1. General Tso’s chicken and Hunan leg of lamb—fiery innovations at oddly spelled HUNAM in 1972 and later UNCLE TAI’S HUNAN YUAN—force wary restaurateurs to see that New Yorkers do like it spicy, peppering the way for Thai, Tex-Mex, Indian, Southwestern, and Sichuan on every block.
2. The chic of LE CIRQUE’s pasta primavera in 1975 gets even our town’s French toques to the pasta pots. Soon they are reinventing ravioli.
3. Policastro’s chewy rolls (an astonishment at CHANTERELLE in 1979) prove bread can be more than tasteless fluff. ELI’s burnt-onion ficelle follows.
4. A lot of us still thought tuna came only in cans till trying seared tuna with green peppercorns and creamy leeks at Barry and Susan Wine’s QUILTED GIRAFFE in 1982.
5. LE CIRQUE’s crème brûlée revival (1982) spawns 1,001 variations that continue to entice and repel.
6. Though New York chefs seared foie gras (often smuggled from France and Israel) throughout the seventies, the first gaggle of Hudson Valley duck livers sets off a major sizzle in 1983. No liver is safe, especially our own. Barry Wine’s sauté rides on greens wilted in foie fat and Silver Palate fruit vinegar. LUTÈCE’S André Soltner serves his with caramelized apples. At the Westbury Hotel, Daniel Boulud thrills jaded voluptuaries with poached American foie gras and grapes in carved ice ducks.
7. Savvy cheese shops were importing French goat cheese all along, but the manna of Sonoma Valley goats makes baked goat cheese on mesclun with walnut-oil vinaigrette the ritual mantra of California cooking at Jonathan Waxman’s JAMS in 1984.
8. Anne Rosenzweig’s lobster club at ARCADIA (l984) led to other fancy bites on toast: “I wanted to break barriers of luxury, to see mayonnaise dripping down the arms of Wall Street,” she says.
9. A sprig of rosemary triumphant atop a pileup of chicken in 1985 is the first hint of Alfred Portale’s architectural yearnings at GOTHAM BAR AND GRILL, but it’s his gorgeous skyscraper s