’Lunch in the Loft’ in world’s capital of food

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’Lunch in the Loft’ in world’s capital of food
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Şubat 26, 2009 00:00

PARIS - Thanks to a handful of English-speaking expats living in Paris, elaborate tea parties have evolved into 'Lunch in the Loft,' one of several unofficial restaurants in Paris that are set in people's homes.

When Claude Cabri was a child, she had a habit of re-arranging the furniture in her family's living room to create a cafŽ scene before dressing up and serving crepes and tea to her friends. These days, her childhood passion for elaborate tea parties has evolved into "Lunch in the Loft," one of several unofficial restaurants in Paris that are set in people's homes.

Similar "underground" restaurants have been popping up in secret locations around the world for the past decade or so Ğ Berlin, San Francisco, New York and Hong Kong are a few cities where they are well-established Ğ but only recently have they taken off in the self-described world capital of food.

That has been changing lately thanks to a handful of English-speaking expats with a talent for entertaining but no desire to chain themselves to a restaurant stove and all the paperwork that comes with it in France.

Grand-daddy of them all is Jim Haynes, who has been hosting open-house dinners in his converted art studio near Montparnasse for the past 30 years.

It started when a young American dancer who was staying in his apartment offered to cook for him and a group of friends every weekend. Now a different guest chef every Sunday cooks for as many as 70 people, a mix of Paris residents and visitors from all over the world.

English is usually the common language and Haynes takes pride in remembering the name of each guest to facilitate introductions. The meal is non-profit, with the suggested donation of 25 euros supporting social and artistic projects.

If these legendary dinners are mainly about networking, a new breed of hidden restaurants focuses on the food.

The trend started a few years ago when chef David Tanis and maître d'h Randal Breski from the famed restaurant "Chez Panisse" in Berkeley, California launched "Aux Chiens Lunatiques", which they dub "an occasional eating club," in their Latin Quarter apartment.

Tanis, who recently published the cookbook "A Platter of Figs" (Artisan), spends six months a year cooking at "Chez Panisse," and the other six leading a more relaxed life in Paris, where he and Breski serve about two dinners a week and the occasional Sunday lunch for a maximum of 12 guests. The "club," which they publicize with a no-frills Web site, is named in honor of their pampered fox terrier.

Their Left Bank apartment, with exposed stone, parquet floors, tall windows and the requisite tiny kitchen, holds particular appeal for expats and frequent visitors to Paris, many of whom have become regulars. They gladly pay 75 euros (96 dollars) for a four- or five-course meal, lubricated with plenty of wine, that might feature dishes such as braised guinea hen with wild mushrooms, grilled treviso (chicory) and creamy polenta.

Food bloggers

Paris food blogger David Lebovitz is typical of the people who are drawn to Aux Chiens Lunatiques. "What's best about their food is that David selects not just the best of the market, but goes deeper, and finds game birds and unusual root vegetables and transforms them into dishes of gorgeous simplicity."

What started as a year's sabbatical for Braden Perkins and Laura Adrian turned into the successful underground restaurant "The Hidden Kitchen" when Perkins decided to use his experience as a cook at "The Dahlia Lounge" in Seattle to serve a 10-course tasting menu to groups of up to 12 paying guests. With a website in English only and the support of influential bloggers such as Clotilde Dusoulier of Chocolate & Zucchini, the weekly dinners, which started in June 2007, quickly took off.

Perkins describes his cooking as "refined new American," drawing on French technique and unusual flavor combinations inspired by the west coast of the United States.

Among dishes on offer this month are cabbage stuffed beets with dill potato salad, red wine vinegar reduction and cumin flatbread, and hibiscus poached wild salmon. The menu costs 70 euros. Cabri juggles her "real job" as an artist, with "Lunch in the Loft," which she launched last year.

A lifelong, self-taught cook who doesn't mind spending days in the kitchen to prepare a single dish Ğ the beef cheeks in wine served in her five-course autumn menu were a three-day project involving a calf's foot and bottles of red and white wine Ğ she barely covers costs with her lunches, which have a "suggested contribution" of 45 euros including wines.
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