James Beard medal James Beard Foundation Nominee 2010

Cabrito

(212) 929-5050
Biscuits & Gravy

50 Carmine Street
Between Bedford St & Bleecker St
New York, NY 10014
(212) 929-5050

View Menu

Lunch Sun-Mon: 12:00PM-11:00PM
Tues-Sat: 12:00PM-1:00AM

Brunch Sat-Sun: 12:00PM-4:00PM

Dinner Sun-Mon: 12:00PM-11:00PM
Tues-Sat: 12:00PM-1:00AM


Review

Neighborhood Downtown East, Greenwich Village

Cuisine Mexican

Price $$$

Directions Subway | Driving

Website www.cabritonyc.com


Shanks for the Memories

There is no question that Au Pied de Cochon in Montreal is one of North America’s greatest restaurants. As its name indicates, there are a lot of piggy amputees limping around Canada who have sacrificed limbs for our dining pleasure. The chef/owner of that restaurant is a lunatic named Martin Picard whose pig, duck and foie gras induced creations are gorgeously illustrated in the Au pied de Cochon Album Cookbook, which I highly recommend (spring for the hardcover with DVD so you don’t miss Picard and his cronies dining naked at the restaurant and their drunken attempts to reassemble an entire pig by placing the preparations of its various anatomical parts on a feasting table).

David Schuttenberg, the chef at Cabrito (formerly of Fatty Crab, which also owns Cabrito), admitted to me that he has never been to Au Pied de Cochon, but he was so inspired by the album’s recipe for Foie Gras Stuffed Pigs’ Feet that he had to adapt it to Mexican cuisine.

The original recipe is an involved process. First, the shank portion of an entire trotter is partially deboned with a hacksaw. The shank meat is browned with mushrooms and onions to make a stuffing, which is packed into the deboned shank and threaded shut. The whole trotter is then slowly cooked sous vide over several hours. Next, the cooked, stuffed trotter is brushed with egg and mustard, coated with breadcrumbs and cooked in a buttered skillet. Picard then throws layers of seared foie gras on top (as he tends to do with everything) for effect.

Schuttenberg said he was faithful to Picard’s recipe and preparation (down to the hacksaw), but to bring the dish south of the border and make it “A Pata de Cerdo,” he added housemade chorizo to the stuffing. Sautéed chorizo and cubed leg meat are cooked separately with onion, garlic and Serrano peppers, then mixed with almonds, cilantro, chipotle chilies, panko breadcrumbs and mescal-soaked raisins. The stuffed trotter is braised in stock for 12 hours, refrigerated for 12 hours to set, then breaded, fried, baked and plated on shredded lettuce with tortillas and a side of cotija-topped Soupy Beans. Instead of foie gras, Schuttenberg piles on housemade pickled jalapeños, which cut the dish’s unctuous fattiness.

I recommend you get to Cabrito fast. The dish is a special this Saturday but they only serve four a night (unless they can find a hog bred with more than four legs). By the way, Cabrito has some great happy hour deals on booze and tacos: “The Fatty Fix” (beer and bourbon, $12) got me in the proper frame of mind and the Taco Lengua ($3) blew away its counterpart at my standby, Tehuitzingo in Hell’s Kitchen. The eponymous Goat Belly Taco ($3), however, was the evening’s only disappointment.

Perhaps they should change the name of the place to “A Pata de Cerdo.”

Food Lowdown

Chef David Schuttenberg

Owner: Zak Pelaccio

Drink Notes:
Great selection of tequilas.

Other Notes:

Happy Hour/Late Night Menu Mon-Fri 4:00PM-7:00PM, Thu-Sat 11:00PM-2:00AM

Always Planning

AlwaysThirsty Picks
Little Branch

Features

What Meal?

  • Dinner
  • Drinks & Food
  • Late Lunch
  • -- Until 3:30pm
  • Late Night
  • -- Until Midnight

What Food?

  • Food for Sharing
  • Mixology

What Else?

  • Will Definitely Wait

What Occasion?

  • Bar Scene
  • Before You Go Out
  • Date Place
  • Double Date
  • HipsterFirstDate
  • Group Dining
  • Guys' Night Out

What Feel?

  • Cool
  • Flat Screens Included
  • Fun
  • Hipster Hangout
  • Tasting Bar
  • Tiny

More about the Restaurant

Related Links

* NY Times (1.28.09)