
Archive for the 'Restaurants' Tag
March 18th, 2009, 10:18 pm by Jess Harter

Few sports-viewing experiences can rival the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. Dubbed “March Madness,” it’s a 19-day rollercoaster ride of amazing plays, emotional gut checks and, every year, a few small-school Davids that slay a hoops Goliath or two.
Here are five East Valley sports bars with lots of TVs and pretty good food that’ll open by 9 a.m. for first-round games (which tip off as early as 9:20 a.m.) and continue to offer specials throughout the tourney:
Majerle’s Sports Grill: The former Phoenix Suns player’s 20-TV sports bar (pictured above) at Chandler Fashion Center will offer basketball-shooting contests in the parking lot and give away Suns tickets during first-round games. Tournament-long specials include $10 buckets of four Bud or Bud Light bottles, $3 Bud Light drafts and $5 baskets of skins, tacos, sliders and wings during games. 3095 W. Chandler Blvd., Chandler, (480) 899-7999.
Blue 32 Sports Grill: Twenty-eight TVs allow you to watch multiple games from just about any seat at this new place just west of SanTan Village. Enjoy $2.50 Miller Lite and Coors Light during games. Fans can fill out a free NCAA bracket to win prizes. Food specials, not yet determined, will change for each round of the tournament. 1524 E. Williams Field Road, Gilbert, (480) 963-0032.
McDuffy’s Grille: This Chandler neighborhood hangout, which has 20 TVs inside and on its enclosed patio, does $4.99 Burger Madness every Thursday, $7.39 beer-battered cod Fridays and $1 chef’s sliders Saturday. Drink specials include $3.50 wheat or white beers Thursday, $4.50 glasses of wine Friday and $3.50 domestic drafts Saturday. 980 E. Pecos Road, Chandler, (480) 966-8200.
Payton’s Place: Nine of this south Gilbert sports bar’s 16 TVs are on the wall behind the bar, allowing you to follow all the first-round games at the same time. Food and drink specials change daily. Get $5.95 burgers and $1 off all drinks Friday, $225 drafts Saturday and $2.25 bottles Sunday. Its Tempe location will have similar specials. 4903 S. Val Vista Drive, Gilbert, (480) 855-5242.
First Round Draft: Buy this sports bar’s special NCAA Tournament t-shirt for $20 and pay happy-hour prices during all games. That means $1.75 domestic pints and $2 domestic bottles, as well as half off all appetizers like chicken fingers, jalapeno poppers and nachos. Games will be shown on more than 50 TVs. 1520 W. Warner Road, Gilbert, (480) 497-2445.
Posted in: Chandler • Gilbert • Restaurants • Sports Bars | Post a Comment »
March 15th, 2009, 6:25 pm by Jess Harter
Another gorgeous afternoon for Day 2 of West of Western. I thought the crowds were slightly larger than Day 1 (read my Day 1 report) at the outdoor Grand Tasting tents, which featured a bunch of different restaurants than Saturday. Inside Phoenix Art Museum, however, the Wine Hall seemed a little less busy.

The most sought-out restaurant of the day had to be Quiessence. Chef Greg LaPrad had promised a 10-course meal, but showed up with a whopping 15 courses! LaPrad’s mother even flew in from Boston to watch her son work. “He never comes to visit because he’s always too busy,” she said.

Among Quiessence’s dishes: Smoked pork shoulder with shaved fennel and arugula (left), heirloom cauliflower “tartare” on brick oven crostini (center) and house-cured spicy coppa with wine and fennel seed salami.

Chef Michael O’Dowd headed a big team from Chandler’s Native American-influenced Kai, Arizona’s only Mobil five-star restaurant.

The Wild Horse Pass resort’s centerpiece restaurant was cooking lamb shank that smelled delicious on a rotisserie.

Kai’s dishes included Churro lamb on an Indian frybread pillow with a tzatziki-like cucumber yogurt and fig, curry and date chutney (left), First Origins chocolate pudding from Ecuador with 60-day corn brittle (center) and a Native American-inspired “Slurpee” with lavender, mint, hibiscus flower, coffee, chipotle, mango and finger.

After featuring menu items from its fabulous Talavera on Saturday, the Four Seasons Scottsdale tent spotlighted its Crescent Moon on Sunday. The staff was making fresh tortillas on site, as chef Mel Mecinas grills them in the background.

The tortillas were used for tacos — pork adobo or halibut — which came with the choice of charred tomato salsa, avocado-tomatillo salsa or spicy papaya-habanero salsa.

For dessert, Crescent Moon offered a sour cream mousse with spicy raspberry coulis and chocolate biscotti.

Owner-chef Deborah Knight was working the Mosiac tent. She and husband Matt Rinn, Mosiac’s wine director, also gave a class, “Secrets of Wine and Food Pairing.”

Knight made two dishes: A wonderful Duncan Farms mache salad with carmelized onion and maple vinaigrette (left) and a spicy Thai shrimp and coconut soup.

Owner-chef James Porter explains his lone offering at the Tapino Kitchen & Wine Bar tent. It was one of the day’s most unique treats …

A “new-fashioned float” made with Sonoran root beer, foie gras ice cream and Arizona candied pecans! It was simple but amazingly good.

In one of Sunday’s many seminars, cookbook author and TV show host Barbara Fenzl spoke to a packed room about “Chiles: Get ‘em While They’re Hot.”

Brandon Crouser was one of two chefs working the Atlas Bistro tent.

Atlas offered its version of a Cuban sandwich made with seared foie gras and house pickles on focaccia bread with house-made chips that Crouser deep-fried on site.

Chef Brandon Crouser (left) deep-fries more chips in the Atlas Bistro tent while his brother, chef Nathan Crouser (right), prepares sloppy joe sliders in the next-door District tent.

District, at the Sheraton Phoenix Downtown, was one of a couple restaurants that participated both days. In my Day 1 report, I raved about Nathan Crouser’s buffalo-meat Sloppy Joe sliders but forgot to get a photo. I made sure to get one Sunday.

Another returnee for Day 2 was Simply Bread. Master baker Jeffrey Yankellow again made the sopressata and aged provolone paninis with roasted red peppers and pesto that were a hit on Day 1.

Chef Claudio Urciuoli worked the tent for Prado, the great new Spanish-themed restaurant at the Montelucia Resort in Paradise Valley.

The Italian-born Urciuoli was giving out burricotta with Michele Ferrante wood oven-dried peppers, wild oregano and Denocciolato extra virgin olive oil. He’s not the only Valley chef who moves easily between Spanish and Italian cuisines …

Chef Aaron May, who made a trio of pinchos at his Sol y Sombra tent Saturday, returned Sunday to teach a class on Spanish cooking. May also recently opened an Italian restaurant, Autostrada, at DC Ranch.

Chef Dwayne Allen of The Breadfruit, a tiny Jamaican eatery in downtown Phoenix, was grilling chicken for …

… jerk chicken with roasted pineapple and mango chutney (left). The Breadfruit also gave away ginger sweet potato pudding.

Festival-goers gave a thumbs-up to The Breadfruit. Even though I live in Chandler, I can’t wait to make the trip over to Phoenix to check out this place.

Two Lisas were giving away meatballs and fresh-baked focaccia bread at the Lisa G Cafe Wine Bar tent. The one on the right is chef-owner Lisa Giungo, who uses old family recipes.

Posh was offering roasted garlic panna cotta with watercress pesto. Nothing sweet here, but …

… chef Joshua Herbert also was handing out Meyer lemon popsicles.

Bar Smith chef Michael Cairns made a Pacific shrimp salad with a roasted tomato vinaigrette and rosemary flatbread.

The Sugar Thieves performed for the crowd Sunday.

Brian Archibald, chef at Tuscany at the JW Marriott Desert Ridge, chats with a festival-goer.

Archibald made braised octupus with blood orange oil and micro arugula.

Turquoise Room chef John Sharpe came all the way from Winslow to make churro lamb posole. The lamb is free-range-reared on the Navajo Reservation.

Different Pointe of View chef Anthony DeMuro made a colorful pan-seared organic Gigha halibut with shrimp, Peruvian purple potatoes, Peppadew peppers, mushrooms, asparagus, lemon fennel and butter sauce.

Inside the Wine Hall, master baker Patrick Peeters drew a lot of interest with a huge display of chocolates from his Peeters Belgian Pastries & Chocolates.

Peters’ chocolates were almost too pretty to eat. I said almost.
(Read my Day 1 report)
Posted in: Phoenix • Festivals • Food • Restaurants • West of Western | 4 Comments »
March 14th, 2009, 8:38 pm by Jess Harter
A beautiful day, a beautiful setting, beautiful food … I was totally impressed by Day 1 of West of Western. The two-day culinary festival, featuring 25 of the Valley’s top chefs each day, moved to the Phoenix Art Museum last year. I missed the 2008 fest, so this was my first time at the museum’s sculpture garden.
It’s a steep ticket — $85 for a day ($150 for both) — but that gets you as much food and drink as you can consume in five hours. The “lines,” if there were any, were maybe two or three people long at each tent. Plus, there’s live entertainment and you can amble through all of the museum’s galleries.
From the easy parking (free) to the dozens of helpful museum guides on duty, this is one well-run event, now in its fifth year. I was thinking about only going for one day, but now I’m definitely going back tomorrow. Here’s what I found Saturday (also read my Day 2 report):

Just a few days short of its first anniversary, Chandler small-plates restaurant Cork was the big hit of Day 1 and had the heaviest traffic at its booth, which was manned by chef Brian Peterson and owner Robert Morris.

The south Chandler restaurant offered six dishes, all streamlined versions of items on its menu, which changes every other month. Smoked antelope with Cypress Grove’s Midnight Moon chevre cheese on a tomato herb cracker was gone quickly.

Cork also paired a seared scallop with a braised short rib with hunter’s sauce. It also did a King crab salad with spinach almond hummus and a mac-and-cheese made with Widmer’s aged cheddar and barbecued pork belly. Robert’s wife, Danielle, made two fabulous desserts: a chocolate chile pot de creme and a banana cream pie shot with caramelized banana and an Oreo crust.

Marc Hennessy is chef of BLT Steak at the Camelback Inn.

Hennessy’s dish was grilled Kobe skirt steak with brown butter crouton and a chimichurri sauce.

A festival-goer samples one of LV Bistro chef Forest Hamrick’s offerings from the Fairmont Scottsdale resort.

Hamrick did a spice-rubbed loin of lamb with dried fruit chutney (left) and a salmon ceviche on a compressed cucumber with saffron and organic apple slaw (right).

Master baker Ben Hershberger’s bread table at The Phoenician resort’s tent was ravaged by other chefs even before the festival opened to the public. Anyone who’s eaten at The Phoenican knows why. I went back later for a second slice of the olive bread.

Victor Casanova, chef at The Phoenician’s Il Terrazzo restaurant, chats with a festival-goer.

Casanova was giving out hand-seared diver scallops with Tuscan farro, sugar snap peas, butternut squash, cherry tomatoes and a lemon vinaigrette.

Some people take a break on the sculpture garden’s sunny patio.

One of the biggest surprises of Day 1 was District, a relatively unknown restaurant at the Sheraton Phoenix Downtown. Chef Nathan Crouser’s Sloppy Joe sliders, made with buffalo on challah buns, were popular, but I liked his mac and cheese even more.

The creamy mac and cheese had chunks of pulled chicken and spicy andouille sausage from Schreiner’s in Phoenix.

The first cooking demonstration of the day featured The Phoenician’s Paul Carter (left) and his “sous chef,” who bore a striking resemblance to Phoenix mayor Phil Gordon.

Mel Mecinas, the acclaimed chef at Talavera at the Four Seasons Scottsdale, sears some scallops.

The scallops (left) were accompanied by baby spring vegetables and a mushroom cream. Mecinas also did ahi tuna poke with a pappadom cracker.

But my favorite thing at Talavera’s tent were the chocolate croquettes with candied pineapple. Delicious!

Inside the museum, the Wine Hall, which offered samples from more than 100 winemakers, was packed.

There also were wine seminars all day.

The Wine Hall also hosted a couple chocolatiers, including Lisa Reinhardt’s Wie of Chocolate.

Wei of Chocolate makes several kinds of organic dark chocolate.

The spirits weren’t limited to wine. Roka Akor was dishing out shochu, which it poured through a block of ice.

Speaking of Roka, back outside the Scottsdale restaurant set up a small version of its robata grill to make my favorite item on its menu, Korean-spiced lamb cutlets.

Roka chef Bjoern Weissgerber also was handing out butterfish tataki with white asparagus and yuzu (left) and maki plates with a spicy tuna roll and California roll.

Seen walking around the festival: Sol y Sombra chef Aaron May.

Back at the Sol y Sombra tent, May was offering a trio of tapas or pinchos: Octopus with arugula and pink grapefruit on grilled flatbread (left), Caribbean sweet shrimp with piquillo pepper and pimenton (center) and bacon-wrapped dates with Cabrales sauce.

Chef Michael Stebner from True Food Kitchen grills ahi tuna.

The tuna was used to make sliders with avocado and wasabi aoili. They were paired with a Tuscan kale salad with lemon, organic olive oil and parmesan.

Meanwhile, at Stebner’s former restaurant, Olive & Ivy, chef Clint Woods has moved up from Tucson, where he opened several Sam Fox restaurants.

Woods made an heirloom beet salad with Arizona pistachios and goat cheese dressing (left) and veal and spinach ravioli with shaved parmesan and mizuna greens.

James Saio is the latest chef to oversee Taggia at the Firesky Resort in Scottsdale.

Saio made a simple but tasty piadini stuffed with butternut squash and topped with mascarpone, arugula and speck.

A band called Dry River Yacht Club performed for the crowd.

Master baker Jeffrey Yankellow and his Simply Bread staff went beyond just bread.

They made a sopressata and aged provolone panini with roasted red peppers and pesto that was amazing.

Steven Zimmerman is chef at ICON, the restaurant at the Wyndham Phoenix.

Zimmerman made cocoa butter seared scallops with fresh field greens from Scottsdale’s Singh Farms and a truffle vinaigrette (left) and mushroom-miso consomme with tofu noodles. He also was handing out shots of a refreshing pomegranate-agave limeade.

As it got hotter during the mid-afternoon, I ducked inside to check out some of the artwork in the museum. I need to come back when I have more time.

The festival also was showing several food-related films, including “Endless Feast — Phoenix” and “A Gift from Talking God: The Story of the Navajo-Churro.”

Meritage chef Smail Yaakoubi made house-smoked beef short ribs with polenta and crispy shallots.

Mucho Gusto’s Chad Withycombe brought his green chile posole with slow-roasted pork and hominy in a tomatillo broth made with green chiles, cilantro and fresh lime juice.

Diners enjoy a shady break with a close-up view of Magdalena Abakanowicz’s sculpture entitled “Five Dancing.”

Pinata’s Latin Kitchen chef Carlos Marquez made cochinita pibil, a Mexican slow-roasted pork dish with cotija cheese, cilantro and lime.

The Wild Thaiger’s Olashawn Hasadinratana, sporting a huge bandage over her nose, made a green papaya salad with shrimp.

Chef Carolyn Ellis, who made grilled corn cakes with pulled pork and lime, had the shortest distance to travel. Her Arcadia Farms Cafe is located at the museum.
(Read my Day 2 report)
Posted in: Phoenix • Festivals • Restaurants • West of Western | 2 Comments »
March 13th, 2009, 4:42 pm by Jess Harter
St. Patrick’s Day isn’t just for the Irish. In fact, the day has been celebrated in United States since … well, since before there even was a United States. The first St. Patrick’s Day parade was held in Boston in 1737.
So in keeping with 272 years of tradition, those of us of Irish descent, and many more who aren’t, will be wearing green, indulging in corned beef and cabbage and drinking green beer Tuesday.
There are far too many celebrations at East Valley bars and restaurants to list them all, but here are some of the most popular:
Fibber Magees annually hosts one of the East Valley’s biggest parties, fencing their strip-mall parking lot (you have to park across the street) to make room for as many as 3,000 revelers. The pub starts serving Irish breakfast at 8 a.m., with outdoor action beginning at 11. The Keltic Cowboys kick off the music at 2:30 p.m., followed by Capitol Down and The Scones. $10 cover. 1989 W. Elliot Rd., Chandler, (480) 722-9434.
SanTan Brewing Company is closing off the street (Commonwealth) on the north of the downtown Chandler brew pub at 4 p.m. for Irish dancers and games. Music will be provided by The Knockabouts, GTR and The Insomniacs. Featured vendors include Rock Bottom, BJ’s Restaurant, Gordon Biersch, Guinness, Bailey’s and Strong Bow. Cover is $20 in advance and $25 at door. 8 S. San Marcos Place, Chandler, (480) 917-8700.
Murphy’s Law, just down the street from SanTan, is fencing off an area behind the Irish pub to accommodate an additional 300 people. Corned beef and bangers (sausages) will be sold. Drink specials include $3 green beers and $5 Guinness. Four bands begin playing at 3 p.m. Cover is $5 before 3 and $10 after. 58 S. San Marcos Place, Chandler, (480) 812-1588.
R.T. O’Sullivan’s will host parking-lot parties for about 1,500 people at both its Mesa sports bars. Live music starts at noon, with five bands at each location. Drink specials include 20-ounce green beers for $4, $5 domestics and $6 imports. 1010 W. Southern Ave., Mesa, (480) 844-1290; 6646 Superstition Springs Boulevard, Mesa, (480) 396-9933.
Dos Gringos, Upper Deck Sports Grill and Acme Bar will team up for the Craftsman Court Block Party in Old Town Scottsdale. Metal Elvis, Zimis and Hairforce will perform. Drink specials include eight green beers for $20. The party, which starts at 11 a.m., is free before 8 p.m. and TBD after. Craftsman Court between Third and Fifth avenues, (480) 423-3800.
McDuffy’s Grille will have $2 green beer, $3 Lucky Leprechauns and $3 Rainbow Rockets starting at 11 a.m. Food will include corned beef and cabbage for $7.95. There also will be green beads and giveaways, as well as a free shuttle. 980 E. Pecos Road, Chandler, (480) 966-8200.
Tilted Kilt opens the doors at its Mesa location at 6 a.m. Irish step dancers and bagpipers will perform at an outside beer garden. Bullox provides live music at 2 p.m., followed by Incognito at 6. Call for cover. 1910 S. Gilbert Road, Mesa, (480) 507-5458.
Casey Moore’s puts on its annual parking-lot party with a limited menu of such dishes as corned beef and shepherd’s pie. No live music or drink specials. The celebrating starts at 10 a.m. Cover is free until dusk; TBD after. 850 S. Ash Ave., Tempe, (480) 968-9935.
D’Arcy McGee’s opens at 6 p.m. for Irish breakfast and a live radio broadcast on KUPD-FM. Live music begins in the Tempe Marketplace parking lot at 1 p.m. with Inis, JG and the Modrockers and the Cell Phone Cowboys. Cover is $10. 2000 E. Rio Salado Parkway, Tempe, (480) 557-9087.
Rula Bula will offer a limited menu of its Irish favorites all day, with bands — Pat McCrosan, the Town Lake Highlanders and the Keltic Cowboys — starting on the patio at noon. The Insomniacs plays inside at 9:30. Cover TBD. 401 S. Mill Ave., Tempe, (480) 929-9500.
Four Peaks Brewing Company opens at 7 a.m. for Irish breakfast. Irish food will be available all day, as will $3.50 pints on all its beers. No cover. 1340 E. Eighth St., Tempe, (480) 303-9967.
Posted in: Chandler • Gilbert • Mesa • Scottsdale • Tempe • Bars • Beer • Restaurants • St. Patrick's Day | Post a Comment »
March 13th, 2009, 11:59 am by Jess Harter
I hadn’t been to Ahwatukee’s Rock Bottom in more than a year, so when brewmaster Guy Bartmess invited me to Thursday night’s tapping of his Dominator IPA I decided to reacquaint myself with brew pub’s nice selection of craft beers.
The tapping was at 6:30 p.m., but when I arrived at 6 the bar area was standing room only. A lot of customers brought their growlers, 64-ounce bottles that Rock Bottom sells (filled) for $13. Refills are $10, and at tappings of new beers (which occur about once a month) refills are just $2.
When the big moment arrived, Bartmess climbed atop a table with a bullhorn (pictured) and announced the new IPA (which stands for India Pale Ale). I found it very hoppy, slightly malty, but without the bitterness that so many IPAs have.
SInce it was dinner time, I paired the Dominator with one of Rock Bottom’s pizzas. Just about any beer goes with pizza, of course, but I think IPAs complement it especially well.
I also sampled the Fire Chief red ale that Bartmess unveiled last month, and I liked it even better than the Dominator. If you want to try it you’d better hurry. I don’t think it’ll last through the month.
Besides the two seasonal or “brewer’s choice” beers, Rock Bottom always has six every-day beers on tap, including Dream Catcher (a American light lager), El Jefe (a German Hefeweizen) and Roadrunner Brown (an English brown ale).
The next tapping will be April 2, when Bartmess introduces a rye pale ale he’s calling Catcher in the Rye. It’ll be an extra-special occasion because the restaurant and brewery will be celebrating its 10th anniversary.
Rock Bottom, 14205 S. 50th St., opens at 11 a.m. daily. Info: (480) 598-1300.
Posted in: Ahwatukee • Beer • Restaurants • Rock Bottom | Post a Comment »
March 12th, 2009, 3:21 pm by Jess Harter
With St. Patrick’s Day on Tuesday, this weekend is the perfect time to indulge in corned beef, shepherd’s pie or a boxty. Here are five places in the East Valley to go green any day of the year:
Fibber Magees: My Irish friends tell me this Chandler favorite’s corned beef and cabbage ($12.95) is the closest you can get here to what they eat in Ireland. The shepherd’s pie ($12.99) is made with minced lamb, and the boxty, a rolled-up potato pancake, comes with choice of three fillings (all $12.99). Don’t miss the traditional bread and butter pudding ($6.99) for dessert. 1989 W. Elliot Road, Chandler, (480) 722-9434.
Murphy’s Law: This relative newcomer to downtown Chandler serves one of the best shepherd’s pies ($9.95, pictured at left) I’ve come across. Baked in a metal pot, the beef chunks and veggies are covered with a thick layer of mashed potatoes and topped with a puff pastry. Seven sandwiches, ranging from corned beef to bangers (sausages), also can be ordered in a boxty ($7.95-$8.95). 58 S. San Marcos Place, Chandler, (480) 812-1588.
Rula Bula: Featuring both traditional and “New Irish” cuisine, this Mill Avenue hotspot starts meals with two delicious house-made soda breads, followed by Irish staples like grilled salmon glazed with a molasses-whiskey sauce ($14.95), Guinness-braised sirloin in a puff pastry ($14.95), One and One (a.k.a. fish and chips, $11.95) and Irish lamb stew with root vegetables ($10.95). 401 S. Mill Ave., Tempe, (480) 929-9500.
R.T. O’Sullivan’s: These two Irish-themed sports bars in Mesa aren’t true Irish pubs, but they offer a number of traditional Irish dishes, including shepherd’s pie made with ground beef in a bread bowl ($10.95), corned beef and cabbage ($10.95), fish and chips ($12.95) and a Reuben sandwich ($8.95, with side dish). 1010 W. Southern Ave., Mesa, (480) 844-1290; 6646 Superstition Springs Boulevard, Mesa, (480) 396-9933.
D’Arcy McGee’s: This Tempe Marketplace eatery, part of a Canadian chain, offers a corporate-devised menu of Irish and English dishes, including Donegal fisherman’s chowder ($5.99), shepherd’s pie ($7.99) and a Guiness-braised steak and mushroom or chicken tikka masala boxty ($9.99 each). The bar features an extensive roster of Irish beers and whiskeys, but service can be sketchy. 2000 E. Rio Salado Parkway, Tempe, (480) 557-9087.
Posted in: Chandler • Mesa • Tempe • D'Arcy McGee's • Fibber Magees • Irish • Murphy's Law • R.T. O'Sullivan's • Restaurants • Rula Bula • St. Patrick's Day | 1 Comment »
March 11th, 2009, 5:09 pm by Jess Harter
Shakespeare’s, a British pub and restaurant, will take over the recently closed Molly Brannigan’s at Dana Park in Mesa.
Co-owner Darren Hickman says if a few final obstacles can be overcome, Shakespeare’s could do a soft opening as soon as this weekend on the northwest corner of Val Vista Drive and Baseline Road.
“It does look likely,” he says.
Hickman and Shaun Claypoole (pictured) opened Churchill’s Pub & Grill in Chandler in 2006. The pair also have 13 years’ experience operating pubs in England.
“We planned to open a second location when we opened Churchill’s,” Hickman says.
The new 225-seat restaurant will look similar to Molly Brannigan’s, a Pennsylvania-based chain of Irish pubs, although Hickman says they had to buy new tables and chairs, as well as kitchen equipment.
The menu (fish and chips, bangers and mash, etc.) and the beer list (a dozen or so on draft, mostly European) will be the same as Churchill’s.
Despite Molly Brannigan’s closing, Hickman likes the demographics of the Dana Park area.
“We think with the quality and the service we provide, we can make a go of it,” he says.
Posted in: Mesa • Churchill's • Restaurants • Shakespeare's | 7 Comments »
March 11th, 2009, 1:05 pm by Jess Harter
Battle of the Bone, an annual Buffalo chicken wing eating contest, kicks off at 6:30 tonight at the Native New Yorker in Tempe. Each Wednesday, a contest will be held at one of Native New Yorker’s 23 locations.
The entry fee is $15, and the contests are limited to amateurs only. The weekly winners will compete in the finals in September for a yet-to-be-announced prize. Last year’s grand prize was a Honda Element.
Native New Yorker’s Tempe restaurant is located at 1301 E. Broadway Road.
The next two contests will be held March 18 at the Queen Creek location (23706 S. Power Road) and March 25 at the Gilbert location (110 S. Val Vista). See the full schedule here.
Every Wednesday, Native New Yorker will offer 23-ounce Bud Light drafts for $2.50 at participating restaurants.
Posted in: Valleywide • Contests • Native New Yorker • Restaurants | Post a Comment »
March 11th, 2009, 10:50 am by Jess Harter

In what’s becoming a hot ticket, SanTan Brewing Company held its second monthly tasting event Tuesday night at the downtown Chandler brew pub. About 40 people enjoyed a three-course, small-plates meal with craft beer pairings for just $10. This month’s spotlight was on stouts.

SanTan brewmaster Anthony Canecchia chats with guests as they start with Nimbus Oatmeal Stout from Tucson. The smooth-flavored beer was served with Camembert cheese toasted on the pub’s beer bread with sliced dates and a Gordo Stout hazelnut syrup.

OK, that’s not a glass of stout. But there’s a reason SanTan’s Sunspot Gold is the pub’s bestseller.

During the meal, guests had plenty of time to discuss beer.

SanTan general manager Jeff Duport fills another 40 glasses of stout.

The second course is petit dejeuner mussels.

The mussels are steamed in a broth of garlic and Gordo Stout with chevre cheese and watercress.

Another round of stout is delivered.

The mussels are paired with SanTan’s own Gordo stout, a dry Irish stout with coffee and chocolate flavors.

Guest speaker Guy Bartmess, brewmaster at Rock Bottom in Ahwatukee, explains the evening’s final beer, Rock Bottom’s Coffee Stout.

Rock Bottom’s stout is paired with a roasted pecan and coffee cheesecake.

The beer-and-cheesecake combination is a hit.

The hour-long event gives Canecchia the opportunity to visit with every table.

As Tuesday’s event wraps up, guests begin thinking about next month’s tasting, which will be held April 14. The featured beers will be announced soon.
Posted in: Chandler • Beer • Photos • Restaurants • SanTan Brewing | Post a Comment »
March 9th, 2009, 11:04 pm by Jess Harter
Sautee, the American urban bistro on the northeast corner of Alma School and Chandler Heights roads in south Chandler, abruptly closed Monday.
Employees reportedly had no hint the restaurant was about to close. When I stopped by Monday, the doors were locked and the tables and chairs were stacked inside.
Despite its French-sounding name, Sautee specialized in American favorites like steaks, chicken and burgers.
Sautee’s original location at Dana Park in Mesa closed early last year. The Chandler location opened in September 2007.
Posted in: Chandler • Restaurants • Sautee | Post a Comment »
March 9th, 2009, 3:20 pm by Jess Harter
Six months after the closing of popular 98 South Wine Bar & Kitchen in downtown Chandler, the San Marcos Place space is scheduled to reopen next month as a restaurant and wine bar tentatively named 98 Place.
“It was a wonderful place,” says David Aubel, spokesman for the investment group behind the new restaurant. “If it’s not broken, why fix it?”
While the basic concept will remain, Aubel says the decor will be “spruced up.” In addition, he says the group is in negotiations with a big-name chef to create a gourmet menu, as well as a wine expert to oversee the wine list and run the front of the house.
The restaurant will open in April, Aubel says.
98 South closed last October when Chandler restaurateur Ron Wojcicki abruptly shuttered all three of his restaurants - 98 South, 56 East Bar & Kitchen and just-opened KiZake Sushi & Martinis.
Posted in: Chandler • 98 Place • Restaurants • Wine Bars | Post a Comment »
March 9th, 2009, 12:53 pm by Jess Harter
Scottsdale’s Roka Akor places No. 5 on Bon Appetit magazine’s ranking of the top 10 sushi spots in the United States, which appears in the April issue.
The magazine’s Andrew Knowlton writes:
“This glitzy global mega-restaurant brand hopes to do for sushi and robatayaki (grilled food) what Benihana did for teppanyaki (griddled food). The 11-course prix fixe, which offers items raw (Wagyu beef, butterfish) and grilled (lamb cutlets, scallops), is the best way to sample the menu.”
New York’s Soto tops Bon Appetit’s rankings. Boston’s O Ya, San Francisco’s Sebo, Los Angeles’ Nobu and Roka Akor round out the top five.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Restaurants • Roka Akor | Post a Comment »
March 8th, 2009, 7:26 pm by Jess Harter
Some drinks and foods just go together. Milk and cookies. Wine and cheese.
But beer and cheesecake?
Actually, the two complement each other surprisingly well when you’re talking about stout ale and coffee-flavored cheesecake (pictured at left).
It will be one of pairings spotlighted in Tuesday’s monthly tasting event at SanTan Brewing Company in downtown Chandler.
Guy Bartmess, brewmaster at Rock Bottom Brewery in Ahwatukee, will join SanTan owner-brewmaster Anthony Canecchia for an informal discussion of stout ales.
The hour-long presentation, which begins at 6:30 p.m. and costs $10, will include three stouts accompanied by food samples from SanTan chef Brant Gasparek.
For the first course, the Oatmeal Stout from Nimbus Brewing of Tucson will be paired with warmed Camembert cheese layered on a fresh baguette and drizzled with a stout/hazelnut reduction.
Rock Bottom’s Saguaro Stout will accent Petit Dejeuner mussels steamed in a stout garlic broth topped with chevre cheese and watercress for the second course.
For dessert, SanTan’s Gordo Stout, which has coffee and chocolate flavors, will be served with the brew pub’s roasted pecan and coffee cheesecake.
Seating is limited so reservations are recommended. Info: (480) 917-8700.
Posted in: Chandler • Beer • Restaurants | Post a Comment »
March 8th, 2009, 12:43 pm by Jess Harter
A couple of free food deals this week:
• Arby’s is giving away its brand-new Roastburger with purchase of a drink. Just print this coupon off its website. The coupon is good through Saturday.
• On Tuesday, Jack in the Box is offering free fries and a free drink. No purchase is necessary. The coupon is only good that day.
• It’s not free, but Jamba Juice also has a coupon to get its new steel-cut oatmeal for just $1. The coupon is good all month.
Posted in: Valleywide • Deals • Fast Food • Restaurants | Post a Comment »
March 5th, 2009, 3:06 pm by Jess Harter
Scott and Gregory Ziegler, the founders of
NYPD
Pizza, are venturing into the sushi business. The pair have opened Banzai Cowboy Sushi and Martini Bar at DC Ranch in north Scottdale.
The Southwest-inspired menu includes specialty sushi rolls, ranging from $5 to $12, created by chef Fumiharu
Hirose. A dozen signature martinis are $9.75 apiece.
The Zieglers are shooting for a fun and casual atmosphere against a backdrop of country, pop and rock music. Nightly promotions include a “Wheel of Sushi” that guests can spin for free prizes.
Banzai Cowboy Sushi and
Martini
Bar, 20715 N. Pima Road, is open 4 p.m. to midnight daily. Info: (480) 502-4900 or banzaicowboy.com.
Posted in: Scottsdale • Restaurants • Sushi | Post a Comment »
March 4th, 2009, 2:52 pm by Jess Harter
West of Western, one of the Valley’s premier culinary festivals, takes place next weekend. Fifty of the state’s top chefs will gather on the grounds of the Heard Museum in Phoenix to prepare signature entrees and answer questions about recipes and techniques. Here are five of my favorite participating chefs (for the full list, as well as a schedule of festival activities, go to westofwestern.com):
Brian Peterson, Cork: Formerly chef de cuisine at Lon’s and The Boulders, Peterson has established the year-old, small-plates restaurant as one of the Valley’s best. His New American menu ranges from foie gras BLTs to prosciutto-wrapped elk. 4991 S. Alma School Road, Chandler, (480) 883-3773.
Michael O’Dowd, Kai: As executive chef at Wild Horse Pass, O’Dowd oversees all the resort’s restaurants, including its centerpiece, Kai, whose globally inspired American Indian cuisine earned five stars from the Mobil Travel Guide. 5594 W. Wild Horse Pass Boulevard, Chandler, (602) 385-5726.
Payton Curry, Digestif: Since Peter Kasperski’s hip hangout opened at SouthBridge just over a year ago, Curry (pictured) has dazzled diners with his “Cal-Ital” dishes made with house-made pastas, hand-cut meats, fresh-pulled mozzarella and seasonal ingredients. 7114 E. Stetson Drive, Scottsdale, (480) 425-9463.
Aaron May, Sol y Sombra: The busy May opened breakfast spot Over Easy in 2008 and Italian eatery Autostrada in January (and is working on a Basque restaurant, Leche), but remains best-known for his stylish, Barcelona-inspired tapas nightspot at DC Ranch. 20707 N. Pima Road, Scottsdale, (480) 443-5399.
Claudio Urciuoli, Prado: After launching Taggia at Scottsdale’s FireSky Resort, the Italian-born Urciuoli was hired to apply his “slow food” mastery to Prado, the fabulous Spanish restaurant at the just-opened Montelucia Resort & Spa. 4949 E. Lincoln Drive, Paradise Valley, (480) 627-3004.
Posted in: Chandler • Paradise Valley • Scottsdale • 5 to Try • Culinary Festivals • Restaurants | Post a Comment »
March 3rd, 2009, 12:01 pm by Jess Harter

Spices Mediterranean Kitchen has been on my lengthy list of restaurants to check out ever since it opened in July 2007. Now I’m kicking myself for having waited so long.
On my very first visit to Etgar Wagner’s strip-mall eatery on the northwest corner of Ray Road and McClintock Drive in Chandler, I realize it’s someplace special.
The affable Israel native, working at the cash register as he often is, recommends the Greek burger($8.25), a Saturday special featuring fresh ground beef mixed with peppers and fennel, then perfectly grilled to a light and crunchy char.
Topped with feta cheese, Mediterranean salad (a mix of diced tomato, cucumber and red and green onion) and creamy tzatziki sauce, the medium-sized burger is nirvana on a toasted bun.
Heck, even the accompanying French fries are hand-cut.
Wagner’s father, he explains, was a chef for an Israeli cruise line. His mother is an even better cook. Together, they provide a rich source of recipes and culinary expertise for Wagner.
Perhaps that’s why Spices’ falafel sandwich ($5.55) is one of the best I’ve ever tasted. The three deep-fried balls made of chickpeas, flour and spices are light and flavorful. The pita pocket also is filled with more Mediterranean salad and a nutty tahini paste.
Spices is anything but fancy — you order at a counter, get your own utensils from bins and fill your own soda — but there are plenty of nice little touches, like a sprinkling of pine nuts on the hummus.
Speaking of hummus, if you like strong flavors you don’t want to miss the spicy hummus ($5.95), another occasional special. It pits my stomach, which can’t get enough, against my head, which knows I’ll be burping garlic for the rest of the day.
Spices’ menu includes such Mediterranean standards as gyros ($6.95) and shawarma (the best is the beef, $6.95), but also more unusual dishes like bourekas ($6.95, pictured above left), a delicious flaky pastry filled with feta and mozzarella cheeses and a side of freshly blended tomato sauce.
For dessert, I love with sweet malawach ($4.95, pictured above right), an Israeli pastry sprinkled with cinnamon, drizzled with honey and topped with a small scoop of vanilla bean ice cream.
How have I never tried this wonderful dish before?
Now that I’ve found Spices, though, I plan on making up for lost time.
Spices Mediterranean Kitchen
Where: 4040 W. Ray Road, Chandler (northwest corner of Ray and McClintock Drive)
Open: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, noon to 8 p.m. Saturday.
Prices: Appetizers $3.75-$7.95, entrees $5.55-$13.95, desserts $4.95.
Info: (480) 491-4777 or spicesmk.com.
Posted in: Chandler • Restaurants • Spices Mediterranean Kitchen | 2 Comments »
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