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Cover Story Features News Arts & Entertainment Gambit Weekly TOC

FOOD NEWS By David Lee Simmons 01 25 05
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The Third Decade Chef
Andrea Apuzzo is celebrating the 20th anniversary of his namesake restaurant (3100 19th St., Metairie 834-8583; www.andreasrestaurant.com) early this week by rolling back his prices to that magical year, 1985. That translates to soups for $4, antipasti (hot or cold) for no more than $6.50, and pastas averaging $8. The most expensive pasta dish is the Capelli D'Angelo Andrea ($9.50): angel hair tossed with salmon, flamed with vodka, served in a light cream sauce and topped with caviar. The specials are good for lunch and dinner Monday, Jan. 24, through Wednesday, Jan. 26. Reservations are recommended.

Grand Opening
Culinaria
(1519 Carondelet St., 522-8789; www.culinariaart.com) recently opened in Central City with its motto: 'Celebrating the Art of Wine, Food & Spirits.' This translates, according to its press release, to a space inside the renovated 19th century Duncan Kenner House that offers a 'culinary institute, wine academy, private entertainment facility, and unique retail outlet.' Group parties can sample Creole cuisine as well as Asian, French, Italian and Latin dishes. The wine cellar will boast more than 5,000 bottles. For more information, call or visit the Web site.

Game Day
As the Super Bowl approaches (Feb. 6), several restaurants are wooing sports fans to try out their space. ZydeQue Cajun Barbeque (808 Iberville St., 565-5520), recently voted by Esquire magazine as 'The Best New Barbecue Restaurant in America,' offers 11 TV screens for proper football viewing. ZydeQue also added curbside takeout to accommodate of the downtown lunch crowd's hunger for ribs. Simply call ahead and have your credit card ready. (That Esquire rating, by the way, should come as no shock: writer John Mariani is a huge fan of Zydeque and GW Fins Chef Tenney Flynn.)

Pot Luck
Congratulations to the winners of Culinary Concierge magazine's "Cooking With Community Coffee" contest. Commander's Palace Chef Tory McPhail won Best in Show with his Chicory Lacquered Quial, while Besh Steakhouse Chef de Cuisine Steven McHugh won Best of Savory for his Braised Venison Osso Buco (with pumpkin sage grits and Community Coffee-Chocolate Mole. Frank Brigtsen earned the Best of Sweet nod for his Cafe au Lait Creme Brulee, and Rene Bistrot barista Leonard Hardy won for Best Coffee Drink with Leonard's Decadent Community Coffee.


Other Stories This Week in Cuisine:

Wine of the Week
2000 Chateau Greysac Cru Bourgeois
Medoc, France
$15-$21


Restaurant Review
The Joint


Other Stories by David Lee Simmons:

Cover Story 01 18 05

Feature 01 18 05

Restaurant Review 01 18 05

David Lee Simmons Archives




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