Tag Archives: lunch

A Lunch in Provence: Saou’s L’Oiseau sur sa branche

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The terrace at L'Oiseau sur sa branche (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

The terrace at L'Oiseau sur sa branche (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

A walk around Saou (Photo: MvB)

Ways to hike off lunch (Photo: MvB)

Que fera, sera, at L'Oiseau sur sa branche (Photo: MvB)

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I owe my lunch at L’Oiseau sur sa branche to Facebook, which helps when I think of how much I paid AT&T for data usage at the end of my trip.

I’d checked in on the train from Lyon to Avignon, and a friend living now in Provence spotted it, and messaged me that we should meet while I was in the neighborhood. She’d heard about Oiseau from foodie friends of her own, so we set out on a weekend expedition, the requisite reservations in hand.

L’Oiseau sur sa branche (it means “the bird on its branch”) sets its tables in the tiny town of Saou, way out in the Provençal countryside. The French visit the area to go tramping through the forest, or climb up a massif for the view. We headed out from Montélimar, and the drive took 45 minutes to an hour. It was late May, and the air was thick with pollen that stained the windshield and shimmering with Provençal heat caught under a blue bowl of sky.

If you continued on, eastward past Saou, you might end up in the Vercors Regional Natural Park — but not by any direct route. You could drive through Saou itself if you weren’t paying attention. But you’re more likely to want to stop because the scene on the terrace outside Oiseau offers a portrait of bucolic life that draws passers-by in: road cyclists in their lycra biking kits topping off at the public fountain, 50-something professionals on Harleys, and backpackers rub elbows with traveling gourmands who’ve come expressly to taste of chef Samuel Paul’s cuisine.

I’m told it’s always crowded — le weekend brings du monde — so you will want a reservation. Inside is half-rustic inn, half-rustic épicerie. The front of house is suffused with that barely managed chaos peculiar to small French establishments, and you can choose to add to it, or not, by demanding prompt, attentive service. Presuming Oiseau was what you came for, it’s better to sit back at your scuffed wooden table and adjust to the rhythms of a three-hour repast. Things will arrive when they arrive.

Nothing on the menu is particularly bon marché: a brioche with foie gras would have set me back $17.25. So you might as well not try to cheap your way through the meal, and agree to the $45 menu of entrée, main course, and dessert. (It’s just difficult, when the delicious hunks of bread show up spiked on a small tined sculpture, not to wonder at how expensive rural authenticity has gotten to be. Just sip quietly at your americano in its ceramic, pestle-shaped cup using the backwards-bent-spoon handle.) Because it’s still France, par Dieu, glasses of wine are as low as $4.

The menu will also likely defeat your high school French, and comes untranslated, unless you’re brave enough to ask the harried help. I had the Filet d’un féra, cuit vapeur, choucroute safrané, more or less a stab in the dark. As it turned out, after traveling from Switzerland to Provence, I’d ordered a steamed filet of Swiss lake fish, with saffron-accented sauerkraut. The féra had the light pinkish color of farm-raised salmon, but was much more firm and tasty, especially in its bed of saffron sauce, in a concentration that came to feel intoxicating.

I could also have had a lamb casserole, crepinette de chevrau (an amalgam of kid goat and spices, wrapped in fat); a top cut of beef, bloody; or lamb tripe, the local specialty. Dessert included choice between orange sorbet, local cheeses, pineapple-almond gratin, and something called “strawberry field forever,” which you may want to try if you like strawberries and the sensation of your eyes rolling back in your head.

Afterward, take a few moments to stroll the streets of Saou, even if a hike upland is beyond you. An absurdly picturesque stream runs through town, flowing under little stone bridges. Tiny metal gates let you walk down to the stream bed. Cobblestones and rock walls preserve a medieval ambiance, as does its sum total of about 500 inhabitants. Above the town looms the Aiguille de la Tour, a tower-like rock pinnacle. As you crane your neck to look up at it, keep in mind that sightseers have been doing that for the past 6,000 years. Then pick up some Picodon cheese for the road.

“New” Palisade a Contender for Seattle’s Best Business Lunch

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Albacore Niçoise salad, with haricot verts, deviled eggs, tomatoes, Yukon Gold potatoes, and balsamic vinaigrette (Photo: MvB)

Apple-wood smoked prime rib dip, perfectly cooked, with Provolone melted on roasted bone jus, and twice-fried Yukon Golds (Photo: MvB)

Red and gold beets mingled with bite-sized frisée, pistachios, Mt. Townsend Cirrus camembert, with basil-pistachio pesto (Photo: MvB)

Apple-wood smoked salmon chowder with bacon, sherry-cream, dill, and smoked salmon croutons (Photo: MvB)

The Devil's Food cake chocolate trife, with Mascarpone crème, Riesling cherries, and crunchy nuggets of brown butter brittle (Photo: MvB)

The pear and apple bread pudding, drizzled with Bourbon caramel, and topped with crème fraîche and cranberries (Photo: MvB)

The new décor at Palisade (Photo: MvB)

A tiny Space Needle to the left orients you, at Palisade. (Photo: MvB)

No matter what the weather's doing, the view of Elliott Bay is phenomenal from your table. (Photo: MvB)

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Palisade Restaurant, at the southern tip of Magnolia, opened in 1992 and immediately earned a reputation as a “celebration” restaurant, a place to dine out for a birthday, anniversary, prom, or any other days that marketers refer to as “life moments.” Seattle doesn’t have that many restaurants that can live up to the weight of expectations that Palisade took on during its first years. Mess up someone’s 25th wedding anniversary dinner and you won’t often get a second chance.

More often than not, they did it well. And there was always that view of boats rocking in the marina and the weather over Elliott Bay.

For many years after opening, the restaurant featured a then-trendy Asian fusion cuisine – and probably stuck with that trend longer than it should have. It’s no secret that fine-dining restaurants can coast on breathtaking views and pleasant familiarity for quite a while in Seattle.

At 20 (mid-life in restaurant years), Palisade has brought in a new chef (imported from Portland City Grill), $200,000 worth of updated décor, and a revamped menu, but it’s also paring away everything that detracts from an uncomplicated, classic appeal. Manager Doug Zellers invited us out to try their refreshed menu, created by Executive Chef Ryan O’Brien, so we drove to Magnolia to taste their $16, 3-course Magnolia Lunch (Monday to Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.).

Zellers told us that Palisade is done only with the first part of a two-phase redo: New furniture, new rugs and a lighter, fresher color palette catch your eye, but the bridge over a coy pond is still there and so is the piano bar, featuring a player piano above the bar. And so is that view that no other restaurant in town can offer.

We settled in and examined the new menu. New chef Ryan O’Brien has ripped out any 90210-era trappings and replaced it with a solid line-up of favorites like salmon and steak with sometimes-whimsical, inventive side-pairings. (In a nod to the Northwest’s perennial Asian influence, there’s tuna and sushi on the menu still.) The menu foregrounds proteins, skipping heavy sauces for the most part, and aims to surprise the palate by employing a variety of techniques. O’Brien rattled off an idea for an upcoming salmon dinner entrée that sounded worth a second trip.

The Magnolia Lunch menu features three appetizers, five entrées, and four desserts to choose from. I lunged for the smoked salmon chowder to start, albacore Niçoise salad and bread pudding to finish up. The meal got better with every course. The chowder was loaded with house-smoked salmon and fresh, still crisp veggies–a great bowl on the first day of November.

The Niçoise was a revelation, thanks to seared albacore carrying a spicy, woodsy flavor which O’Brien told us was from blow-torching the seasonings, highlighted by thyme, instead of simply pan-searing them. It’s a good, not-too-large lunch portion stacked with deviled egg, green beans, fresh greens, and nice salty olives to finish it off. O’Brien told us he wants all the ingredients to stand out in every bite and with these two dishes he hit the mark. The bread pudding at the end was the best I’ve had in town since the long-lamented closing of Rippe’s five years ago.

Editor MvB chose the beet salad, beef dip, and chocolat trifle, impressed by the red and gold beets’ consistency and piquant flavors, pre-sliced-for-easy-eating frisée, the rich, rich bone jus, and the brittle smuggled into the crumbled, brownie-like Devil’s Food cake. You can order a la carte for lunch as well and diners close to us were raving about the sushi rolls. (Playing against type, another table turned out to be half-composed of Parrotheads, one of them providing a fair but dining-room friendly rendition of the first verse of “A Pirate Looks at 40.”)

Location is a challenge for secluded Palisade–even Seattleites might have to refresh their memory with a glance at a map, or switch on GPS. Zellers knows this and that’s why he’s running a free town-car service to downtown hotels. But for a business lunch, having your client for a little extra time actually helps. And O’Brien’s 3-course lunches taste like expense account luxe without having to email the CFO afterward. (Or, impress a frugal client with your nose for deals.) The trip also allows for conversation in amiable, out-of-the-way surroundings where you won’t be interrupted.

That said, want to splurge? Seattle Magazine recommends the eye-popping “family-style seafood spread called the Ocean Tower that includes lobster, oysters on the half shell, jumbo prawn cocktail, ahi poke and King Crab ($59 without the crab, $83 with) and a divine Filet Mignon Oscar whose flesh was even softer and meltier than the potato gratin that accompanied it.”

Zellers has remade the wine list for lunch and dinner with an eye towards great offerings up and down the price meter. In a nice touch, he hasn’t yielded to charging more for older vintages in a winery’s run. So feel free to try an older vintage to accentuate the meal. He and O’Brien have made common cause over the importance of service and hospitality, and the wait staff is highly competent (warning shellfish-allergic MvB off the salmon chowder because they knew chef sometimes used clam broth). Our entrées were just slightly delayed because O’Brien wanted my tuna prepared precisely as I’d specified–it says something when a chef makes that call.

Seattle has a good deal of business lunch venues to choose from, but few downtown options could deliver that potent Palisade charm and gravitas–with O’Brien firing up the kitchen, the “celebration” restaurant can offer you “celebration” business lunches, too.

Classical Music on the Cheap: Lunchtime Concerts

In this episode of “Classical Music on the Cheap”, we explore concerts that fit right into your weekday lunch hour. For those who work in downtown Seattle, there’s a wealth of midday events happening just steps away from your office. These hour-long concerts are a great way to sample classical music in bite-sized portions. The best part? All of these performances are completely free.  So grab a sandwich and coffee from the corner cafe, and let’s check out our options.

A performance by Janet Anderson on piano and Nancy Kirkner on solo English handbells (Photo: Sherman Clay Seattle)

Sherman Clay Pianos presents a free piano concert every Thursday at 12:15pm in their showroom just around the corner from Westlake Center. The next recital in the series is on September 27 and features a program of British music performed by Janet Anderson on piano and Nancy Kirkner on English handbells.

Head to the historic Daniels Recital Hall at Fifth and Columbia for themed programs of popular audience favorites. These free noontime concerts are held on the last Thursday of each month. “Music of the Americas”, the next performance in the series, is on September 27. Pianist Jensina Oliver presents works by Joplin, Gershwin, Bolcom, Ginastera, and Piazzolla.

Members of the Ladies Musical Club of Seattle present a free noontime concert at the Seattle Art Museum on the first Thursday of each month. On October 4, pianist Janet Anderson and English handbell artist Nancy Kirkner perform the same program of British music that they’ll play this week at Sherman Clay Pianos. In November, oboist Gail Perstein, soprano Frances Garcia, and pianists Asta Vaicekonis and Taotao Liu will take the stage.

The Central Library is another popular venue for Ladies Musical Club performances. These free monthly concerts are held at noon on Wednesdays. The next concert in the series is on October 10 and features traditional Welsh folk songs as well as piano works by Scriabin and Respighi.

Potbelly Sandwiches Opens New Bellevue Location

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Roast beef sandwich, BBQ chips, and a Coke for $8.25. Sidewalk café atmosphere. Not exactly priceless, but very nice. (Photo: MvB)

Inside the Bellevue Potbelly (Photo: MvB)

"Live music" we were promised, and live music we got. (Photo: MvB)

Exterior of Belluvue Potbelly (Photo: MvB)

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Readers of The SunBreak know that SunBreak Audrey is a giant fan of Chicago-based Potbelly sandwiches. As she’s already had her say, we left her at home when The SunBreak Lunch Team made an expedition to Bellevue to visit their newest Washington State location.

You will find Bellevue’s Potbelly along NE 4th Street at the base of the South Tower, just next to Purple. We were alerted to expect a “lively environment with live music and great food” and indeed, showing up unannounced, we found a guitar player and a busy lunch counter, even at the tail-end of the lunch-hour.

We parked across the street on 106th Avenue NE, but the Potbelly people quickly instructed us that they validate if you use Bellevue Towers parking. That, in addition to a bunch of sandwiches that start at $4.80, makes for a budget-conscious lunch. MvB got a roast beef sandwich with BBQ kettle chips and a regular Coke for $8.25, while RvO downed a turkey (no cheese) sandwich, chocolate chip cookie, and regular Diet Coke for about the same. The Bellevue store is spacious inside, but for nice weather they have about four tables outside for sidewalk-café ambiance.

If there’s a continuum of assembly-line, affordable sandwich-makers, Potbelly is at the high end for quality across the sandwich experience, including a very tasty, toasted multigrain bread option. It’s a compliment to the Potbelly operation that we can say the same thing about the Bellevue location as we did about their downtown Seattle location:

Now, let’s get to the food: All sandwiches are approximately $5 and come on white or multigrain wheat rolls. There are also salads, pickles, chips, a variety of juice and pop, hand-dipped malts and shakes, and cookies, but to be sure, it’s all about the sandwiches. My Potbelly of choice is the turkey and swiss, which was juicy and excellent as always, while the rest of The SunBreak tried A Wreck (salami, roast beef, turkey, ham, and swiss) and a double-ham-no-cheese. Potbelly is great about individualizing each sandwich with condiments and toppings, but this ain’t Subway.

The lunchmeat actually tastes like lunchmeat (from an ANIMAL), while the mustard, peppers, pickles, oil, and seasoning add a nice tang to the creaminess of the mayo and cheese. If you’re looking to cut carbs, please don’t talk to me, but feel free to order the sandwich “thin-cut” for a third less roll. Regardless, what’s great about the bread is that it’s not overwhelming. The roll has a nice give and toasts well, but it’s not overly chewy or so rough that it takes the skin off the roof of your mouth.