A childhood camping snack of Beach Cliff fish steaks in Louisiana hot sauce, which included the softened bones in their tins, inspired his "trout marrow" appetizer. Skillful sears on the pork chop and rabbit kept the meat juicy their earthy savor made the foraged greens taste all the brighter. The kitchen’s precise execution kept the meal temporal. It was like going back in a time machine." Talk to him long enough about his work and the conversation takes on spiritual shadings: "The more I discovered what grew and when it grew, I saw that the hills will take care of you if you stop, look, and listen. Often the leafy additions are as much for the eye as for the palate: A slice of washed wind tomme from Vermont (Allen allows himself shipments of cheese from Murray’s in New York) came camouflaged among tender spruce tips, lemony sumac, and wood violets. He rhapsodized over the slight nuttiness of an herb called Solomon’s plume served alongside zippy sochan, another springtime green, to accompany our grilled pork chop. He enthused about how the sturdy, sharp green known as stonecrop holds up to heat as a finishing touch to rabbit loin with black radish and ramps. Ask him about some obscure, in-season foliage and he’ll swoon and utter expletives. His foraging credo makes inherent sense given the lushness of the mountains that surround the restaurant.Īnd Allen, wiry and bearing a passing resemblance to Top Chef Masters’ Curtis Stone, is a magnetic character who’s built Knife & Fork a loyal following despite its remoteness. Of course his foraging credo smacks of the Nordic trend spearheaded by Noma, but this approach also makes inherent sense given the lushness of the mountains that surround the restaurant. The staff could easily present field guides along with the menus. But over time his cuisine has evolved into a more modern and personal expression: He might fold in global nuances, but the ingredients largely hail from the region, most strikingly in the form of wild fauna that liberally peppers his dishes. Initially Allen intended Knife & Fork to pay homage to Appalachian cooking, incorporating influences from Irish and German settlers. He took it as a sign to open his own place in town.Ībove: Rabbit loin with stone crop, black radish, and ramps Below: Washed wind tomme with spruce tips, sumac, and wood violets and ramps with savory ebelskiver (puffed pancake) and morels Selling alcohol in restaurants had just become legal in Spruce Pine that year. As a cook, Allen had been yearning for a climate more closely tied to actual shifting seasons. In 2009 he and his then-wife Wendy relocated from California to be closer to her family in western North Carolina, where Allen also has relatives. and as a private chef for Hollywood stars whose identities he won’t confirm (his rumored clients included Reese Witherspoon and Tobey Maguire). Allen cooked for 10 years in Los Angeles at restaurants like A.O.C. Nate Allen, the restaurant’s owner and head chef, was pulling service duty that night as well. Most of the diners had instead gathered around smoky gray picnic tables on the restaurant’s garden patio. It was a Wednesday in early May the spare dining room (sage and green walls, chairs with wicker backs around simple wooden tables) was nearly empty. As I drove into town a fire (burning trash?) smoldered by the curving train tracks across from the restaurant. It resides in the small town of Spruce Pine about an hour northeast from Asheville in the thick of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Knife & Fork, despite its banal name, is the rare exception - an actual destination-worthy restaurant. I’ve instead found polite souls serving earnest food that’s a boon to an underserved area and usually hews to culinary trends about 10 years past their height in the nearest metropolis. In my career, most hunts for such hidden wonders have usually led to polite duds. Seekers relish the image of the charming find in a tiny town where obscure magicians conjure unimaginably delicious food at stoves steps away from a secret garden. It’s a great game for early in a workshop.A certain mystique hovers around the idea of an astonishing restaurant in the middle of nowhere. You want to get them to make choices and commit to them. Keep the pace quick so they don’t talk during the game. It has the bookend effect of ending where you started. I always end with the same pair I started with Knife & Fork. The list does not have to be physical objects, it can be fun to introduce concepts. For example when knife and fork is called out, one of them becomes a human sized knife and the other becomes a human sized fork. Their job as a team is to create body shapes that represent the two things called out.
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