Forget the Glaciers. Will Our Children Be Able to Enjoy Stews?
1/8/07 at 9:00 AM

We’re not exactly sure what this artist is trying to get across.Photo: Images.com/Corbis
• For a restaurant that’s supposedly so in touch with nature, Savoy’s pretty oblivious to the weather. We recently got an e-mail billing their new cassoulet as the perfect “respite from a winter chill.” Their bean stew, packed with duck confit, house-made sausage, pork belly, and braised lamb, is just one available iteration of the classic dish, as this short list shows. But eating it fireside seems a bit much when we’re coatless and shvitzing just getting from the cab to the door.
• Brasserie LCB, that bastion of the French old school, has a long history with cassoulet. But chef Jean-Jacques Rachou seems to have thrown up his hands: “Right now we sell much less [cassoulet] than we normally would. It’s too hot. We have cold soups on the menu, like vichyssoise and gazpacho. And we never saw so many cold lobster, cold salmon salads [sold].”
• Tom Valenti at Ouest, whose signature lamb shank would make Chris Tucker lethargic, seems to have stumbled upon a middle ground: “The lamb shank is bulletproof as far as weather goes. We try to take it off the menu in the dead of summer and are always met with stiff resistance. ” Which isn’t to say he won’t change with the times: “Maybe I should start serving it on cold baby greens though.”

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