Organic Vegetable Gardening, Cooking, and Dining out in Austin Texas

The Good Knight

Posted: May 30th, 2009 | Author: KMT | Filed under: Cocktails, Eating Out | Tags: , | No Comments »

 

RIDICULOUSLY good salad!

RIDICULOUSLY good salad!

This is a review I wrote for the Austin Chronicle. But when I post it on my blog, I can put Photos!

The Good Knight

1300 E. Sixth, 628-1250

 

Tuesday-Sunday, 5pm-2am, food until 12mid; Mondays, closed

 

The Good Knight is easy to miss as you drive down East Sixth; the sign is not particularly well-lit, and the restaurant is on the ground floor of a two-story brick building with a forbidding, Prohibition-era blind front. Part of the Good Knight’s allure is its hidden-gem ambiance; it feels like an anachronistic neighborhood bar, kept secret by the locals. Parking is a breeze. The decor is Fifties dive-on-a-budget: stained plywood partitions, good quality chairs and tables, and very dim lighting. It reminds me of the nightclub where Dorothy Vallens performs in the movie Blue Velvet, a theatrical version of the 1950s, not unlike a movie set.

It’s also a perfect place to wear your vintage cocktail dress. The Good Knight specializes in cocktails and boasts a comprehensive and absolutely fun list of house specialties including Pimm’s Cup and Grasshopper, along with the more mainstream Harvey Wallbanger, Sidecar, Manhattan, and Old Fashioned. The cocktails are $6, $7, and $8, making this a very popular watering place, as the quality of the mixology is superb, and the price is right! Six rotating, select draft beers are also available, as is wine; there’s a strong sense, however, that the wine is intended to be enjoyed with the food.

Fried Red and Green Tomatoes

Fried Red and Green Tomatoes

 

 

The food here is anachronistic, as well: It is extremely good, even though you are in a bar. The focus is tight: The menu is a mere 14 items, and substitutions are not encouraged. Though the menu has been described as “rustic Conti nental,” it’s actually a mixture of classic Amer i can dishes, such as chicken potpie and meat loaf, and Gallic ones such as pâté and mush room caviar. But everything is prepared with such skill and with such superfresh, locally sourced ingredients, that it seems Cont nent al. It is the opposite of “bar food”; it is cuisine.

Chicken Pot Pie topped with Puff Pastry

Chicken Pot Pie topped with Puff Pastry

 

 

There is but one salad ($6.50): an airy pile of achingly fresh, tender local greens, tossed with house-made butter croutons, cashews, and pickled mushrooms, dressed with a simple balsamic vinaigrette. I knew once I tasted it that everything I was going to eat that night was going to be wonderful; it is a perfect salad. There is only one soup, as well ($7), a soup of the day that changes with the seasons; this evening it was a hearty lentil and vegetable. The fried tomatoes ($7.50), a large appetizer featuring thick slices of breaded red and green tomatoes, crisply fried and reposing in a small pool of garlic aioli, is the best version of this Southern favorite I have yet experienced. The popular chicken potpie ($10.50), a sturdy bowl of thyme-seasoned chicken, Yukon Gold potatoes, mushrooms, and carrots suspended in thick gravy, is topped with whisper-light, golden puff pastry. The meat loaf ($12), made of pure Angus beef and topped with whiskey gravy, is accompanied by rich, dense mashed potatoes and the perfectly cooked vegetable of the day, a carrot and kale mixture that was just as good as, well, everything else on the menu. There are two desserts: an Earl Grey-infused chocolate pots de crème ($6) and a crustless buttermilk coconut pie with blue berry compote ($5). I chose the pots de crème, and it was dense and creamy, with deep chocolate flavor and just a dab of fluffy white hard sauce on top.

Mmmmm Chocolate Pot de Creme with HARD SAUCE....I said Hard Sauce...heh heh

Mmmmm Chocolate Pot de Creme with HARD SAUCE....I said Hard Sauce...heh heh

 

 

There is a definite sense that the kitchen purposefully limits itself to what chefs Christopher Concannon and Lisa Newmeyer know can be done consistently to perfection, even on a busy night. If ever an Austinite sent up a prayer that there might be a civilized place to get both a decent cocktail and a decent meal, the Good Knight is the answer to that prayer.


Tipsy Thai

Posted: May 7th, 2009 | Author: KMT | Filed under: Bloggers Eat For Free, Chefs, Cocktails, Thai, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , | 3 Comments »

 

Jam Explains Thai Cooking Principles

Jam Explains Thai Cooking Principles

The Tipsy Texan and Thai Fresh are getting together to offer cooking classes that combine Jam Sanichat’s amazing Thai appetizers with David Allan’s classic cocktails. The Blogitariat was invited last night to preview the class, and, as anticipated, it was the cat’s pajamas!

 

Corn Fritter Batter

Corn Fritter Batter

 

 

 

The first class of this type is going to be offered next Wednesday (May 13th) and I really can’t recommend it enough! Not only because no one’s Thai cooking skillz can touch Jam’s, but also because  you are not going to get a better cocktail than from the Tipsy Texans. It is a Foodie’s Delite!!

David Allan

David Allan

(Not surprisingly, both of these local maestros are going to be contributing to the prestigious Farm to Table Dinner tonight at the Barr Mansion. The dinner is SOLD OUT, which is wonderful, as all the proceeds go to the Sustainable Food Center.)

First David Allan demonstrated the correct way to make a Daquiri: fresh lime juice, white rum (he used our local Treaty Oak brand) and simple syrup. In fact, most of the cocktail demonstration was the (in my opinion) rather common-sensical stressing of the fact that one should make one’s cocktails out of REAL INGREDIENTS, rather than fake chemicals and mixes. But I live in a little Foodie Paradise where I wouldn’t dream of making anything out of chemicals and mixes; there are, in fact, many people who DO! Well, this class will show anyone who uses a chemical mix the error of their ways.

 

Mint Julep

Mojito! This is a Mojito, not a Mint Julep!!

In the course of the lesson in mixology, we learned the Proper Way to make a Mint Julep, a Margharita, a Daquiri, and we previewed the cocktail Allen has created for the Barr Mansion event tonight. Of course, each cocktail was sampled, making for a very merry class!

 

About halfway through the cocktail lesson, Jam took us into her kitchen and we learned how to make the classic Thai appetizer Chicken Satay with Peanut Sauce and Cucumber Salad. Although it is an appetizer with many nuances and seems terribly time-consuming and fancy, it really isn’t that hard, and can easily be made at home.

Thai Cucumber salad with Shallots, Jalapenos, and Red Peppers

Thai Cucumber salad with Shallots, Jalapenos, and Red Peppers

 

 

 

Strawberry Margharitas made from Fresh muddled strawberries, lime juice, agave nectar and tequila

Strawberry Margharitas made from Fresh muddled strawberries, lime juice, agave nectar and tequila

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jam also shared with us a recipe she developed for Corn Fritters, made in the manner of Thai Fish Balls (but vegetarian.) Oh My God!!  SO DELICIOUS!!!!!  Jam said that when she was developing the recipe, she made a plateful, and a customer asked to try one, and then bought the whole batch. I have no doubt at all this is true, because left to my own devices I might have eaten the whole platter. Wonderful texture, wonderful flavor.

The Fritters

The Fritters

 

 

 

Without a doubt, one of the finest cooking classes I have taken, and one I would pay to take again.