Mar 2013

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: Chef Micah Wexler’s “To Live and Dine in L.A.”

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Meet: The Residency.

Housed in Downtown’s UMAMIcatessen, this culinary series features a changing roster of chefs from around the country every Thursday night, with each stint lasting 10 weeks. Think of The Residency as Grant Achatz’s Next with a dash of Heston Blumenthal’s Dinner and a pinch of LudoBites’ showmanship. Does that make any sense? You’ll see…

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Kicking off the series is Chef Micah Wexler (left), formerly of Mezze. Joining him behind the 12-seat counter is Mezze’s former pastry chef Morgan Bordenave (center) and general manager Mike Kassar (right).

One of the coolest aspects of this experience is the intimacy of the space. With diners seated around a small U-shaped counter and chefs preparing and plating each course just a few feet away, interaction and conversation is encouraged like at no other venue in town.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Chef Wexler is as personable as they come, so it was a real treat bantering back and forth with him throughout dinner and probing him about important matters like how to best prepare the flageolet beans I received in my Christmas stocking last year.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

For Chef Wexler’s residency, he is exploring Los Angeles’ most notable neighborhoods, cultures, and time periods—a different one each week. The inaugural “Live and Dine in L.A.” menu features dishes born on Pico Boulevard. As a Los Angeles native, Chef Wexler had a plethora of anecdotes to share about the restaurants and dishes that he selected to pay homage to.

The five-course menu is priced at $45, with wine pairings available for $22.50.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

The first course to hit the counter was an individually-wrapped cheese bureka inspired by Eilat, an Israeli bakery in the Kosher Corridor. Filled with ricotta, feta, dates, and bacon, the bureka served as a warm and buttery, “hello.” Go ahead and pass on the Knork flatware for this one and eat it all with your hands.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Next to arrive was a most intriguing and delightful interpretation of Julio and Carolina Orellana’s Guatemalan concha negra from La Cevicheria. Instead of a murky cocktail of bloody clams, tomatoes, onions, avocado, mint, lime juice, and Worcestershire sauce, Chef prepared a fetching clam chowder/borscht hybrid.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Neat cubes of beets and potatoes lined the bowl, along with the supple Rhode Island-raised bloody clams. A broth made from clam juice, beet juice, habanero chilies, and crème fraiche was poured into the bowl a la minute. This one was light, refreshing, and awesomely briny with every clammy bite.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

My favorite dish of the evening was the tacos de cabeza, inspired by the taco tables that line Pico after dark.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Here, Chef layered on the flavors like a champ. From the bottom up was a fresh corn tortilla, made-from-scratch head cheese, a habanero salsa-laced sauce gribiche, pickled red onions, cotija cheese, and fresh cilantro. French-Mexican fusion, baby!

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

The final savory course was a play on Versailles‘ “Famoso Pollo.” Hunks of bone-in dark meat and boneless white meat were cooked in chicken fat and served over a bed of beans along with a citrus mojo and a charred leek. Chicken cracklings and a flourish of fresh herbs added the finishing touches.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

Last but far from least was a deconstructed banana cream pie a la The Apple Pan. The Astronomer and I were mesmerized by the bruleed-before-our-eyes bananas.

The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: "To Live and Dine in L.A." with Chef Micah Wexler

The artistically assembled plate consisted of caramelized baby bananas, two textures of whipped cream, buttery crumbles, and rich vanilla ice cream—I wonder what the folks at The Apple Pan would say about this one!

“To Live and Dine in L.A.” officially begins today with two seatings at 7:45 PM and 9:30 PM. Next week’s menu will highlight Boyle Heights. Chef Wexler mentioned this evening that he hopes to pay homage to the Chinese restaurants in the San Gabriel Valley in the coming weeks. I’ll certainly be the first in line for that one.

UMAMIcatessen
846 South Broadway
Los Angeles, CA 90015
Phone: 213-413-8626

One year ago: Salted Cookies ‘n Cream Cookies
Two years ago: The Fremont Diner – Sonoma
Three years ago: The Slaw Dogs – Pasadena
Four years ago: V.P. Tofu – Monterey Park
Five years ago: Eating in Bangkok IV
Six years ago: Petite Passion – Philadelphia

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2 thoughts on “The Residency at UMAMIcatessen: Chef Micah Wexler’s “To Live and Dine in L.A.”

  1. Wow, that looks amazing. Also, “To Live and Die in LA” is now stuck in my head. Lastly, I would kill to be there for the SGV experience.

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