New York Magazine – July 22, 2019

(coco) #1
52 new york | july 22–august 4, 2019

PHOTOGRAPH: SCOTT HEINS FOR NEW YORK MAGAZINE

The Fulton

food


Edited by
Rob Patronite and
Robin Raisfeld

key: The rating scale of 0 to 100 reflects our editors’ appraisals of all the tangible and intangible factors that make a restaurant or bar great—or terrible—regardless of price.

On the Waterfront


Globally accented seafood meets picturesque coastal
setting at Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s latest.
by adam platt

S


ure, there are a few things
that might cause a bilious skeptic to
raise an eyebrow (or two), and
maybe even emit a sad, resigned
sigh, when planning a first visit to Jean-
Georges Vongerichten’s ambitious new
downtown seafood restaurant, the Fulton.
Like many large-scale projects around
Manhattan these days, the 200-plus-seat
restaurant is situated in a new real-estate
development, in this case at the
end of the refurbished Pier 17
down by the old South Street Sea-
port. There will be a food hall in
this boxy, somewhat antiseptic
mall-like structure one day, along
with other enticements (yes, Mr.
Chang will be opening a restau-
rant too), but right now the entrance is a
little hard to locate (it’s obscured by vari-
ous construction projects, not to mention
that rumbling Mad Max flyway known as
the FDR Drive), and when you arrive for
dinner, you might find yourself wandering
up and down escalators, like I did, through
crowds of dazed-looking thrill seekers and
tourists, before you sit down to eat.
As anyone who’s followed his long and
storied career knows, Jean-Georges has a
knack for taking tired old formulas

(French cooking, Asian fusion, farm to
table, etc.) and imbuing them with his par-
ticular elevated sensibility and style, and
this new exercise in mall branding turns
out to be a little different from all the oth-
ers. The large, double-floor space has been
fitted out with aqua-green banquettes and
buoy-shaped lights, among other nautical
touches, and it occupies a prime spot at
the front of the pier. There’s an alfresco
area where you can contemplate a
variety of eclectic raw-bar treats
and crudi as sea breezes waft
around, and from the well-situ-
ated tables in- and outside of the
restaurant, you can gaze at the full
span of the Brooklyn and Manhat-
tan bridges, as well as south,
toward the harbor, where the ferries and
sailboats are cutting to and fro.
“I almost feel like I’m on vacation,”
someone said during one of my visits, as
we looked south down the harbor and
then up again at the great bridges turning
pink in the evening sun. Indeed, for a
front-row view of the Fourth of July fire-
works, the restaurant was charging a
hotel-level $375 per seat (which included
food and drink). Being a Jean-Georges
franchise, the Fulton’s menu is filled with

discreetly exotic touches from around the
globe. Our places were set with chop-
sticks, and during the early, crudo portion
of dinner, we sampled deep-sea red
prawns from Spain, served with their
whiskery heads on and an elegant Asian-
style dipping sauce made from fermented
soybeans; long, chewy razor clams from
Maine spritzed with lime juice and chile;
and delicious little nickels of delicately
sliced scallops, laid out on their silvery,
moon-shaped shells with a garnish of torn
shiso leaf and jalapeño.
“This is the only Manhattan clam
chowder I’ve ever eaten that didn’t taste
like the inside of a rusty tomato can,” one
local chowder aficionado said after expe-
riencing the excellent house chowder at
the Fulton, which the kitchen constructs
with littlenecks and choppings of celery,
carrots, and potatoes, all cooked down in
a tomato broth brightened with Thai
chile pepper. That other tired local war-
horse Long Island fluke crudo is enliv-
ened with Sichuan buds, fresh mint, and
a habanero vinaigrette, among other
things. The warm, gently pulverized octo-
pus tentacle is an almost perfect iteration
of this great Mediterranean dish, and if
you call for a helping of bouchot mussels,
you’ll find that they come with a small
mound of black Chinese rice on the side,
which you’re instructed to stir into the
rich, lemongrass-infused broth once a
modest number of shells have been
cleared from the bowl.
A few of the entrées at this elaborate sea-
food shack turned out to be more of a mixed
bag, however. The aïoli-laden fish stew

IMPRESSIVE^88
The Fulton
89 South St.,
at Beekman St.
212-838-1200
thefulton.nyc
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