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A Dining Room of Visual and Culinary Delights

12/04/2009
by Joe Bonwich

Dining at Monarch these days is something like visiting the Impressionist galleries at the St. Louis Art Museum or attending this weekend's Brahms concerts at Powell Hall. You'll do just fine if you just merely sit back and enjoy the experience on a basic sensory level.

But if you make the extra effort to discern the various layers of harmony, contrast, complement and texture, the evening rises above a simple great meal to something more transcendent.

The artist behind it is chef Josh Galliano, a Louisiana native with a culinary pedigree that includes a diploma from Le Cordon Bleu, a European tour with Michelin-starred restaurants and a return to his native state at the renowned Commander's Palace in New Orleans.

Galliano wandered up the river several years ago to take a job as chef de cuisine at Larry Forgione's An American Place downtown, moving over to helm Monarch's kitchen last year.
Each item on the dinner menu is presented as an ingredient list, the primary element in bold. It allows Galliano to style the presentations without any preconceived notions. And without exception, the visual appeal is dazzling.

Sometimes it's intricate, as with an appetizer terrine ($11) made up of contrasting stripes of foie gras and beef, set at an angle to the grill marks in a piece of brioche and ornamented with dots of fig-flavored balsamic vinegar, a smear of fig preserves and a nest of quick-pickled red cabbage. The visual complements are striking, but the various elements also play together nicely, with the sweet fig flavors enhancing the foie while the beef adds a slightly bigger flavor and the cabbage contributes a hint of tang.

And sometimes it comes from a narrower palette, such as a swirl of deep purple from an elderberry coulis set in the golden-orange center of a butternut squash soup ($8). A touch of maple adds a depth to the sweetness, while crisped chicken cracklins stand in for bacon.

Galliano's nod to the season was an off-menu duo of venison, a perfect loin coupled with a croquette that resembled a ground-venison hash.

He also catered to the old-fashioned meat-and-potatoes crowd with a new-fashioned butcher steak ($30), unexpectedly tender for a shoulder cut. Mushrooms showed up in the steak's crusting, in a side of sautéed mushrooms and in a hearty sauce described as mushroom ketchup.
Desserts continued the equal emphasis on visuals and flavors, as with another terrine, this one alternating passion fruit and Camembert in something of a cheesecake texture.

The PB&J added a touch of whimsy, positioning a log of peanut butter semifreddo on a bed of crumbled dark-chocolate soil, with Concord grape gels providing the J element and pools of bacon-infused honey there if for no other reason than to prove that bacon improves just about everything.

It's not exactly cheap, but a $40, four-course weeknight tasting menu includes one of two offerings from the cold appetizer, hot appetizer, entree and dessert courses, knocking about $15 off the list price if they'd been ordered separately. An additional $20 buys you four generous pours of matched wines.

The quality of service matched that of the food, both on a broad basis and with subtle touches. I need to point out that my anonymity was compromised on both visits, but it appeared that every table in the main dining room was receiving equal attention.

That room, by the way, is my major objection to the current state of Monarch. It's beige and relatively bland. And not all tables are lighted equally, making it difficult to appreciate the kitchen's visual artistry.

The restaurant's website also needs some updating: It positions the cuisine as focusing on French, Asian and American Southwest influences, an approach that has clearly been modified by Galliano's incorporation of his Louisiana favorites.

Galliano is one of a closely knit group of young chefs who, in the past few years, either migrated here or came home, in the process changing the face of the local food scene. In his case, he married a local girl and has a son, so I'm hoping his wanderings are over and he'll be in St. Louis for the long run.

7401 Manchester Road — 314-644-3995 — monarchrestaurant.com — Menu: Thoughtful flavor combinations and striking presentations from eclectic influences, including Louisiana and Mediterranean specialties from the chef's background — Smoking: No — Hours: 5-11:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday

Posted on Wednesday, December 2, 2009