Thursday, April 9, 2015

Blue Hill at Stone Barns Review

Overall rating: 98

Food rating: 95

Blue Hill at Stone Barns: An amazing dining experience


I'd been hearing that Blue Hill at Stone Barns was the best restaurant in Westchester, where we travel fairly often, but had been unable to get a reservation. Then, a couple of days before we were heading down I checked and found an opening for dinner and snapped it up.

The Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture is a non-profit center created by David Rockefeller on land from the Rockefeller estate. Much of the food comes from the working farm, its greenhouse, and surrounding farms.

Reaching Stone Barns is pretty easy, but getting to the parking area at twilight was relatively unmarked and involved a fair number of twisty roads. Once there, we were met by a valet to park the car. You then walk through an open court with surrounded by stone buildings to reach the restaurant. It's a really beautiful space. We didn't take pictures, so I am stealing from the Internet:


The dress code is jacket and tie for men. Once we entered we were offered a chance to either go to our table or sit first at the bar and have drinks. We chose to go to the table, which was in a gorgeous dining room (another stolen picture):


The tables are spaced far apart, and the acoustics make it easy to talk privately. There were an incredibly large number of servers for the number of guests, and so we were very well attended to.

You could easily imagine this feeling stuffy and formal, but it didn't. Everything and everyone felt comfortable and welcoming. I ordered a drink that was basically an old fashioned made in birch wood, which added a birch beer flavor. Unusual and wonderful.

There is no menu at Blue Hill. Food just starts arriving once they check to make sure there are no dietary intolerances. Most courses involve just once piece of food for each guest, and there were 25 or more courses. These ranged from an initial piece of lettuce with some dressing on it, to venison, to dried herring. At one point our table was taken to a separate building (that used to be the manure storage on the farm), where we had some amazing bread with a couple of different accompaniments. I ordered a glass of wine that was at the lower end of the wine prices, but was really delicious.

The foods were unusual and delicious, and the setting and service made it the best restaurant experience I've ever had.

The prices matched the experience: $198 per person before drinks, tax, and tip.

I don't think I can do the restaurant justice in this review, and the expense is enough that it's hard to imagine going back for quite awhile, but if you are in Westchester and want one of the best dining experiences you will ever have, go to Blue Hill at Stone Barns.