• Published: May 3rd, 2011
  • Comments: 46

A Casual Sunday Lunch

YouTube Preview Image

On the first of May we hosted a “luncheon” on the L line of the New York City subway. The subway is a familiar place, providing a necessary means of transportation for many New Yorkers. Its stairwells, turnstiles, platforms, trains and unpredictable elements are all-too-familiar to its dedicated patrons. One begins to know the exact time of travel from one destination to another. One begins to intuit the conditions of a ride, anticipating smooth stretches and knowing when to brace for a jarring turn. Through a series of familiar gestures, presented in commonplace locations in unfamiliar ways, we set out to challenge a habitual experience.

We wanted to serve a meal in a dynamic and strained location, to give ourselves a challenge that could only be overcome through teamwork and partnership. It is with great honor and pride that I say that this event born in the mind of Mr. Cigar in the back of a luxury car somewhere lost in the bowels of Los Angeles came alive when it was brought to team of creative and inspired people below. I am honored to have such good friends and compatriots that can take such ridiculous ideas and bring the into fruition no matter the adversity.

It is with that that I am honored to say thank you to everyone listed here below as this event could not have taken place without your energy, effort and support. No matter how big or small a roll you thought you played without you this would never have happened.

Aboard the L Train, Luncheon Is Served
“Aboard the L Train, Luncheon Is Served” – New York Times, May 2011 – Click on photo for full article

My sincerest thanks go to:

Daniel Castano – founder  – a razor, a shiny knife
Jonny Cigar – Winetology
Mike Lee – Studiofeast
Linda Lou – The Cheeky Chef
Andrew Rosenberg – a razor, a shiny knife
Ronen V – Pictures, Videos, Stories, Friends and Cool Projects

CK
Michelle Cortez
Zach McGeary
Kristen Hager – Snooth.com
Carissa Cirino – Tutus over French Fries
Dominic Musacchio – @dominicjohn
Alex Davidowski – Mirador Studios
Keith Haskel – Videographer
Steph Goralnick – Steph Goralnick Design and Photography
Emily Cavalier – Mouth of the Boarder
Drew Altdoerffer – Photography
Katie Hawthorne
Hannah Newbury
Cathy Erway – Not Eating Out in NY
Chad Griffith – Photography
Michael Opalensk
Simona Picco
Maurcio Vargas - The Blaaahg
Dan Vallejo
Alex Schulten
Andrew Warman
Alexis Ames – nineteen84 Design
Joe Levine – Studiofeast
Marissa Ain
Laura Huben- Studiofeast
Danielle Gould – Food + Tech Connect
Dave Christiansen – Pop-up Studio
Benjamin Lambert – Ben Lambert Chef
Ivana Kottasova
Derrick Yuen – Studiofeast
Soomin Baik – Studiofeast
Mihir Desai – Cross Species
Danny Zlobinsky
Joseph Yoon
Jana Philips
Nora Lidgus
Helena de Pereda
Katherine Wheelock

The Mast Brother’s Chocolate
The Brooklyn Kitchen

We will be releasing our photos and videos over the course of the next week so please stay tuned. We are committed and determined to push ahead, boats against the currents, providing unique and unforgettable experiences… And so we leave you to ponder what might be next…

Michael J Cirino

Founder – a razor, a shiny knife

  • Published: Oct 15th, 2008
  • Comments: None

The New York Times

Here Daniel is showing where the loins are located on a boar, so they can be removed and wrapped in chicken skin.

After long delay we are proud to display some additional images from the boar dinner we held on Saturday, August 15th of this fine year two thousand and eight, in the municipality of Homer, NY. I will attempt to preserve brevity in our hopes to just dazzle you with the brilliant photography of Jennifer May and our good friend Michael Knight.
Our goal for this meal was to prepare and serve a locally sourced meal based around wild boar. This brought us to Cold Brook Hunts http://www.coldbrookhunts.com/ near the ancestral site of my family’s farm. It was to be a celebration of the great pre-mythological being in whose honor we have sacrificed of all of our whole animals to this year; Lewis. He was a pseudo-deity that retained his stature from pre-history by giving the gift of smoking, straws, and other processes that were greatly improved with suction to man. In these dishes we sought to transfer the body of this boar into a meal for twenty four cooked almost entirely by ingredients sourced within a 50 mile radius of the farm personally picked up by me the day before in a great scavenger hunt.

Menu
1. Wild Boar Rillette with a Pot-lickies Gelee and Duck Skin Crackling
2. Sweetbread and Offal Raviolo with Wild Boar Ragu
3. Chicken Fried Wild Boar Loin, Succotash Custard, Molasses Kimchi, and Soju Watermelon
4. Smoked Wild Boar Ribs with Collard Green, Mac and Cheese and Black Eye Peas
5. Aleppo and Vanilla Ice Cream with Amish Mellon and White Peaches

Menu created with Daniel Castaño, Andrew Rosenberg and Mark Low.

First you start with a whole wild boar. Slightly chilled and very wild.
Photo by Michael (Santi) Knight © 2008 www.photo.sarcfilms.com

Then you cut the ribs apart at the sternum and break the ribs off the spine using only shear force and maybe a cleaver later on if things get dirty. Either way you make Tom very happy.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

If you plan on wrapping chicken skins around the loins you first need to skin the birds making sure this doesn’t happen.

Photo by Michael (Santi) Knight © 2008 www.photo.sarcfilms.com

After the skins are free from their flightless carcasses you may now wrap them around the loins and bond them using Activa RM. Roll into a tight torchon, vacuum pack them and drop them into a water bath at 55C for 6 hours. Water that is just cool enough not to kill the Activa enzymes but high enough to pasteurize the chicken skins after 131 minutes of cooking.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

While the pork is cooking make fresh ricotta and be slightly sad that you couldn’t find sweetbreads anywhere in Cortland County that weren’t processed in Ohio or south of the Mason Dixon Line so your ravioli will just have to be filled with the creamy richness of raw milk ricotta and basil.

Grind the shoulders, hams and all of the extra fat into a 70/30 lean/fat ground boar, with a touch of pork and beef fat thrown because it was fresh. Dice up some fresh vegetables that you picked in your aunts garden and some jarred tomatoes from last year’s harvest and make up a Bolognese base.

Take the wild boar liver and kidneys as well as some left over pork, chicken and duck livers and simmer them with some caramelized onions, thyme and a bottle of red wine until glazed and slightly crisp. Add cream and puree until smooth.

Make pasta dough, then make 100 ravioli and let them rest.

Add pâté to Bolognese right before serves and lay lightly cooked ravioli on top with a light chiffonade of basil.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

The night before it would have been wise to take a little extra Activa RM and bond the leftover chicken skins and purposely cleaned duck skins into a tight torchon and refrigerate overnight. Only to freeze in the morning, sliced wafer thin on a deli slicer and then deep fried in beef tallow. Add salt and enjoy.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

Or to place on top of the wild boar shoulder rillette that you confit in pork fat for the last 12 hours and formed over a slice of spicy and floral pot lickies gelée that you made with Agar-Agar later that same morning right after the boar was butchered but before the pasta making.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

While you are at it the night before you might as well also cut 4 types of melon into steaks and spend an hour compressing them in a vacuum with a little salt and lime juice to give them a bright color and smooth consistency.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

Once done in the sous vide take the chicken skin wrapped boar loin out of the bag, batter dip it and deep fry it until golden brown. Slice it into thin rings (here you can see both tenderloins bonded together to form a larger loin sized cut).

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

Actually the most important thing you should have been doing right after they were broken out of the carcass was getting the ribs into a pork confit to soften for 4 hours and then into a smoker with layers of boar belly stacked on top of them and hickory smoke circling past the glassy meat.

Whip up a mac and cheese, some collard greens and a black eyed pea and aji mash and you have a rib entrée and hopefully a tiny bit of room for desert.

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

And serve those over the molasses kimchi with melon and scallons

Photo by Jennifer May © 2008 www.jennifermay.com

Wild Boar

[img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_gords-maikol-phelps.jpg"][img title="Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-0459.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-0626.jpg"][img title="Chef Daniel Castano and the hind quarter, as he says, the prize possession. Castano is Michael Cirino's business partner and is also the owner of Emilia Romagna, an Italian restaurant in Bogota, Columbia. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Chef Daniel Castaño and the hind quarter, as he says, the prize possession. Castaño is Michael Cirino's business partner and is also the owner of Emilia Romagna, an Italian restaurant in Bogota, Columbia. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-0694.jpg"][img title="Michael Cirino displays the duck stock which has been reduced six times until it is a jelly. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Michael Cirino displays the duck stock which has been reduced six times until it is a jelly. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-0732.jpg"][img title="Duck skin crackers. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Duck skin crackers. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1127.jpg"][img title="A duck skin cracker. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="A duck skin cracker. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1131.jpg"][img title="The first course: wild boar rillette with a pot-lickies gelee and served with a duck skin crackling. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The first course: wild boar rillette with a pot-lickies gelee and served with a duck skin crackling. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1163.jpg"][img title="The second course: Bolognese sauce (wild boar ragu) with fresh made raviolis stuffed with basil and fresh made ricotta cheese. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The second course: Bolognese sauce (wild boar ragu) with fresh made raviolis stuffed with basil and fresh made ricotta cheese. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1239.jpg"][img title="Michael Cirino with the chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator" alt="Michael Cirino with the chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1243.jpg"][img title="Four kinds of melons which were vacuum sealed and cut into cubes. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Four kinds of melons which were vacuum sealed and cut into cubes. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1253.jpg"][img title="The chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator - soon to be deep fried. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator - soon to be deep fried. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1256.jpg"][img title="The chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator and then deep fried. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The chicken skin wrapped tenderloins which were cooked using an immersion circulator and then deep fried. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1277.jpg"][img title="The third course: chicken fried wild boar tenderloin, succotash custard, molasses kimchee, and soju watermelon. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The third course: chicken fried wild boar tenderloin, succotash custard, molasses kimchee, and soju watermelon. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1282.jpg"][img title="The fourth course: smoked wild boar ribs with collard greens and black eye peas. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="The fourth course: smoked wild boar ribs with collard greens and black eye peas. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1327.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_the-action.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_the-action2.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_the-eye.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_the-munchies.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_esnaiper-machin.jpg"][img title="" alt="" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_gords-model.jpg"][img title="Taking a break from cooking. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" alt="Taking a break from cooking. Photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times" src="http://www.arazorashinyknife.com/wp-content/flagallery/wild-boar/thumbs/thumbs_jennifer_may_photo-1055.jpg"]
  • Published: Aug 29th, 2008
  • Comments: None

NY Times – Article

A couple of weeks ago we spent a weekend in the country and had a feast based around a wild boar. The New York Times was gracious enough to come and write about it, here is a link to the beautiful photography and words that told the story of Lewis and our gastronmic appreciation of him.

More to follow in our words and photos but please follow Daniel’s snack to see theirs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/27/dining/27boar.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&ref=dining

© 2009 a razor, a shiny knife. All Rights Reserved.

This blog is powered by Wordpress and the Magatheme Pro Magazine Theme for Wordpress and Gazelle Wordpress Themes.