Wednesday, April 23, 2008

UNDER THE RADAR DINING

Milwaukee has an adventurous new flavor for its palate: its own underground restaurant. That’s about as much as I can tell you. The crew behind the venture has asked me to withhold who they are, when their next event is, location(s) and even the name their secret café goes by. I can tell you, however, that the name is a reference to Emma Goldman’s journals. They’ll be referred to here as “Café X.”

Underground restaurants have sprung up worldwide and, in the United States, range from the Blind Pig outside of San Francisco to the NY Bite Club in the heart of New York City. Blind Pig offers a different theme for each opening and one of the locations they use is a two-car garage furnished with booths that were thrown out from a closed-down Chinese restaurant. It’s run by two chefs—who go by the aliases Ro Smith and Mo Smythe—who cook outside the garage in a tent. The fee is $15 to $30, depending on the number of courses.

Bite Club is a members-only joint located in a Manhattan commercial loft building. Members are asked not to talk about the restaurant in the hallway and are charged $150 a head. Thankfully, Café X has a much more laid-back attitude. Started by enthusiastic vegan chefs, they charged a more Milwaukee price of $10 at their last opening. The staff includes two or three chefs and a handful of volunteers.

One of the chefs recalled visiting underground restaurants in Olympia, Wash., and Portland, Ore. “I felt so overwhelmed by how amazing it was, and when the opportunity came up to do it here in Milwaukee, I was totally excited,” she said.

Underground restaurants are sometimes more a state of mind than an actual location, and so Café X rotates between the homes of its crew members. On the night of Feb. 24, it took place in an East Side building with apartment loft spaces. A doorman at the ground level asked people if they had arrived for Café X, and then directed them upstairs. Pushing through a door, you found yourself in a lobby featuring displays of paintings by a local artist—also anonymous.

Walking through a beaded curtain into the next room, you gave a donation for admittance to the culinary speak-easy. Candlelit tables were set up throughout the loft, and I grabbed a seat with my friend and her young daughter next to the open kitchen.

The Café X staff was in high gear, slicing and stuffing, pulling trays of food out of the oven to restock the buffet-style food line.

Vegan Menu

This was the third time Café X had set up shop, having done it twice in the summer in the vein of an outdoor, neighborhood barbecue. They said that they plan to carry on “as long as they can.” Everything is vegan, and on the night that I attended, one of the chefs stated, “This is our most ambitious menu yet.” The offerings included grilled tempeh, corn pudding, stuffed mushrooms, crostinis, seitan in chile-chocolate mole, lemon-roasted asparagus, toasted sesame slaw and, for dessert, cakes and truffles—rich truffles. When my friend’s kid grabbed quite a few, a chef gave her mom a friendly warning. “You might want to take some of those home,” she said. “They’re very rich. I don’t think you can eat them all in one sitting. “I had a friend who ate a bunch and he was like, ‘Ohhhh,’” she added, holding her stomach in mock pain.

Preparing the Meal

The preparation for this meal started Friday night with a major grocery run. “We try to use local and organic ingredients as much as we possibly can,” one chef said. The morning before the event is when the prep work begins. The chefs spend about seven hours on desserts, chop 37 pounds of vegetables, boil 15 pounds of seitan, move the food to storage and organize the space.

They begin the real cooking the morning of—lots of decorating, marinating, stuffing a hundred mushrooms, washing and assembling—fearful that everything might not be in place by the 6 p.m. dinner bell. Café X has advertised through e-mail lists and fliers. This strategy attracted about 50 people in February—mostly Riverwest punks, activists and artists.

The atmosphere is friendly, and one of the secret chefs stated the ultimate inspiration: “It is obviously a labor of love, and we get that love back when we see people enjoying themselves and the food.”

Originally appeared in the Shepherd Express

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

DANNY PRICE AND THE LOOSE CHANGE

“Sinnerman, where you gonna run to? Oh, sinnerman, where you gonna run to? Where you gonna run to, all on that day?” –traditional song

WELL I RUN TO THE ROCK- PLEASE HIDE ME!
“Let’s run through it one more time, then listen to the CD.” Danny Price tells this to his band, The Loose Change. They are practicing a set of mostly covers for a St. Patrick’s Day show at a Riverwest bar known simply as The Pub. They are trying to get down a cover of a traditional song, “Sinnerman”, made popular by Nina Simone. It is an intensely soulful rolling piece.
“When I first heard her version of ‘Sinnerman’, there wasn’t another song I listened to for a week.” Price says of the piece.
The Loose Change, Paul Setser, keyboard, Ben Rousseau, bass, Russ Nadasdy, guitar and Ken Zanowski, drums, are crowded in Setser’s living room in his second floor flat. The drum set is set up by the couch, the keyboard by the TV, and everyone somewhere between. All the members have a glass of wine within arms reach.
They jam through the song pretty reasonably, and then listen to Simone’s version. Paul plays along lightly on the keyboard and Ken adds a couple cymbal splashes. They start into the song, faster this time, and add a break down where the band claps the rhythm with their hands. They run through the song one more time and they have it down tightly. They then run through a couple more covers, “Suspicious Minds” by Elvis, and the traditional Irish drinking song “Nancy Whiskey”, which is sure to get the crowd singing along.

SO I RUN TO THE RIVER, IT WAS BLEEDIN’- ALL ON THAT DAY
Danny Price grew up listening to pop music and country, and in his adolescence discovered punk and metal.
“Now I try to incorporate all those different styles that I grew up loving into our music.” Price says. Price looks and sings like a sailor who just got leave off a ship of the damned. When he sings, his face is concerned, as if he is feeling all the pain he sings about.
Danny, Paul, and Ken played the first Loose Change show as a trio on Christmas Eve, 2006 at the Circle A. The three also play in the burlesque themed band Eat The Mystery. Smoky torch singer Angie Livermore sings with Eat The Mystery and often joins in with the Loose Change at shows. Ben and Russ joined the band a year later.

OH I RUN TO THE SEA, IT WAS BOILIN’- ALL ON THAT DAY
“I said POWER (Power lord!) POWER (Power Lord!) POWER!” The Loose Change are performing “Sinnerman” at The Pub, Danny Price screaming “Power!” over and over, The Loose Change clapping and singing “Power Lord!” in response. They are shoved in a corner, more cramped than they are in the living room. The crowd is festive for St.Patty’s Day; everyone is shoulder to shoulder, clinking glasses and enjoying the music.

This article appeared in a slightly diffrent form in the Shepherd Express