Posts

Public access

In the US cable systems are required by law to reserve a certain number of channels for so-called public-access and community programs. Think crazy old cat lady ranting and raving, or cronies of local politicians, usually the left-wing fringe, pushing whatever bizarre agenda they have, whether it is nimbyism, conspiracy theories or advocacy of positions so extreme they don’t find other outlets. I passed by the offices of one of San Francisco’s public access channels on Market Street, and they certainly seem quite posh.

Reusing those channels for Internet access would serve the ostensible purpose of those programs, public participation, far better than giving a bunch of lunatics a non-interactive, one-to-many broadcast soapbox.

Virtue is its own punishment

Even cardinal virtues can become vices when pushed to extremes. Justice untempered with mercy becomes draconian and oppressive. Courage without justice leads to the likes of Otto Skorzeny. Temperance without humility leads to self-righteousness.

The Moss Room

Another recently opened restaurant, this one in the new Academy of Sciences museum in Golden Gate Park. The restaurant itself is in the south wing (to the right when facing the main entrance), it is a bit tricky to find as they don’t have proper signage yet. You need to purchase admission if you are having lunch, but not for dinner. You can easily find parking around in the evening, just keep in mind parking is forbidden after 10PM, making reservations after 8PM more costly because parking in the museum garage.

The restaurant itself is in the basement floor and the decor is lackluster, just a wall covered in moss that gave the room its name. The overhead lights in the handblown glass are incandescent bulbs, a bit disappointing as you would expect a place that makes a big deal of sustainability to use CFL or LED lighting.

I had the smoked trout salad with fingerling potatoes, quail egg and horseradish as a starter. A variant on the classic French bistro dish hareng pommes à l’huile, it is competently executed but that dish mostly emphasises the ingredients and does not showcase the chef’s style. The main course was cavatini with wine-braised duck sugo, which was superb, the duck moist and tangy, the cavatini (small rolled tube-like pasta filled with ricotta and parmesan) complemented the sugo perfectly. It reminded me of a similar dish made with lamb I had at Zaré in Napa. The dessert was a chocolate torte with walnut-cocoa nib sablés. The shortbread were delicate and crumbly, and the torte itself a welcome change from the ubiquitous flourless chocolate cakes, with its two alternating textures of cake and ganache.

The service was good, friendly and attentionate, yet inobtrusive. Sadly, it seems this restaurant did not get the memo about the tanking economy and how menu prices should trend downwards. At $57 for three courses, this is definitely on the high end. It needs to go down at least $15 before I can unreservedly recommend it.