Thursday, 15 May 2025
America Age
  • Trending
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Money
    • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion / Beauty
    • Art & Books
    • Culture
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Font ResizerAa
America AgeAmerica Age
Search
  • Trending
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Money
    • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion / Beauty
    • Art & Books
    • Culture
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 America Age. All Rights Reserved.
America Age > Blog > Uncategorized > Restaurant Review: Jonathan Waxman’s Barbuto
Uncategorized

Restaurant Review: Jonathan Waxman’s Barbuto

Enspirers | Editorial Board
Share
Restaurant Review: Jonathan Waxman’s Barbuto
SHARE

When the chef Jonathan Waxman opened Barbuto in 2004, the bookies of the food scene put long odds on its survival. Since making Jams into one of the defining New York feeding grounds of the 1980s and then losing it and two other restaurants by the end of the decade, Mr. Waxman had become something of a drifting gunman for hire, moving from one consulting job to another. One veteran critic told me confidently, when I said this new place looked promising, “He’ll be gone in a year.”

In fact, Mr. Waxman was still there delivering his idea of Italian cooking 15 years later, when a new landlord who had bought Barbuto’s building just south of the meatpacking district chose to let the lease expire. By that time Barbuto had outlasted dozens of nearby restaurants that had been deliriously greeted when they appeared, only to sink without a ripple some time later. Barbuto never changed chefs or adopted a tasting menu or went Nordic or eliminated meat or introduced an elaborate main course for 12 that had to be ordered weeks in advance or did anything else that made news, although just about every food publication in town took its turn admiring the roasted half-chicken under a shaggy patch of salsa verde.

Until its final month, May 2019, when it put out a video of the staff singing a theatrical farewell to the tune of “One Day More” from “Les Misérables,” Barbuto did very little for attention. It went about its business with a cool, steady assurance that if it kept doing things its way, people who knew the difference between heat and light would notice. Many people did, and they found it impossible, or at least unpleasant, to imagine downtown Manhattan without Barbuto.

Mr. Waxman clearly agreed, because his response to eviction was to build a second Barbuto about 500 feet from the first. After a short, ill-fated run in February and March of 2020, the restaurant returned in October. Again it sits on a northeast corner, at the intersection of West and Horatio Streets. Again the outside walls are largely glass, although on the new site they don’t roll up, which made the original space so appealing on warm nights. Again the kitchen is organized around the flames of a gas grill combined with a pizza oven in full view of the dining room, which is filled with many of the same square tables, the same chairs, the same plates and the same servers.

The bar is much longer now, making it easier to slither in without a reservation and call for a cocktail — maybe a soft-edged Negroni, or a mai tai with a pool of dark rum that you smell before you take the first sip, or a JW margarita, which may not be groundbreaking enough to justify the monogram but is smoother and more polished than most.

Standard operating procedure at this point is to order a dish of green and brown and purple olives dripping with citrus-scented oil. There is no reason to deviate from that, but the spicy roasted nuts, new since the move, do get along extremely well with margaritas and other cocktails with lime in them.

Custom also dictates that at least one bowl of kale salad must appear at the table. Although this heap of roughage looks as if it should be taken for medicinal purposes only, the greens have lost their ferocious raw quality after being thoroughly kneaded with a Caesar-like dressing. Basil is almost invisible, but essential. This is the One True Kale Salad, beside which all others are pretenders.

Before you follow custom, though, you should know that the salad of shaved brussels sprouts is brighter and sunnier, and puts its main ingredient through a metamorphosis just as remarkable.

A word should also be put in for the salad that combines warmed radicchio, crunchy rings of squid and a spicy red-pepper aioli that has an effect similar to Buffalo-wing sauce.

If none of this strikes you as especially novel, it is because the style Mr. Waxman helped to invent in California in the 1970s, at Chez Panisse in Berkeley and Michael’s in Santa Monica, and then carried to New York at Jams in the ’80s, became something like the default mode for seasonal Italian cooking in America in the ’90s. Today, chefs who aren’t trying to reproduce with fidelity the traditions of Italy are walking through the doors opened by Mr. Waxman and a few others. On the other side of that door were mesquite grills, wilted salad greens, odd pizza toppings.

Barbuto has a smoked-salmon and avocado pizza, an edible museum piece. Even the more traditional pie, a Fontina- and stracciatella-topped number called the Hannah, uses not plain tomatoes but a long-cooked tomato ragù. Well, why not?

Still, there is more profound flavor in the wild-boar ragù that Mr. Waxman has been twirling chestnut fettuccine with lately. In fact, the pizza at Barbuto is generally upstaged by the fresh pasta, particularly if your definition of pasta takes in the splendid potato gnocchi — even though they are not boiled, but pan-fried in butter and olive oil and then scattered like throw pillows across a plate with sautéed romanesco or some other seasonal vegetable. Again, why not?

When it comes to main courses, there are several options but only one important choice: Are you going to get the chicken or something that is not the chicken? The other meats and fish tend to be filled out with vegetables that don’t just complement them but complete them — the pan-seared cod with fat gigante beans, as creamy as cake frosting; the craggy breaded pork cutlet with salad of crisp, bitter greens that’s as bracing as a snowball fight.

The chicken arrives all by itself, apart from a spoonful of rough, rustic Italian salsa verde; the arugula, parsley and other herbs are not so much chopped as slashed. Blots of it are scattered around the golden, pepper-flecked skin.

If you find roast chicken too plain to eat in restaurants, the one at Barbuto probably won’t change your mind. But if the plainness is a good part of what you love about roast chicken, you may feel as if you’ve reached a high peak of simplicity, a roast whose natural flavor is the point, cooked by a method that leaves each part of the bird almost equally juicy. And if you eat this with a side of JW potatoes, roasted to a crisp flakiness that almost no other kitchen seems able to achieve, you have got one of the greatest meals the city offers.

Heather Miller, the pastry chef, moved to the new site with the other Barbuto fixtures. Her chocolate pudding, gelati, cheesecakes and so on taste of constant tinkering and improvement, but look as if they just came together on their own. This is close to the restaurant’s ethos, which she must have carried in her back pocket when she showed up on Horatio Street.

What the Stars Mean Because of the pandemic, restaurants are not being given star ratings.

TAGGED:Barbuto (Manhattan, NY, Restaurant)Chez Panisse (Berkeley, Calif, Restaurant)Cooking and CookbooksItalian Food (Cuisine)Jams (Manhattan, NY, Restaurant)RestaurantsThe Washington MailWaxman, Jonathan (1950- )West Village (Manhattan, NY)
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Meghan King talks split from Joe Biden’s nephew: ‘Just stupid of me to marry him’ Meghan King talks split from Joe Biden’s nephew: ‘Just stupid of me to marry him’
Next Article Who knew you could get a 120-inch projector screen for just  at Amazon? Who knew you could get a 120-inch projector screen for just $21 at Amazon?

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned us the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
LinkedInFollow
MediumFollow
QuoraFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Popular Posts

Amazon deal of the day: LG’s powerhouse CordZero All-in-One stick vacuum simply hit a brand new record-low

Amazon offers of the day at a look: We're inching nearer to Prime Day, which…

By Enspirers | Editorial Board

Peabody Awards: The Complete List Of 2022 Winners

UPDATED with final winners: The Oscar-winning documentary Summer of Soul, Bo Burnham’s Emmy-winning musical comedy…

By Enspirers | Editorial Board

Hindus in Kashmir Desperate to Flee Amid Spike in Attacks

ANANTNAG, Kashmir — As hundreds of Hindu families fled the Kashmir region in recent weeks…

By Enspirers | Editorial Board

Insider Reveals How Lakers Have Modified Underneath JJ Redick So Far

(Picture by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Pictures)   JJ Redick has a tricky job as the…

By Enspirers | Editorial Board

You Might Also Like

Edouard Patrick Junior Onana: Pioneering Document Security with an Unforgeable Stamp
TrendingUncategorized

Edouard Patrick Junior Onana: Pioneering Document Security with an Unforgeable Stamp

By Enspirers | Editorial Board
Inspiring Change: Michael Bates Path to Entrepreneurship and Giving Back
Uncategorized

Inspiring Change: Michael Bates Path to Entrepreneurship and Giving Back

By Enspirers | Editorial Board
The Problem With Wine Bottles
Uncategorized

The Problem With Wine Bottles

By Enspirers | Editorial Board
From Pizza to Dip, Chips and Popcorn: Pickle Is Summer’s Big Flavor
Uncategorized

From Pizza to Dip, Chips and Popcorn: Pickle Is Summer’s Big Flavor

By Enspirers | Editorial Board
America Age
Facebook Twitter Youtube

About US


America Age: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 news.

Company
  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability
Terms of Use
  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices
© 2024 America Age. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?