Posts Tagged ‘Boston’

Crow Trys Swimming in Mare, Comes Out Wet.

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

crow

So, as many of you many know last week was the seconded week of Boston’s singularly named Restaurant Week.  This is a time of year where Bostonians flood our most popular restaurant in droves and Chefs cry for mercy while they drain the city of booze in the after hours.  Last year my man crow and I skipped out on the semiannual running of the hungries, but this fall restraint was too much to ask, especially after I saw that North End hot-spot, Mare, was on the list.

Now, let me start with a disclaimer.  I know that you are never supposed to judge a restaurant based on a restaurant week meal.  The kitchen is over burdened, the chefs are board with the dishes that have been created more from price points than true inspiration.  The waitsaff is tired from two weeks of insanity.  I understand this.  However, this is a restaurants time to shine- to show that despite the conditions they can do good, even great,  work  and therefore expose themselves to an all new and interested clientele.  During this time it is the duty of the restaurant to put out a meal delicious enough to temp us back to cough up the full price in future, more peaceful times.   Mare simply did not achieve this.

My expectations were high of Mare.  Since living in Boston I have often passed by their quaint North End location with its chique blue and glass exterior and gazed enviously at the dining patrons.  To me, at least, Mare always seemed like the best of the North End’s modern Italian, and it has prices that indicate it deserves such accolades.  I was thrilled to see it on the Restaurant week list, excited to finally try a place I had been curious about for so long.

The disappointment started almost immediately.  Mare is small and crowded within an inch of its life, but I can excuse that as being typically authentic of the North End.  What I couldn’t excuse were the televisions (Is this TJI Fridays?)  posted in all four corners of the dining room that continuously played a tacky DVD showing aerialviews of Italy’s most famous locations.  It was almost as cheesy as the green lighting that decorated the back wall.  What had looked so clean and sophisticated from the outside looked downright tawdry within.    The service in general was very good throughout the meal, but we were sat without a copy of the restaurant week menu and had to ask for it from our server.

If you’re interested, you can peep the menu here. Looks good, right?  The man crow and I stated with a glass of Pinot and a glass of Prosecco (both yummy) and for our first courses chose the Maine Peekyote Crab Poloette, lemon caper ailoi, and bitter green salad and the thin crust pizzetta di mare with assorted seafood, fresh tomatine and parsley.   The Poloette’s were certainly the best part of the meal- crunchy on the outside and sweet and warm on the inside, but the “bitter green salad” was more of a garnish.  The Pizzetta was boring , with a bland sauce and unattractive presentation.  The seafood was fresh and good, but would have benefited from more seasoning.  Between the two of us, we had no desire to finish more than half of it.

For entrees, I chose the grilled rainbow trout, charred leeks, funghi trifolatwith whole grain mustard and ManCrow had the hand rolled ricotta gnudi, wagyu beef bolognese with shaved parmigiano.  The presentation of my trout was terrible- just a whole grilled trout on a plate with a leek on top.  No sauce, no garnish.  I didn’t even realize it was supposed to have had a mustard vinaigrette on it until I looked back at the menu.  All together it was nothing more impressive than I could have cooked at home with a trout and olive oil.  The braised leek was probably the best part of the entire dish.  ManCrow’s fancy-sounding fare was basically very dry cheese gnocchi with bolognese.  It was a very small portion with the most basic of presentation: past+sauce in a bowl.  (Remind me again why I’m paying for this?)  He claimed the small portion was made up for by the fact they the ricotta gnudi’s were little gut bombs, and then he complained about a stomach ache for the rest of the night and into this morning.

For desert, we both choose from the very limited menu, the tiramisu panna cotta with chocolate  truffle, brandy caramel sauce and savoiardi crumb.   It was merely mediocore (although probably the best course of the meal), but in the future I would point out that the flavors of tiramisu doesn’t exactly pair well with brandy caramel.  Also- the “savoiardi crumb?”  Literally, a crumb.   We left, my curiosity about Mare thoroughly quenched.  Unlike it’s examplary neighbor, Terrimia, who we visited for restaurant week a couple of years ago and which was so fantastic we’ve visited several times since, I can’t imagine ever going back to Mare.   The meal was still drastically overpriced for what we got, and had we had been paying full price, I would have been furious.  This is one location this crow will be unlikely to fly to again.

Mare on Urbanspoon

Crows Perch at Drink, and Proceed to Do Just That.

Friday, March 5th, 2010

drink.png[1]

The Boston Crows  got a girls night out last week in celebration of Riane’s visit, and boy did we do it up!  Mo, Holly and I have been simply dying to try out relatively-new hot spot Drink for what feels like ages, and this finally afforded us the opportunity.  Located in the rarely visited Fort Point neighborhood of Boston, Drink did not disappoint.  The drinks were exciting and original, the munchies were delicious and the bartenders were friendly and attentive.  We were in Crow Heaven.

Owned by Chef Barbara Lynch, the proprietor of several fabulous locations around these parts, Drink is a pretty unique concept- it is a cocktail bar without a cocktail menu.  All drinks are made custom to the taste of the drinker; you tell the bar tender what you like (example: fruity, clear liquors, with some fizz) and they whip something up.  If you don’t like it- no big deal- they’ll make you another.  There are a few “suggestion” drinks listed on a blackboard behind the bar, but they were inconspicuous enough that we didn’t even notice the list until round three.

The environment itself is warm and comforting- 3  long wooden bars with brick walls and perfectly low lighting.  Behind the bars it is mostly sterile stainless steel and stone- not a single booze bottle or mixer in sight.  Only several glasses filled with garnishes and basic bartending tools can be seen by the patrons.  The bartender’s dapper attire gives some indication of their skill- even the barbacks were in vests and ties!

We wanted to try as much as we could and between the four of us we came close to succeeding.  Mo and I started off with two vodka and champagne cocktails- hers topped off with house-made grenadine and mine with their homemade raspberry syrup.  Holly and Riane went the gin cocktail route (Holly’s was a gin and grapefruit concoction)  and after the first sips we knew we were off to a great start.

Of course, it being dinnertime and all, the crows needed to munch.  Drink has a small menu of  snacky items to compliment their cocktails.  Everything sounded delicious, and everything was reasonably priced at under $15.oo.  We wanted to try it all but finally settled on bacon wrapped dates ($9), french friens with a lemon aoli ($6?), the house cheese plate (which came with a hard and a soft cheese, citrus marmalade, a portion of salted nuts and baguette, $12) and a plate of cheesy puff pastry bites (only $2!!!!!!!!).  Everything was as satisfying as promised and we mowed down while we watched our lovely and attentive bartender prepare our second round.

Honestly, I get a little blurry on the particulars after this point, but I know that there were more drinks and that they were amazing.  After conducting a survey of the crows, here are some of the highlights:

  • A Dark and Stormy, made with Drink’s housemade (and spicy!) ginger beer
  • A Bee’s Knees; you could taste the fresh honey
  • Cucumber and Hendrick’s gin with grenadine
  • A Pink Lady- made with a raw egg white (good until it got warm)
  • a play on a whiskey sour
  • Dueling tequila drinks: one that was margarita-esque and one that tasted almost like tequila on the rocks but with a stronger smokey flavor.  (This is when it starts to get blurry)

All together, we had an amazing time at Drink, and although it was a bit to pricy to become a regular crow perch, we all agreed that the bill was very reasonable considering the damage done and the high level of service and skill that we got. (Side note:  I would highly recommend coming to drink on a weeknight as apparently it gets super crowded on the weekends, and the personal attention we got on a Tuesday was half the fun.)  Drink sets the bar so high it will be tough to find another cocktail establishment we like as much, but if you know of any, please leave suggestions in the comments!

For more information on Drink, check out the following article on boston .com: here

The Crows, Post Drink

Drink on Urbanspoon

The Delux Cafe

Sunday, January 24th, 2010
The Delux Cafe, 100 Chandler St in Boston's South End

The Delux Cafe, 100 Chandler St in Boston's South End

Friday night my ManCrow and I went out to the South End in search of comfort food on a budget and we decided to try out the Delux Cafe- a location I had only previously used as a watering hole.  Although the menu was small, we were pleasantly surprised with the goodies placed before us and I am sure that there is no place else in the neighborhood we could have eaten so good on so little.

The place was crowded at 7:30 on a Friday, so we felt lucky to immediatly score two seats at the long wooden bar.  Trying to be mindful of my bank account, I sipped a Narragansett tall boy while my more affulent ManCrow chose a Long Trail bottle.  I was surprised to see that they only had 3 beers on tap, and was bummed that none were tempting or original choices.   Maybe Delux is more about the liquor and I just didn’t get the memo, but later in my meal when I asked to finish off with a dark and stormy the bartender informed me that they don’t carry ginger beer.  Fail.  But never the less, the beer they did have was cold and the bartender quick.

We started with an order of chips and salsa and were unsure what to think when the “chips” turned out to be warm, soft tortilla pieces.  For a six dollar chip and salsa I expected more than the meager serving of salsa and sour cream with plain tortilla, but fortunately this was defiantly the nadir of the meal. For my main course I ordered a bowl of tomato basil soup and the grill cheese with portabella mushroom.  The soup was chunky and delcious and came in an enormous portion.  If served with a piece of bread it would have been a meal in and of itself!  The grill cheese was a thick, buttery mass of provolone, marinated portabella and chewy sourdough bread.  It was rich and comforting and absolutely perfect when dunked into the soup.  ManCrow ordered the pork chop, which came stuffed with apple, bacon and rosemary and was served with sides of yukon mashed potatoes and roasted carrots. He barely spoke words beyond “this is so good” for the rest of the evening.

For all the food and two rounds of beers each, our check came to around $50 before tip.  It’s worth mentioning that it might be better to hit up the Delux on a weeknight as the crowd was (surprisingly for such a funky place) dominated by the Back Bay young corporate crowd.    Despite the lame choices in draft beer (beer in general really) and less than stellar chips and salsa, our entrees were delicious and  for the value and location I certainly would go back to the Delux Cafe again.

On a random side note, I have know I have given shout outs on this blog before to one of my all time favorite cookbooks, Vegetarian Planet.  Well, I was reading the inside of the book jacket yesterday while searching for dinner inspiration and it turns out that the author, Didi Emmons, used to be the chef at the Delux Cafe!  Crazyness!

Delux Café & Lounge on Urbanspoon

Hungry Mother

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Yesterday I had the absolute pleasure of eating at one of Boston’s most buzzworthy restaurants-Hungry Mother. Nestled right in the heart of Kendall Square, HM boasts hearty, homemade Southern favorites made with seasonal fruits and veggies.


HM


My crow-beau’s birthday was the perfect opportunity for us both to enjoy Barry Maiden’s delights (Maiden was recently named one of Food and Wine’s best new chefs. Check it out here!) We started off with the Allen Benton ham and the biscuits with pepper jelly. Absolutely delicious and a great snack to hold us over while we perused the wine list. Next came the charcuterie board with pate, grilled chicken sausage, stout mustard, green tomato chutney and grilled ciabatta bread.  As a main course, Derek had the roasted chicken with the grits and gravy. I had to choose the pork loin with creamed cabbage and heirloom potatoes. After polishing off both of our plates, we knew we would be missing out if we didn’t order dessert! We each had an espresso and shared the pecan pie with bourbon ice cream and the apple bread pudding with boiled cider chantilly. After paying our bill (which was totally reasonable), Derek thanked the waitress and told her the meal was “awe-inspiring”.

I think its safe to say that we’ll be visiting Hungry Mother again. Soon, I hope.

You can view the menu, hear HM’s story, and make reservations on the website:  www.hungrymothercambridge.com

Hungry Mother on Urbanspoon