that originated in Tokushima
Prefecture, Japan.
Song sprinkles his food with a hiker’s backpack full of interesting fruits, vegetables, herbs, and says his plates are designed to complement bartender and Brooklyn native Michael Lazar’s exciting cocktail list.
Song sprinkles his food with a hiker’s backpack full of interesting fruits, vegetables, herbs, and says his plates are designed to complement bartender and Brooklyn native Michael Lazar’s exciting cocktail list.
One of my favorite dishes at Hog and Rocks: hay smoked beets with buttermilk avocado dressing, on one of Song's hand-thrown plates. |
The yellowtail, for example was also dressed with yuzu,
jalapeno, radish and wild coastal agretti, a bitter/salty accent that served as
a bridge connecting the dish with a super-herbacous Coastal Collins. The
ultimate locavore cocktail, the Collins is made with Alameda-based St. George Terroir
Gin (distilled with an assortment of botanicals gathered from nearby Mt.
Tamalpais), lemon, pickled huckleberries and bay laurel. Song does spicy well,
too: his salt and pepper wings, which pack a delightfully punishing lime and
pepper-laced wallop, found their cocktail counterpart in Lazar’s version of
Carter Beats the Devil, the potent mescal, reposado tequila, lime, agave and
chili tincture mixture.
Highly addictive: Chef Robin Song's spicy fried rice cakes and Korean blood sausage. |
A cook who found his path in life after trial runs as a successful
drug dealer (until, he says, “I grew a conscience”) and apprentice sound
engineer, Song says it was a stint with chef Daniel Patterson’s Plum Bar + Restaurant in Oakland that
made him realize he wanted to find a truer expression of himself in food. He also gave up bicycle racing and now throws clay on a pottery wheel instead. Plans are afoot to open a new, two-part
Korean establishment: one portion called Junju, an extension of his pop-up
serving fast, casual Korean pub fare, and a smaller counter serving Song’s take
on Korean barbecue in the form of a tasting menu.
My one regret: not making it to Thai American chef James Syhabout's Oakland side of the bay, where his mini-empire of restaurants has doubled in size since my last visit. Next time!