
Archive for July, 2009
July 31st, 2009, 11:28 am by Jess Harter
Mickey’s Hangover, the ultra-casual Scottsdale nightclub and breakfast spot, has closed.
Mickey’s featured a basement-like decor with worn-out couches and coffee tables.
But the kitchen produced some fine pub grub, and Mickey’s was a popular after-hours destination for a late-night meal.
Signature items included “Almost Famous” Cincinnati chili cheese dogs, “Fat Boy” burgers, “Fat Chick” chicken sandwiches and cheese fries (pictured).
Drink specials included buckets of cans of Schlitz beer and four flavors of Mad Dog 20/20.
Just two months ago, owner Randy Smith closed his other Scottsdale nightclub, the upscale Six.
A Mickey’s farewell party will be held tonight on the rooftop patio at nearby Acme Bar & Grill in Scottsdale.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Mickey's Hangover | 2 Comments »
July 30th, 2009, 10:34 pm by Jess Harter
“Food, Inc.,” a new documentary about the nation’s food industry, should be required viewing for every American.
The 93-minute film, which opens Friday at Harkins Camelview in Scottsdale, enlightens, angers, inspires, repulses and saddens.
And, filmmaker Robert Kenner hopes, forever changes the way you look at food.
Kenner sets the stage with the doc’s opening line: “The way we eat has changed more in the last 50 years than in the previous 10,000 …”
Then he launches a brutally blunt exploration of the consequences — most cleverly hidden from consumers — of having the majority of food in this country now produced by just a handful of giant corporations.
Big Food, Kenner contends, started with the birth of fast food, particularly McDonald’s, in the 1950s.
Today, McDonald’s is the world’s largest purchaser of ground beef and potatoes, and one of the largest purchasers of pork, chicken, tomatoes, lettuce and apples.
So when the Golden Arches wants its Big Macs in San Diego to taste exactly the same as its Big Macs in Boston, the food industry is forced to accommodate.
And even those who never set food in a fast-food or chain restaurant are mostly stuck buying food produced by the same system at their local supermarkets.
Interviewing food-industry gadflies like Eric Schlosser (“Fast Food Nation”) and Michael Pollan (“The Omnivore’s Dilemma’), “Food, Inc.” makes a litany of charges, including:
• Concentrated animal feeding operations have resulted in chickens so heavy from being biologically “redesigned” they can’t stand up out of their own feces. Cattle are ground up with their own manure.
• Toothless regulatory agencies like the FDA and USDA are headed by politically appointed former food-industry execs. According to the film, the FDA conducted 50,000 inspections in 1972, but just 9,184 in 2006.
• Corporations like the chemical giant Monsanto allowed to patent crops like soybeans, effectively creating a monopoly — permitted by a Supreme Court ruling written by ex-Monsanto attorney Clarence Thomas.
• The food industry successfully lobbying for passage of so-called “veggie libel laws,” such as one that makes it a felony in Colorado to disparage beef. In several states, it’s seeking to make it illegal to publish any photo of an industrial food operation.
The film’s most emotional punch, however, is delivered by food advocate Barbara Kowalcyk (pictured at left), whose 2-year-old son Kevin died from E. coli poisoning after eating a hamburger in 2001.
Listening to the mother describe the agony of her son’s final days is heartbreaking. Learning that the plant had discovered the E. coli but didn’t recall the meat is infuriating.
“We put faith in our government to protect us, and we’re not being protected at the most basic level,” Kowalcyk says.
Kowalcyk helped write Kevin’s Law to give power to the USDA to shut down plants that repeatedly produce contaminated meat.
I not sure what’s more disheartening: That such a law doesn’t already exist, or that Congress refuses to pass Kevin’s Law now.
“Food, Inc.” does have its bright spots, though. It notes that sales of organic food products are growing at approximately 20 percent each year.
And, it argues, the power and influence of Big Food is impossible to sustain. The current food system simply requires too much gasoline for production and transportation.
And, so far, no corporation has been able to figure out how to grow more oil.
(”Food, Inc.” is rated PG for some thematic material and disturbing images.)
Posted in: Uncategorized • Movies | 2 Comments »
July 30th, 2009, 11:58 am by Jess Harter
Native New Yorker is celebrating its 30th anniversary today by giving away free chicken wings: Stop in any of its 24 Valley locations to get six free wings with the purchase of any beverage.
The offer is dine-in only — no to-go orders.
Posted in: Paradise Valley • Valleywide • Native New Yorker | 1 Comment »
July 29th, 2009, 9:13 am by Jess Harter
Jamba Juice has extended its popular “buy one smoothie, get one free” offer until Aug. 9. All you need to do is download and print this coupon.
Posted in: Uncategorized | Post a Comment »
July 29th, 2009, 9:06 am by Jess Harter
It’s been a tough year for restaurants. Now we know how tough.
According to a report from the NPD Group, a leading market research company, there are 4,000 fewer restaurants in the United States than a year ago.
Fine dining was the segment hit hardest, and almost all the category’s losses were among independent fine-dining restaurants.You could see it play out locally with the closings of such indies as Tapino, Sea Saw, Fine’s Cellar and, most recently, Canal.
Fine-dining chains, on the other hand, actually saw fairly nice increases.
The other big category loser over the past year was family restaurants, especially small (50-99 restaurants) and mid-size (100-499 restaurants) chains.
The number of diners with children, a demo that makes up a third of the restaurant industry’s traffic, has dropped for three consecutive quarters.
Posted in: Valleywide | Post a Comment »
July 28th, 2009, 8:59 pm by Jess Harter

Being a restaurant reviewer means I get to eat at some of the Valley’s finest restaurants on the Tribune’s dime. On my own time, however, you’ll rarely find me at those places; I’m sure you wouldn’t be surprised to learn a journalist’s salary doesn’t go very far when meals can run $200 to $300.
Summer is an exception. For these few weeks when triple-digit temperatures scare way many visitors, some the Valley’s top resorts lower prices or offer special meal deals. Here are five resorts where you can enjoy some of the Valley’s best cuisine in spectacular atmospheres:
T. Cook’s: “Iron Chef America” competitor Lee Hillson (pictured above) heads the kitchen of the Royal Palms Resort & Spa’s centerpiece, which melds Spanish Colonial architecture with a Mediterranean-influenced menu. Through Sept. 13, you can design your own three-course meal off the menu for $40 Sundays through Thursdays. Entrée suggestion: Pecan-roasted “Poulet Rouge” chicken, a French heirloom breed considered by some the world’s finest. 5200 E. Camelback Road, Phoenix, (602) 808-0766.
Kai: The only Valley restaurant to earn Mobil’s five-star rating and AAA’s five-diamond rating, this Wild Horse Pass Resort & Spa restaurant spotlights ingredients produced by the Gila River Indian Community. Kai currently is offering a $59 prix-fixe menu of three of chef Michael O’Dowd’s signature items; hand-picked baby lettuces, grilled buffalo tenderloin and traditional fry bread. (Note: Kai closes from Aug. 9-Sept. 9 each summer.) 5594 W. Wild Horse Pass Blvd., Chandler, (602) 385-5726.
J&G Steakhouse: The Phoenician Resort shuttered its venerable Mary Elaine’s last year, but has replaced it with an upscale steakhouse from celebrity chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. This summer, J&G is offering a $19 burger-and-beer special: a fresh-ground patty topped with made-from-scratch Russian dressing, house-pickled cucumbers and lightly battered Vidalia sweet onions, hand-cut French fries and a premium microbrew. 6000 E. Camelback Road, Scottsdale, (480) 214-8000.
Talavera: Prime cuts of free-raised meats and seafood are the building blocks of chef Mel Mecinas’s contemporary American cuisine — not cutting edge but expertly executed — at this classy-casual Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale restaurant. Talavera offers a weekly two-course tasting menu for $34, or $45 with wine pairings. Through Sept. 1, all bottles on house wine list are half-price Sundays through Wednesdays. 10600 E. Crescent Moon Drive, Scottsdale, (480) 515-5700.
Lon’s: The Hermosa Inn celebrates the spirit of the Old West, and it’s reflected in chef Michael Rusconi’s “artful American” cuisine at this hacienda-style dining room. A new summer menu includes pan-roasted foie gras with dried
cherry tamale; butternut squash ravioli with organic spinach; heirloom
tomato salad with cucumbers, red onion, San Joaquin Gold cheese and basil
sorbet; and Colorado lamb loin with goat cheese gnocchi and
fava beans. 5532 N. Palo Cristi Road, Paradise Valley, (602) 955-7878.
Posted in: Chandler • Phoenix • Scottsdale • Uncategorized • J&G Steakhouse • Kai • Lon's • T. Cook's • Talavera | Post a Comment »
July 28th, 2009, 11:39 am by Jess Harter
Jeff Bagby of Pizza Port Brewing Company will be the guest brewer at SanTan Brewing Company’s monthly Tuesday Night Tasting on Aug. 4.
The tasting, which starts at 6:30 p.m. and costs $25, will feature four courses of food and six beers:
• Reception beer: Pizza Port’s Carlsbad Cask IPA
• Point Reyes blue cheese and pear wedge salad (paired with SanTan’s HopShock IPA)
• Classic vichyssoise (SanTan’s Hefe Weizen)
• Intermezzo: Pomegranate sorbet (SanTan’s Sunspot Gold)
• Muscovy duck confit with Gouda mac ‘n’ cheese (SanTan’s Big Red)
• Chocolate-vanilla creme brulee duet (SanTan’s Strawberry Wit)
RSVP: (480) 917-8700.
Posted in: Chandler • SanTan Brewing Co. | Post a Comment »
July 28th, 2009, 11:25 am by Jess Harter
Uncorked Wine Bar in north Scottsdale is hosting a wine tasting from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday.
For $20, attendees can meet winery representatives from Phoenix’s Young’s Market and sample any 20 wines.
Participating wineries include One Hope, Matchbook, Mossback, Schramsberg, Willakenzie Estate, Gainey, Don Sebastiani & Sons, Ponzi and Girard.
Info: (480) 699-9230.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Uncorked | Post a Comment »
July 28th, 2009, 11:23 am by Jess Harter
The Cheesecake Factory is celebrating National Cheesecake Day on Thursday by offering slices of any of its 30 cheesecakes for half price.
The day also will mark the debut of the restaurant’s newest flavor, red velvet.
Cheesecake Factory has East Valley locations at Chandler Fashion Center and Superstition Springs in Mesa.
Posted in: Chandler • Mesa • Cheesecake Factory | 2 Comments »
July 28th, 2009, 11:21 am by Jess Harter
Wednesday is National Lasgana Day, and Buca di Beppo is marking the occasion by giving away free lasagna.
Anyone who purchases a pasta dish or entrée at any Buca location will receive a free lunch-sized portion of lasagna.
The offer is not valid on take-out orders.
Buca has East Valley locations in Mesa, Chandler and Scottsdale.
Posted in: Chandler • Mesa • Scottsdale • Buca di Beppo | Post a Comment »
July 25th, 2009, 1:08 pm by Jess Harter
P.F. Chang’s China Bistro is giving away free lettuce wraps this weekend to celebrate a hole-in-one by golfer Briny Baird in today’s Canadian Open. Purchase of an entree is required, and you must download the coupon here. The offer is good through Sunday at any P.F. Chang’s.
Posted in: Uncategorized | Post a Comment »
July 24th, 2009, 1:39 pm by Jess Harter
(Update July 26, 2009 – The sale of Canal was finalized late Friday and Gutierrez is proceeding with plans for Acua.)
Numerous reports (including my own) that a French-Asian fusion restaurant called Acua would take over Canal’s spot at Old Town Scottsdale’s SouthBridge apparently are premature.
Saturday indeed will be Canal’s last day of business. But Debi Bridges, who handles PR for SouthBridge developer Fred Unger, says the sale of Canal to Valley restaurateur Joseph Gutierrez has not been finalized. The odds it will go through, according to Bridges, are “50-50.”
If the sale is not completed — which should be known Monday, according to Bridges — Unger plans to open a new concept of his own in the Canal space.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Canal | 1 Comment »
July 23rd, 2009, 10:41 pm by Jess Harter

Friday is National Tequila Day, an opportunity to celebrate the agave-based spirit first distilled by Spanish conquistadors nearly 500 years ago near the site of present-day Tequila, Mexico. Today, there are more than 900 registered brands of tequila.
If you don’t know the difference between tequila categories such as blanco, reposado and extra anejo, here are five East Valley restaurants that carry a great selection to, ahem, study:
Juan Jaime’s Tacos and Tequila: This friendly eatery (pictured below) near Chandler Fashion Center offers approximately 80 tequilas to wash down its street-style tacos and tequila. A daily happy hour (4 p.m. to 8 p.m.) features $2.50 margaritas. 2510 W. Chandler Blvd., Chandler, (480) 821-5826.
Maria Maria: The back-wall bar at musician Carlos Santana’s stylish Tempe Marketplace restaurant offers 28 premium tequilas (all 100 percent weber blue agave), including a 2-ounce snifter of Gran Patron Burdeos for $65. 2000 E. Rio Salado Parkway, Tempe, (480) 449-3663.
The Mission: This Old Town Scottsdale destination pairs modern Latin cuisine with more than 50 premium tequilas. For $100, you can enjoy a two-person margarita made with Don Julio 1942 anejo tequila and centennial-edition Grand Marnier. 3815 N. Brown Ave., Scottsdale, (480) 636-5005.
Blanco Tacos + Tequila: Restaurateur Sam Fox’s Borgata newcomer (it opened in December) lists more than 60 tequilas on its menu, including a snifter of Herradura Suprema for $82. Margaritas range from pomegranate/grapefruit to peach/hibiscus. 6166 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, (480) 305-6692.
Cien Agaves Tacos & Tequila: As its name suggests, this Old Town Scottsdale two-story venue (pictured at top) boasts more than 100 tequilas, and hawks a $70 extra anejo flight (one-ounce pours) of Herradura Suprema, Jose Cuervo Reserva de la Familia and Partida Elegante. 7228 E. First Ave., Scottsdale, (480) 970-9002.
Posted in: Chandler • Scottsdale • Tempe • Blanco • Cien Agaves • Juan Jaime's • Maria Maria • The Mission | 1 Comment »
July 22nd, 2009, 11:38 pm by Jess Harter

And then there was one.
Canal, one of just two original restaurants remaining at Old Town Scottsdale’s two-year-old SouthBridge development, has been sold. Saturday will be its last day.
The fashion-centric eatery, best-known for its $30 lobster sandwich and the S-shaped runway in the dining room, will be replaced by a French-Asian fusion restaurant called Acua.
Of the seven restaurants originally planned for SouthBridge, only Foodbar, Canal, Estate House and Digestif got off the ground. Mexican Standoff came close; the others were supposed to be a new Sea Saw and Shell Shock.
Foodbar closed last year and has since been replaced by Metro Brasserie. Digestif moved into a smaller space across the street and reopened Wednesday.
Estate House, the sole remaining original restaurant, has revamped its menu once already and says yet another revamp currently is in the works.
Acua, which hopes to open by mid-August, will be the third new SouthBridge project from Cin-Cin owner Joseph Gutierrez, who just opened an Italian restaurant, Tutto, in the old Digestif space and is planning a Spanish restaurant, Tapas Papa Fritas, for the Mexican Standoff space.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Acua • Canal | 2 Comments »
July 22nd, 2009, 2:23 pm by Jess Harter
Ten days after closing its doors at Scottsdale’s SouthBridge development, Digestif reopens at 5 p.m. today across the street in a cozier space recently freed up by the closure of its sister restaurant Sea Saw.
Chef Payton Curry (pictured) is still heading the kitchen, which will offer a scaled-back menu that promises to be more global and eclectic than the previous Cal-Ital one. The new space will accommodate about 30 people.
Digestif will be open for dinner only Wednesdays through Sundays. It is participating in Yelp’s current restaurant week promotion tonight, but not Thursday (when it hosts a six-course wine dinner with Palmina’s Chrystal Clifton).
Because of the late start and one-day interruption, Digestif will offer its Yelp $25 prix fixe menu through next Thursday.
Digestif’s new address is 7133 E. Stetson Drive. The phone number remains (480) 425-9463.
Posted in: Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
July 22nd, 2009, 12:21 pm by Jess Harter

Chandler’s Whole Foods and SanTan Brewing Company are teaming up for a four-course beer dinner at 6:30 p.m. Thursday.
Whole Foods, located at Ray Road and the Loop 101, will host the dinner and provide the food. SanTan brewmaster Anthony Cavecchia will pair each course with one of his ales.
The courses and pairings:
• Fontina cheese and figs on Marcona almond crust garnished with lavender, lemon zest and caramel sauce (paired with Sun Devil Ale)
• Ceviche made with shrimp, scallops and tropical fruit garnished with fresh parsley and served with tortilla chips (Sunspot Gold)
• Braised short ribs topped with fried egg and garnished with candied ginger with mashed sweet potatoes and baby bok choy (HopShock IPA)
• Brie and berry sandwiches made cocoa spread and fresh berries with a sprinkle of powdered sugar (Gordo Stout)
Cost is $30. RSVP: (480) 821-9447 or e-mail sp.chr.marketing@wholefoods.com.
Posted in: Chandler • SanTan Brewing • Whole Foods | Post a Comment »
July 21st, 2009, 3:55 pm by Jess Harter

Joe Johnston, the Gilbert restaurateur who brings the East Valley an annual Free BBQ Day at Joe’s Real BBQ and Free Cheeseburger Day at Joe’s Farm Grill, is at it again.
Wednesday, Johnston’s newest restaurant, Liberty Market, will be giving away free espresso drinks from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. to celebrate the 45th birthday of its Faema E61 espresso machine (pictured with Johnston above)
The E61 model, which Faema debuted in 1961, revolutionized the espresso industry by introducing many technological firsts commonly found on today’s machines.
Liberty Market purchased its E61, which was built on July 22, 1965, from an espresso bar in Milan, Italy.
Wednesday’s free offer only applies to classic Italian drinks — in other words, espresso, macchiato or cappuccino — with no other add-ins such as syrups.
There’s a limit of one drink per person, and the drinks must be consumed on the premises.
Liberty’s E61 espresso bar still will serve its regular menu of other drinks — at their regular prices — during Free Espresso Day.
Liberty Market is located on Gilbert Road between Guadalupe and Elliot roads. Info: (480) 892-1900 or libertymarket.com.
Posted in: Gilbert • Liberty Market | Post a Comment »
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