Cookshop: New York, New York

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Some restaurants, rare though they are, exude a kind of palate mnemonic.  There you are, seated at a restaurant, when something happens to your memory, thanks to something on your palate, or perhaps the lighting, or the tables, the music in the background – and suddenly you are transported, back to that meal you most adored in the midst of your most favorite vacation when nothing was required of you but to savor what you’d been served.

Such a feeling envelops you soon after you enter Cookshop on Tenth Avenue, or rather Tenth Avenue Cookshop as its full name would have it.  Back in the nineteenth century, perhaps a more convivial time, cookshops were establishments where locals could come for a bit of simply prepared food.  The philosophy behind this current Cookshop revolves around sustainable ingredients and humanely-raised animals alongside support for local farmers and artisans.

And it’s not long after being seated at Cookshop that a feeling of contentment, the kind most associated with vacation, and perhaps specifically those spent in San Francisco, takes hold.  Perhaps it’s the bread, fresh and whole-grained and thick-crusted – or maybe it’s the spread, a heavenly combination of horseradish, caramelized onions and creme fraiche.  A glass of Cotes du Rhone and a plate of bread – sometimes it takes so little.

Then comes the heirloom tomato salad, yellow and red jewels, and also the hand-cut pasta with tomato ragout, and the vegetable succotash, with corn so fresh there must be a field out the back door—  And squash blossoms stuffed with mushrooms and—  This is food one associates with farmers’ markets, produce fresh from the earth, every flavor still accessible.  For dessert, there’s a coffee sundae, with coffee sauce and coffee ice cream, and also a buttermilk brioche beignet with a blueberry coulis so fresh—  There must be a blueberry bush out the back door too.

To eat at Cookshop is to remembering the best foods you’ve ever eaten: that peach from a summer long ago, and the best ever corn on the cob, and that slice of blueberry pie, and those fresh donuts—  All come rushing back to you at Cookshop, a cornucopia of your best-loved American meals.

LINK: Cookshop

Mark Thompson

About Mark Thompson

A member of Authors Guild, Society of American Travel Writers (SATW), and New York Travel Writers (NYTW), Mark Thompson is an editor, journalist, and photographer whose work appears in various periodicals, including Travel Weekly, Metrosource, Huffington Post, Global Traveler, Out There, and OutTraveler. The author of the novels Wolfchild (2000) and My Hawaiian Penthouse (2007), Mark completed a Ph.D. in American Studies. He has been a Fellow and a resident at various artists' communities, including MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center.

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