Wednesday, December 19, 2007

New Restaurant - Square Root Cafe



I'm in Vegas through the weekend, but while I was at the airport I got this email from the owners of a new cafe opening up on the corner of Myrtle and Classon:

We are opening a cafe in January

January 1st we are hosting a complimentary (AKA Free) buffet brunch
featuring our favorite dishes. The free buffet is open to everyone

Come spend a lazy afternoon with us and recover from your New Years Eve
celebrations

We hope you can join us between 1pm-5pm

Happy Holidays,

Eda + Joe

This is right down the street from me, so I'm really looking forward to it. I'm not sure how easy it will be for me to get to a brunch on New Year's Day, but I'm certainly going to try.

Information:

Square Root Cafe
584 Myrtle Avenue
Corner of Classon
718.230.7077
www.squarerootcafe.com

Monday, December 17, 2007

Once Again to Olea for Brunch


I know, I know. I need to change up where I go to brunch, especially with so many great places in the 'nabe. Next time I promise some place new, but we headed back to Olea once before before my dad and stepmom headed out of town. They'd heard our praise of the Savory Parmesan French Toast, and we couldn't deny them.



Two orders of the French toast later, along with a Spanish omelette and the cleverly-named Green Eggs and Lamb, and we had ourselves a brunch.



My green eggs weren't as good as I'd hoped they'd be, and I regretted not getting the French toast again. The Spanish omelette didn't disappoint, though.

Information:

Olea
171 Lafayette Ave
Brooklyn, NY
718.643.7003

Google Map

The River Café

I've heard stories about The River Café, usually filled with superlatives. I wasn't sure it would live up to its reputation, but last Saturday we made the trek out to Dumbo to find out what all the fuss was about.

The first thing that strikes you about the joint is how much it seems like an oasis. The surrounding neighborhood isn't much to write home about, and it makes you wonder just where the hell you're trying to get to that's so important. Once you turn the corner in to the valet circle, though, it's like entering a completely different world, especially with all the lights they had up on the surrounding trees. The Brooklyn Bridge towers above you, making for a pretty striking experience as you enter the restaurant.

We had reservations for 6, and the main dining area was surprisingly empty when we showed up. I'm glad we got there when we did, since we ended up getting a table right next to the window. The dining room is actually built out over the East River - it's like actually eating on the water. The bridge rises above you and stretches over to Manhattan, the skyline basically filling your view. One great thing about how the room is designed: there are mirrors at eye-level all around you, so no matter where you look, you catch a glimpse of the river and skyline. Ok, enough about the dining area, let's talk about the food!

The River Café offers a price-fixed menu. After bringing you a small apéritif of a truffle chicken salad, you're given the menu and instructions to choose one appetizer and one entrée. They also offered appetizer and entrée specials, and afterwards you given given a choice of desserts.

We started out well, each ordering a different appetizer.

I had the yellowfin tuna, which was seared with a foie gras stuffing and served with a black truffle vinaigrette. There seemed to be an awful lot of foie gras on the appetizer menu (three different dishes by my count), but this one was the only one any of us had. The combination of flavors was really exceptional, and I highly recommend it.

The special appetizer was lobster ravioli and scallops with a cream sauce, and unfortunately I didn't get a great picture of it. It was as good as it sounds, though.

My father had the buffalo steak tartare, and his won our award for "Best Appetizer." it's quite a production, as you can see. The waiter will gleefully turn the dish in to an incredible mix of flavors, right at the table. It was very rich, so I'd recommend pairing it with a lighter entrée, which my father did.

For our main course, the four of us were less varied, splitting equally between the Branzino Fillet (Mediterranean sea bass, chorizo and shrimp "stuffing", smoked tomato petals, petit zucchini, and a charred lemon confit), and the special, which was a lobster tail served inside a hollowed-out pumpkin with sauteed cabbage and a kind of pumpkin mousse. I'm really not doing it justice with the description, so just check out the picture. While I somewhat regret the fact that we only had two different entrées between the four of us, I don't think any of us would have traded what we ordered for anything else - both dishes were that good.

For dessert we went back to a variety, since we knew everyone would be trying everyone else's. Everything was great, but I think my goat cheese cheesecake carried the day. The Chocolate Marquis Brooklyn Bridge certainly took home the award for "Most Striking Presentation," arriving with an actual chocolate bridge decorating the plate.

The River Cafe ended up being one of those dining experiences that I'll always remember. It really is something special, and while it's expensive, it's worth going to at least once.

Information:

The River Café
1 Water Street
Brooklyn, NY
718.522.5200

Google Map

To Il Torchio Once More!

I'm finally getting around to posting about all the eating out I did while I had family in town last weekend. I was unable to join them the first night they were here, but Mick took them to Tamboril and everyone agreed it was pretty great. No pictures, though, because apparently if I'm not there, there's no reason to document it. One nice thing about that night was what they brought home for me. I got a text from them at the restaurant asking if I'd like them to bring anything back, and if so, what. I said just bring me something spicy! The chef ended up making me a shrimp, spinach, and rice dish that was off the menu that turned out to be exactly what I needed. Spicy as hell and not too heavy. So that was Thursday.



On Friday we debated between Il Torchio and Graziella's. Actually, that's a lie, since we initially debated between Graziella's and the Stonehome Wine Bar. We decided on the latter, only to drive down there and discover a fourty-five minute to an hour wait for a table. That certainly wouldn't do, so we went with plan C: Il Torchio.

This was my third time there, and I've yet to have anything but a great meal. We went through three or four bottles of wine, a few different tapas, a cheese plate, and an entrée for each of us.

I had the Saffron Linguine, which has clams, calamari, and pepperoncini in a white wine sauce. Out of everything I've ever had here, this was the most disappointing. Not because it wasn't good - it was - but because there was so little of it. It seemed like there was only half a portion of pasta, especially when compared to the giant heaping bowls every other dish seems to consist of.




Among other things we ordered were the Penne "Il Torchio," penne pasta in a plum tomato sauce with bufala mozarella, the Taglioni, and the Risotto Del Giorno. Not a bad dish in the bunch, there.

One last quick note: our waitress accidentally spilled some water during the meal, and the staff was not only quick to clean everything up, but offered us free desserts for our trouble. Among other things, we tried the Cantuccini Con Vinsanto, a biscotti-like almond cookie (the cantuccini) served with Vinsanto, a sweet, muscat-like dessert wine. It came highly recommended, and with good reason.

Information:

Il Torchio
458 Myrtle Ave
Brooklyn, NY
718.422.1122

Google Map

Thursday, December 13, 2007

I'm Still Alive!

Due to some crazy Life™ happenings over the last week or so, I've been unable to post. I did get an email or three from a few of you out there, and that was really sweet. I actually have three posts I have to make about dining at Il Torchio last Friday, the amazing River Cafe on Saturday, and another brunch at Olea on Sunday. Lots and lots of pics of very yummy food.


One quick thing worth noting - I received this gift pack (there's no way to link to it directly that i can find, but I'm referring to the 12-bottle gift pack) from Sherry Lehman as a Christmas gift, and it's pretty fantastic. I'm not going to do a rundown of each bottle, but so far we've really liked every one we've tried. We're going to pick out a few that we really liked and get a case or two of each, I think. It's a pretty great value and makes a good gift for any wine lovers you know.

I'm hoping to bang out the late weekend posts today or tomorrow. Thanks for checking in, even though there's nothign worthwhile to see.

Here's a preview of the River Cafe post: Go.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Wines of the Night


Pretty good


Less good

Both were bought from our good friends at Gnarly Vines. I was a little disappointed in the Bordeaux, as the 2005's are supposed to be transcendent. This one in particular wasn't that great, but we'll definitely try more.

Saturday, December 1, 2007

67 Burger

After last night I didn't think I could handle any more red meat. It turns out I was wrong.

After not getting a chance to eat all day, I pulled myself away from work for a while to get out of the house and get some air. I originally thought I'd walk over to Quizno's on Myrtle, but when I passed by I decided I wasn't really in the mood for it. I walked pretty far down Myrtle, considering each restaurant I passed, but nothing really jumped out at me. I did seriously consider Maggie Brown, but I wasn't positive I really wanted a burger yet.

I did get to pop in Barking Brown for the first time, though. Cute little shop with some really nice hats. Hats kick ass.

Anyway, after walking almost all of the way to Fort Greene Park, I hung a left and walked down to Lafayette. Briefly considered Olea, but passed on that. By this point I had burger on the brain and I was heading for 67 Burger, a joint I'd never gotten a chance to go in.

I didn't have my phone or camera with me, so you'll have to forgive the lack of pictures.

Let's go over what I didn't like about 67 Burger first: this is an expensive burger joint. I got a burger - their signature "67 Burger" - fries, and a diet coke, and it ran me $15. That seems a bit steep for a burger and fries, personally. My only other complaint was that the fries didn't seem to have much, if any, salt on them, and there were no salt shakers on the table.

Ok, enough nitpicking, on to the good stuff: this is a fantastic burger. I got mine medium, and it was on the rare side of medium, which was fine with me. I usually order burgers medium unless I trust the place to do medium rare justice, and these guys have earned my trust. The 67 burger is a good size patty with bacon and blue cheese, and like all burgers comes with lettuce, tomato, and onion. It wasn't long for this world, as I pretty much inhaled it, pausing only to turn the pages of the copy of The Onion I was reading. It's a pretty messy eat, but the fries did a great job of picking up anything that dropped to the plate.

The fries were pretty great, minus my salt caveat. They weren't soggy or too greasy, and they came to the table hot enough to kill a man.

The diet coke was a diet coke.

67 Burger is awesome. Better than Five Guys? I'm not sure, but they're still really good, and much closer to me than 5 Guys, so I'm more likely to go.

Now, I really need to go run a mile or three before I kill myself with red meat. I really should've gotten a turkey burger, but whatever.

Information:

67 Burger
67 Lafayette Ave
Brooklyn, NY
718.797.7150
http://67burger.com

Google Map