Rancho Santa Fe Archives - San Diego Magazine https://sandiegomagazine.com/tag/rancho-santa-fe/ Wed, 20 Sep 2023 01:05:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://sandiegomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-SDM_favicon-32x32.png Rancho Santa Fe Archives - San Diego Magazine https://sandiegomagazine.com/tag/rancho-santa-fe/ 32 32 Neighborhood Guide: Rancho Santa Fe https://sandiegomagazine.com/guides/neighborhood-guide-rancho-santa-fe/ Tue, 05 Apr 2022 05:46:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/neighborhood-guide-rancho-santa-fe/ North County's most rarefied village is starting to emerge—this is where you need to go

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Rancho Santa Fe - main

Historic Rancho Santa Fe features original Spanish Colonial–style architecture by Lilian J. Rice from the 1920s and ’30s

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

With more banks than bars, “The Ranch” never set out to be a destination. But, like the rest of North County, there’s never been a time like the now. Retailers are leaving the coast for inland spaces, while a forthcoming market and restaurant concept might claim the title of the Ranch’s first rooftop.

“The clientele will get this sense of intimacy and privacy,”  says Matt Powers, owner of the proposed two-story project, New Francisco. “Bill Gates can come here. No problem.”

Rancho Santa Fe - Amy Meier

International design star Amy Meier holds court at her showroom and studio.

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

Design Stars

With an international roster of clients, Amy Meier is both design doyenne and ambassador. Her eponymous corner space is equal parts studio and retail shop, featuring

a vetted selection of antiques, art, and capsule collections (Hartmann&Forbes, Casey Johnson Studio). Meier’s exacting formula of antique/modern has provenance right here, but she translates it for design destinations like Palm Beach, Palmetto Bluff, and La Jolla.

Rancho Santa Fe - Thyme in the Ranch

The garden at Thyme in the Ranch café.

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

“There has been a gradual but tangible shift in the energy of the Ranch,” says Meier, who neighbors the venerable Thyme in the Ranch café. “What was once a sleepy retirement village has slowly transformed into a vibrant community of families, young and old.”

Rancho Santa Fe - Zofia Day

Zofia Day Jewelry is sunlight and Gucci wallpaper

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

Around the corner, a jewel box awaits discovery. Lisette Polny, founder of Zofia Day Jewelry, has created her dream shop, bathed in natural light and Gucci’s New Flora wallpaper. Here, clients and brides source fine jewelry and reimagine family heirlooms under Polny’s trained eye. Earlier this year, she fled her 101 showroom in Leucadia for something less crowded.

“There’s a lot to be desired in this little downtown,” she says. “I am surrounded by beauty.”

Body of Work

Rancho Santa Fe Barber Salon

Rancho Santa Fe Barber Salon is part of the next gen

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

Hairstylist Roger Tuttle, of Model Call Salon fame, recently debuted Salon Iris in a secret garden setting. Meanwhile, top tresser Carly Saturnino is opening a second location of Vohg Hair, boasting high-glamour interiors by A. Naber Design. Even the Rancho Santa Fe Barber Salon has a new vibe thanks to Dan Lara passing his shears on to 28-year-old stylist Juleah Roll.

Saturdays, meanwhile, are all about other shiny objects. The be-seen Cars & Coffee is held every Saturday from 8 to 11 a.m. at the intersection of Paseo Delicias and Avenida de Acacias with a lineup of vintage and luxury autos.

A Place in Time

Rancho Santa Fe - Lilian J Rice statue

A new statue of the late architect Lilian J. Rice pays homage to her impact

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

Architect Lilian J. Rice remains a central figure here, both historically and figuratively. A new life-size statue, sculpted by local artist Nina de Burgh, further solidifies her legacy. Rice was a trailblazer and a protégé of Irving Gill when she earned the opportunity to design Rancho Santa Fe’s civic center. In her boom years—from 1927 to 1938—she was commissioned by Bing Crosby, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., and Mary Pickford. Women weren’t invited to many tables back then, so Rice designed a few of her own.

Today, 11 of her buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including the 1923 Francisco building where Australian restaurateur Matt Powers plans to open Mrkt Space. It’ll be the fourth location of his popular cafe/market concept after Leighton Beach, Australia; Leucadia; and the forthcoming La Jolla Shores.

Neighborhood Guide - New Francisco

The forthcoming home of New Francisco in the Rice-designed building from 1923

Tomoko H. Matsubayashi

Powers says he will honor Rice by taking her dialogue into a new era. The second-story rooftop will embrace views of the surrounding landscape and mountains that she worked so hard to maintain.

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Watch This Cooking Show Filmed in Rancho Santa Fe https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/watch-this-cooking-show-filmed-in-rancho-santa-fe/ Thu, 18 Mar 2021 05:12:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/watch-this-cooking-show-filmed-in-rancho-santa-fe/ An upcoming episode of 'Be Well + Live Well with Lisa' centers around good food and great ambition

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Dreaming isn’t a matter of fantasy for LA-based cook Lisa Holmes—it’s the first step to making things happen. After all, it was a dream that led the food-and-lifestyle coach to land her first cooking show.

On the upcoming “Dare to Dream” episode of Be Well + Live Well with Lisa, Holmes tells her story and cooks up a delicious meal on a Rancho Santa Fe estate through HomWork, a service that’s like Airbnb but for coworking. The series airs on Taste on TV, a cooking channel dedicated to the food, culture, and voices of African Americans and people of color.

What’s on the menu? Holmes starts with goat cheese and almond-stuffed dates wrapped in bacon as an appetizer. The entrée features grilled cod with zucchini and summer squash topped with a roasted red pepper sauce, all laid on a bed of polenta. For dessert, you’ll learn how to make a Southern bourbon-buttermilk pie, which comes from a recipe passed down by her grandmother.

“What I’m hoping to do is just inspire,” Holmes says. “Especially if I have a platform that can encourage and motivate people and help get them redirected toward something that they’ve been trying to accomplish, or that they’ve given up on.”

In her dining discussions, Holmes draws from her experience in human resources. She worked 30 years as an executive coach for career success, and has motivated dozens of people to change their mindset and search for opportunities.

After struggling with her own medical conditions, Holmes was inspired to start a whole new lifestyle and launched Honey and Company for cooking products, skin care products, and home necessities, all of which are used on the show.

“I take people on my journey because I have a curiosity for life,” Holmes says. “Hopefully, it gets people to feel a little better after watching.”

You can watch “Dare to Dream” this week on Taste on TV, an extension on Roku TV.

Lisa Holmes, host of Be Well + Live Well with Lisa

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Top SD Chef Gets New Restaurant https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/top-sd-chef-gets-new-restaurant/ Thu, 28 Jan 2016 05:35:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/top-sd-chef-gets-new-restaurant/ One of my favorite chefs in the country, Patrick Ponsaty, gets own restaurant

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So this one is breaking. I don’t have all of the details. But when pressed to name my “favorite chef in San Diego,” the answer always includes a handful. But it always includes Patrick Ponsaty, the ex-Loews and El Bizcocho chef, one of only two Master French Chefs in San Diego (the other being Bernard Guillas at Marine Room).

Now he has his own restaurant, and it’s rumored his name will be part of the name of the restaurant. A well-deserved and long overdue development in San Diego’s food scene. He and his partner have taken over Delicias in Rancho Santa Fe. They are planning an extensive remodel. Though its own very affluent island in northern San Diego, it will be worth your drive out there. Trust me. Everyone I send to Ponsaty returns to say their lives have changed in an imperceptibly joyful way.

A few years ago, Ponsaty left Loews to join local businessman Brian Bonar’s emerging restaurant business. He’s been overseeing culinary at their Escondido bistro, Bellamy’s. He’s also cooking at Bonar’s historical ranch, Bandy Canyon.

And now the news breaks today that they’ve bought Delicias, the Rancho Santa Fe restaurant that’s been there for 26 years.

This is very, very good news. More of it to come.

Top SD Chef Gets New Restaurant

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Three Dots and a Hunger: Jan. 31 https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/three-dots-and-a-hunger-jan-31/ Sat, 01 Feb 2014 09:27:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/three-dots-and-a-hunger-jan-31/ Bull Taco to Leucadia; Anthology's new owner?; tons of rumors

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JAZZ HANDS: Little Italy’s 13,000-square foot jazz supper club, vacant since early last year, sounds to have new owners. Originally, it looked like an L.A. group was set to invade, but multiple sources have told us that local Tim Aaron—who recently took over both Nicky Rottens locations—is heading the project now. Calls to Aaron haven’t been returned so we have zero direct confirmation. But we’re told they’re doing a big remodel and plan to open in June.

GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LEUC: Leucadia’s little food renaissance is on. The last couple years has seen Fish 101, Solterra Winery + Kitchen and Regal Seagull move into one of the last funky beach communities in SD. The new project from Vigilucci’s group—Robby’s—is reportedly coming along beautifully, but slow. Now Leucadia is getting Bull Taco—the proudly “inauthentic Mexican” joint made famous because a couple surf punks served creative tacos (lobster chorizo, shrimp curry, even foie gras back when it was legal) out a window overlooking the beach. The new location is going into the former Jamroc (101 N. Coast Hwy 101). There’ve also been rumors that Bull Taco would take over Woody’s in Solana Beach (near CPK, formerly fine dining joint Blanca). But a BT rep says “no, not yet.”

SAN DIEGO MEANS BEER IN GERMAN: Craft beer bottle shops are the new wine bar. Bottlecraft in Little Italy and North Park has obviously done a great job. Now Solana Beach is getting one with San Diego BeerWorks—also going into the Beachwalk Retail Center in the former space of Cupcake Love.

NICE PLACE NEEDS CHEFS: Rancho Santa Fe’s top property Rancho Valencia has lost both exec chef Eric Bauer and sous chef James Noonan. We knew Noonan was leaving to be top toque for Urban Plates, but weren’t sure about Bauer’s new gig. Now Eater’s reporting Bauer has joined catering company H Events, which handles the annual Diner En Blanc. Look for Rancho Valencia to make a big new hire to helm its signature restaurant, Veladora. That $1M Damien Hirst art almost demands it.

TOTALLY UNCONFIRMED RUMORS: By no means are the following cemented nor confirmed, but… A source has told us that the long-shuttered On Broadway has a new owner. Our source also told us that the new club will be called YOLO—the internet acronym for You Only Live Once. Just kind of lets the soul leak out of ya, doesn’t it? Pray harder…. Oggi’s Pizza is reportedly working on opening a bunch of new locations around SD, concentrating the first efforts near SDSU… Pirch—the high-end kitchen showroom that hosts a slew of top-notch culinary events—is expected by expecters to open a few more spots around the city soon…. Three big renovations planned for iconic SD spots: The Catamaran Resort (Pacific Beach), The Horton Grand Hotel (Downtown) and Baleen (at Paradise Point in Mission Bay, home to talented chef Amy DiBiase)….  Keep your eye on the great and mighty Pannikin coffee shop in Del Mar’s Flower Hill Promenade. We have reason to believe there may be some big changes coming to that space as FHP continues its overhaul… We’re also hearing that PB Fish Shop has just signed on for a second location in Encinitas, and are planning a few more…

Three Dots and a Hunger: Jan. 31

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Three Dots and a Hunger: Jan. 31 https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/three-dots-and-a-hunger-jan-31-2/ Sat, 01 Feb 2014 09:27:00 +0000 https://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/three-dots-and-a-hunger-jan-31-2/ Bull Taco to Leucadia; Anthology's new owner?; tons of rumors

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JAZZ HANDS: Little Italy’s 13,000-square foot jazz supper club, vacant since early last year, sounds to have new owners. Originally, it looked like an L.A. group was set to invade, but multiple sources have told us that local Tim Aaron—who recently took over both Nicky Rottens locations—is heading the project now. Calls to Aaron haven’t been returned so we have zero direct confirmation. But we’re told they’re doing a big remodel and plan to open in June.

GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LEUC: Leucadia’s little food renaissance is on. The last couple years has seen Fish 101, Solterra Winery + Kitchen and Regal Seagull move into one of the last funky beach communities in SD. The new project from Vigilucci’s group—Robby’s—is reportedly coming along beautifully, but slow. Now Leucadia is getting Bull Taco—the proudly “inauthentic Mexican” joint made famous because a couple surf punks served creative tacos (lobster chorizo, shrimp curry, even foie gras back when it was legal) out a window overlooking the beach. The new location is going into the former Jamroc (101 N. Coast Hwy 101). There’ve also been rumors that Bull Taco would take over Woody’s in Solana Beach (near CPK, formerly fine dining joint Blanca). But a BT rep says “no, not yet.”

SAN DIEGO MEANS BEER IN GERMAN: Craft beer bottle shops are the new wine bar. Bottlecraft in Little Italy and North Park has obviously done a great job. Now Solana Beach is getting one with San Diego BeerWorks—also going into the Beachwalk Retail Center in the former space of Cupcake Love.

NICE PLACE NEEDS CHEFS: Rancho Santa Fe’s top property Rancho Valencia has lost both exec chef Eric Bauer and sous chef James Noonan. We knew Noonan was leaving to be top toque for Urban Plates, but weren’t sure about Bauer’s new gig. Now Eater’s reporting Bauer has joined catering company H Events, which handles the annual Diner En Blanc. Look for Rancho Valencia to make a big new hire to helm its signature restaurant, Veladora. That $1M Damien Hirst art almost demands it.

TOTALLY UNCONFIRMED RUMORS: By no means are the following cemented nor confirmed, but… A source has told us that the long-shuttered On Broadway has a new owner. Our source also told us that the new club will be called YOLO—the internet acronym for You Only Live Once. Just kind of lets the soul leak out of ya, doesn’t it? Pray harder…. Oggi’s Pizza is reportedly working on opening a bunch of new locations around SD, concentrating the first efforts near SDSU… Pirch—the high-end kitchen showroom that hosts a slew of top-notch culinary events—is expected by expecters to open a few more spots around the city soon…. Three big renovations planned for iconic SD spots: The Catamaran Resort (Pacific Beach), The Horton Grand Hotel (Downtown) and Baleen (at Paradise Point in Mission Bay, home to talented chef Amy DiBiase)….  Keep your eye on the great and mighty Pannikin coffee shop in Del Mar’s Flower Hill Promenade. We have reason to believe there may be some big changes coming to that space as FHP continues its overhaul… We’re also hearing that PB Fish Shop has just signed on for a second location in Encinitas, and are planning a few more…

Three Dots and a Hunger: Jan. 31

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NEW FACE: Market Del Mar https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/new-face-market-del-mar/ Sat, 17 Aug 2013 05:25:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/new-face-market-del-mar/ Designer of Craft + Commerce tapped for reinvention

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One of SD’s top chefs is getting a new room. James Beard Award nominee Carl Schroeder will get a few days off Oct. 14-24 when Market Restaurant + Bar closes for a complete remodel. Local design firm Basile Studio is handling. Judging by Paul Basile’s past work (Craft & Commerce, Bankers Hill, Polite Provisions, etc.), the new Market should be fun to look at.

Market partner Terryl Gavre is quick to point out that this will not be anything like Craft & Commerce. But that fantastic spot is an example of Basile’s work, and why we should all give a damn about this news.

Gavre says they’re adding a wood-stone oven to the bar area and rolling out a new casual menu cooked exclusively in the hot pit (flatbreads, roasted meats, shellfish, etc.). They’re also opening up what was formerly known as the “Red Room” (the lounge off to the side), making it part of the main dining room. Custom glass doors will give ‘em the option of sealing it off for a private party.

Gavre on the aesthetic of the new space: “The finish materials haven’t been finalized yet, but we’re using natural materials, warm woods, neutral colors. The look will be a comfortable, ‘Napa style.’ Our location close to the hills and horse farms of Rancho Santa Fe lends itself to the same feel of the wine country. So it seemed a natural direction.”

NEW FACE: Market Del Mar

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Om Away From Home https://sandiegomagazine.com/uncategorized/om-away-from-home/ Fri, 01 Mar 2013 01:13:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/om-away-from-home/ Rancho Valencia's new yoga den

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Arguably the most beautiful place to practice yoga in San Diego, Rancho Valencia’s new 1,000-square-foot yoga pavilion is a study in serenity and good taste. The open-air studio, made from gorgeous ipe (Brazilian hardwood), overlooks a stone-filled reflecting pool with a floating dock and sanctuary of native plants. Birdsong and the rustling of the wind serve as the soundtrack to your sun salutations. Not a downward dogger? There’s also a high-energy Zumba dance class. All classes are complimentary for overnight guests or anyone who has booked a treatment at the spa. 5921 Valencia Circle, Rancho Santa Fe

Om Away From Home

Yoga pavilion at Rancho Valencia

Photographer:Micaela Malmi

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Rancho’s Rebirth https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/ranchos-rebirth/ Sat, 12 Jan 2013 07:25:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/ranchos-rebirth/ Troy Johnson reviews Veladora

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Rancho’s Rebirth

Veladora

Veladora

5921 Valencia Circle, Rancho Santa Fe
ranchovalencia.com

 

TROY’S PICKS
Maine lobster salad
Scottish trout
Olive-oil cake

Dear Grandma,

It’s with a heavy heart that I write today. I wanted to tell you in person, but with your valves not as valve-like as they once were, I felt I should prepare you for your an­nual respite in Rancho Santa Fe.

San Diego is different. Shamu still draws a crowd, but a smaller and sadder one. Bartenders are extinct; the polite nomencla­ture is now “mixologist.” They’re very artistic, and sensitive.

So much change. Including your favorite spot in all of life—The Restaurant at Rancho Valencia Resort & Spa. Remember the blue-and-yellow Spanish tiles? How you said they reminded you of a swimming pool at a very affordable motel? They’re gone. Remember how you’d have me recite the jokes from Ladies’ Home Journal while you crocheted by the sunny window? How some jokes, especially ones about ironing, were so funny that you spilled your tea? Well, the restaurant is less Ladies’ Home these days.

There’s no easy way to say it. The place you loved is gone, Grandma. But if I can convince you of anything in this letter, it’s that… it’s beautiful! World-class! They spent $30 million making the Relais & Châteaux property even more Relais-y.

“I know change is hard, Grandma. I know you loved the old restaurant, but I always felt the phrase ‘dull torpor’ described my feelings about it. I was concerned the new designers would ruin the ‘soul’ of the place. But, I assure you, that $30 million was incredibly well spent.”

The new owners (their dad created Qualcomm, which makes phones without cords) brought in a flashy designer. His business name is Mr. Important Design, which I’ll take at face value because the new room looks important. The restaurant is now called Veladora, which is I believe is Italian for “over budget.”

It’s appointed with beautiful hunting-lodge wooden frames, iron chandeliers, and candles galore (I just consulted the Internet—it seems veladora is actually Span­ish for “candle”). The centerpiece is a huge, brightly colored piece of art that looks like a Buddhist mandala, or a splayed-out collection of tie-dyed t-shirts. But it’s made of hundreds of real butterfly wings and cost $1.1 million! The artist’s name is Damien Hirst. He’s British and famous for putting dead animals behind glass.

There’s a new cocktail den called the Pony Room. I know, I know. Grandpa said places named after animals were always “sellin’ flesh.” And I guess they are—Kobe beef sliders on brioche with Béarnaise, candied garlic chicken wings, wood-fired pizzas, and salamis they make them­selves. They have more than 100 tequilas, so I tried the Neck Shot cocktail with blanco tequila, serrano-infused simple syrup, and house-made grapefruit soda. My wife you don’t approve of chose the Peachy Paddock Mule with Bulleit Rye, fresh peaches, house-made ginger beer, and lime juice. Both were remark­ably fresh, as if some prankster spiked your hand-squeezed juice. That said, our cocktails tasted nearly identical; some nuance is desired.

The Pony Room is, however, one of the most stunning places I’ve ever had an in­distinguishable cocktail. The wooden barstools are branded like cattle, standing on hoof-shaped feet! The wallpaper is textured. There are deep leather chairs, oil paintings, candle-shaped light bulbs, and a massive hutch filled with stemware. It smells like new leather and feels like home, if my home were prettier.

We’ve eaten there twice now. The first evening, the maître d’ walked us through Veladora’s warm, lovely main dining room and its legion of throw pillows, and sat us in the Sunrise Room. Remember this room? Such sentimental value! Unfortu­nately, that’s its only allure. Compared to the main dining room’s $1.1 million supply of butterfly wings, both Unapproved Wife and I felt like we’d been banished to the kids’ table. So remember to ask to sit in Veladora’s main area, or just eat in the Pony Room.

Veladora’s chef is Eric Bauer, formerly of that jazz club called Anthology, and the Four Seasons. He uses produce from local farms, including a famous patch of earth called Chino. All of his herbs are grown on-property. He also has six honeybee hives! And an olive grove to make his own oil! He is The Luckiest Chef in the World.

Do try his slow-poached Maine lobster salad, Grandma. You won’t miss the may­onnaise dressing, I swear. It has pickled and roasted beets, so sweet, with avocado and tufts of burrata cheese in a lemon vinaigrette. It’s art on a plate. The wild-caught ono crudo we didn’t love as much. The tang from pickled apples, white soy, and poached black mustard seeds over­whelmed the roasted pepper oil and silky ono. The steak tartare comes out in a generous roll. It looks like a sausage someone forgot to cook; but just scrape off a bit of the salty lemon-and-caper aioli and it’s very good.

Bauer is making excellent extruded pastas! The kind pressed through bronze dies (like a gun chamber for pasta) with durum wheat for that rough, textured surface that catches every bit of sauce! Both the lamb osso bucco and Bolognese with Reggiano cheese were lovely. The wild mushroom risotto with whipped mascarpone and Reggiano had great creamy-forest flavor—though we did find the rice a bit hard-centered, as if someone had a lapse and added cold stock.

Now, I know you’ve called vegetarians “bony fanatics,” but they’ve spawned and grown in number. Bauer is thoughtful to include two options for them. The Anson Mills polenta with wood-roasted ratatouille ragout and smoked tomato sauce is sinfully creamy, with enough vegetable acid to give it a kick. I’d like a touch less cream and a bit more polenta grit, but that’s a quibble.

You must try the sautéed Scottish trout with braised millet (it’s a very old grain, appar­ently good for your constitution), roasted and smoked turnips, mussels, and fennel-orange reduction. Oh, my. The skin cracks like glass, and the meat is perfectly cooked (a few de­grees past raw in center). Bauer also manages to keep his Berkshire pork tenderloin from drying out—a feat. It’s a touch salty, but the sunchoke purée and roasted local figs balance that out if eaten as a composed bite.

For dessert, pastry chef Jean Marie Verho­even makes an olive-oil cake with honey-roasted figs and lemon-thyme tuile (fancy thin cookie) and sliced Marcona almonds. It’s good, as is the spiced fruit consommé, served with strawberry bits, lemon verbena, a pista­chio tuile, and citrus mascarpone. A light treat.

I know change is hard, Grandma. I know you loved the old restaurant, but I always felt the phrase “dull torpor” described my feelings about it. I was concerned the new designers would ruin the “soul” of the place. But, I assure you, that $30 million was incredibly well spent.

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