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Sunday, March 27, 2011

Paleo Swedish – Koenigsburger Klopps


I once handed my card to a pastry chef from Durham.

"Paleo-culinary ethnography?" She laughed and walked away.

Yeah, well.
Paleo-culinary ethnography is what I call American food before it became fashionable – before the Food Network and even before Julia Child. I do try to take it seriously. I do own a dozen or so cookbooks that are older that I am. And I do stick my proboscis into them trying to excavate something interesting in order to turn back the clock. And in spite (or despite) of the levity I generate in the professional foodie community, I will endeavor to persevere.


Nosing about one of my 29 (wink, wink) year old mother's cookbooks, I happened on a recipe for Koenigsberger klopps – Swedish meatballs. This household has a fetish for nearly all things Swedish – both a Volvo and a Saab in the garage, a bottle of Absolut in the freezer, and Dux to sleep in upstairs – and this Pre-Eisenhower recipe works well steamed potatoes and green beans.

Ingredients

Meatballs


  • 1 pound ground beef
  • 1 pound ground pork
  • ½ half of a large onion, grated
  • 5 egg whites, well beaten
  • 1/3 to ½ cup breadcrumbs
  • Sal, pepper, and nutmeg to taste
Sauce

  • 3 cups water
  • ½ onion grated
  • 4 bay leaves
  • 1 tablespoon of sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of salt
  • 1 tablespoon of peppercorns
  • 1 tablespoon of allspice berries
  • ¼ cup balsamic vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon flour
  • 5 egg yolks, beaten
  • 1 lemon sliced
  • 1 tablespoon capers
Boil the first six sauce ingredients for 30 minutes, then strain and bring to a boil again. Add the meatballs in batches and cook for about 15 minute. When they're done, remove them from the water and onto a warming plate. Once all your meatballs are done add the vinegar to the water. The add the flour slowly, whisking the mixture. Slowly whisk in the egg yolks until thick. Serve the sauce over the meatballs.

Looking back at this recipe, it's easy to see why people of that generation didn't live all that long. A nice meal like this, topped off with an unfiltered Lucky Strike, is not exactly the way to make it to triple digits. Still, it does spin the clock backwards offering a glimpse of what America was like when life was simpler and we weren't so jaded; a time when men wore hats, women wore dresses and the world in general and the dinner plate in high relief specific didn't seem so dangerous.




 

Friday, March 25, 2011

That which I know not – Vimala’s Curry Blossom Cafe

I've worked in a lot of restaurants. Mediterranean. Chinese. Mexican. High-end seafood. Low-end burgers. I've sold wine by the bottle and vodka by the case. I've served falafel to vegans and prime rib to everybody else. I've waited on senators and wine critics and drunken Russians and NFL footballers. I even authored a book on how to do it: The Art of Waitering; a Practical Guide for College Students.

I know an awful lot about an awful lot of food from an awful lot of places. But one thing I don't know anything about is the cuisine of India. It's a huge hole and I need to fill it.

Indeed, India itself is a bit of a mystery. My knowledge of India is limited by my professional experience and that lives in the software universe. Some of my coders are from The Bangalore. Four Mile Mike has conference calls to Poon a few times a week. He refers to those as "Chickens and Pigs" for reasons too difficult to explain here. In summation: everything I know about India either derives from "if then, if else" function calls or strained memories of Gandhi, a movie made about a justly great man who quite famously did not eat.

Her Imperial Majesty is no knowledgeable scholar on the subject either. But she is a person Who Has Good Ideas and recently insisted that we trek to Franklin Street in Chapel Hill to Vimala's Curry Blossom Café. On the way over, she told me the back story; it was irresistible. For some 18 years, Vimala Rajendran has hosted community dinners out of her home and her food could be found all sorts of progressive events. To quote from her website: "Her food has shown up everywhere, from protests across the region to weddings and private parties to the Weaver Street Market lawn and Johnny's in Carrboro."

Her street cred established, she opened her space where Sandwich used to be. When we arrived on Saturday night, there was a line some 40 minutes packed with locals. The smells were exotic and intoxicating. When we got to the counter, we ordered and took an inside table in a corner as all the patio seating was taken. About 20 minutes passed before an avalanche of food appears at our table.

We ordered Beef Thali, Dal, Tandoori Chicken, plantains, and vegetable Samosas. Overall, everything was spicy but not terribly hot, as often happens in Indian restaurants I've experienced. Here, the Thali was rich and flavorful. Served with Dal, they complimented each other well. The Tandoori Chicken was nicely seared but still quite moist, which came as a bit of a revelation. The plantains were battered, then fried and were quite different that any others in my experience insofar as they were not sweet. Instead, the batter featured black sesame seeds and they were served with a sweet yogurt dipping sauce that was marvelous. Most interesting were the Samosas, which proved to be light and flaky yet substantial – and interesting trick for what is essentially a dumpling. Indeed, there was so much food at the table, that a good bit of it came home, which was a good thing.
There is much to recommend in Vimala's Curry Blossom. The dishes presented are perfectly simple, yet expertly prepared. There are no distractions like a pretentious setting or trend-oid waitrons. It is, in short, an exaltation of street food, which is something near and dear to my heart. It may very well serve as the opening steps in my Passage to India.

Vimala's Curry Blossom Cafe

431 W. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27516
inside the Courtyard
Phone: (919) 929-3833
E-mail: vimala@curryblossom.com

Cuisine: Indian street food done right

Rating: *****

Prices: $$

Atmosphere: Very relaxed and true to its DNA.

Noise level: Nothing out of the ordinary.

Open:

Tuesdays through Saturdays 11:30a to 2p & 5p to 9p. Come out 9p - 10p for drinks after serving hours.

Reservations: Not necessary.

Other: Counter service. Expect lines.

We rank restaurants in five categories: Extraordinary***** Excellent**** Above average*** Average** Fair*






 

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Leftovers 101 – Moroccan Rice pilaf with chicken and dried apricots

So this chicken walks into my house and asks what's for dinner. I say, "I'm not sure, will you be staying for dinner?" The chicken says "sure". So he stays for dinner. And he stays the next day. Then, he's leftovers.

Anyone can be a great culinary artiste if cost is no object and every possible ingredient is at one's fingertips. But that's not where creativity comes from. Our ancestors made more with less, as perusal of almost cookbook printed during The Depression will illustrate. (I have one that even has instructions on how to build a wood or coal fire for your cook stove.)

In the Third World, very little meat is stretched into a very satisfying family meal by adding staples, like rice and beans. This dish is an amalgamation of several recipes and whose construction was based on the ingredients at hand, save a small, $3 dollar packet of Marrakech Moroccan Spice from The Savory Spice Shop. The result is simple and easy. Think of it as 10 ingredients + 1 pan + 50 minutes = dinner.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup white rice
  • 1 quart chicken stock (you probably won't use it all)
  • ¼ cup dried apricots
  • 2 tablespoons dried cherries
  • 1 cup meripoix (dices, onions, carrots, and celery in equal amounts
  • I left over chicken breast, de-boned and coarsely chopped, about ½ pound
  • ½ cup dried English peas, soaked overnight
  • I tablespoon Marrakech Moroccan Spice blend (cinnamon, turmeric, cardamom, ginger, anise, allspice)
  • Zest of one orange
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
Technique

Heat olive oil in deep skillet with lid or Dutch oven. Add your meripoix and sauté until soft, about 5 minutes. Add rice and sauté until slightly brown (that makes the rice taste nuttier). Add 2 cups of chicken stock and drop the lid on the pan, stirring occasionally, for about 15 minutes or until mostly done. Next, stir in your chicken and your dried fruits and let cook for another 10 minutes or so. Then add the peas, the spice mix and the orange zest, stirring to blend. Remove the dish from the heat and let stand for a few minutes to let the aromatics in the spice blend and the orange zest to release their happiness and give the dish its full flavor.

Bon appétit!




 

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Seven ingredients + 25 minutes = dinner – Italian sausage and just wilted spinach

I believe in simple. Simple has made my fortune. And I raised my daughter in the Simple Fashion.

No, no, no. I can't channel Don Corleone this early in the morning. That's more for a late night, after Peter Clemenza says, "leave the gun, take the cannoli." After all the noise in my life has subsided, the world can devolve from its current 21st Century complexity and become simpler and sepia toned.

My faith in the simple is reaffirmed every time I attempt to watch a Food Network show that pits chef against chef, going mano a mano with a panoply of exotic ingredients and over the top techniques. I gnash my teeth and start fingering the remote to fund something more useful for my brain to consume.

Sure, I get that these programs are really a sort of culinary fantasy; that it's really a window into an alternative, foodie-themed universe. I fully buy into the willing suspension of disbelief that I, with the right tools and ingredients, can transform stuff brought home in plastic bags from the grocery into high art. And I can do it with the same élan in which I channel The Don: "I'll make him an offer he can't refuse".

But alas, such culinary excursions rarely happen and it usually comes down to one salient fact: it's too much trouble. Sure, I probably could do it, but I just don't want to. I want simple, as much for mental clarity as for ease of preparation. There is enough noise in my life and I just don't want to work that hard for a plate of food.

The magic number in this dish is seven. It's so simple one can watch a movie and still pull it off.

Ingredients

  • 1 large yellow onion, diced
  • Three cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 bags pre-washed spinach
  • 1 pound sweet or hot Italian sausage – I like sweet sausage, but you can do what you like. Turkey sausage would work as well.
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • Parmesan cheese to taste
  • 2 cups dried short pasta – farfalle or orecchiette works nicely
Technique

In a large pot, boil your pasta to al dente. When it's done, drain it. That's it.

In a large skillet (with a lid), sauté your onion with a bit of olive oil (yeah, I know, it's not listed in the ingredients but come on). When they're soft – maybe five minutes later – add your sausage and cook until brown, about 10 minutes. When they're done, remove and set aside to cool. At this point, add the spinach and the garlic, toss a bit to mix things up, then drop a lid on it and let it go for about five minutes. While it's wilting, cut your sausages into small, bite size pieces, maybe as thick as your little finger. Add them back to the spinach mixture, then stir in you chicken stock and let it reduce for a couple of minutes. Next, remove the pan from the heat and add the pasta to the spinach / sausage mixture. Toss with a bit of Parmesan and your favorite Italian herbs – I like the Cantanzaro Blend from The Savory Spice Shop – and drop the lid one more time for a couple of minutes to let everything get happy, then plate.

Net result: dinner for four, with two dirty pans and zero exotic ingredients or techniques. It's as simple as leaving the gun and taking the cannoli.


 

Friday, March 18, 2011

It is what it is and that’s all it is, but what it is, is my mother’s favorite – Captain Stanley’s


There is a perfect comfort in knowing exactly what to expect. One goes to The Restaurant. One orders The Usual. It arrives in The Proscribed Time. It tastes exactly like The Last Time and The Time Before.

It can be called consistency but it's really more than that. McDonald's is consistent. Wendy's is consistent. But one can't really call those restaurants. They are, in reality, small factories that churn out food and sell directly to the public.

Not that there is anything wrong with them. In traveling through strange cities on the way to someplace else for very serious reasons like business trips, they can be the difference between some minor sustenance and nothing at all. There is nothing worse than a meal of mystery food before a four hour C-level business development meeting. The sword of Damocles is a giant dollar sign and its trigger is the festering lunch one hastily ate and is desperately trying to keep down.

Sadly, I digress. This was all about her Imperial Majesty Le Grand Dame's favorite lunch in the world and this piece should center on that.

When my parents used to take us to the beach, the trip to Calabash was de rigueur; it was something we simply had to do. The first shrimp I ever ate all those years ago was a battered and fried affair. As a mere child, I remember the shrimp boats at their docks, the smells of the sea air and the ever present aroma of the fried shrimp. There were literally mountains of teeny-weeny little shrimp coming out the various dockside kitchens. Pop would pick out a promising looking place and we'd go in and order. The portion that arrived on my Dad's plate always looked like half a football. He loved it. I loved it. What's not to love?

Alas, getting that style of seafood inland – a hundred miles from the shrimpers – was something nearly impossible to contemplate in my youth. When my parents moved to Raleigh, they found this place and it solved the problem. Shrimp had been abstracted away from the ocean. There was no need to venture down Interstate 40 to back back and get The Usual..

Recollection: the first time Her Imperial Majesty and I ate there, Das Kinder was a toddler. We met the Paternals at the location in Garner. When we sat, we promptly ordered and our food arrived – steaming hot – in a little less than a minute. I remembering remarking at the time that I had waiting longing in a fast food drive thru.

This is not high end gourmet, nor is it "oh-so-trend-oid." The cuisine is old school fish camp, and very much what it's like at the hundreds of fried fish joints that dot the North and South Carolina beaches. And what is striking is that over the years is that it has been a model of consistency.


I got what I always get: Calabash-style popcorn shrimp. For those readers unfamiliar with the concept, it's essentially very small de-shelled and deveined shrimp, battered and fried in peanut oil. While not terribly healthy and certainly an acquired taste, what they serve at Captain Stanley's is as good as it gets and easily the equal of anything at the coast. My mother got what she always gets, the fired tilapia. It too was a flawless example of fish camp fare; lightly battered and perfectly fluffy. Her Imperial Majesty is not of these parts and ordered the broiled salmon. It too was a flawless execution. Everything was served with a choice of two vegetables, a seemingly bottomless basket of hush puppies and a seemingly endless river of sweet tea.

Truly ethnically Southern? You betcha'. Consistently yummy? Absolutely. High end gourmand? Nah, that would go against its DNA. No, what it is, is an institution. It stands athwart the rip tides of culinary faddishness and delivers something very near and dear to my heart: paleo-seafood. It is as simple as when I first tasted that first fried shrimp all those years ago. It has stayed perfectly true to its DNA and that's why it rates four stars in my book.

Captain Stanley's Seafood Restaurant

One location

3333 South Wilmington Street

Raleigh, NC 27603 | (919) 876-8662


Cuisine: Old school fish camp cuisine

Rating: ****

Prices: $$

Atmosphere: Very relaxed

Noise level: Nothing out of the ordinary

Open:

North Raleigh Hours:

Mon - Thurs:11:00 am-2:30 pm
   4:30 pm-8:30 pm
Fri:11:00 am-2:30 pm
   4:30 pm-9:00 pm
Sat:11:00 am-9:00 pm
Sun:11:00 am-8:00 pm


South Raleigh Hours:



Mon - Thurs:11:00 am-2:00 pm
   4:30 pm-8:30 pm
Fri:11:00 am-2:00 pm
   4:30 pm-9:00 pm
Sat: 4:00 pm-9:00 pm
Sun:Closed
Reservations: I wouldn't bother.

Other: Come hungry. Leave sated.

We rank restaurants in five categories: Extraordinary***** Excellent**** Above average*** Average** Fair*


 

Monday, March 14, 2011

Magical Goat Cheese – The Celebrity Dairy in Chatham County

Her dad bought the farm as a speculative investment years ago. When they moved there, they lived in a 10 foot by 30 foot trailer while they renovated the 1830s log cabin. They would need to as it had no indoor plumbing or modern amenities. It was, in essence, a wooden tent.

That was the genesis of the Celebrity Dairy in Chatham County, locally famous for their varieties of goat cheese which sells at area farmers markets and ends up on the menus of hot chefs throughout The Triangle.

Run by Brit and Fleming Pfann (pronounced "Fan"), the Celebrity Farm sprawls over 114 acres and features goats, chickens and even llamas. It all sounds pretty much like the perfect hippie fairy tale. Husband and wife – sick of the corporate rat race – bail out to Green Acres to make artisan goat cheese and live a neo-hippy, oh so happily and very much off the grid, ever after. It would make a great screenplay. And the beautiful thing, that's sort of what happened.



In the late 1970s, Brit was an engineer for Bell Labs working on Defense projects and commuting to Guilford Center. His wife Fleming was an artist working in textiles. He changed jobs, which exacerbated his commute from Guilford County to Research Triangle Park. All that time, he was working on the farm. One day though, there was a rumor that downsizing was coming to the company. He volunteered to be "on the list." As it happened, it worked out.


"Being laid off was great," Brit said. "I was too busy to come to work anymore."


Before the Pfanns took over the farm in the 1960s, the land was a used for subsistence farming, meaning people grow what they will eat. It sounds romantic. The reality is much harder; it's a hardscrabble life. By the 1970s, the farm had been abandoned by the owners who apparently fled to the cities for "real" jobs.

Brit and Fleming moved to the property in the late 1970s and bought goats to help clear the land. Fleming, who has a lifelong allergy to cow's milk, tried drinking goat's milk on the suggestion of a friend.


It worked.

Fleming decided that there could be other uses for Goat's Milk and decided to try her hand at making cheese, although she didn't know how to do it. This being the low tech early 1980s, she decided to do an analog document search the only way it was available: she went to the Siler City Public Library. It didn't exactly work; she was rebuffed.

"She asked the librarian for books on cheese making and was told that they only had 'proper research material' and none of that hippy stuff," Brit said with a laugh. "She was told they had research on 'genealogy'. So she went to the Pittsboro Public Library, where they did have books on cheese making."

Recipes in hand, the Pfanns started to make their now famous goat cheese. But the first forays weren't that – how to put this – tasty.

"The initial batches weren't always edible, so we feed them to the chickens," Brit said.

But perseverance prevailed and now Celebrity Diary Artisan Goat Cheeses are available at two local farmers' markets and all five local Whole Foods Markets. As of today, there are some 80 milking goats making more than 112,000 gallons of milk yearly which yields some 1,200 to 1,400 pounds of Celebrity Goat Cheese. The cheeses comes in multiple flavors, such as dill, apricot and chocolate (editorial comment
it rocks!) There's also a Bed and Breakfast for those seeking a wee bit of the rural lifestyle and a monthly dinner on the third Sunday afternoon of every month.

"It truly is a labor of love," Britt said.

The Celebrity Dairy

114 Celebrity Dairy Way

Siler City, NC 27344

Tel. (919) 742-5176, for toll free reservations call: (877) 742-5176


Cuisine: Eclectic American

Rating: *****

Prices: $$$

Atmosphere: Bucolic

Noise level: Country quiet

Open: Call for details

Reservations: Oh yeah. You can't just show up.

Other: This is a working farm, not a tourist destination. Their cheese is available at The Durham Farmer's Market, The Carrboro Farmer's Market, and all five Whole Foods locations in The Triangle.

We rank restaurants in five categories: Extraordinary***** Excellent**** Above average*** Average** Fair*


 

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Goat Cheese from Chatham County -- Celebrity Farms

Celebrity Farms is opening up its barns for visitors and for farm direct sales of their oh so fresh, oh so yummy offerings this weekend. Folks, you can't get any more fresh or any more locavoire than this. I'm sure there will be lots of baby goats available for pictures. Her Imperial Majesty, Her Imperial Majesty Junior and I will be there tomorrow. Details here:

http://www.celebritydairy.com/events/events_main.html


 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Spice is the variety of life – The Savory Spice Shop


Smell – Also called Olfaction (also known as olfactics; adjectival form: "olfactory") is the sense of smell…. For air-breathing animals, the main olfactory system detects volatile chemicals, and the accessory olfactory system detects fluid-phase chemicals.
(From Wikipedia).
There are some specific locations that a person can identify with the sense of smell alone. Certain bakeries or Italian restaurants immediately come to mind. There is pork store on Arthur Avenue in The Bronx Calabria's – that smells like no other place on Earth. The soppressatas hanging from the ceiling give it that ambiance which can never be taken away. The aroma hangs heavy in the air, and when you walk in, you are completely inundated by it. It is a cloud of happiness and the anchor of memories.

Bob and Cindy Jones understand the concept and know what it feels like. They are are the proprietors of The Savory Spice Shop in Lafayette Village on Falls of Neuse Road, in North Raleigh, which opened earlier this year. Along the walls are more than 400 spice products. If one could smell colors, this would be IMAX™ 3-D.

"I gave up my suit and tie for an apron," Bob said one recent Friday afternoon. "And I feel better about it." A former IT guy for a big multi-national, Bob faced an employment crisis after a large-ish merger landed in him in the cross-hairs of outsourcing. After much thought and some prayer, he and his wife Cindy decided to look into franchising. The results were predictable.

"My wife and I talked and we said, 'what are we going to do all day? Sit in an office and look at each other.'" Then came the Aha! moment. The Savory Spice Shop in Denver had just started to franchise and they wanted in. The results have been quite good.

"So far this year, we're working to plan," he said. "We really have been blessed"

"The spices are ground weekly," Cindy told me. "We order on Monday and we get them on Friday. Everything's fresh."

But that's just the business back story. The front story slaps you in the face when you open the door – the amazing aroma of 400+ spices and herbs that come at you. And the beauty is not necessarily in their spices but their spice blends, ready-made in jars that can turn simple ingredients into marvelous fare. No thinking required.

"The nice thing is that we're learning from our customers," Cindy said. She recounted a customer who had recently gone hunting and came back with venison. The raw deer was turned into Venison Vindaloo. "Our customers feed us."

Area chefs have discovered The Savory Spice Shop. But don't ask me who. It's a secret.

I asked Cindy the obvious question: how long had she been a foodie? She responded with a smile, and recounted travels in Italy when she was in her 20s, and that she grew up in New Jersey in an Italian family. It was the place, she said, where her mother and grandmother cooked all day. That's just what they did.

"It's is an extension of our home," she said. "It's all about entertaining, about gathering around the table for a meal. That's where families gather, at the table." She looked off for a few seconds, and then turned back. "It's a feel good place." I nodded in agreement. She's right.

As I left, I picked up some Cantanzaro Herbs – sort of an Italian answer to Herbs de Provence. I walked out of the shop, and the smells receded into memory. The regular world had returned and I was confronted with the normal smells of North Raleigh next to a five lane thoroughfare, such as that is. But it's okay, I brought a little bit of happiness home with me in a jar.

The Savory Spice Shop

Lafayette Village

8470 Honeycutt Road, Suite 108

Raleigh, NC 27615

TEL 919-900-8291


Cuisine: A World of Spices

Rating: *****

Prices: $

Atmosphere: Aromatic

Noise level: Normal retail

Open: MON. – THURS 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM; FRI: 10 AM – 7 PM; SAT 10 AM – 5PM; SUN 12 PM -4 PM

Reservations: Come on, it's retail.

Other: Ask questions. They've tasted everything in the shop.

We rank restaurants in five categories: Extraordinary***** Excellent**** Above average*** Average** Fair*








 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Alamance County and the best sandwich I’ve ever eaten – The Saxapahaw General Store


Once, when I was newspaper reporter, a colleague once explained that the name Alamance was derived from an old Indian word. It means "minimum wage".

That pretty much sums my feelings about my home; there is not much good that could possibly come out it.

As soon as I could, I left. Most of the people I know left. For that matter, most of the industry that had supported the county during my childhood left. The textile mills that used to employ half of town in my youth are long gone, decamping to places where the minimum wage is measured in cents, not dollars.

Most of the ancient old mills were either abandoned or bulldozed. A choice few, the ones with a river view, were condo-ed.

That happened in Saxapahaw.

Chef Jeff Barney
Amongst the rolling verdant hills is an old mill. Around the corner is the Saxapahaw General Store. There, you can by 93 octane and baby diapers. There's also a kitchen and in Jeff Barney's capable hands, it turns out some of the best food in The Triangle.

Yes, the best food in The Triangle. And they sell gasoline.

Her Imperial Majesty and I recently visited on an overcast Saturday and we're completely blown away. We split two sandwiches: the first was duck breast, with arugula, red onion and goat cheese with balsamic vinaigrette, the second was a sliced steak with provolone, onion and mushrooms. Served with duck fat fries, they were nothing less than spectacular. The duck was just slightly pink and perfectly balanced with the goat cheese, arugula and red onion. The steak and cheese with provolone had the right touches of everything. Almost everything appears to be locally sourced. The colors and smells of the place was a real 360 degree experience. The duck fat fries were a revelation. We sat in awed silence as we plowed through lunch. It was that good.

Is it worth the drive? Absolutely. Would I do it again? Absolutely. Would I recommend it to friends? If you live in The Triangle and have want of a great meal, wander around the rolling hills of southern Alamance County and finding your way to The Saxapahaw General Store is a no brainer.

And I can hold my head high because I can honestly say that the best sandwich I've ever eaten in my life is made in Alamance County.

The Saxapahaw General Store

1735 Sax-Beth Church Rd.

Saxapahaw, NC 27340

Phone: (336) 376-5332

http://www.saxgenstore.com/

Café Closed Mondays

Cuisine: Eclectic American

Rating: *****

Prices: $

Atmosphere: Crowded with local foodies who know

Noise level: Quick service crowded

Open: Hours: M-F 6:30-9:00; Sat 7-10 & Sun 10-8

Reservations: Nah.

Other: No table service. Order at the counter and wait. Quite a show actually. Outdoor seating is available.

We rank restaurants in five categories: Extraordinary***** Excellent**** Above average*** Average** Fair*