See What's Cooking in San Jose RELAX MAGAZINE Aug/Sept 2007
Relax Magazine Aug/Sept 2007
See What's Cooking in San Jose by Ruth Carlson
See What’s Cooking in San Jose
By: Ruth and Rich Carlson
San Jose overtook San Francisco in population years ago and now the capital of Silicon Valley is taking on the city’s culinary status. Thanks to a diverse population, the highest disposable income in the country, and a cultural renaissance, San Jose is becoming a dining destination. To find your way to San Jose, just follow your nose.
Foodies are gathering at Santana Row, an outdoor mall in the live/work European style. Builders imported ancient stone remnants of cathedrals from France and Spain and surrounded them with public squares where old men gather to play chess, yummy mommies teach their babies how to walk and businesspeople check their email. As you’d expect in Silicon Valley, most restaurants and public spaces are wired.
Santana Row residents live on the second floor of Mediterranean-style pastel condominiums while the street level is dedicated to shops and restaurants. Its home to high-end designers like Tod’s, Gucci and Burberry, (psst, H and M is soon to open for the more budget minded), but from the beginning, restaurants have been the runaway success. Thanks to warm days and nights, (San Francisco’s fog may be romantic but it’s chilly), Santana Row resembles an Italian village with diners at sidewalk cafes for a front row seat to the parade of young women with purse dogs teetering on high heels, couples holding hands and laughing friends debating where to eat.
There are restaurants for every palate and budget, all representing the diverse cultures of the Valley. Antica’s thin crust potato pizza, Straits Singapore-style grilled salmon wrapped in banana leaves, and French pomme frites at the Left Bank tempt you for dinner while the Vintage Wine Bar offers cheese plates and wine tastings to you’re your appetite. You’d expect wine tasting on Santana Row but the latest rage is tequila tasting. El Jardin is an outdoor patio in the Mexican style with 240 kinds of pure agave tequila – the largest collection in Northern California. Aficionados claim tequila has as much subtly and complexity as wine.
If you’re having too much fun to leave Santana Row, check into the Hotel Valencia where high touch luxury meets high tech. The Santa Cruz mountains form a dramatic background to the Cielo deck, where you can enjoy live music and gather around an open fire pit after sunset. The hotel’s V-bar attracts the fashionistas on martini and manicure evenings.
Come down to earth at the Farmers Market held every Sunday, rain or shine, from 10 to 3 on the main promenade. Local farmers cart in fresh flowers, organic produce and homemade goat cheese, so you can take a little bit of Santana Row home with you.
While Santana Row is the newest addition to the South Bay’s culinary scene, the downtown has been reinventing itself. Formerly apricot and prune orchards, the city center has retained its small town atmosphere and in fact San Jose is consistently rated one of the safest big cities in the U.S. It’s easy to walk to all the major spots: the Convention Center, the Museum of Art, City Hall, the Tech Museum and numerous ethnic restaurants.
Start your exploration at The historic Sainte Claire Hotel. Built in 1926 at the height of the jazz age, it caused Will Rogers to comment, “Look like here hotel outgrew the town.” The town has finally caught up. Larkspur Properties recently spent six million dollars to restore The Sainte Claire to its original glory. The Grande Hotel, designed by the same architecture firm behind the Mark Hopkins and the St. Francis hotels in San Francisco, once again resembles an Italian Palazzo with elaborate grillwork, arched doorways and painted ceilings. The stuffed monkeys for sale in the lobby are a reminder of the hotel’s eccentric past. The original owners owned a pet monkey called Bobo that had his own room and bathroom. His favorite pastime was wandering down the hallways, unscrewing light bulbs and flushing them down his toilet!
Hotel guests have a front row seat of the Caesar Chavez Park where toddlers run through sprinklers on hot summer days and San Jose State University College students read textbooks in between stealing kisses. The hotel’s restaurant, Il Fornaio, is popular with tourists and locals alike who come for the wood oven pizzas, rotisserie chicken and the fresh baked olive and rosemary bread, which is also available in the adjoining bakery.
A newcomer to the San Jose dining scene was preceded by an international reputation. The legendary chef Michael Mina opened the sleek Arcadia across the street from The Sainte Claire. When Al Gore made a recent stop in San Jose to promote environmental issues, he extended his stay to have lunch at Arcadia. No word on whether he ordered the signature lobster corn dog on the end of a popsicle stick, or Mina’s version of popcorn; organic corn tossed with black truffle and chives.
If you’re in the mood for Southwestern Asian food, E&O trading company offers traditional dishes with a twist. Don’t miss the Indonesian corn fritters and pomegranate margaritas.
Walk off dessert by visiting the Tech Museum of Innovation. The mango-colored walls are your first clue this is not your usual staid museum. Truly interactive, it encourages visitors to become innovators by designing a rollercoaster, watching a hurricane form, or experience an undersea adventure in the Imax dome theater.
Technically Parcel 104 is not in San Jose but i t’s worth the short drive to Santa Clara. Celebrity chef Bradley Ogden’s inspiration is in a strange location, right off Highway 101 next to a Marriott Hotel. But as soon as you step through the door, you’ll be tempted to check your cell phone and laptop. Plush carpeting, gentle lighting, muted tones and an open wood fireplace invite you to pull up a leather chair and relax. Parcel 104 used to be a pear orchard and the chef still works with local farmers to nab the best organic produce, which determines the daily menu. The chef lets the fresh ingredients speak for themselves. Start with the caramelized onion flat bread and if it’s on the menu, order the lobster-morel risotto, rich and briny at the same time. Follow it with the "sampler plate" of desserts: tiny tastes of satiny crème brulee, French toast, a gilded tapioca pudding and watermelon agua fresca. Order the wine flight for the presentation alone. A candelabra type arrangement with flutes containing 2 ounces of different wines and champagnes is a fun way to learn more about pairing wine and food.
While you’re in the neighborhood visit the Intel Museum and discover the history of Silicon Valley, including the origins of the computer chip.
It’s becoming more difficult to score a reservation at San Jose’s top tier restaurants, an indication that the economy is picking up. Once again, venture capitalists and inventors are drawing plans on restaurant napkins and sealing deals over dinner. Energy is rumored to be the next “gold rush” and while no one knows how long this latest incarnation of the Valley will last, San Jose’s innovative cuisine can help fuel and inspire tomorrow’s leaders.
-END- Details: San Jose Convention and Visitors Bureau:
Sanjose.org Santana Row: wwww.Santanarow.com
Hotel Valencia: www.hotelvalencia.com
The Sainte Claire Hotel: www.thesainteclaire.com
Arcadia restaurant: www.michelmina.net
The Tech Museum of Innovation: www.thetech.org
Parcel 104: www.Parcel104.com
Intel Museum: www.intel.com/museum
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