L’Atelier Robuchon Geneva

Lunch
Visited April 2022
Rating: none yet

The opening of another Atelier Robuchon, and that in Geneva, has been a rumor in the press for years. After it was announced that this actually happened in September 2021, the restaurant made it on my list of planned visits. Now, on the occasion of another appointment in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, the opportunity to actually do so arose.

The restaurant has not yet been rated by Michelin, as it has only been open for a short time and the publication of the 2022 Guide Michelin Switzerland has been postponed until fall. Executive chef here is Olivier Jean, who moved from Atelier Taipei. The Atelier there held two Michelin Macarons under him.

The 22-seat counter here is arranged as a strip in front of the kitchen. Four additional tables for groups are also present in the restaurant, which has a separate entrance in “The Woodward” hotel building complex. Through the divider between the serving aisle and the kitchen, one can somewhat observe the activities in the kitchen: For example, arranging on plates from the squeeze bottle, cutting out round brioche slices, breading artichoke quarters with cornstarch, stowing leftovers in storage boxes, and finally, complete cleaning the mostly black kitchen surfaces.

For once, I did not choose my menu from à la carte dishes for lunch today. Reason: the vegetarian menu offered two courses that I would have chosen anyway and, new this weekend, fresh morels, which is one of my favorites as a basic ingredient.

Driving and another appointment in the evening limited the wine enjoyment in terms of quantity, so I had a glass of 2019 Petite Arvine Les Seyes white wine, Cave des Amandieres from Fully, Valais, Switzerland. With the main course, I had a half glass of 2018 Syrah red wine, Christophe Abbet from Martigny, Valais, Switzerland.

Amuse: Mushroom Royale with coulis of parsley and olive, pimento crouton and piment d’Espelette.

This hors d’oevre was served with the vegetarian menu only. Other guests received the classic, foie gras crème with port wine reduction and parmesan foam. The amuse was served lukewarm and featured a lot of umami due to the mushroom flavor – a good start.

Here, too, a basket with several homemade breads was served, most of them excellent tasting

Unsalted and salted butter came with it. The brioche buns are better in New York. These here were too dry.

A BETTERAVE DE GAIA
en duo de pommes à l’avocat, herbes fraîches et sorbet à la moutarde verte
beetroot with apple and avocado, fresh herbs, green mustard sorbet

This is a dish I’ve been wanting to eat for a while, and had actually picked it for a planned visit to Atelier Montreal, which had fallen victim to Corona. Now I have eaten it here. On the plate is a tartare of beetroot, Gala and Granny Smith apples covered in mixed herbs, unfortunately including coriander, and a mustard ice cream. Next to it there are dabs of gels and creams as there are, beet, avocado, orange?mayonannaise, olive oil. The tartar is interesting by the interplay earthy (beetroot), sour (Granny S.) and sweet (Gala) and slightly spicy by the addition of piment d’Espelette and mustard. The mustard ice cream is mild and goes well with it.

LES MORILLES
Mitonnées au vin d’Arbois, œuf du Lignon, galette de riz nacrée au Gruyère
Morel mushrooms, sunny side up egg, golden pearl rice with Gruyere cheese

In the center of the plate is a fried egg on a kind of pancake of crispy fried rice. Then to the side are the stars of this dish, fresh fried morels. Slices of shaved Gruyere cheese, arugula and a foam complete the dish.
I loved the taste of this one. This dish lands in second place out of all the dishes I have ever eaten at Ateliers. Unbeaten remains the cod I had at Christophe Bellanca in New York.

L’ARTICHAUT POIVRADE
en velouté soyeux, gnocchi de ricotta, pistou de roquette
baby artichoke in a silky velouté, ricotta gnocchi, arugula pistou

The baby artichoke quarters were thinly breaded and deep-fried. The ricotta gnocchi were very fine, silky smooth, almost velvety. I think I have eaten what is there called Parisian gnocchi before, in New York in a truffle dish. The velouté went well with it. What bothered me, however, was the bitterness of the arugula crème specks, which did not quite fit the flavor picture of artichokes, gnocchi and velouté.

LE BLE FARRO
mitonné doucement à la carotte, émulsion lactée au chèvre frais de Genève
farro wheat simmered with carrot, milky emulsion with fresh goat cheese from Geneva

As main course was served the grain farro cooked on low heat mixed with pieces of carrot impeccable bite and refined with goat cheese, which added freshness and some acidity. A broth with chives, decoration with various slices of beet and dots of crème fraîche completed this course. The course was very filling. It was served with the famous Robuchon potatoe puree, which I liked better this time than those, I had in ateliers before. It may be that this was due to the combination with the other components.

LE PRE-DESSERT
ananas et fruit de la passion, crumble et sorbet à la noix de coco
pineapple and passion fruit, coconut crumble and sorbet

Crumble and a compote of pineapple and passion fruit at the bottom of the glass and on top coconut sorbet were covered by coconut foam with lime zest. This pré-dessert was as good as a small dessert with a combination of exotic fruits can be.

LA NOISETTE
en variation gourmande au sucre soufflé, confit de coing au poivre Voatsiperifery
hazelnut variation, sphere of blown sugar, quince and Voatsiperifery pepper

When this plate is served, at first you see only the sugar sphere and a pattern of quince jelly. Then inside the sphere, at the bottom, there were two disks, one of roasted hazelnut pieces, then a kind of sablé of pastry, on top praline cream, hazelnut pieces and a kind of caramel cream. The dessert was for me a substitute for LA FORÊT NOIRE, which is the standard dessert on the vegetarian menu. I had already eaten this in another Atelier and my request to try something different was gladly granted.

Friandises from left to right: raspberry chocolate pralines, meringues with lemon cream, strawberry vanilla panna cotta slices

Conclusion

A visit to an Atelier Joel Robuchon is always worth the trip. I liked the vegetarian menu. The morel dish was the highlight. All other courses were good to very good with little things here and there that I personally did not 100% like. Piment d’Espelette for example should not be used in almost all the dishes :-). If the opportunity presents itself again, I will go back to try more dishes from the large database of Joel Robuchon recipes. Too bad that such relaxed dining is not possible in Germany.

Website: L’Atelier Robuchon Genéve

Former visits at Ateliers:

Shanghai 2018

New York 2018

New York 2019

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per se New York

Mittagessen
Besucht am 30.09.2017
Bewertung: Drei Michelin Macarons

Das Restaurant per se befindet sich am Columbus Circle an der südwestlichen Ecke des Central Parks in der zweiten Etage eines Einkaufszentrums. Das Masa, ein anderes höchstbewertetes Gourmetrestaurant Japanischen Stils, ist auf der gleichen Etage. Erwischt man einen guten Tisch, hat man einen herrlichen Blick auf den Central Park.

Es handelt sich um ein klassisches Gourmet-Restaurant.

Wir haben uns für das Chef’s Tasting Menu entschieden. Das an sich schon in den oberen Preisregionen angesiedelte Menu gab einem noch diverse kostenpflichtige Optionen (Kaviar, Foie Gras, Wagyu), auf die wir verzichtet haben.

Das Menu bestand aus:


Amuse Bouche

Austern und Perlen: Sabayon vom Perlen-Tapioka mit Austern und Sterling White Störkaviar

Eins der Signatur-Gerichte von Thomas Keller, der hier das Sagen hat.


Salat vom Butternuss-Kürbis, Quittenmarmelade, Selleriezweig, Piemont-Haselnüsse und schwarze Wintertrüffel-Emulsion

Konfiertes Filet von der Rotband-Seebrasse, Jonah-Krabben “Pressé”, getoastete Pinienkerne, Matsutake-Pilzbouillon

Maine Butter-Hummer, “Pain de Campagne”, halbtrockene Frühtomaten, gehobelter Fenchel und “Billi Bi”

Milch-gefüttertes Yorkshire Schweinchen, Bohnen, Broccoli-Blüten und Sauce Dijonnaise

Lamm mit Kräutern, Kichererbsen “Panisse”, “Märchen”-Aubergine, Paprika und Pesto

Das kleine Stück Lamm war leider von der zähen Sorte und hatte dazu noch einen Knochen. Das bin ich von Restaurants dieser Klasse nicht gewohnt.


Gougère mit gealtertem Gruyère

Bis hierhin waren wir noch hungrig. Die Fotos täuschen darüber hinweg, dass es sich bei allen Tellern um sehr kleine Portionen handelte. Meist war nach zwei, drei Bissen Schluss. Das nimmt einem die Möglichkeit, die Komponenten auf dem Teller unterschiedlich zu kombinieren, um das ultimative Geschmackserlebnis zu finden.


Die Auswahl von Desserts entschädigte dann ein bisschen.

Hinterher gab es auch noch Pralinen

Damit man auch weiss, was drin ist, sind die Pralinen auf der Rückseite angeschrieben.

Beim Herausgehen wurde ich an der Garderobe auf Deutsch angesprochen. Es stellte sich heraus, dass die Chef de Service für das Abendessen aus Baden-Württemberg kam. So kamen wir noch in den Genuss einer Küchenführung.

Mise en place: Hier der Hummer
Mis en place: Dessert

Thomas Keller betreibt auch die French Laundry in Yountville, Kalifornien. In der Küche gibt es, wenn man reinkommt rechts oben einen Bildschirm, wo man dem Team in Kalifornien bei den Vorbereitungen für den Mittags-Service zuschauen kann.

Im per se bekommt man beim Verlassen eine Tüte zum nach Hause mitnehmen in die Hand gedrückt. Darin befindet sich eine Schachtel mit den hervorragenden Pralinen und eine Blechdose mit per se Aufdruck, in der sich feine Butter-Biskuits befinden. Unsere Taschen wurden mit ein paar Extradosen bestückt…

Fazit:

Schöne Location, sehr kleine Portionen, sehr kostspielig (inzwischen wurden die Preise abermals erhöht), wenig Gänge mit Wow-Effekt, teilweise Schwächen in der Qualität (Lamm). Ich denke, ich gehe nicht wieder hin.