Oklahoma Magazine July 2021

Page 136

TA S T E | FIR S T BI T E

JUMP ON THE WAGON

Basque is a team effort. There’s Zach Pittman, who designed a duck entrée that has, as one small component, a Mexicanstyle molé that takes ten hours to prepare. Morgan Barkley and Emily Price, those superlative bakers, have input on a lot of dishes. They make the fabulous pillowy squid ink bread, as well as the brioche that accompanies the decadent foie gras torchon. They have also become line cooks. “I would never tell Morgan and Emily: ‘Do these five pastry dishes,’” says Donovan. “I’d describe the vision, the culture, the vibe, and they’d focus their strengths and develop the recipes themselves. I wrote the menu but I never told anyone, ‘this is the recipe to use.’ I’d tell Zach what I was looking for in a dish, he’d create a recipe, and then we’d refine it together. Amelia and I decide in what direction we’re sailing, but it’s the crew that hoists the sails, maintains the engines, runs the boat.” It’s a group effort and yet... “I’ve worked in so many different places,” says Donovan, “and this one comes straight from the heart. What we have in Basque is a style that’s very personal to me. As I was devising our dishes, a lifetime’s knowledge, things I didn’t even know I knew popped into the mix. I’d find myself reliving memories from Spain and my Tia Pol days, my life’s highlights. Our dishes are simple, though the techniques we use are complex. We take a Above: Owner Amelia few ingredients, Eesley pours Ameztoi season properly Txakolina 2020 from a Basque Perrone. and cook them From cast iron roasted well. This is ribeye to fingerling who I am as a potatoes and stuffed chef.” piquillo peppers, Basque has it all. Photos by Stephanie Phillips

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OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | JULY 2021

BRIAN SCHWARTZ

Being from Tulsa, I grew up around a great selection of “classic burgers” in town. So when I began splitting my time between Tulsa and OKC, I knew I needed to find a local place to satisfy my cravings. I sampled through some great choices and found that my husband was right; my favorite would come from a spot right down the street from our home. The Patty Wagon was initially opened in 2011 as a food truck before transitioning to a brick-and-mortar restaurant a year later. Sadly, Bryce Musick, the original owner responsible for the dreamy, housemade sauces and insistence on using only 100% local, grass-fed certified Angus beef, passed away after a long battle with brain cancer. As fate would have it, Kris Standridge-Pederson was at the perfect point in her life to make a career change. She was so impressed by the food that she took the leap from accounting to food service and bought the restaurant. Today, you’ll find the same quality ingredients and home-made specialty sauces (the “Mustard Lovers” and “Horseradish Mayonnaise” are my favorites) that made the restaurant a success from the beginning. From their signature burgers and sandwiches to lighter options, there’s something for everyone, including vegetarians. They offer a wide selection of add-ons, including hatch chiles, extra-thick bacon and housemade chili. In addition, they offer five flavors of oldfashioned, hand-dipped shakes. For those who want something specific, the “build-your-own” option is perfect. Weekly specials keep the menu interesting, and whatever you do, don’t skip the onion rings! AMANDA JANE SIMCOE

Photo courtesy Patty Wagon

lot of thought, time and research into making sure that ingredients, techniques and tastes are truly Spanish. Donovan, a lucky man, once spent weeks backpacking around the Basque region, eating all the way. Still, quality is the No. 1 goal. “When I first got the job at Tia Pol, I was terrified,” recalls Donovan. “I’m from North Carolina and I had to create six new Spanish dishes every day. But then, instead of worrying about how authentic my specials were, I started making good, creative dishes. People come for good food.” Basque strikes a happy medium between creativity and authenticity. One dish might have octopus imported from Spain, sous-vided then grilled and served with pine nuts and Spanish olives on skewers. But the traditional dish that inspired it, pulpo a la Gallega, features octopus boiled in a huge cauldron. Grilled is tastier. The city of Barcelona also inspired another menu item – a ham and cheese sandwich Donovan named Bikini, just because a popular nightclub in Barcelona serves a sandwich with the same name. But, as Eesley is quick to point out, their sandwich is extremely classic to the Basque region and uses the finest Spanish Serrano ham and Manchego cheese. Another dish epitomizes Donovan’s approach. When making their version of the classic Basque dish chipirones in su tinta, he opted for fried calamari because, if they used the authentic sauteed squid, no one would like it. The original dish uses squid ink, rice and onion; Donovan’s uses these same ingredients, but in different ways. The rice is rice flour and the ink is used in the sauce. “I like to think that our dish is unique,” he says. “It respects Basque culture but it’s our own. I always tell the staff the history of the classic dish behind each of our recipes. I believe that the more knowledge you have, the better you’ll be. You never lose the thirst for knowledge.”

TA S T E | LO C AL F L AVOR


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