
Chef Ollie Clarke

Smoked lamb carpaccio at Origins 14 – La Regalade
British chef Ollie Clarke has purchased the legendary La Régalade within the 14th Arrondissement and is transitioning it in direction of a brand new identify, Origins 14 – La Régalade. In all chance, this will likely be shortened to Origins 14 as soon as Clarke has settled in, however in the intervening time, the moniker La Régalade is being retained as a type of placeholder, as a result of so many individuals know the place this restaurant is situated and in addition that it was the birthplace of la bistronomie, or fashionable French bistro motion, when chef Yves Camdeborde first opened it in 1992.
Since fashionable French bistro cooking has turn out to be the dominant culinary idiom amongst formidable younger cooks going out on their very own, it’s virtually arduous to think about that this cooking model barely existed twenty-five years in the past. That was when a band of younger cooks who’d labored with chef Christian Fixed when he was head chef on the sadly now vanished Les Ambassadeurs on the Lodge de Crillon started going out on their very own and making use of the haute-cusiine classes they’d realized from Fixed to bistro cooking.
This included the concept of utilizing luxurious meals preferred foie gras and truffles as garnishes on bistro dishes, shorter cooking instances, a lavish use of recent herbs, and a desire for jus (deeply decreased meat or seafood inventory) and vinaigrettes rather than conventional French sauces made by deglazing cooking juices with wine after which elaborating them with wealthy dairy merchandise like butter and cream. Greens abruptly achieved a brand new significance within the context of this cooking model, too, and homelier cuts of meat, together with a variety of organ meats, and cheaper fishes (mackerel, herring, pink mullet, and so forth.) took delight of place on the menus at this new breed of bistro, which additionally dismissed the canon of conventional bistro cooking, together with such grand Gallic dishes as blanquette de veau and boeuf bourguignon, as too wealthy and too heavy.
French meals author Sebastien Desmorand coined a reputation for the brand new motion, La Bistronomie, and a raft of recent guides and publications, together with Nova (not publishing) and Le Fooding (now partially owned by Michelin and so a part of the institution it as soon as took such iconoclastic enjoyment of ridiculing and rejecting) championed it. So it thrived, and to such a level, in reality, that it’s now a lot simpler to discover a bistronomie model meal in Paris than it’s a conventional bistro feed.
On my approach to the restaurant on a cool autumn night time, I bear in mind the spectacular first meal I had on the authentic La Régalade. First we gorged ourselves on the excellent loaf of terrine de campagne that arrived on the desk with glorious bread compliments of the home, after which I had ravioli full of foie gras underneath a thatch of truffle shavings and a chic dish of grilled rougets with cep mushrooms and roasted chestnuts. This meal was so good that desirous about nonetheless makes me ravenous a few years later. So I used to be very inquisitive about how Clarke would reset the pendulum of this very well-known place en route to satisfy Bruno there for dinner.
Arriving, the look of the eating room hadn’t modified in any perceptible approach, which allowed me the pleasure of some umami-rich gnawing on outdated bones nostalgia for all the glorious meals I’d eaten right here by way of the years, with completely different folks and on completely different events, over a glass of fantastic Cotes du Roussillon Domaine Modat whereas I waited for Bruno. The group appeared little completely different from the final time I’d been right here, maybe 5 years, in the past, as effectively, because it remained a combination of locals, guidebook-following foreigners, French out-of-towners staying in cheap inns across the Porte d’Orleans and solidly fed Parisian regulars of various stripes who’d most likely arrived by Uber. There was, nonetheless, a sprinkling of youthful sorts, who most likely knew Clarke’s cooking from the times he was chef at Fish La Boissonnerie, a well-liked expat desk in Saint-Germain-des-Pres.
So I discovered myself musing like some form of an uncle on the concept of getting identified this restaurant for its total lifetime and in addition questioning why I hadn’t been right here in such a longtime. In the long run, the explanations this deal with fell off my record needed to do with the truth that bistronomie turned so ubiquitous it not required a journey to an out-of-the-way nook of the 14th Arrondissement to get pleasure from or not get pleasure from it and in addition as a result of pretty much as good because the cooking of chef Bruno Doucet could also be–Doucet took this place over when Camdeborde moved to Saint-Germain-des-Pres to profitably play to his worldwide repute in a front-row setting the place he might command increased costs, it lacked the sinewy originality and occasional thrillingly primal bluntness of Camdeborde’s model. All of this most likely explains why Doucet determined to promote the restaurant to Clarke and focus on the 2 different Paris eating places that bear the La Regalade identify, La Régalade Saint-Honoré and La Regalade Conservatoire on the Lodge de Nell. Odds are good that he most likely needs to make some cash off of a great globally identified model identify on his personal depend, too–and who can blame him, with out having to fret about sustaining the attract of the unique location.
When Bruno confirmed up we ordered immediately, since he was hungry on the finish of an extended day. After the waiter left our desk, I discovered myself earnestly hoping about what would occur subsequent, after which it did. The assistance-yourself terrine de campagne delivered to the desk as a complimentary hors d’oeuvre arrived with a thump, after which there was second thump an earthenware jug of cornichons was set down on the desk, together with a basket of fantastic bread. And we shamelessly savaged the terrine, which was excellent. Oh, and by the way in which–don’t even take into consideration scolding the fats edging this terrine, because it was as scrumptious, possibly much more scrumptious, pretty much as good butter. Only for the file, possibly it’s Instagram fatigue or one thing, however I’ve additionally gone fully off super-styled meals pictures and am now besotted with images that inform the reality.
For the reason that kitchen was clearly struggling a bit to maintain up with a full eating room simply a few weeks after the takeover, we had been additionally handled to an excellent slice of the most effective rabbit terrines I’ve ever eaten. Clarke, 28, whose meals I liked at Fish La Boissonnerie, has clearly mastered his primary Mrs. Beeton’s cooking expertise, as a result of these fantastically made terrines might as simply have been served in a Cotswold farmhouse as a restaurant in Paris. And within the interval between the terrines and the arrival of our first programs, I couldn’t assist however take into consideration what a massively difficult factor a reset of La Régalade would really be, because it’s such a monument of current Parisian gastronomy. And but…. And but the thought does happen that bistronomie has turn out to be fairly rote after twenty-five years, so maybe we’re anticipating a scrumptious and well-reasoned change?
No earlier than I’d began mulling over this concept–what precisely would possibly we be wanting after we sit down in a Paris bistro in the present day?–then our starters got here to the desk. My carpaccio of smoked lamb with spinach leaves, pine nuts and Kalamata olives was glorious, as was Bruno’s marinated bonite with Granny Smith apples and roasted chestnuts. After which it struck me–possibly what we wish is meals that’s much less chef-y and extra about good consuming? What made me suppose that is that these starters had been intelligently conceived, well-sourced, frank and never supposed to indicate off, or bear a showy chef’s signature, though they did–Ollie Clarke’s.
For all of his expertise in Paris, I’ve a sneaking feeling that it’s not the French cooks he labored for who had the most important affect on Ollie Clarke, however British seafood maestro Rick Stein, since Stein is a prepare dinner who glories in nice produce and is fascinated by getting ready conventional recipes with the subtlest of tweaks. What this implies is meals that’s scrumptious and fashionable however humble. Or meals like Ollie Clarke’s.
Even when they each had a flaw or two, our predominant programs confirmed this notion of Clarke’s cooking as feet-on-the-ground, with the nice bones of great approach, plus a sensibly shy shot of creativeness and a profound love of produce. My pork stomach was described as croustillant, or crispy, on the menu, however wasn’t. Nonetheless, the style was gently smoky and pleasantly porcine, and the garnishes of cabbage and carrots with a puree of boudin noir (blood pudding) had been logical–the greens, and intelligent–the sauce. Bruno preferred his veal breast with honey-glazed parsley root, too. After I return, nonetheless–and I’ll, I’ll order fish, as a result of I’d be curious to see simply how Rick Stein should be Clarke’s compass within the kitchen, since Clarke started his profession at Stein’s The Seafood Restaurant in Padstow, a fairly seaside city in Cornwall.
Clarke additionally had the nice sense to take care of one other a lot liked custom at La Régalade, the person Grand Marnier souffle, which was impeccably made and as a lot of a failsafe Gallic completely satisfied ending as will be imagined. Ditto a stunningly good baba au rhum, or sponge cake gorged with rum-spiked sugar syrup, an enormous quilt of vanilla-flecked whipped cream and the charming garnish of candied lemon verbena leaves.
This was a really superb meal, and the Paris desk it made most consider wasn’t any of the bistronomie locations in Paris in the present day, however relatively the restaurant Bones when Australian James Henry was the chef there. Clarke and Henry share a love of the artwork and arduous work of fine trustworthy cooking made with glorious produce, and neither of them must insert themselves into the story with fiddly garnishes or fussy plating like many different bistronomie cooks. So Ollie Clarke is off to a a terrific begin, and La Régalade seems to be good to go for a brand new cycle of quiet culinary renown with him within the kitchen.
Origins 14 – La Regalade, 49 avenue Jean Moulin, 14th Arrondissement, Paris, Tel. (33) 01-45-45-68-58. Metro: Porte d’Orleans. Prix-fixe menu 37 Euros. www.origins14.com Open Tuesday to Friday for lunch and dinner, Monday dinner solely, closed Saturday and Sunday.