Toronto Popup (Twitter: @Toronto_PopUp, Facebook: Toronto Popup) featured ESÉ two Sundays ago at Monarch Tavern. The $40 five-course dinner, with optional wine or beer pairings, evolved around Mexican small plates or antojitos ("little cravings"). Below is a recap of the ESÉ Antojitos dinner:
Peter double checking his eggs before they are served.
UNO
ARPEGE EGG
Coddled yolk, housemade chorizo, goat cheese mash, tortilla spear
Toronto Popup founder, Juliana, with Ryan and Peter giving a toast to start the evening off right.
DOS
POUTINE CON YUCCA
Yucca frites, beef brisket, ancho, huitacoche gravy, queso
Wine: Earth & Sky Pinot Noir, VQA
Beer: Beau's SMoking Banana Peels
TRES
TACO DE JAMAICA
Sauteed hibiscus flowers, onions, ancho, cojita, chopped avocado, handpressed corn tortilla
POLLO FRITO
Fried chicken wing, mole sauce
JACKFRUIT ROJO
Braised jackfruit in three-chili sauce, corn nuts, cilantro, onions, housemade taqueria sauce
Wine: Robert Mondavi Woodbridge Sauv. Blanc
Beer: Mill Street Palomar Chipotle-Lime Ale
CUATRO
COCHINITA PIBIL
Slow roasted pork shoulder braised in achiote and citrus, poblano rice, pickled onions
Wine: Gnarly Head Cabernet Sauvignon
Beer: Great Lakes No Chance With Miranda
CINQO
TOMALITO + SAFFRON HORCHATA ICE CREAM
Sweet corncake, dulce de leche, edible flowers, saffron, horchata ice cream, canela
This was a wonderful dinner from start to finish. I especially enjoyed arpege egg...it was a very pleasing start to the meal. Gently and lightly cooked, the egg had layers of flavours and textures that complemented each other really well - from the creamy goat cheese mash on top to the rich chorizo in the middle all the way to the soft egg at the bottom. Very well done. I also loved the playful presentation. The next course was ESÉ's spin on the poutine. Yucca, a starchy tuberous root that originated in South America, has a drier texture and a milder taste to the popular potato. Topped with braised beef brisket, which was tender and lovely, I thought the overall dish could use more robust flavours...perhaps more of the huitacoche gravy and queso? Complete with crispy skin, very juicy meat and thick mole, the chicken wing in the third course was incredible. I also appreciated the use of such unique and interesting ingredients in both tacos (i.e. hibiscus and jackfruit). Next up was a hefty plate of braised pork shoulder on a bed of fluffy green poblano rice. Finished with slivers of pickled onion, this dish was a great ending to our savoury courses. My second favourite course of the night, after the arpege egg, is the dessert. Baked in a water-bath, this corncake was moist, sweet, and loaded with fresh corn flavour. With a texture similar to a cake-y cornbread, it was seriously delicious with the horchata ice cream and the light drizzle of dulce de leche.
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