Press and Reviews

 
 
 

A La Carte

Leeanne Griffin

9:20 a.m. EDT, March 15, 2012

 
Foodies with a conscience, representatives from greater New Haven's top restaurants and a celebrity chef mingled at Yale Commons Wednesday night, coming together for the annual Taste of the Nation event to benefit anti-hunger organization Share Our Strength.
Tequila, Guacamole, and a Nice Ass
 
Cucos the donkey was tired. It had been a long night for the celebrity beast of burden; saddled with a blanket and a decorative tequila cask, he’d been the “it” quadruped of the party, and everyone wanted to have their picture taken with him. So many cameras flashing! So much ear-petting and neck-hugging! Where’s the hay and shut-eye? Is that too much for a non-drinking booze ambassador to ask for?
 
Well, it’s a living. Cucos was in downtown New Haven, on the expansive and quite enchanting patio of Geronimo Southwest Grill and Tequila bar, to celebrate a special occasion: the coming-out party for Geronimo’s very own boutique tequila. On that mild February evening, Herradura Double Barrel Reposada “Antiguo” joined more than 300 other tequila varieties at Geronimo – which has the largest collection in the Northeast – alongside such blue agave stars as the Herradura Seleccion Suprema, which normally sells for $42 an ounce (offered half-price that night).
 
Geronimo’s gracious co-owners, Rob Bolduc and Marc Knight, were on hand to regale visitors with stories of their trip to Jalisco, Mexico, where they sampled and selected the tequila that would be exclusively theirs. “Double barrel,” explained Rob, is literally that: the tequila is aged for 11 months in an oak barrel, making it a “reposado.” At that point it is tasted and, if selected, transferred to a new oak barrel for one more month before it is bottled and shipped. Upon tasting the resulting tequila from a rustic little cup, a souvenir for guests, it did prove to be exceptionally smooth and fine, a surprise for those of us more accustomed to over-the-counter tequilas which, when drunk in a shot, cause a spontaneous reaction, usually something like, “aaarrgh!”
 
This was sipping tequila, no doubt about it. And it turned out to be the perfect prelude to another happy surprise: the cookery of Chef Tim Scott. Geronimo’s owners have always been passionate about Southwestern cuisine, but the talented chef, who was classically trained in France and sharpened his skills at some of New Haven’s earliest trendy restaurants – Bruxelles on College Street, Gentree on York – has come on board and ratcheted the food up several notches.
 
Geronimo’s menu is an exotic read unto itself, loaded with ingredients and dishes rarely seen in this part of the country. Prickly Pear Cactus Gazpacho, Elk Chili, Lobster Enchiladas, Mahi Tacos, Chihuahua cheese and buffalo/hominy meatballs, a.k.a. “Prairie Oysters” are just a few of the tantalizing choices, which also include vegetarian options and the very vegan Quinoa Relleno, featuring a roasted poblano pepper stuffed with quinoa with Sierra Nevada black beans and smoked tomato sauce.
 
Our party started our feast with table-side guacamole, made to our liking – extra cilantro, no onions – which was simply divine (I know it will be a staple on summer nights, although we also loved dining by the adobe fireplace). We then devoured a Chorizo Salad, featuring spicy chorizo sausage on grilled red onions, alongside a perfect little salad of arugula, fresh corn salsa and more. Next, a special of Navajo Fry Bread with smoked trout, tomato, scallions, capers and fresh Mexican cheese. Finally, we trounced a tamale with buffalo brisket and jicama slaw with Hatch green chilies (from Hatch, New Mexico, the only place in the world they grow).
 
Everything we tasted was loaded with high-intensity flavors, with bright notes playing against smoldering, smoky undertones. And there was no monotony to the offerings, either -- that is, nothing tasted like anything else, which can sometimes happen at Southwestern (and Mexican) restaurants headed by less-skilled chefs.
 
The atmosphere, too, is a treat at Geronimo, with a glowing central bar and Southwestern art and artifacts adorning every surface, plus a mysterious-looking private room down a spiral staircase. Be forewarned, however, that this place jumps after dark; it’s situated on New Haven’s Crown Street, which is home to a teeming club scene on weekend nights, and there’s the inevitable overspill. So if you like your dining quiet, come early and ask for a table in the back.
 
Written by Todd Lyon. Photography by Nancy Shea.
 
 
 
 
 
 

RestaurantsCT.com CT Foodnotes

In late January, I was fortunate enough to attend a Veuve Clicquot Champagne Dinner at Geronimo Tequila Bar & Southwest Grill in New Haven.

My companion and I passed up the front steps and across the patio to the hostess station, from which we were directed to the rear dining area. There we found the bubbly free flowing and the atmosphere festive.

RestaurantsCT.com CT Foodnotes

I have vague recollections from the 1980s of shopping for Szechwan peppers and other exotic ingredients in a Chinese market that once occupied 271 Crown Street in New Haven. Time marches on, and a friendly Chinese couple with a lovely daughter and cute grandson fade in memory.

That distinctive space on Crown Street now houses Geronimo Tequila Bar & Southwest Grill.

Yale Daily News

If restaurants were named after what they do best, New Haven’s newest restaurant would be called “The Chile Pepper.” Unfortunately, this plan is just too rational, and “Geronimo” will have to serve as the moniker of the new eatery on Crown Street.

Across from Salvation Army, between High and College streets, Geronimo calls itself a “Tequila Bar and Southwest Grill.” This description couldn’t be more fitting (unless it included the word “chile” somewhere), because Geronimo is fundamentally a bar and grill spot. The food is upgraded grill fare with a Southwest flavor (chile peppers) and the bar is an imposing U-shaped structure armed to the teeth with the liquors of Mexico.