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Fork

Guess What’s Going To Be On The Menu At Fork?

ForkAsparagus

“Ever wonder what $1,000 worth of asparagus looks like?”

~@EliKulp

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Serious Farm To Table Action At Fork

ForkBroccoli

“Wild flowering broccoli rabe, picked at 10:22am this morning, on the menu tonight.”

~@EliKulp

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About Last Night: Hop Chef

Posted by Foobooz on April 24th, 2013

NewHopChef2

Southwark’s Nick Macri wowed the judges last night with his  “You Can Win Friends with Meat Salad,” an ode to Homer Simpson. Where most of the chefs chose one pairing principle (simple pairing, incorporation, mimicking, story telling and experimental), Macri included all five in his Ommegang Hennepin-based dish and that was enough for the win. But the coppa with ginger-pickled chiles, grains of paradise bread crumbs, ballpark nuts, and orange-coriander-cured sauce wasn’t the only dish that impressed. JG Domestic’s Yun Fuentes won the People’s Choice with his duck arepa and Ommegang Rare Vos glaze. And Fork’s Eli Kulp created a first-of-its-kind treat in his Crackerjack-topped beer rye pretzels.

If you were there, you know how good everything was. If you weren’t, the best we can offer you are pictures, shot by COOK photographer and Friend of Foobooz, Yoni Nimrod.

Enjoy…

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The Old-School Excellence of Fork

Posted by Foobooz on April 1st, 2013

fork-surf-clam-crudo

Trey Popp reviews Fork, the 15-year old dining institution in Old City that, thanks to New York import, Eli Kulp, is suddenly as fresh as anywhere in the city.

Kulp can cook, no doubt. Barely a week into his tenure, he put out a split-personality guinea hen that would go down as the best entrée I’d eaten in a year. The thighs were done up as fried nuggets with hot sauce; the breasts had a mysterious depth—and crackling skin—born of dry aging, complemented by a nose-tingling mustard oil, crème fraîche, and sweet pear and apple marbles that riveted me to the last bite.

Kulp does even better by duck. He hangs the carcasses in cold air for a week, spends another week Peking-ifying them—ballooning the skins with an air compressor, dipping them in a boiling vinegar solution, powdering them with baking soda, glazing them with maltose—and then veers sharply away from China, cooking the breasts medium rare rather than to death.

Three Stars – Excellent

Restaurant Review: Fork [Philadelphia Magazine]
Fork [Official Site]

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Eli Kulp Would Like You To Try Some Bread

Posted by Jason Sheehan on March 26th, 2013

ForkBread

Specifically, some squid ink sponge bread with toasted seaweed butter. Or maybe a bit of beet volkornbrot with sunflower seeds, dehydrated roasted beets, rye berries and smoked beet butter.

Because, seriously, the 49 other menus chef  Eli Kulp has already written for Fork (and Fork etc.) aren’t enough, so now he has to go and get weird with the bread service?

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A Tease of Philly Cooks Participants

Posted by Foobooz on January 22nd, 2013

 philly-cooks-week

Last week we told you how Philly Cooks is all new this year. The event has turned into a week-long celebration of Philadelphia’s top kitchens and culinary masters. Today we’re sharing just some of the restaurants that will be participating in the Philly Cooks Big Event, set for Thursday, February 28th.

Among the hand-picked restaurants »

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Fork Debuts New Winter Cocktail List

Posted by Foobooz on January 4th, 2013

Since chef Eli Kulp has arrived at Fork he has been quite busy recreating the restaurant and producing menu after new menu. So it’s no surprise that Fork bar manager Guy Smith has a new winter cocktail of his own. The menu is broken down into three sections, Bubbly, Citrus and Spirituous with cocktail highlights including Aperol with orange bitters and sparkling wine; Bourbon with Fernet Branca, mint, grapefruit and Peychaud’s bitters and in the Spirituous category, Scotch with Drambuie, Campari, rhubarb bitters and burnt orange.

Cocktails range from $11 to $13 and will change with the seasons.

See the full cocktail list and bar snacks too »

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On The Menu Today At Fork

Country Time Farms porchetta sandwich. Looks way better than that Wawa hoagie you were thinking about…

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Gastronaut: New York State of Mind

Posted by Jason Sheehan on December 6th, 2012

Philly has been luring Manhattanites away from the Big Apple for years. Now we’re taking its chefs—and concepts—as well.

For decades, Manhattan has been a kind of protected game preserve for chefs and foodies, a rarified environment where restaurateurs with big names could lure in enough of the monied trade to make the cripplingly high rents and off-the-charts food costs work with $300 tasting menus and $18 cheeseburgers. And because the biggest names in the game opened there, the best crews flocked to them. The best suppliers. It was a system that worked only because every piece of it depended on the willing suspension of all good sense, and a kind of universal acceptance by the people of Manhattan that they were living (and dining) in the greatest food city on earth.

Continue reading the Gastronaut »

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The Forest And The Trees At Fork

We were watching when this mural by Anthony DeMelas was being made. Now it’s finally on the wall at Fork.

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