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A marriage of equals

A marriage of equals


 

 

I was curious when I learned that Jeremy Sewall, chef-owner of Lineage in Brookline, was going to be running the kitchen at Eastern Standard. Was there a message here? Another bistro casualty? Trouble in the kitchen at Eastern Standard? Thankfully, the answer was none of the above. Two success stories added together equals one big win.

Almost since the day it opened, Eastern Standard has been packing them in at the bar and on the patio, with parties queuing up for those burgundy booths both before and after the game. In only four years, Eastern Standard has established its niche as a scene, a breakthrough bar, and a damned good place to eat. “Comfortable food with polish” is how proprietor Garrett Harker describes it. But Harker, a hospitality perfectionist, wants more. “Restaurants are all about balance. We could just ride the bar, but I have aspirations for our food to be as good as our bar.” Enter Jeremy Sewall.

Sewall is a serious pro. He trained right, went to the right schools, worked at the right five-star hotels and French bistros and San Francisco icons. When he came to Boston to help open Great Bay, the GB team was nearly agog at his ability, especially with seafood. With his wife Lisa, an equally revered pastry chef, he owns Lineage, a gem that Brookliners almost hate to share with friends in Boston proper because they don’t want it overrun. Sewall has a rep as a chef’s chef —time spent in his kitchen becomes part of a young cook’s own lineage. And it hardly seems like he’s in need of a moonlighting gig: Sewall’s Lineage had its best year yet in 2008 and its best months to date in February and January.

Why, then, is he taking command of the Eastern Standard kitchen? “I like building teams,” explains Sewell. “I brought 10 people with me from San Francisco when I relocated to Boston for Great Bay. I’ve built another solid team at Lineage, and coming to Eastern Standard lets me take on another great group of young cooks.” Harker sees Sewall as having the potential to be a “mentor” to his kitchen corps. “I’ve spent a lot of time ‘loving’ the front of the house at Eastern Standard. That’s what I know how to do. I know exactly how to motivate people whose main job is hospitality and service. But I’m not a chef. Jeremy is the guy who can motivate and train the guys on the line. He’ll make time spent on the line at Eastern Standard feel like graduate school for our kitchen team.”

The mutual admiration society between Harker and Sewall dates back to when Sewall cooked at Great Bay and Eastern Standard was in its infancy. “Jeremy has no hard edges,” says Harker. “He was the guy down the end of the corridor who could loan us something when we ran short or give us brutal advice when we asked for it. A colleague from the get-go.”

What’s this really about? Harker recognizes that inching Eastern Standard up a notch to destination-dining status means
making an investment in his kitchen. Eastern Standard’s basic menu won’t change — “it will just get better,” Harker says. “We’ll keep the same price point, the same kind of brasserie menu.” Sewall is making an investment, too. As organized and calm as he is, there are still only 24 hours in most days. He says he’ll be shuttling between the two restaurants several times daily (they are “1.1 miles apart”). Both guys are wagering that one plus one will add up to a lot more than two.

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A food writer’s favorite culinary indulgences

If ever there was a time of year to be a little indulgent, it’s December. After all, isn’t it payback for having to slog through 31 short, dark, chilly days? In that spirit, I’ve put together my personal top 10 of micro, mini, and maxi indulgences for the month. The key to making the most out of these small pleasures is conscious ceremony. You don’t just eat the great, juicy cheeseburger on the run, or slice off cold chunks of artisanal cheese before it comes to room temperature runny-ness. You construct the ambience carefully, hold the bite in your mouth, marvel over it, rhapsodically describe it, and thus transform a small moment of sensual pleasure into a big helping of self-love.

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Feeding Frenzy: St. Alphonzo’s Kitchen, Legal Sea Foods, B&G Oysters, and Eastern Standard

Feeding Frenzy: St. Alphonzo’s Kitchen, Legal Sea Foods, B&G Oysters, and Eastern Standard


NEWS FROM the South (Boston, that is): Peter Irving and Natasha Kanieff have reinvented their comfort-food hideaway, Potbellies Kitchen. It's now called St. Alphonzo's Kitchen ; the new name comes from a Frank Zappa tune, "St. Alphonzo's...

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