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Acid reflex: Bastide gets new pan--from critic.


Quelle horreur!

Bastide Bastides are fortified[1] new towns built in medieval Languedoc, Gascony and Aquitaine during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, although some authorities count Mont-de-Marsan and Montauban, which was founded in 1144,[2] as the first bastides. , the West Hollywood bastion of fine French fare, has taken a tumble.

Having earned a rare four-star rating from the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
 last year, what was arguably the best restaurant in the region came down several notches last week when Times restaurant critic S. Irene Virbila panned the work of new chef Ludovic Lefebvre and dropped Bastide to a single star (the same rating as Morton's, The Steakhouse).

Virbila's lengthy review described less a dining experience than an assault on her palate. A soup with chanterelle chanterelle

Highly prized, fragrant, edible mushroom (Cantharellus cibarius, order Polyporales), rich yellow in colour, found in woods in summer and autumn. Its similarity to the poisonous jack-o-lantern (Clitocybe illudens, order Agaricales), an orange-yellow fungus of
 mushrooms was "tongue-numbingly bitter, its intensity punishing, the gastronomic gas·tro·nom·ic   also gas·tro·nom·i·cal
adj.
Of or relating to gastronomy.



gastro·nom
 equivalent of body piercing body piercing Body image A disruption of a mucocutaneous surface with jewelry or dangling artifices. See Tattoos. ," with licorice licorice (lĭk`ərĭs, –rĭsh), name for a European plant (Glycyrrhiza glabra) of the family Leguminosae (pulse family) and for the sweet substance obtained from the root.  and coffee flavors so overpowering she felt as if she'd "been mugged."

A foie gras dish fared no better. Served on a brioche, the appetizer's accompaniments "were so sweet, it made me want to scrub off my piece of foie gras like a raccoon raccoon, nocturnal New World mammal of the genus Procyon. The common raccoon of North America, Procyon lotor, also called coon, is found from S Canada to South America, except in parts of the Rocky Mts. and in deserts.  before eating it," she wrote.

In fact, much of Virbila's criticism centered on a "sweetness that is unrelenting" in nearly every dish.

While it is not unusual for restaurant ratings to fluctuate, such a drastic demotion de·mote  
tr.v. de·mot·ed, de·mot·ing, de·motes
To reduce in grade, rank, or status.



[de- + (pro)mote.
 is practically unheard of.

"You hear about a restaurant whose glory fades and they lose a star here or there, but to lose three out of four is fairly substantial," said Randall Hiatt, president of Fessel International, a restaurant consultancy in Costa Mesa.

What impact the review will have on Bastide's business, where a couple can easily spend upwards of $400 on a meal and wine, remains to be seen, but Hiatt and others point out that the well-heeled restaurant-goers patronizing Bastide are also likely to be reading Virbila's reviews.

"With restaurants like that, probably 80 percent of the people go for the food and those are the people who are going to be swayed negatively by the review," Hiatt said. "The L.A. Times is a pretty powerful voice in this market."

Several restaurants panned by Virbila over the years still manage to score well in the Zagat Survey (where customers get to vote), including Matsuhisa in Beverly Hills and Bistro 45 and the Parkway Grill, both in Pasadena.

But the critic's comments might have ushered the end of at least one establishment. Virbila's 1995 pan of La Veranda in Beverly Hills kept diners away in droves, and less than a year later owner David Slay slay  
tr.v. slew , slain , slay·ing, slays
1. To kill violently.

2. past tense and past participle often slayed Slang
 sold it.

Slay, who still lives in L.A. but spends a good deal of time on restaurant projects in his native Missouri, was unequivocal in blaming Virbila for the restaurant closing. The review came out on a Sunday morning, he said, and by the time he got into work that day, the calls were already coming in from people canceling dinner reservations.

"It was devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
," said Slay. "Business literally dropped every day. I thought we had a good, loyal clientele, but it was over with quickly."

Business declined by more than 50 percent and within five months he had closed the restaurant.

Bastide is owned by commercial director Joe Pytka, who declined through a spokeswoman to be interviewed. The restaurant earned its four-star rating in February 2003 under renowned Chef Alain Giraud.

Giraud spent more than a decade as chef de cuisine at the now-shuttered Citrus before becoming chef at Lavande in the Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel. After meeting the deep-pocketed Pytka, he left Lavande in 2000 and spent three years developing Bastide.

Despite the restaurant's four-star rating, Pytka decided that the elegant cuisine needed some livening up and, to the shock of many foodies, he dismissed Giraud in the spring. He snatched Lefebvre from what would have been Ludo ludo
Noun

Brit & Austral a simple board game in which players move counters forward by throwing dice [Latin: I play]

Noun 1.
 at Starwood Hotels & Resorts' W Hotel in Westwood. (A restaurant called 9 Thirty is opening in Ludo's place.)

The 33-year-old Lefebvre, who joined Bastide in July, did not return calls, but Donato Poto, Bastide's general manager, said of the review: "Everyone is doing their job. She is doing hers and we're doing ours." He declined further comment.

Restaurant owners sometimes go to extremes in response to reviews. Earlier this year, Texas restaurateur Phil Romano sued the Dallas Morning News after a positive review of his Il Mulino New York. Romano alleged that the reviewer made errors such as claiming that a dish "whispered of gorgonzola" when none was used. The suit is still pending.

After the Mobil Travel Guide dropped Philadelphia's Le Bec-Fin to four from five stars in 2000, chef/owner Georges Perrier invested $500,000 on renovations and went through several chef changes before regaining the fifth star two years later. (Pytka has just lured Le Bec-Fin's sommelier to oversee his vaunted vaunt  
v. vaunt·ed, vaunt·ing, vaunts

v.tr.
To speak boastfully of; brag about.

v.intr.
To speak boastfully; brag. See Synonyms at boast1.

n.
1.
 cellar of French wines.)

If anyone is breathing a sign of relief as a result of the dustup, it may be Innovative Dining Group, which was set to install Lefebvre at the W. But IDG IDG International Data Group
IDG Integrated Drive Generator
IDG Installation Design Guide
IDG Internet Discussion Group
IDG Inset Dielectric Guide
IDG International Dangerous Goods (mail, shipping) 
 partner Lee Maen said he didn't feel like he dodged a bullet.

Bastide's French cuisine differs from the concept IDG was developing, Maen said. "We're not chef-driven. We, as owners, have a lot to say about what's on our plates, and what's on our plates are things we like. No one goes off in a strange direction--not that he did."
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Title Annotation:Up Front
Comment:Acid reflex: Bastide gets new pan--from critic.(Up Front)
Author:Flass, Rebecca
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 8, 2004
Words:863
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