"An always-intriguing seasonal menu derived from Santa Barbara County's Wine Country and fresh ingredients, this intimate restaurant lies hidden behind a shrubbery portal in the heart of downtown. The food and service are impeccable, and an experienced staff stands ready to help coordinate by-the-glass wines for each course."
The Best Restaurants in California
Frommer's, California 2005
"These people are serious about wine and the food is creative without being over-the-top; flavors are bright and fresh."
I created bouchon to reflect my image of fine dining— the freshest ingredients, prepared with care. Excellent wines that reflect the quality and character of our region and work in concert with the cuisine. Warm, inviting ambience, service at a relaxed, leisurely pace.
the food
We source all of our ingredients using an ‘as-fresh-and-as-local-as-possible’ approach, with fish from the Santa Barbara Channel, produce from the surrounding countryside and meats and poultry from local micro-ranches.You’ll taste a difference.
the wine
We believe that Santa Barbara is producing some of the finest California Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Syrah. Other locally produced varietals will surprise you with their quality, variety and approachability.On the last page of the wine list you will find a page of forty or so Santa Barbara wines that we feature by the glass.Please ask your server for recommendations on how any of them may match up with your dinner selections.Bon Appètit!
Mitchell Sjerven, Proprietor
random details:
Dinner Nightly from 5:30 pm
we gladly prepare vegetarian items
bouchon santa barbara opened Bastille Day 1998
a non-mandatory gratuity of 20% may be added to tables of 6 or more
private dining in the cork room available for groups of 10 –20 pp
corkage is $20./750 ml (Weeknights) and $40./750ml (Fri., Sat. and Holidays) BYOB is not permitted for groups of ten or more
bouchon means wine cork in French
restaurant-quality catering for intimate dinner parties
we shop year-round at the Farmer’s Market
biographies:
Mitchell Sjerven, Proprietor
A twenty-five year restaurant veteran, Mitchell owns & operates bouchon santa barbara. His passion lies in providing an authentic, regional dining experience.
Mitchell graduated the University of California, Santa Barbara with a degree in International Relations, Political Science.As a member of the Board of Directors for the Greater Santa Barbara Lodging Association, Mitchell is very active in promoting tourism to the Santa Barbara region.
In 2000 bouchon santa barbara was selected by the State of California to be the exclusive caterer for the IMAX film “Adventures in Wild California”, representing ‘California Cuisine’ in twenty international cities.Traveling to the premiere of the film, bouchon created post-screening receptions at each IMAX venue, bringing a “Taste of California” to movie-goers around the world
With wife, Amy, daughters Madeline and Caroline, Mitchell has been a Santa Barbara resident since 1985.
Chef
Greg Murphy
Greg Murphy grew up in
Orange County, California, surrounded by eclectic tastes. His mother had
an extensive library of cookbooks, which he experimented with at an early
age. “My earliest recollections as a young boy were of my mother perusing
her cook books,” says Murphy, and attempting new dishes for the family to “expand
their horizons”. Chef Murphy attended college at the University of California,
Santa Barbara, and obtained a degree in Environmental Studies. Chef
Murphy is passionate about the environment we live in and considered a variety
of fields that would allow him to take advantage of his studies.
Ultimately, though, his love
for food and the need to express his creative side led him to the restaurant business.
“Although there were many avenues I could have pursued with my degree I kept
coming back to food. And, really, being
good stewards of our planet—be it through organic produce or sustainable
seafood —isn’t at all a stretch for an environmental studies major!”
Chef Murphy returned to school
as a student in the well-respected School of Culinary Arts at Santa Barbara
City College. “Even though I had always been comfortable in the kitchen
and had already worked in restaurants I felt the technical training in a school
environment would serve me well in tackling a professional kitchen,” states
Murphy.
Upon graduation Chef
Murphy began his career at the Wine Cask, worked under Chef John Pettitt at
Seagrass Restaurant until ultimately taking over the reins at Bouchon Santa
Barbara. Chef Murphy recognizes that today’s
diners expect more than great food. “Presentation
and flavor are obviously essential to a fine meal but a truly memorable dining experience
includes a thoughtful wine list, great ambience and warm, friendly service.
recipes (more recipes on 'Special events' page):
Roasted Tri-color Beet & Baby Carrot Salad
with Oregano vinaigrette, purple haze goat cheese, sweet onion and crushed toasted hazelnuts
Oregano vinaigrette:
1 cup EVOO (extra virgin olive oil)
¼ cup champagne vinegar
1 T. Dijon mustard
1 t. minced shallots
2 T. freshly dried oregano*
Salt & Pepper to taste
·Combine dried oregano, shallots, Dijon and vinegar in large bowl. Slowly drizzle in EVOO while whisking. Season with Salt & pepper to taste. Dressing keeps in fridge for one week.
·Roast separately each individual type of beet in 1 T. EVOO (so as to not discolor lighter beets) at 350° or until tender, then peel after cooled.
·Trim carrot topes down to ½ inch remaining and snip ‘strings’ at bottom of carrots, if any. Wash well and roast all carrots together in 1 T. EVOO at 350° or until tender. Do not peel.
While beets & carrots are roasting, you can:
·Place goat cheese in freezer for 15 minutes & crumble just prior to salad assembly.
·Shave small sweet onions on mandolin, set aside
When ready to serve:
· Quarter beets, halve carrots and toss with onions and hazelnuts with 1/3 cup oregano vinaigrette. Season with salt and pepper to taste and crumbled goat cheese over plated salad.
This salad pairs brilliantly with the 2005 Margerum ‘Purisima Mountain’ Sauvignon Blanc, enhancing the herbaceous characteristics of the dressing/earthy flavors of the beets & carrots without making the wine seem ‘vegetal’. Also, Sauvignon Blanc is considered a natural match with goat cheese and I like a lot in my salad!
Serves 4 (starter-sized salads)
1. Bourbon & Maple-Glazed Duck
with fava bean, butternut squash and applewood-smoked bacon succotash
Recipes
Duck Stock
Duck Confit
Maple Glaze
Succotash
1. Duck Stock
Duck bones
2 cups chopped carrots
2 cups chopped celery
4 cups chopped onions
4 gallons water
Preparation:
Remove duck legs and duck breast from the bird, set aside.
Roast bones in roasting pan at 450º for 1 hour or until golden—turn in 30’.
To roasting pan add water, carrots, celery, and onion
Boil and reduce heat.
Simmer for 6-8 hours, or until liquid is reduced to 2 quarts.
2. Duck Confit:
Purchase 4 duck legs and 1 lb. duck fat from reputable butcher.
Preparation:
Dry cure legs in refrigerator overnight in 1 part sugar, 2 parts salt.
Immerse legs in hot duck fat, take care not to splatter.
Add 4 dried bay leaves and 8 crushed juniper berries.
Bring to boil on stovetop, remove and put in 225° oven for 3 hours.
Set aside to cool.
3. Bourbon Maple Glaze
1 gallon bourbon whiskey
½ gallon maple syrup
¼ pound fresh thyme
Preparation:
Reduce whiskey in stainless pot (careful not to flame)
Add syrup last 3 minutes
Steep thyme for 15 minutes off heat
4. Succotash
8 oz. applewood-smoked bacon (julienne)
4 oz. leeks (julienne)
2 ears corn (cut from the cob)
8 oz. fava beans (cleaned and cooked)
1 lb. regular butternut squash
4 oz. fresh picked thyme
2 oz. heavy cream
Preparation:
Sauté bacon until properly cooked.
Add leeks, corn and butternut squash, cook thoroughly.
Add cream, thyme and season with salt and pepper to taste.
Ready to serve:
In a separate pan cook the succotash as described in the recipe and set aside (keep warm for serving).
In a cold dry pan, over medium heat, slowly render duck breast and remove from pan when completely cooked (pour off excess fat). Replace pan over fire and increase heat. Sear cooked confit leg until exterior is golden brown.
Return breast to pan, add bourbon glaze and cook until a syrup-y consistency
Finish glazed duck in the oven at 450º for 2-3 min. This will cook center slightly and heat duck. After removing breast from oven let stand for 2-3 min., then slice.
Presentation:
On the plate, place heaping mound of succotash in center, arrange duck slices around succotash. Place duck confit on top of succotash and garnish with thyme. Bon Appètit!
2. Pacific Ahi Tuna
As featured on ‘FoodNation’ with Bobby Flay (June 8, 2005)
Yield:4main dishes
Ingredients:
2 lbs.Ahi (or substitute albacore) from fresh fish market
Muscatel Vinegar
1 qt.vinegar (substitute rice wine or champagne vinegar
White Beans
2 cupsdried white beans, (soaked in 2 quarts water overnight)
½ cupwhite onion, diced
3 ea.cloves of garlic
to tasteolive oil
to tastesalt & pepper
to tastebutter
Oven-roasted tomatoes
10 ea.Roma tomatoes, sliced in half lengthwise
3 tbspgarlic, minced
2 tbsp parsley, Italian
2 tbspolive oil
Preparation:
äMaking the Muscatel vinegar reduction:Reduce over medium heat until one cup remains.
äMaking the white bean purée:Cook soaked beans in simmering pot of water with onion and garlic until soft.Strain and let moisture drain out in a warm place.Blend in food processor until smooth, slowly adding butter & olive oil.Season to taste and keep warm until ready to serve.
äRoasting the Tomatoes:Sprinkle garlic and parsley on top of halved Roma tomatoes.Drizzle with olive oil, place in oven and let roast on a low oven setting for approximately 3-4 hours around 140°.
äWhen ready to serve:Coat exterior of Ahi with herbs de Provençe and coarse salt mixture.On very hot skillet, in 3 tbsp oil, sear fish on all sides (approx. 30 seconds per side) by turning to ‘crust’ the exterior of the fish and yet keep the light purple center rare.Next, sauté some greens, asparagus or haricots verts to serve.Place mound of white bean purée just off-center on plate, slice albacore into slices and fan out around white bean puree.Add roasted tomatoes and drizzle muscatel reduction around plate and serve.
Wine Recommendations:
For the Sauvignon Blanc lover this dish presents wonderful possibilities.With an abundance of herbs, veggies and fish the Brander ‘Au Natural’ (Santa Ynez Valley) is a perfect match.Lots of acid, no oak and ready to take on this dish with zest.Those who go straight to Pinot Noir with fish these days, however, won’t be disappointed.Tuna is particularly well-suited to the earthy strains of Santa Barbara County pinots.Try the Fiddlehead, Clos Pepe or melville (Santa Rita Hills) for some wonderful wines that are earthy and fruity, but too ripe.
3. bouchon santa barbara Chocolate Cakes
1 lb.
Santa Barbara Chocolate*, chopped into rough chunks
A good Belgian substitute would be Callebaut. Valrhona (French) works well too!
A simple, yet delicious recipe for mouth-watering chocolate cake. Because of the simplicity of this dish, the highest quality chocolate and farm fresh eggs, if at all possible, are desired.
To prepare:
Melt chocolate over water bath to 104 degrees (or until liquid).
Beat eggs and sugar with whisk until fluffy, fold in melted chocolate.
Stir in flour.
Divide batter equally into 8-10 small 8oz. ramekins, buttered and sugared.
Bake 7-9 minutes and serve immediately.
Center should still be moist and gooey.
Serve with coconut ice cream (or another that sounds good to you!) and sprinkle with crushed macadamia nuts.
If desired, individual cakes can be prepared in advance and refrigerated overnight. Bake 15 minutes if chilled. If you do not have individual china ramekins aluminum muffin tins will do.
Serves 8 – 10
4. Honey-Mustard marinated Santa Ynez Venison
12 ounces
Grain:
Venison leg, boned (dinner for two)
1 cup
½ onion
Pearl barley
Red onion, small dice
2 cups
Sauce:
Water, cold unseasoned
1 cup
2 cups
¼ cup
1 t.
1 ounce
Garnish:
Port
Beef stock
Cranberries, dried
Honey
Butter
½ cup
Hazelnuts, toasted, large crush
Legumes, such as haricots verts or Blue Lake green beans make an excellent accompaniment to this dish.
Preparation:
§Marinate venison: 24 hours in advance in 2 tablespoons honey, 3 cups port and 3 tablespoons whole grain mustard.
§To make sauce:cook port until reduced by half, or until you have a thick, syrupy consistency.Then add beef stock and reduce again by ¾.Add cranberries to sauce to plump them.Finish sauce with honey and butter, set aside and keep warm until serving.
§Simmer barley: 15 minutes in water.Drain and set aside.‘Caramelize’ onions (sauté at very low temperature in olive oil) until translucent.Add to cooked barley.Set aside and keep warm.
§Cooking Venison:Coat venison with kosher or coarse salt and freshly cracked black pepper.Sear venison evenly, rolling in pan one quarter per turn so to as preserve an even cooking temperature and a beautiful dark purple ‘eye’ in the center of the loin.
§Plating:Place large mound of barley in the center of plate Cut venison against the grain in thin (¼-inch thick) slices, fanning out on top of barley mound.Drizzle sauce around mound, sprinkle crushed hazelnuts on green beans or legume of choice.
Note: You can order venison locally in the Santa Barbara area from Lazy Acres or Shalhoob Deli.
5. Tarte Tatin
Ingredients:
12 large apples, preferably granny smith
(when in season, feel free to substitute peaches— firm, so as to not add too much moisture-- or pears)
‘puff pastry’
(Puff pastry often comes in standard 10” x 15” sheets.It can be purchased in the frozen food section, Pepperidge Farms is a widely available brand.You’ll need enough to cover either one 12” skillet or ten individual 3-4” molds)
for caramel:
1 cup sugar
1 #butter, quartered
½ cup red wine
¼ cup cream
Preparation:
qMake caramel in a medium-sized sauce pan, stirring sugar with a wooden spoon until it begins to caramelize.Carefully & slowly add red wine with a measuring cup avoiding steam.Stir until liquids are combined, then carefully and slowly add cream (adding cold liquid will create steam).Add butter a quarter at a time and continue to stir until caramel is brown and ‘pourable’.Will make enough for 10 individual ‘tarte tatin’ or a large one.
For individual Tarts:
qSlice fruit into ¼”-thin wedges, set aside. Pour caramel into molds (individual ramekins or shallow china ‘cappuccino’ cups work very well) and set aside.When ready to bake, place apples on top of caramel and bake for approx 15 minutes at 350°.
qAt the same time, use a ramekin as a ‘cookie cutter’ and create individual puff pastry ‘tops’.