Marta review, NYC

More ridiculousness

People, things got funnier yesterday. After the last-minute babysitting cancelation which prompted a rush delivery of the children to their grandfather, named “Topta” by Jack when he was a wee tot, and a race down to Union Station, we boarded the slowest train east of the Mississippi.

Yes it was a Regional rather than an Acela, but it was not hard to see why Amtrak is often decried as less than its European kin. I daresay Amtrak is one version back in the evolutionary chain, missing a critical gene know as Infrastructure Funding. Our car was hot as Hades and the bathroom was unusable unless your sense of smell has long since abandoned your olfactory system. The sticky floors, the blue swirl in the toilet’s bowl ever-attempting to remedy the ambient odors, the dripping faucet of non-potable water. I always wonder about non-potable hand-washing water. Isn’t that vaguely oxymoronic? Why do I want to wash my hands in water I cannot drink?

It’s all too bad, really, because I love riding the train and think it is an excellent form of transportation that could be so much more than it currently is. Fortunately, we weren’t in a rush except if you count my heart-pounding desire to get there. There. NYC. The source of a vibrancy I struggle to find elsewhere and was keen on tapping into yesterday at the start of our too-brief but lucky getaway.

Marta

Ultimately, we crawled into Penn Station, only a slight improvement of the train’s bathroom, and walked over to E. 29th Street to make our reservation at Marta. It’s in the lobby of the Martha Washington Hotel, and the restaurant design is, overall, a great combination of hopping, warm and chicly simple. The main light fixtures were the only miss, awkwardly 80s bar lights hanging jauntily from the ceiling some attempt at Calder Cubism.

www.em-i-lis.com

But the black tile wood ovens, the wooden tables, what looked to be mercury glass panels lining the balcony of the upstairs dining area, the very Danny Meyer vases of greenery and the hipster-chic “uniforms” worn by the staff all coalesced into a spot that you felt happy to be sitting in and in no hurry to leave.

I ordered a glass of Greco, a white from Calabria, and Tom and I chose the octopus, sunchoke, orange and Castelfranco salad and two pizzas: the Salsiccia–sausage, red sauce, crimini mushrooms- and the Cavolini –Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, pickled chili, grana. I’m certain you realize that the former was T’s choice and the latter, mine.

www.em-i-lis.com

Marta makes Roman-style pizzas, and true to form, our pizza crusts were cracker-thin. If you wait more than a minute to eat the first slice, you’ll never sample the crusts fleeting suppleness, so you need to know that going in. Most of your pizza will need to be enjoyed as if you are eating toppings on paper-thin yet strong foundation. It’s going to crunch and crackle and snap and flake. My strategy was to fold each slice in half, quickly and confidently, so as to keep as much filling in contact with crust as possible.

It pains me to say this because I think Danny Meyer is a genius gift to the restaurant world, but I was completely underwhelmed by the pizzas. The octopus salad was nice but not terribly memorable, and the pizzas were lovely to look at. But, I thought the sauce on Tom’s was too sweet, and my pizza overall just didn’t do it for me.

Two slices in, I discovered a piece of hard plastic, like that from a plastic tub, under my pie. This deflated me a bit further, and though our waitress could not have been more apologetic and gracious, I ate my new pizza more out of rueful hunger than any real desire to be ingesting it.

Nonetheless, my NY high outweighed the rogue plastic and disappointing meal, and we took a cab to our regular hotel, eager to check in and rest for a bit before getting dressed for the night. Tom gave our name, and I happened to glance at the woman pulling up our reservation; she looked increasingly confused, and because our name is often misunderstood, Tom spelled it out slowly. No dice.

We don't have a reservation?

Y’all, we had never actually made the reservation, the hotel did not have any rooms for us and so we decamped to the lobby to search for another home. We ended up on the eighth floor of the Sheraton Tribeca, a rather downtrodden place on one of the many ugly blocks of Canal Street.

Hysterically, when we pulled up in front, Tom said, “Em, LOOK! Right next door is the falafel joint you drunkenly insisted we take you to after Emily’s wedding several years ago.” Let me tell you that my memory of that joint is far shinier and cleaner than it is in the flesh. Sad muffins sit in bins by the floor, the fruit for smoothies is haphazardly smashed against the front window, and the salad bar looks to be in a perpetual state of wilt. That said, I really did need, want and eat the falafel sandwich the amused and lovely owner of this spot, Tribeca Bagel, made for me one fall night, so I bought a hot tea, just for old time’s sake.

Because we are obsessed, we watched a House of Cards and then got ready for the wedding reception which was in Brooklyn. Forty-five minutes later, we arrived in Brooklyn, having taken the slowest possible tour of Canal Street in the history of New York->Brooklyn trips. It never gets prettier, people. Ever. It is seedy and littered and glows with fluorescent bulbs that seem to be both hopeful and desperate. One after another shop sells the exact mix of perfumes, sunglasses, bags and keychains. The boarded up facades around and above them beckon mysteriously in Chinese and English, pictures and words offering gold, reflexology, insurance and pedicures. And still the vibrancy emanates, the hard scrabble, moneyed and lack of, fast-paced negotiation that is life in NY. And I love it.

Once at the party, I hugged my dear friend of twenty years with love and congratulations. I wished his beautiful wife well, saw another college friend it’s possible I’ve not seen since she graduated a year ahead of me, met some cool new people and finally headed back to the eighth floor where we fell fast asleep.

(Yet another) great night at Ghibellina: needed

Yesterday was utterly pooey, y'all. Just sucky to the nth for a whole host of reasons. I felt blue and sad and tired and busy and found that I have early-stage frozen shoulder and need to go gangbusters at physical therapy for a while. Three times a week: who, pray tell, has time for that? And I have to abstain from raking which is not only one of my favorite activities but also exceedingly necessary as our Sugar Maple has just commenced its annual arboreal depilation. Observe. www.em-i-lis.com

It also rained all day, and I felt as if the Earth and I were so soggy we might slither through a storm drain to some nether-abyss. As is perhaps obvious, this is not an optimal mood to be mired in when you have plans to head out on the town with girlfriends you've been trying to see for a long while. But often, a night out laughing is just what's needed. So I gussied myself up, Ubered myself out and met my pals - as I did Shawn several weeks back - at Ghibellina where we quickly made ourselves at home at one of the bars.

I am coming to believe that no bad mood can persist when sitting at a great bar in a great pair of heels laughing and nursing a glass of great wine (last night, the Lucente, a merlot-heavy Super Tuscan-style that was at once smooth, spicy and warm).

Plus, can I just make your mouth water by telling you about what we ate? I arrived first and a cursory glance at the menu illumined the word burrata. I don't believe I've ever not ordered a dish that included burrata, and if I have, I should sue myself for idiocy. Last night was no exception as I placed an executive decision order immediately for the burrata with marinated rapini, calabrian chilies and toasted bread. Not a mistake.

www.em-i-lis.com

We then received two additional, wonderful dishes: stewed lentils with root veggies and Tuscan kale; and the spectacular, stuff-of-my-dreams fagioli e zucca al forno, or oven-roasted pumpkin with white beans. For this dish you should run, not walk, to Ghibellina as soon as possible so that you can indulge before it leaves the menu.

The pumpkin was perfectly cooked: easily cut with the slightest pressure applied to the side of a fork, but not mushy. The consistency of the beans was equally pleasing, expertly treading the line between too-firm and overdone. Dressed with balsamic, olive oil, toasted almonds and a bit of allspice, each bite caused me to shut my eyes, slow my chewing and savor the marriage of flavors for as long as possible. It's a steal at $8. I did not get a photo. I have pretty-please asked for the recipe.

We ordered the chocolate-hazelnut tart but also got to taste the sublime Meyer lemon sorbet and the delicate panna cotta with saba, a balsamic like nectar. The sorbet shocked with its exact-replica taste. We were eating sugar-coated Meyers, yes?

www.em-i-lis.com

www.em-i-lis.com

As always, the service was wonderful: friendly, generous, unobtrusive. The bluster outside subsided, but no one seemed in any sort of hurry to leave Ghibellina's warmth.

I realized, as we finally all hugged and parted ways, how truly restorative friendship and laughter are. That they are some of the last things that should be sacrificed on the altar of busyness. That sometimes Tired is really just a need for fun and light escape masked as fatigue.

My cab coasted up to my house, and as I opened the car door, I saw a beautiful doe standing peacefully on the sidewalk not ten feet away. She was really in the wrong neck of her woods, and I tried to woo her towards me, but she declined. At 3am, Oliver woke up and I got in bed with him and told him about the deer. "She was gawding [guarding] the house until you got home, Mom." I think my heart melted a bit then.

Today the sun came out, and I went to PT for the first time and thought how absolutely lovely it was to be tended to, and to have to lay down for fifteen minutes with a warm pack wrapped around my shoulder, the electrical currents running under it easy enough to tune 0ut as I read my magazine and just was. Three times a week will be great!

Fabulous anniversary dinner at Blue Duck (and I wore "the shoes")

Last night, I donned "the shoes" (and the skirt I bought to go with them), and T whisked me downtown to Blue Duck for our 10th anniversary dinner. He'd not yet  been but based on my wildly enthusiastic reviews, was really excited. It did not disappoint! www.em-i-lis.com

I started with a glass of Moet Rosé Imperial and was reminded that truly, it is perfection in a flute. So when our waiter offered to treat me to a second glass in honor of our night, you can be sure I agreed. T, of course, started with a beer, an IPA from Port City in VA. I thought about ordering the Wagyu filet but ultimately decided on the Braised Beef Rib because the thought of fall-apart tender sounded decadent and easy. That plus a Baby Wedge with Green Goddess Dressing sounded like a winning pair, and then T and I also decided to share an order of the BD grits which drive me positively wild.

www.em-i-lis.com

When this lovely salad arrived, I dove in, eager for a non-iceberg Wedge (bless you, Blue Duck; I can think of nothing redeeming about iceberg lettuce.) It was fresh and pretty but not great; the dressing wasn't punchy enough, and it was either too loose or the lettuce hadn't been dried quite thoroughly enough because there was a watery'ness that you just don't want in a salad. I want my dressing to enliven the foundation and fun additions and to stick right to them so that effortlessly I get the flavor in every bite.

www.em-i-lis.com

www.em-i-lis.com

The braised rib, on the other hand, was downright amazing. When it was placed in front of me, I told Tom, "Wow, I can't wait to make a sandwich with my leftovers tomorrow" because really, this was an eNORmous rib. I then proceeded to eat the entire thing. Literally people, the whole honking rib. With the grits. Which together was manna from heaven, albeit unbelievably rich manna. And I washed it all down with a wonderful glass of Zin from Quivira.

Meanwhile, T chose the 12-hour Suckling Pig and the Asparagus Salad with Parm, a Fried Hen Egg and Guanciale. Doesn't the latter sound outrageously good? It really was. Just delicious!

www.em-i-lis.com

www.em-i-lis.com

I did not photograph the suckling pig because s.p. does not make me happy. T enjoyed it immensely though he said it was rich beyond belief. And, a complete grit-skeptic, he nonetheless felt they were superb and ate his full share! And ordered a Delirium Tremens.

We were full but how we could we not have a celebratory dessert? Not least since we were having a ball and next to us was the quietest couple ever to dine together. He was so thin I thought he was a stick person, and she had enormous hair and kept looking at him as she pecked at her chicken, and I swear I'm not sure they even breathed. So I rather felt we had to have some fun for them. And we did. We ordered the Rocky Road Cookie which came warm and gooey with toasted marshmallows on top and vanilla ice cream. But our waiter also brought us a cup of cardamom-coffee (white? still) ice cream that was fabulous, and I must have one of these gelato cups because it's so appealing. We ate all of this too.

www.em-i-lis.com

Finally we were done. We settled up with our waiter who was sort of like Stanley Tucci meets a wannabe spy (he swore six ways to Sunday that he worked for the Japanese government, couldn't say more and travels there often; his work at BD is seasonal and just for travel money. All possible of course, but T and I looked at each other and simultaneously said, "Lie.") though very nice, walked out to our car and drove home in happy satiety. There waiting for us were my sister who is so preciously pregnant with a little boy of her own and Jack who couldn't sleep. And then my parents arrived and finally we all went to bed, and I ended up moving from my bed to Jack's and then to Oliver's all before 6am and I feel like a nauseous load of dung right now but a happy one at that.

So cheers to great food and drink and happy marriages and family and friends and kids and love. Have a good one!