Win a Dinner for Two at La Crémaillére
Win a Dinner for Two at La Crémaillére Fall 2018
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La Crémaillère Tops Our Bucket List
If you think La Crémaillère is a restaurant for blue-haired ladies from Greenwich, you don’t know Greenwich. Or La Crémaillère. In fact, La Crème attracts an eclectic mix of date-nighters, power diners and families celebrating special occasions.
La Crémaillère has been a fixture on the landscape of Bedford for many years, but Bobbie Meyzen told us, “this is not just your grandmother’s restaurant anymore.” Bobbie Meyzen and her husband Robert are La Crémaillère’s proprietors. And after a good week in the stock market, the front room, filled with local hedgies, can take on a party atmosphere with lots of cross-table chatter.
A perennial Top Ten Restaurant in Westchester/Hudson Valley, La Crémaillère was named one of America’s Most Beloved Restaurants by Town & Country. In 2017 Open Table diners voted it one of the 100 Most Romantic Restaurants in America. It tops our Bucket List of area eateries for foodies, people watchers and anyone that calls the ABC towns home.
The Original Farm to Table Restaurant
La Crémaillère’s clientele has skewed younger in recent years due to a growing appreciation of their longstanding farm to table practices and the growing appeal of lighter, contemporary French cooking. Their seasonal menu “is based on the classics,” Bobbie explains. “We use Escoffier-style recipes. But instead of so much butter and cream, our sauces are stock-based. Our chef makes fish, vegetable, and meat stock every week, so our sauces are flavor-based. He gets flavor from the ingredients and just a touch of cream. It’s healthful and made from scratch. We use local purveyors and farms—so everything’s very fresh.”
And its signature dishes are numerous and memorable. Favorites include the escargot with pine nuts; duck confit with lentils, carrots and merlot reduction; scallops with champagne sauce; rack of lamb; and “quenelles de brochet”—pike whipped into a light dumpling, with a lobster reduction. Dessert choices include crème brûlée, warm apple tart with vanilla ice cream, and iced raspberries with warm white chocolate sauce. They also offer gluten-free and low-salt dishes, as well as vegetarian selections.
In the Kitchen
La Crémaillère prepares its own pâtés and terrines—and is one of the few restaurants that make the very challenging soufflé. Even the ever-popular French fries—or “frites,”—are extraordinary. “The way we cook them is fantastic—crispy and delicious, fried in a special oil, really hot and really fast,” says Bobbie. “And the way they are served on a cake tray is unique—it comes out with a big flourish.”
The man responsible for overseeing the kitchen is Chef de Cuisine Albert Astudillo, who has been with the Meyzens since 1993. Starting out by chopping vegetables and prepping, Albert learned the tricks of the trade over the years from four chefs. “He is perfect,” says Bobbie, “His sauces are unparalleled. He is wonderful.”
La Crémaillère’s award-winning wine cellar has 14,000 bottles of wine—mostly from France and California. Including one very precious bottle from the Civil War era. The Meyzens buy wine futures, determining the best vintages from year to year. They obviously have a talent for it, as the restaurant has won a Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence.
La Crème in the movies
Adding to the dining experience is the charming and cozy décor with its fabulous wall murals by Jean Pajet, depicting traditional regional costumes from French provinces. Upstairs in the Provence room are exposed wood beams from the 1700s, when the house was built. And one table in the restaurant is famous for being the place Ryan O’Neal and Candice Bergen dined in the motion picture Oliver’s Story, the sequel to Love Story.
From Stage Coaches to the Porsche 911
The building itself is steeped in history. Known as the “Widow Brush House,” it was part of a 100-acre farm owned by Deborah Rush, who lived there in the 1700s with her eight children. Over the years, the property served as a stop along the stagecoach route, a two-family home, and a ladies’ golf club. Then, in 1947, Antoine Gilly, proprietor of the French restaurant La Crémaillère in New York City, bought the site and turned it into La Crémaillère à la Campagne (La Crémaillère in the Country).
Robert Meyzen’s father came to the U.S. from France with the French Pavilion at the 1939-1940 World’s Fair. When Henri Soule started Le Pavillon in New York in 1941, French cuisine was just being introduced to New York City. In 1960, Robert Sr. and his business partner, Fred Decré, established La Caravelle in New York City. It earned the highest ratings from food guidebooks, and the attention of many celebrities. Including Joseph Kennedy. In fact, some of La Caravelle’s recipes, such as champagne chicken, were later made in the Kennedy White House.
And then La Crémaillére
The following year Meyzen and Decré purchased La Crémaillère on Bedford-Banksville Road that became their country restaurant. Eventually they moved the business permanently to Bedford. During his growing-up years, young Robert worked in his father’s restaurant, learning every aspect of the business. “He did his homework in the wine cellar,” explains Bobbie. “He shucked oysters and helped in the kitchen and as a busboy.” Every holiday from school he was on duty and, in 1974, he joined the full-time staff. In 1993, Robert Jr. and Bobbie bought the restaurant from his father—and have carried on the proud tradition, serving and pleasing generations of customers.
(46 Bedford-Banksville Rd., Bedford, 914.234.9647; frenchcountryrestaurant.com)
By Elena Serocki
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