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Otto a No-No

Dara writes:

Last week a friend and I met at Mario Batali's pizzeria Otto, located on 8th Street in downtown Manhattan. The restaurant has been open for about five years; I dined there for the first time around when it opened and remember only the lardo--or pig fat--pizza. I had never eaten a slice of pig fat before. So the pizzeria had that going for it. From my recent experience, Otto does not have much else to recommend it.

When I walked in to the restaurant this time I felt like I was entering The Peach Pit, that diner where Brenda and Brandon Walsh hang out in the TV show Beverly Hills, 90210. Every patron was under 25 years old, including the hostess, who looked like a high school senior--and acted just as professionally.

Though we had made a reservation, when we arrived, on time, my friend and I received a "train ticket," and were told to watch the "board," where, as with an arriving train, our table number would appear. Now, I don't know about you, but I don't like watching train boards. When I am standing in the LIRR waiting room at Penn Station, I feel harried and tired--which is not how I want to be feeling on a relaxing night out with a friend.

To make matters worse, when we did sit down, our waiter thought he was too cute by half, and that a broad smile from him could mask the sharp acidity of the dolcetto I ordered to drink. The wine tasted like vinegar and only letting it breathe for an hour made it palatable. For our main courses, I admit it: we erred. We did not order pizza. This being a pizzeria, that was a foolhardy choice. Instead, we ordered a bunch of little veggies in ramekins. Beets, cauliflower, brussels sprouts. They were a tad cold and oily and did not go down easily. Chunks of grayish fish in a sweet, raisiny and oniony marmalade filled another ramekin. It tasted good but resembled cat vomit . The best item we ordered was a crisp escarole salad studded with chopped almonds and dressed with a light, lemony olive oil. Actually, the olive oil gelato for dessert was great. The restaurant is known for its gelato. I had tasted olive oil gelato before, but only this one was redolent of bright green grass.

I had a sense I didn't like Mario Batali's food. Where he favors bold, meaty, fatty, I appreciate subtle, delicate, clean. More Japanese, if you will. Having just listened to the book about Batali--Heat by New Yorker writer Bill Buford--on tape, I knew the chef had an out-sized personality. I'm beginning to think that is why he is famous. He's fun! He was red hair! He wears shorts! He drives a Vespa!

One word about that Vespa: a friend lives in Batali's building. She gets annoyed that he leaves his Vespa always parked at the awning, and that he seems to think he is the coolest cat around. So my friend gooses him by acting the country bumpkin whenever they meet.

Picture this: Batali, clogs and bermudas, enters the elevator. Perhaps he is nursing a hangover. My friend is a poised, downtown lady, but when her famous neighbor is in the elevator, she goes all Oklahoma on him. In her most chipper, "the corn is as high as an elephant's eye" voice, she coos: "My, my, isn't the weather delightful today! Well I never saw such a blue sky in all my life."

My friend tells me Batali just flips his red hair and turns away. I think I will take a cue from the chef himself and give his pizzeria Otto the silent treatment.

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Thank you, WFB

Dara writes:

Today, which marks the passing of William F. Buckley Jr., is a sad day. I feel lucky that I was able to enjoy his company at his house not too long ago for a very special evening of listening to brilliant pianist Simone Dinnerstein playing the Goldberg Variations. I've written about that event here.

Bill Buckley's son tells a story of his father's fearlessness. Chris was traveling from New York to Connecticut to meet his father for a sail. On the train up, Chris noticed the weather kept getting worse. He was sure the sail would be canceled. Yet, lo and behold, when the train pulled into Stamford, Chris spied Bill, the gale force winds doing nothing to deter his sense of adventure.

Bill's joie de vivre was contagious. I'd like to think I caught a bit of it myself when I accepted a date with a handsome young man to join him for a sail on his boat. There were sparks that day and the rest, as they say, is history. The young man was James. The boat was Patito, which Bill had sold to my husband and two other friends.

After our first sail on Patito that day in 2004, I had to make a hasty return to New York. The next morning, I would be protesting the Republic National Convention. This funny amalgam of right and left was a hint of what was to come in my life with James.

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Top Cooking Moment of 2007

Dara and James write:

It was our proudest culinary moment of the year. For James’s birthday in December we put together the following menu for six of our friends.

Hors d'oeuvres : Grandma Shipley’s cheese dip (equal portions mayonnaise and grated sharp cheddar cheese, with a bit of chopped onion, baked in a dish for 15 minutes). Green olives from Whole Foods.

Main course: Cider braised pork shoulder with caramelized onions with 4 lb deboned pork shoulder butt from Flying Pigs Farm (Union Square Greenmarket); thinly sliced brussels sprouts with purple cippolini onions and lime juice; mustard roasted potatoes; sour dough levain bread from Our Daily Bread (USG)

Dessert: 7 inch strawberry shortcake from Veneiro's bakery. It's a light cake, perfect after a heavy meal.

Drink:

Cocktails: 2 bottles Lini lambrusco bianco (sparkling)

Wine: 1 Vigna del Noce 1997 Barbera d’Asti from Trinchero Renato;
1 Rocche 2001 Barolo

Digestives: 2 Braida Giacomo Bologna 2006 Brachetto d’Acqui (sparkling red sweet wine, first sampled in Turin at Cambio); amaro

All wine from Vino, New York.

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