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Nobu New York

Archives

January 7, 2011 by admin

Black Cod with Miso

Ingredients
4 black cod fillets, about
1/2 pound (230 grams) each
3 cups (800 grams) Nobu-style Saikyo Miso
1 stalk hajikami per serving

Method
1. Pat the black cod fillets thoroughly dry with paper towels. Slather the fish with Nobu-style Saikyo Miso, place in a nonreactive dish or bowl, and cover tightly with plastic wrap. Leave to steep in the refrigerator for 2 to 3 days.

2. Preheat oven to 400°F. Preheat a grill or broiler. Lightly wipe off any excess miso clinging to the fillets, but don’t rinse it off. Place the fish on the grill or in a broiler pan, and grill or broil until the surface of the fish turns brown. Then bake for 10 to 15 minutes.

3. Arrange the black cod fillets on individual plates and garnish with hajikami. Add a few extra drops of Nobu-style Saikyo Miso to each plate.

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Posted in Chefs, HAUTErecipes, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu Fifty Seven, Nobu New York, Nobu Next Door ·

Archives

January 7, 2011 by admin

THE MAGIC OF NOBU

By Tracy Nieporent

Nobu Matsuhisa’s vision to use the ingredients of Japanese cuisine, along with an imaginative use of Western and South American flavors, started a culinary revolution.

Growing up in New York City in the 1960s, Chinese food—not Japanese—was the most prominent Asian cuisine. Trips to Chinatown were fun, but, in truth, you could enjoy good Chinese food almost anywhere in the city. Japanese food was mostly relegated to an afterthought, and sushi didn’t have wide appeal at that time. In the following decades, many more Japanese restaurants began to open, but with a fairly limited range—tempura and teriyaki dishes tended to be the featured dishes.

Everything changed with the arrival of Nobu New York City in 1994. Nobu Matsuhisa’s vision to use the ingredients of Japanese cuisine, along with an imaginative use of Western and South American flavors, started a culinary revolution. Amazing dishes like black cod with miso, yellowtail with jalapeño, tiradito, new-style sashimi, sashimi salad, and many others captivated New York City diners. The flavors were bold and vibrant, and each dish was plated like a work of art. The clarity came from the simplicity of using the finest ingredients served with heart—or, as Nobu says, kokoro.

This wonderful, inventive cuisine evolved from Nobu’s creative life experience and international travels. Listening to the guests was also part of this culinary renaissance. “New-style sashimi” was created in response to a diner who wouldn’t eat raw fish. Nobu topped the raw fish with ginger spears and sesame seeds, and drizzled it with ponzu. He then took sesame oil together with heated olive oil and poured it briefly over the fish. A wonderful cavalcade of flavors came together. The guest tried a mouthful and then eagerly gobbled up the entire dish. It is certainly one of the most popular dishes on the Nobu menu, and a tribute to a great chef’s ingenuity.

Through the years, virtually every celebrity you can think of has dined at Nobu. But, really, the foundation of the restaurant’s success, both here in New York City and in other places, is that the food, décor, service, and total experience have captivated the public at large. There can be no greater compliment. Going to Nobu is a wonderful experience that is eagerly anticipated because, quite simply, it makes people feel good. Thomas Keller, the revered chef and owner of the French Laundry and Per Se, sums it up best when he says, “Chef Nobu Matsuhisa’s dishes are not just nourishment for the body—they are a delight to the senses, and a soothing balm to the spirit.”

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Posted in Chefs, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu Fifty Seven, Nobu New York, Nobu Next Door ·

Archives

January 5, 2011 by admin

Myriad F10

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Posted in Centrico, Corton, Crush Wine & Spirits, Myriad, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu Fifty Seven, Nobu New York, Nobu Next Door, Tribeca Grill ·

Archives

April 7, 2010 by admin

A Helping Hand

Through the years, the Myriad Restaurant Group has worked with hundreds of worthy charities. Social issues, illness prevention, schools, and cultural institutions are among the many areas in which we’ve had involvement. We have affection and respect for everyone we work with, and here are a few of the organizations for which we have a particular affinity.

City Harvest has been feeding New York City’s hungry men, women, and children for more than 25 years. It all started with restaurants, and this year they will collect more than 25 million pounds of excess food from all segments of the food industry. This food is then delivered at no charge to nearly 600 community food programs throughout New York City using a fleet of trucks and
bikes as well as volunteers on foot. Each week, City Harvest helps 260,000 hungry New Yorkers find their next meal.
www.cityharvest.org

Table to Table is a community-based food-rescue program that collects excess prepared and perishable food and delivers it to organizations that feed the hungry in Bergen, Passaic, Essex, and Hudson counties in New Jersey. They’re delivering approximately 6 million meals a year at a cost of about 10 cents each. Now in their 11th year, Table to Table is as important in New Jersey as City Harvest is in New York City.
www.tabletotable.org

Citymeals-on-Wheels was founded by Gael Greene and James Beard in 1981, and the organization delivers more than 2.2 million nutritious meals to over 18,000 frail seniors in every borough of New York City. Additionally, their 1,500 volunteers collectively spend 62,000 hours visiting and delivering meals to these homebound elderly New Yorkers who can no longer cook or shop for themselves.
www.citymeals.org

A Helping Hand
Through the years, the Myriad Restaurant Group has worked with hundreds of worthy charities. Social
issues, illness prevention, schools, and cultural institutions are among the many areas in which we’ve
had involvement. We have affection and respect for everyone we work with, and here are a few of the
organizations for which we have a particular affinity.

Share Our Strength has led the fight against hunger and poverty for almost 25 years by inspiring and organizing individuals to share their unique talents and strengths. They have a mission to make sure that no kid in America grows up hungry. Their strategy is to weave together a net of community groups, activists, and food programs to catch children at risk of hunger, and ensure that they have nutritious food where they live, learn, and play.
www.strength.org

YAI/National Institute for People with Disabilities is an award-winning network of not-for-profit health and human-service agencies serving people with developmental and learning disabilities and their families. Their more than 450 programs serve over 20,000 individuals daily, primarily throughout the New York metropolitan area and New Jersey. They ensure that people with disabilities have a place for opportunity, a place for growth, and a place of hope.
www.yai.org

There are many other exemplary organizations—such as the Kristen Ann Carr Fund, Tuesday’s Children, Food Allergy Initiative, and the Tribeca Partnership—that we’d like to acknowledge in future issues of Myriad magazine. We are proud of our association with them, and of the wonderful services they provide.

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Posted in Aarón Sanchez, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu New York · Tagged Aarón Sanchez ·

Archives

January 16, 2009 by admin

Myriad (F 08)

Myriad-F08-1.jpg
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Posted in Aarón Sanchez, Centrico, Corton, Crush Wine & Spirits, Myriad, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu Fifty Seven, Nobu New York, Nobu Next Door, Publications, S Lewandowski, Tribeca Grill · Tagged Aarón Sanchez, S Lewandowski ·

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June 19, 2008 by admin

Myriad (S 08)

BLT_S08

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Posted in Centrico, Corton, Crush Wine & Spirits, Myriad, MYRIAD Magazine, Nobu Fifty Seven, Nobu New York, Nobu Next Door, Publications, S Lewandowski, Tribeca Grill · Tagged S Lewandowski ·

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