Pierre
Gagnaire, father of the modern French cuisine, has many restaurants in Paris,
London, Dubai, Las Vegas, Tokyo, Moscow, Hong Kong and Seoul. But Pierre
Gagnaire restaurant is the flagship. He started in Saint Étienne and was awarded
three Michelin stars in 1993. He later had to move to Paris and opened Pierre
Gagnaire restaurant in Hotel Balzac just off Champs Élysées near Arc de
Triumph. Chef Gagnaire is also well-known for his close association with Hervé
This, one of the founding fathers of molecular gastronomy.
Restaurant
Pierre Gagnaire is open for lunch and dinner Monday thru Friday, and you can
choose between the a la carte and a 9-Course Tasting menu. Lunch has a special
115 € 4-Course Tasting menu, the price was definitely not exorbitant by Paris
fine dining standard. This is my 2nd visit of restaurant Pierre Gagnaire. In
between 2 visits, I have had dinner at Sketch, his magnificently decorated two
Michelin stars restaurant in London. As is the Gagnaire style, each course
arrived in an array of little dishes with several variations on the main
ingredient element. I chose the 4-Course Tasting menu started with Amuse
Bouche.
Varieties
of bread and butter were offered throughout the meal.
Butter
Froment
du Léon, Butter from Brittany
The
Froment du Léon is an endangered French breed of dairy cattle (nicknamed golden
cattle) from the coastal region of Brittany, in the northwest of France. It is
considered high-quality dairy product, with a very special yellowish luster.
Butter
with Caramelized Butter Milk & Black Salt, Butter with Citrus &
Espelette Pepper
Making
caramelized butter milk is a long tedious process, the caramelized particles
give a roasted sweetness balanced by black salt. I have recently had similar caramelized
butter at Geranium.
The
espelette pepper is cultivated in the French commune of Pyrénées-Atlantiques
region, traditionally the northern territory of the Basque people. Espelette
pepper is not hot, but has a very pretty orange color luster. It tastes sweet
and less peppery than ordinary peppers.
Bread
Walnut
& Raisin Bread and Spanish Brioche
Crispy
Pistachio Bread
Crispy
Breadstick with Pure Sea Salt, Souffleed Bread with Cuttlefish Ink, Grissini,
Olive Cream Venere, Hazelnut with Salt and Soubressade
Grissini
are crunchy pencil-sized breadstick with a rustic appearance coming from the
hand-stretched process of pizza-crust like dough. Each of the four different
flavors offered dissimilar delightful taste.
Soubressade
is a charcuterie of the Balearic Islands of Spain. The most popular soubressade
is made with black pork. It can be used as a stuffing, ingredient or condiment
of a large number of recipes. In addition to the artsy lookng breadsticks,
there was olive purée accompanied as dip, it was almost like tapenade but less
rich. It balanced well because the breadsticks were already rich in flavor and
taste.
Sacristains
is the puff pastry made of ground almonds, cinnamon, egg and all-purpose flour.
Shortbread was made of almond powder, butter, parmagiano cheese and flour. It
carried more characteristics of puff pastry than bread. But it was delicious.
The
varieties of bread were all tasty. However, I had to restrain myself from
eating too much bread so to leave rooms for other treats.
Appetizers
Red Bell Pepper and Mint Bavaroise/Paris Mushrooms, Onions and Vuletta
Red Bell Pepper and Mint Bavaroise/Paris Mushrooms, Onions and Vuletta
It
was Corsican smoked black pork cheek ham, mainly the cheek part. Meat around
check has a different type of muscle, it is more elastic and flavorful. The
black pork’s lean meat has a slightly darker tone then lean meat from other
ordinary pork. Sliced daikon mildly marinated complemented the meat well.
Fresh
Anchovy, Eggplant Stiletto
With
slightly sautéed diced celery, green onion and onion, and accompanied by
eggplant purée. I am not a great fan of anchovy, but this fresh and sweet
anchovy was enjoyable.
Sardine
Yosuke – Shiso Leaf (Oyster Leaf), Sardine Rillettes, Berce Salad Leaf
Shiso
is in the mint family, taste a bit herbaceous, citrusy, basil and a hint of
mint. It has been used as an herb because of its anti-inflammatory properties.
Shiso leaves contain large amount of calcium and iron, making them a great
addition to salad and soup. The preparation for rillettes involved meat/fish
being chopped, cooked, flavored and pâtéd. Fresh sardine rillettes with the
right texture was smooth, fatty and sumptuous. It covered cream of onion and
chive at bottom and was glazed with intensely flavored condensed fish stock.
Sardine glaze was made of vinegar, wine and bitter orange juice.
I
have tasted lamb prepared with similar process at Geranium on August 9. It was
amazing, meat tasted and flavored even better with the process. In addition,
each type of meat tasted like the original texture and appeared like what it
originally should be.
Marinière
of Cockles and Squid, Sea Fennel
À
la marinière is a French phrase meaning "mariner's style." It refers
to the preparation of shellfish with white wine and herbs. Cockles are bivalve
mollusks which are only found in saltwater. It was important to clean cockles
before cooking. Both cockles and squids were tender and scrumptious. The sea
fennel is a wild plant from the same family of the parsley and celery, that is
used as a fresh ingredient for many food preparations. Sea fennel is a hardy
plant that grows on rocky beaches and between pebbles; it has fleshy green
leaves and yellow/green flowers. It looked simple, but it was sophisticated in
taste and flavor.
End
of Summer Fruits Soup Spiced with Espelette Pepper, Smoked Salmon
Smoked
Haddock Bouchée
House
smoked haddock was made into haddock rolls and wrapped in nori. It was milder
than smoked salmon, a better pairing with cherry ball.
Cherry
Ball
Made
by spherification process, filled with Compari, a bitter-sweet red liqueur,
from Italy. Compari is an alcoholic liqueur obtained from the infusion of herbs
and fruits in water and alcohol. The bitter-sweet taste complemented and
well-balanced the saltiness of the smoked fish.
Main
Courses
1.Crunchy
Pollack, Shrimps with Salty Butter
Tiny
Brittany shrimp were slightly browned by butter and served with shrimp
bouillon, sliced cucumber. Sautéed and broiled Pollack was scrumptious and
juicy.
This
course consisted of 4 dishes intended to be enjoyed together:
2-1.Ratte
Potatoes from Le Touquet, Pointy Cabbage, Farm Mussels
The Ratte potato is a small potato, highly sought after, with a unique nutty flavor (with hint of hazelnut and chestnut) and smooth. Its buttery flavor resulted from the type of soil the variety is grown in by French farmers. Mussels soup made of tomato, tomato and espelette pepper sauce, enoki mushroom, fennel and dill, with a consistency of half-bisque was rich in flavor and taste.
2-2.Nolpi
It
was a miniature pizza with toppings of cuttlefish, tomato and onion. It was
flavorful and tasty. The petite size kept your palette from being overwhelmed.
2-3.Green
Olives La Vernede, Pistachio from Sicily/Gin Tonic
Tomato
based soup and jelly covered by gin tonic jelly and garnished by green olive.
Oddly enough, they actually cleaned your palette probably because of the gin
tonic jelly.
2-4.Damier
of Redcurrant and Horseradish, Dentelle Noire
At
the bottom, there was a layer of mousse made of passion fruit, lemon and olive
oil. The mousse was covered by Dentelle Noire, the black-laced thin crispy
bread flavored and colored by squid ink and appeared like elegant black lace.
At the very top, there was an elegantly red (redcurrant flavored) and white
(horseradish flavored) checkerboard (panna cotta). I could imagine the amount
of time, skill and technique required for the preparation. It was well-balanced
in taste and flavor, with striking appearance.
3-1.Fennel
Salad, Capers La Nicchia and Parmaesan Cheese
3-2.Stichelton
Cheese
Stichelton
is an English blue cheese, similar to blue cheese, except Stichelton uses only
organic and unpasteurized raw cow milk. It is toasty, nutty and sweet with a gentle
blue note. It is like raw-milk Stiltons. Stichelton cheese mousse had a very
smooth and refreshing taste on the palette, an ideal plate for the transition.
Desserts
As
the usual Gagnaire style of a vast array of miniature delights, desserts are always
a galore even though the menu only printed out “desserts”. We had more than
half-a-dozen courses of desserts.
White
Chocolate Cup
Filled with Cucumber and Olive Oil Cream Garnished with Dill; Bread Soufflé;
Dark Chocolate Cup Filled with Diced Dark Cherries; Apple Tart; Pomegranate
Crisp
Liquorice
and Apricot Biscuit
Saffron
Rice Mousse with Candied Green Pepper and Apricot Sauce
White
Chocolate Mousse with Grapes and Berries
Dark
Chocolate Ganache with Liqueur, Milk Chocolate Cream and Toasted Hazelnuts
Lemon
Citrus Waffle
Filled with Lemon Custard, Mousse and Lemon Jelly. This is a true
Gagnaire style of making variation of one primary element and create a
complex and sophisticated plate. It was delightfully refreshing, tasty and
flavorful.
Nougatine
Filled
with Caramel Liqueur and Lemon Custard. The sweetness of caramel in contrast
with the citric, a pleasant combination.
Italian
Chocolate with Liqueur from Basque
House
Made Chocolate
with Caramel Crunches on a White Chocolate Cookie, Dark Chocolate Truffle
and Milk Chocolate Truffle. A house-made and pleasing chocolate dessert.
Dining
at restaurant Pierre Gagnaire is a treasured experience. Service was flawless.
Ingredients were top quality, impeccable, and technical side of the cooking was
sophisticated, creative and innovative. Chef Gagnaire also has an incredible
sense of flavor and flavor amalgamation that enable him to maximize flavors
while still being creative, unlike some other restaurant lost its focus on flavors in the course of pursuing creativity. Chef Gagnaire is unquestionably at the forefront of
gastronomic progress delivering world class cooking.
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