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Empire State South

Just because I haven’t been blogging doesn’t mean I haven’t been eating. Last summer I got a car and took the golden opportunity to drive around Atlanta. Long gone are the days when I would take a bus to a MARTA train station to another station, only to walk 2 miles in the freezing rain to a restaurant like … Buckhead Diner (sigh). Since I’ve been away, here are some of my favorite spots right now.

beignets with bourbon praline sauce at The Optimist

The Optimist
By far Ford Fry’s The Optimist is my favorite restaurant to open this year (2012). How is the shellfish here so fresh and so clean? Plump Georgia shrimp, mesmerizing lobster rolls, oysters so fresh you’ll think they lived next door — The Optimist has never disappointed me. The bar also makes a mean punch bowl that goes down as easy as water. On my most recent visit, beignets in a bourbon praline sauce (see above) made anything from New Orleans taste like trash. Fun fact: Esquire Magazine named The Optimist the “Best New Restaurant in 2012″ to open in the U.S. Well deserved, Chef Fry. Well deserved.

Empire State South
Empire State South (ESS) is like that awesome aunt who never disappoints you and always takes you away from the mundanity of your current life. Any meal here is a meal to be remembered. At breakfast, a pimento cheese and fried chicken biscuit is the only thing that gets me out of bed before 11 a.m. For lunch, start with pimento cheese and bacon marmalade. Everybody wins.  Then there’s the fried pork sandwich and wild prawn sub. At dinner, the cheese plate is the best in town. Steak tartare and anything with a farm egg, pork belly or sweetbreads will confirm, in your mind, that ESS is one of the best spots in town.

Something delicious at Empire State South

Community Q BBQ
Community Q has come a long way since it first opened. Dry meats and cold sides were prevailing problems but since 2010 Community Q has found its stride. The beef rib is fit for a caveman: a giant hunk of juicy meat on a bone the length of my arm. The brisket sandwich on buttery texas toast is also a staple. When I’m not looking for bbq, the kitchen sink salad (if I’m feeling healthy) or the smoked chicken salad sandwich with grapes with a side of kale and sweet potato is a filling way to happiness. If I’m still hungry and still proud of making it to the gym earlier in the day, the bread pudding (any variation) is superb. 

Star Provisions
For those who can’t afford Bacchanalia but still want a taste of what this powerhouse culinary family can do, check out the Star Provisions deli. Foccacia with leek, goat cheese and thyme, a savory fried green tomato sandwich with meyer lemon mayo, a gloriously unctuos pork belly bahn mi, a silky cream of squash soup — Star Provisions makes everything in house, and a damn good job they do.

The Porter
Little Five Points isn’t my scene at all. I stick out like a blonde in China. I will, though, make a special trip just for The Porter. The interior is narrow but surprisingly extensive.  Dishes that come to mind: fries tossed in herbs and garlic oil, goat cheese fritters with clove honey, fish n’ chips, and the Reuben. It’s heavy stuff, indeed, but I feel like a champion every time.

Brickstore
I haven’t been to Brickstore in some time but between a beer list the length of the Bible and a hearty menu of done-right pub food, it’s hardly a bad choice any day of the week. Wholesome chicken tenders come with a spicy mustard sauce, but if you’re in the mood for something more grown up, the shepherds pie is as elegant and deliberate as you’ll find.

The Wrecking Bar Pub
On the days when I’m not looking for the grungy vibe of The Porter and Brickstore, I drive to the edge of Little Five Points to this unassuming stand-alone Victorian building. In the basement sits the Wrecking Bar Pub. With a cavernous interior heavy on the wood, the Wrecking Bar has a flexible space well-suited for romantic dates or large parties. The food is a few notches above Brickstore and pub food, in general. Goat cheese and wild mushrooms make for a superb flatbread and anything with porkbelly tends to please. The beer selection is smaller than Brickstore, but more focused, in my opinion. The servers, either way, are wonderful guides to help you along.

Watershed
The new Watershed on Peachtree looks nothing like its original location in downtown Decatur, abandoning a kitschy garage funk for bright, wood-paneling and hardwood floors. The kitchen has also changed. Chef Joe Treux now stands where Scott Peacock once did, and the menu harnesses more Cajun and Asian influences. I haven’t tried their famous fried chicken (only served on Tuesdays) but the fried catfish plate with green beans tossed in fish sauce was excellent. I remember there being dessert served in a giant, class bowl.

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beef heart, rare on farro

We were on glass number four — my state of mind somewhere between bewildered and woozy — and everything was making beautiful sense.

I don’t always associate “beautiful” and “sense” with farm-to-table-locavore-grassfed-organically-sustainable-non-gluten-beet-fanatic restaurants that pair industrial metal with wood and aprons. These places are all all over Atlanta, and at this point, the look is overplayed, and the food can be expensively nonsensical: $27 turnip greens unseasoned but seasonal as chefs assume we can taste sustainability and Mother Earth’s smile, as if the heat comes from the warmth we feel on our insides knowing we’re helping Farmer Joe.

After a 4-course wine pairing dinner, I think Hugh Acheson’s Empire State South is what other farm to table restaurants should be: bold and creative. Executive Sous Chef Kyle Jacovino was in charge of our appetites that night, and while he showed an affinity for mustard, farro and parsley, he did not show a reluctance to season and spice where appropriate.

amuse bouche: parlsey root soup, crispy farro
The crispy farro seeds are a clever touch to a brothy bouche that isn’t too far from celeriac.


smoked duck breast, apricot mostarda, celery root puree, pak choi, hominy
This is duck breast unlike anything I’ve had. It’s rare and fresh before smokiness subtly rides in at the end to meet a garden of bright vegetables and puree.

soft poached farm egg, crisp rice, housemade kilbasa, mustard
What kind of farm to table place would ESS be without the obligatory poached farm egg?  The play on flavors and texture are fantastic: crispy rice matches a creamy egg with lightly-salted kilbasa.

cheese plate, buttermilk crackers
ESS offers some fine cheeses, but it is the accompaniments that make them superb. Specifically, honey and muscadines go with smooth, buttery moses sleeper (Jasper Hills). A red onion marmalade turns an appalachian from meadow creek dairy into a savory wonder.

maple flan w. pear, breadsticks
There are flans, and then there is this one, a buttery descendant from Mount Olympus that should have chefs across the country hiding in shame. Flans are not inherently difficult desserts to make, but ESS’s is smooth until the end with a remarkable complexity.

In the coming months I look forward to sifting through ESS’s menu in search of consistency, creativity and boldness. The kitchen is doing farm to table right, and I, for one, will vote for them with my fork.

Empire State South
(404) 541-1105
Midtown 999 Peachtree St NE
Atlanta, GA 30309
empirestatesouth.com

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