I
have been asked by people who inhabit such gourmet eateries as Happys
Tavern or Butchs Supper Club to name my very favorite dining place.
This is a compliment, since it implies that one has unfolded a
napkin somewhere besides McDonalds and a few places in Paris.
I have no hesitancy.
My favorite
dining place was Kellys Table...an exclusive, unpretentious place
run by Tom and Audrey Kelly in Chicago. It was a warm and homey place;
a euphoric combination of food and friendship. Its patrons were a sometimes
weird but always compatible group of brilliant, intelligent people who
had a sense of humor and used it.
At Kellys
Table, Tom was the Chef Supreme, the maitre d, the head cork popper.
He had a fixation. He would pursue some remote butcher shop on the far-east
side of Chicago to get a particular slab of aged filet or a select crop
of shallots, mountain grown. He also picked up, in the process, a strange
following of traffic cops. After the fourth of his dynamic martinis
it was a question of which got done first...the dinner or his tragic
tale about the dishonesty of the courts. Audrey, assisted by her youthful
family helpers, did all the work.
Any attempt
to recreate this domestic scene at Kellys Table would be incomplete
without the ultimate gustatorial gem...Toms Cherries Jubilee.
I have read many recipes for this exotic dessert; none even came close
to the Kelly version.
It was
apparent that ingredients were important. Tom would spend half a day
getting the ice cream from a bakery run by two little old ladies on
the west side of Waukegan. The cherries were hand-selected at a small
but neat fruit stand at the southern end of Western Avenue; then washed
and rinsed twice in soft water. The chafing dish was of Anaconda copper
burnished with Bon Ami. At the last moment generous bowls of ice cream
were brought from the kitchen.
The moment
of truth was approaching.
Oh, the magic of the moment! Standing back in a pose resembling Douglas
Fairbanks and his fabled sword, Tom added the final touch to the chafing
dish of sautéed cherries. No little quarter-cup of Cognac as
the plebian recipe calls for, but just about enough to fill the crank
case of a Mercedes. Without a moments hesitation he scratched
a kitchen match on the seat of his pants and touched the match to the
mess.
I may be
mixed up in my remembrance, but that second will always be timeless
in my dreams. The ignition was not a bang or a boom, but rather like
a muffled replica of the first A-bomb test at Alamogordo. The flames
leapt up like a volcano in orgasm and left a black smudge on the ceiling,
which, for all I know, is still in the old homestead.
Tom, my
favorite man for many reasons, was unperturbed. When the heat subsided
he spooned sixteen cherries and sixteen ounces of flaming cognac into
the ice cream bowls and the beautiful Kelly daughters passed them around.
Having never experienced a Kelly Cherries Jubilee, I ate the whole thing
and spoke with a lisp for a week.
Excerpted
from a letter by family friend
John Read Karel