To begin, if my pictures look a little ridiculous in all of these posts, it's because they're all iPhone pictures. Timothy's mom graciously lent me her super fancy digital camera and I forgot to buy a USB cord before we left. Amazon is shipping me one on Tuesday, so I'll have way cooler pictures then!
Now, the post you’ve all been waiting for…our night at The French
Laundry. It was nothing short of perfection, with genius sprinkled into every
course.
Before I begin, I will give you the run-down on this
restaurant and the chef. Thomas Keller is an American chef who has won multiple
culinary awards, including Chef of the Year, the Best California Chef, and the
Best Chef in America. Thomas Keller is the ONLY chef in the WORLD with two 3-Michelin-Star restaurants at the same time. The French Laundry is always included in the Top 50
Restaurants in the World, and has actually won Best Restaurant in the World multiple
times. Finally, The French Laundry was awarded three Michelin stars. Basically,
it was a dream to come here.
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| They clamp the napkins with these adorable clothes pins! |
So you get the restaurant, now let’s discuss the
reservations. The French Laundry hosts one party per one of their 60 tables per
night. When you reserve a spot, it is your table for the night. That means they
aren’t rushing you out to seat a new party (ahem, Restaurant August). When you
leave, your table remains empty for the entire night. Very cool, but
reservations are extremely limited.
Now, The French Laundry only takes reservations two months
in advance, and the infamous reservation hotline opens at 10AM from Monday-Friday. I
began calling on a Tuesday, two months to the day I wanted a reservation. After
1000 phone calls, I didn’t get through. I am not exaggerating. I called 1000 times to hear a busy signal every. single. time.
The next day, I tried again. After about 900 phone calls, we got through. Alas, no reservations available. I checked online, tried message boards, begged various credit card holders...no help to get a reservation at this hotspot.
As you know, we finally got a reservation. My method? I can't tell you. If you already know, you're welcome; if not, good luck on the hotline. The only thing I can say is that sometimes, complaining gets you places.
So it's July 13 and our day has come. The French Laundry is located in Yountville, CA, a 5-mile drive from Napa. Our reservation was at 8:45, but we wanted to check out the famous garden beforehand.
When we pulled up, there were about 100 people taking pictures out front in casual wear. It was exciting to see how many people wanted just a picture in front of this place, and we actually had reservations. Luckily, I was able to get a few good shots of the garden without people in the picture...
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| The French Laundry garden |
Now, this garden was HUGE. My picture does not do it justice. Most of the food at the restaurant is grown right here, 10 yards from the front door. In the back, there are chickens for eggs and bees for honey. Amazing, right?
Finally, it was 8:30. As we checked in with the maitre d', he let us know it would be a few minutes. He led us to the garden, sat us down, and apologized about 100 times. Five minutes later, he came back, and with an adorable French compliment ("I love your last name so much, I had to bring you a bottle!"), he had a bottle of Champagne Grand Cru. Pouring us big, hearty glasses, we were perfectly fine waiting.
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| Champagne with champagne!!! |
After only a few minutes, we were seated. Our adorable table sat directly next to a beautiful fireplace, and we were home for the night.
As a side note, please realize that I am not a genius writer, nor a chef. I do not know the names of half of the stuff I ate last night and I don't have the vocabulary to do this meal justice. Please bear with me, and enjoy the pictures. Ah, on that note, the pictures might seem a little dark, and that's because I took them with my iPhone sans flash. I can't be flashing cameras in The French Laundry, yall!
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| Our menu |
Let's discuss the experience. We were seated by the maitre d', who seats all of the guests. Next, our waiter took our wine order, accompanied by the sommelier with fantastic suggestions. In that time, another waiter poured our water and one waiter set our silverware. Now, these waiters were ours for the night. My water never fell below 75% full, my silverware always perfectly shaped for my course, my napkin properly folded, and my wine fresh and cool. I felt like royalty the entire 4-hour meal.
Another cool point...there was a period of time between when the sommelier first greeted us and when he actually assisted us...five minutes max. So what did The French Laundry do? Apologized profusely and refilled our $50/glass champagne glasses for free. So, four glasses of champagne, on the house, because we waited 5 minutes to talk to the sommelier. Amazing.
After we ordered, our waiter brought us a first complimentary course.
The baby biscuits in the middle were little buttery puffs stuffed with melted gruyere cheese. The puff melted in my mouth faster than I could chew it. So tiny, yet so delicious, and I craved more. The stick-thing in the middle was basically an ice-cream cone, stuffed with fluke crudo. Fluke crudo is a raw-preparation of a fish and it was ground to taste like a paste. We have no idea what was on top, and I didn't write it down. Just know the top was crunchy, like a light fry, but sweet. Fantastic.
Now, I'm not really crazy about the fishiness of caviar, but these sauces and mousses really highlighted the light, cool, and not-so-fishy taste of the caviar. The course included Japanese sea urchin, jidori egg mousse, pickled onions, nasturtium leaves, and a crispy dill lavash. The little squares between the mousse tasted like sweet jello and perfectly balanced the caviar. There were so many different textures, flavors, and temperatures, but it worked perfectly. Paired with my glass of champagne, this was fantastic.
My next course was a salad of Hawaiian hearts of peach palm.
I initially thought this long stringy white thing was cheese, due to the creamy consistency. However, it's actually heart of palm, a vegetable. That is an adorable radish next to it, as well. This course included hadley orchards medjool dates, radishes, finger lime relish, and cilantro. The sauce tasted herby and creamy, bursting with intense cilantro.At this point, I moved on to a Sauvignon Blanc. The sommelier suggested that this crisp white would really emphasize the veggies and cilantro in this dish. Boy, was he right. At $40/glass, this white paired perfectly.
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| See that black stuff? Shaved truffles! |
After we "approved" (or really just nodded our heads in enthusiasm), our waiter grabbed a truffle and shaved it onto Timothy's risotto. One pound of fungi later, the waiters left, and Timothy and I just stared. Nervous to taste at first, I finally succumbed to curiosity. Truly, the truffles had an earthy flavor that I generally shy away from, but were sweet enough for me to ask for another bite. Australian truffles are extremely rare in the US, apparently, and it was a real treat to try them.
For our third course, we enjoyed slow-cooked belly of wild king salmon. As my favorite dish, I finished this thing in record time.
It combined sicilian pistachio "financier," poached brooks cherries, endive "emince" and ruby beet puree for a fabulous dish. The salmon was slow poached, with a melt-in-your-mouth texture, perfectly cooked, moist, and sliceable like butter. The pistachio financier had a creamy top and crunchy bottom, perfectly paired with the beer puree. I ate this too quickly, and gave Timothy "puppy eyes" until he gave me the rest of his salmon.
The next course was butter-poached Alaskan king crab, with applewood smoked bacon, marinated la ratte potatos, pickled pearl onions, cornichon lamelles, and whipped grain mustard.I must admit, I finished this quickly, as well. Slow-poached again, this crab was as delicious as the salmon. Easy to cut, melt-in-your-mouth courses seem to be the norm at The French Laundry.
Anyway, the crab was buttery and moist. The potatoes, tiny, crunchy, and flavorful. The whipped mustard was light, airy, spicy, and very similar to foam. The bacon...crunchy, smoked, and fatty...just the way I like my bacon.
Now, we are about halfway done with the meal. These portions look small, but the flavors are so big and rich, it is hard to keep eating. But then I remembered I was at The French Laundry, and not eating was NOT an option.
It is also here I moved on to a big Pinot Noir. As a recent red-wine-drinker, this is a bold move for me. But the sommelier was insistent I enjoy a red for the next few courses...The next course was a "Fleur de Courgette Farcie au Lapin." This mixed summer squash confit, toasted pine nut butter, black olives, opal basil, and salsa verde.
Next, our waiter brought Marcho Farms' nature-fed veal ribeye, along with compressed garden cucumber, wild fennel, greek yogurt, and charred eggplant "bechamel."
Swiss chard wrapped this veal, sitting atop a heavy sauce. Under the cucumber, there was a light grey sauce that truly tied the entire meal together. It was an intense roasted eggplant puree. Remarkable.
On our third-to-last course, our new best friend brought "Cabot creamery's clothbound cheddar", with crispy padron peppers, tomato marmalade, and wild argugula.
Let's focus on the cheddar. As a cheese-lover, I harp on cheese constantly. When I go to cocktail parties, I like to pair the wines with a cheese. I even bought Timothy a super fancy cheese cutter when we first started dating, so you know cheese is my thing. This cheddar was intense...cheddar. There really is no other way to explain it. If you'd had a very, very strong, sharp cheddar, this was it. It was nutty, dry for a cheese, and buttery. Mixed with the peppers and tomato, the flavors clashed, clashed again, then finally, balanced on our palates. After an exciting ten courses, it was time for dessert.
We began the two dessert courses with a delicious Santa Rosa plum sorbet with Jacobsen Orchard's compressed plums and candied oats.
The sorbet was very sweet, simple, and aromatic. The dish tasted like a super ripe plum, with the sorbet icing the entire course over. The candied oats added a little crunch to the icy dish, with a very sweet coating that neutralized the intense plum. Although I was extremely full at this point, I finished this dish and wished for more.
Finally, our last course arrived. It was about 11:30PM, and we had enjoyed our meal for three hours. Our waiter brought "dark treacle," a devil's food, valrhona chocolate marquise, lyle's golden syrup, and Marshall Farm's burnt honey ice cream.
This was a dream come true for me...chocolate, chocolate, and chocolate. Again, baby squares of sweet jello covered in a sweet icing, mixing with chocolate drops, a very sweet syrup, and a light devil's food cake bottom. The little chocolate wisp was light, crunchy, and melted in my fingers before I could get it to my mouth. This dish was put together with expert fingers, and truly amazed me.
After our meal, our waiter brought yet another treat: a box of house-made chocolates. Seven different types, he said, "Choose whatever and however many you'd like." As a chocolate-lover, I sure did. Seven truffles later, I was full, chubby, and satisfied. Also? These chocolates were free. Whoever said The French Laundry was expensive!?
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| Chocolate box |
Of course, we ended our fantastic night out with espressos. They even had those adorable little sugar cubes that I came to love in Europe, and miss so dearly here.
So, we were ready for the bill, right? Wrong. Our waiter brought us one last dish, the dish they "end every meal with."
It was an coffee...ice cream almost, but it wasn't, with whipped milk on top, similar to a cappuccino. I don't know what exactly this treat was made of, but it was just very similar to coffee ice cream. Ice cold, creamy, easy to scoop, sweet yet tart like coffee, covered in whipped-cream-or-maybe-milk, with shaved espresso beans on top. Truly a remarkable treat.
So our meal was over. I'll spare you the cost because it was astronomical, shocking, and so, so worth it. I would advise anyone in the Yountville area to check out The French Laundry, and good luck with getting a reservation. It's an experience, one that not many can claim to have had, and I was thrilled to share it with Timothy.
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| We LOVEEEE The French Laundry! |
Stay tuned for my next update, where I show you awesome pictures of Chef Keller!


















































