WD 50

Home_photo2b I am stumped on this one.  We have all read about WD-50. Wylie Dufresne is brilliant, taking food to another level,  winning major awards, a must foodie place, etc.  Lower East Side.  So, after all, we all went. 

Here is what I like.  The service is fantastic.  This is the only restaurant in NYC that when they brought our bottle of wine out with 5 glasses.  One for each of the kids too which I couldn't agree with more.  How are they supposed to appreciate the enjoyment of food and wine at restaurants.  It surely isn't like they had 3 glasses.  Anyway, the seating is really comfy.  Big intimate booths.  The restaurant has an industrial feel but hip at the same time.  The kitchen is open to the restaurant in the back, very clean and simple.  There is also a nice sized bar so if you happen to be in the area with out a reservation.  The wine menu is extensive.  There is a variety of ways to taste from singular options to tasting dinner and desserts.  There has been much thought to every single thing. 

But, let's talk food.  I just didn't love it.  None of us did.  But I am not sure it is about that.  Emily said it best.  The chef obviously has a million things rumbling around his brain about what you can do with food and he is experimenting with it and we get to taste.  She is absolutely right on the mark.

The girls split the popcorn soup which was a very rich corn soup that literally tasted like popcorn with hints of jicama, tamarind and a shrimp.  Quite good.  They also have the grilled octopus which a few of us had.  The piece of the octopus was smooth, round and thick.  Two pieces served over a whipped avocado cream and some  lychee campari strands that were thick like octopus but textured like noodles.  Very strange and not that good.  Josh went with the corned duck that has been on the menu for years.  Three round tastings of corned duck (think thin corned beef) swirled over a rye crisp and served with a purple mustard and a heavy horseradish cream.  Hmmm. 

We went on to the mains.  I had the duck breast.  2 long slices of duck, no skin, served along side smoked hen o' the woods mushrooms over a snow pea and pomegranate mixture.  Fred went with the pork belly which I thought was the best thing we had.  Square slices of pork belly served with a roasted sun choke and a really good chutney like concoction of ancho pineapple over a green caper emulsion.  The pork belly was delicious.  The girls each went with the turbot which was sort of over cooked and too dense but the sides were interesting.  A cauliflower puree which was full of flavor and a thin chip of cauliflower chip on the side with barbecued lentils.  The lentils were really interesting and flavorful.  The last touch was persimmon which was soft like squash.  Josh went with the lamb which was interesting too.  Pieces of lamb served with potato noodles which were really weird texture and not that interesting in taste.  There were also mustard crumbs and the dish was sitting in a pretzel consumme. 

Ok, yes, yes, we did do dessert.  Toasted coconut cake which was really rich dense and delicious along side a carob and pecan mixture with a brown butter sorbet.  The cake was the best thing.  We also went with the grapefruit custard which had elderflower and blueberry and basil on the side.  That was given a resounding thumbs down and tasted like soap.  Lastly we went with the milk chocolate mousse which was strange and had a peanut covering with goji berry and a whipped soy milk on the side. 

Again, this is basically what I can recount from the meal looking at the menu.  Nothing really made me want to go back.  Perhaps the chef wasn't in that evening. Interesting, yes.  Scientific kitchen, no doubt.  Would I rather have a dinner at Market Table?  Absolutely.  What can I say?  I love good food but I am not quite ready for 2015.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Joanne Wilson Joanne Wilson loves food, books, and music. She lives in New York City. Her husband Fred and children Jessica, Emily, and Josh are bloggers too. More »

gotham gal updates

RSS    Email updates    Gotham Gal Twitter updates

books of the moment

  • Cristina Alger: The Darlings: A Novel

    Cristina Alger: The Darlings: A Novel
    i LOVED this book. First time novelist. Well written. She does a great job of describing each character. The story is loosely based on a Madoff type character. Total NY story. Page turner. She knows her town and these people. Really LOVED this book.

  • Stephen King: 11/22/63: A Novel

    Stephen King: 11/22/63: A Novel
    This is my first King book. He is an incredible story teller. Quite a book, very creative, interesting idea and story. It is so long. 850 pages. I get why he is one of the best selling authors

  • Whitney L. Johnson: Dare, Dream, Do: Remarkable Things Happen When You Dare to Dream

    Whitney L. Johnson: Dare, Dream, Do: Remarkable Things Happen When You Dare to Dream
    I was so graciously asked to write a blurb for this book. It doesn't come out until May when I will write a post but for the time being you can pre-order. Here is my blurb; Every woman, regardless of age or profession, should read this book. Through stories of real women, their dreams and their struggles, Johnson's book has created an instant community. What's more, she has opened the door for women to empower themselves to dare, dream and do.

  • Russell Banks: Lost Memory of Skin: A Novel

    Russell Banks: Lost Memory of Skin: A Novel
    An interesting novel about the underground topic of child molesters. Banks takes on a disturbing topic as he weaves a variety of strange characters into the fold. Maybe I wanted some kind of closure from the book. The book is a big idea which really navigates a slice of America. Really well written but not so sure I'd recommend it. I stuck with the book but I didn't love it.

  • Susan Weissman: Feeding Eden: The Trials and Triumphs of a Food Allergy Family

    Susan Weissman: Feeding Eden: The Trials and Triumphs of a Food Allergy Family
    The name of the book says it all. Every parent and every teacher should read this book.

  • Tom Perrotta: The Leftovers

    Tom Perrotta: The Leftovers
    I have read a few of Perrotta's books. He is an incredible writer but I always feel so unfulfilled when his books end. This concept of this book is that one day random people disappear and the world changes. The book focuses on one particular community and a few families. At the beginning I was wowed by the premise of the book but as always his books begin to ramble and the end was so bad it was if he couldn't figure out how to finish it. Literally the last paragraph made me say to myself, "seriously"?

  • Alice Hoffman: The Dovekeepers: A Novel

    Alice Hoffman: The Dovekeepers: A Novel
    I wanted to finish it, I really did. But half way in I moved on. Really beautiful book. A story of four women who lived on Masada who are thrown together through fate as they tend to the doves. Wonderful history and interesting paths of each character. Just super dense. I hope to return to finishing it. After all...it is on my kindle.

  • Deborah Copaken Kogan: Between Here and April

    Deborah Copaken Kogan: Between Here and April
    This book tracks a terrible tragedy of a mother who took her life and her childrens in the 70s. I was interested in it because it happened where I grew up. Unfortunately the book bounces all over the place and only focuses on the authors own issues that she believes to be connected to this but in essence it is a serious reach and rambling.

  • W. Bruce Cameron: A Dog's Purpose

    W. Bruce Cameron: A Dog's Purpose
    It took me a while to get into this but a very clever book. Life through a dogs eyes. Really well done.

  • Kyung-Sook Shin: Please Look After Mom

    Kyung-Sook Shin: Please Look After Mom
    International best seller. Not only a peak into a past generation of Korean life but a disturbing look at alzheimers. Sticks with you.

  • Kathleen Flinn: The Kitchen Counter Cooking School: How a Few Simple Lessons Transformed Nine Culinary Novices into Fearless Home Cooks

    Kathleen Flinn: The Kitchen Counter Cooking School: How a Few Simple Lessons Transformed Nine Culinary Novices into Fearless Home Cooks
    Flinn writes about how she transformed 9 people to love cooking, understand food and what they are eating and basically changed their lives. Good book.

  • Julie Salamon: Wendy and the Lost Boys: The Uncommon Life of Wendy Wasserstein

    Julie Salamon: Wendy and the Lost Boys: The Uncommon Life of Wendy Wasserstein
    What a fascinating life. I actually liked the last 25% of the book the best. A woman of the generation that was told she could have it all and with all her success she still felt unaccomplished. A worthy read.

  • Michael Ondaatje: The Cat's Table

    Michael Ondaatje: The Cat's Table
    A beautiful memoir of Ondaatjes solo journey from Sri Lanka to London as a young boy of 11 to return to his mother who had been residing there for 3/4 years. Those 3 weeks made quite an impact on his life as he threads those stories back to his life as an adult.

  • Jeffrey Eugenides: The Marriage Plot: A Novel

    Jeffrey Eugenides: The Marriage Plot: A Novel
    loved this book. brilliantly written, great character development, literature references abound, questioning of religion, depression issues, post college angst. loved loved.

  • Julie Otsuka: The Buddha in the Attic

    Julie Otsuka: The Buddha in the Attic
    I read Otsuka's first book, When the Emperor Was Divine and really enjoyed it. Her writing is very distinct and her prose is written in a way that is different, imaginative and interesting. The book is a bit of an extension of the first book. The topic is on America's stained past during the war, in our own country, when we locked up all the Japanese people living here because of pure fear of nothing. Otsuka's book gives the read insight into how the Japanese lived prior to that time and really what wonderful immigrants they were and are. Opens up a chapter of American history that we should all be very disturbed by.