Koloman Gives New York Its First Modern Austrian Restaurant In Decades
Secessionist decor runs throughout the new Austrian restaurant.
Austrian restaurants have never had a large presence in New York, and a few have come and gone. I am, therefore, delighted that the latest iteration comes via a superb Austrian chef named Markus Glocker, previously at Bâtard, who refines traditional dishes in elegant ways that only Kurt Gutenbrunner has achieved over twenty-three year at his Wallsé in the West Village.
Markus Gucker respects Austrian culinary tradition but adds flair and levels of flavor to his food.
Glocker has a command of technique that invests every traditional dish, from asparagus soup to Wienerschnitzel, and the design and décor evokes the Vienna Secession art movement, one of whose leaders was Koloman Moser, founder of the Wiener Werkstätte workshop. The premises were most recently The Breslin, which had an English tavern motif; now, with two floors, gas lamps, geometric-patterned wallpaper and a huge clock, Koloman has the handsome ambience of a Viennese café on the Ringstrasse. The difference is that the crowd here insists on being twice as loud as in a similar venue in Vienna, so try to get one of the booths towards the rear, near the kitchen.
Koloman is big and get get very loud, but these nook banquettes are quite cozy.
The menu is of sensible size, with twelve appetizers and ten entrees. At a time when many restaurants are now charging for bread and butter, Koloman does not, instead sending out freshly baked breads of poppy seed rolls and sourdough bâtard with cultured butter of them, all of which mate splendidly with the rest of the food here.
Gougeres are cheese-rich popovers at Koloman
But by all means get the puffy gougères laced with bergkäse (mountain cheese) and red wine shallots ($15) that are as sumptuous as anything on the menu, not least when paired with the luscious duck liver parfait with sweet kracher wine gelée ($25), even though it comes with its own toasty brioche bread. Boeuf tartare studded with oxtail and tongue ($26) is a pleasant alternate to one made entirely of beef, and the chilled asparagus soup with mussels escabeche and a savory sable ($24) is as good an introduction to summer as anything you could eat this month. Correction on that: At the moment—though only while they last—Marchfeld Spargel white asparagus from the Marchfield Valley near the Danube River come with a ramp sabayon, red endive, and sourdough bread ($36).
Agnolotti of root vegetables come in a well-reduced broth
Do I sense a return to restaurants of the cheese soufflé? If Glocker's marvelous version is any indication it really should on other's menus, made with Pleasant Ridge Reserve (an American Alpine-style cheese), aged cheddar and a mushroom jam to be spooned into the center ($29). At this price, however, it is not a very large portion, more a titillation than wholly satisfying. A more ample agnolotti packed with rutabaga and springtime morels come in a lovely mahogany-colored, intense broth ($29).
Wiener Schnitzel is cooked in butter and comes crisp and tender.
And so we come to the butter-fried Schnitzel "Viennoise" ($38), which on its own is as good as any I’ve had in Vienna, but here enhanced with creamy potato salad, cucumber, lingonberries and sea buckthorn. Poached halibut is a nice light dish ($48) with spring garlic, cannellini beans and charred broccoli that gives it a pleasing smokiness.
Beautiful composed salmon en croûte is delicate and as colorful as it is delicious.
You might expect that "salmon en croûte" would come wrapped in a coat of pastry, but at Kolomon it comes as a dainty looking cake of pastry sheets and thickly sliced salmon with green parsley-scallop mousse, with pickled cucumber, a little red roe, sunchoke and a gorgeous beetroot-beurre rouge ($51). I don't know why Glocker flies his salmon in all the way from Australia, but it does have better flavor than most farm-raised brands. Well-cut slabs of rose-colored, crisp skinned roasted duck breast enjoy the sweet tang of oranges, braised celtuce and crispy einkorn grain ($49).
Nockerl is Austria's version of Baked Alaska.
Austria's desserts had enormous influence on European pastry-making, and it becomes clear why when you taste Emiko Chisholm's updated classics ($15) that include an apple-rich, not too sweet strüdel dotted with rum raisins and toasted hazelnuts and a dollop of frozen buttermilk. Duck eggs add to the usual richness of crème brûlée with the added appeal of caramelized pineapple and mint, while the epitome of Austro-Hungarian goodness is evident in her rendering of the Esterhaźy Torte (named after Austrian Prince Paul III Anton Esterházy de Galántha) with an almond and hazelnut sponge cake and lemon verbena sherbet.
My favorite of all is simply called on the menu "Soufflé for two," but its more evocative name is Salzburger Nockerl, which is that charming city's version of our baked Alaska. With some lingonberry jam and rum-laced vanilla ice cream, this is a guilty pleasure, mostly meringue fluff but a dessert to make everyone smile.
Beverage director Katja Schnargl, last seen at Le Bernardin, together with three sommeliers, has put together a balanced wine list with a proud number of the best Austrian bottlings of varietals like Grüner-Veltliner Blaufränkisch and Furmint. There is an admirable number of half-bottles, too.
Reading my descriptions you can tell that Glocker and Chisolm are always adding little extras to each dish, something surprising but always providing more flavor and texture. As noted, Austrian cuisine is hardly ubiquitous in New York, and Austrian cuisine of this high order is not found anywhere in the city except at Koloman.
KOLOMAN
16 west 29th street
212-790-8970
Since Koloman is adjacent to a hotel, it serves Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily.