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The Dish with Jess Harter ~ Pursuing food and fun across the East Valley

Archive for the 'Restaurants' Tag

5 to try: Where to go after Cactus League games

February 25th, 2009, 9:10 pm by Jess Harter

Arizona’s Cactus League has kicked off its 2009 schedule. For the next month, 14 major-league baseball teams are playing exhibition games at 11 stadiums, including Mesa’s Hohokam Park, Tempe Diablo Stadium and Scottsdale Stadium.

After the games, most of which are held in the afternoon, you can keep the fun going for extra innings at one of these East Valley restaurants, which are popular with players and fans alike.

Don & Charlie’s: The walls of this old-fashioned Chicago steakhouse are covered with the autographed photos of the famous athletes, as well as celebrities and politicians, who have enjoyed its steaks, ribs and stiff cocktails. The extensive sports memorabilia includes more than 800 signed baseballs on display in the entryway (pictured). 7501 E. Camelback Road, Scottsdale, (480) 990-0900.

Pink Pony: This dimly lit Old Town Scottsdale establishment has been a spring training mainstay for 60 years, and famed baseball writer Roger Angell calls it the best baseball restaurant in America. Huge steaks are served with homemade biscuits and Pink Pony’s own steak sauce. Look for the collection of commemorative bats lined up behind the bar. 3831 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, (480) 945-6697.

Diamonds Sports Grill
: Originally called Harry and Steve’s (for then-owners and Cubs broadcasters Harry Caray and Steve Stone), this Mesa sports bar has undergone several incarnations (Steve Stone’s, Sluggo’s) over the last 20 years but remains a favorite watering hole for Cubs players and fans every spring. Large murals of Cubs players grace two of the walls. 161 N. Centennial Way, Mesa, (480) 844-3888.

Pier 54: If you don’t get enough sun during the game, head for this all-patio restaurant and bar on the edge of a man-made Tempe lake. This offshoot of a family-run catering business serves up very tasty salads, burgers and sandwiches. There’s live entertainment on the weekends, when it’s usually packed with locals. 5394 S. Lakeshore Drive, Tempe, (480) 820-0660.

Half Moon Sports Grill
: OK, the concept is little juvenile — this place takes it name from the numerous posters of amateur athletes (mostly young women) unintentionally baring a portion of their behinds — but the atmosphere is fun and friendly and the chicken wings, burgers and sandwiches are seriously good. 2121 E. Highland Ave., Phoenix, (602) 977-2700.

Italian restaurant Bella Vino adds … Mexican dishes?

February 25th, 2009, 4:51 pm by Jess Harter

Spaghetti and meatballs with a side of tacos, anyone?

In one of the more unusual moves I’ve seen from a Valley eatery, Italian fine-dining restaurant Bella Vino has added seven pages of Mexican dishes (see menu pdf) to its already extensive menu of Old World pastas and entrees.

The restaurant’s exterior boasts temporary banners with the name “El Palacio of Chandler” on the southeast corner of Alma School and Chandler Heights roads. Inside, however, banners proclaim “Casa Serrano of Chandler” next to the original Bella Vino signage.

Confused?

Bella Vino owner-chef Anthony Serrano grew up in the Mexican restaurant business; his family operates several such eateries in western Arizona. (The family is not related to the longtime Chandler family that owns several Serrano’s restaurants in the East Valley.)

The new menu additions include seafood and egg dishes, as well as such specialities as chile verde, steak ranchero and mole poblano.

The new highlight, however, has to be the 28-inch El Bandito burrito ($22) stuffed with a tamale, chile relleno, rice and beans. Half is covered with red sauce, the other half green sauce.

Read my recent review of Bella Vino.

Restaurant review: The Farmhouse

February 24th, 2009, 6:43 pm by Jess Harter

Eating at the Farmhouse reminds me of the breakfasts I had as a young boy at my Grandma Schank’s kitchen table.

Every Christmas, my parents would pile my brother, my sister and me into the back of our wood-paneled station wagon and we’d drive 300 icy miles, stopping first to visit my father’s family in Bismarck, N.D., before continuing on to spend several days with my mother’s parents.

In those days, my Grandma and Grandpa Schank lived in a small house in the small town of Dickinson on the edge of the Badlands. But they had spent most of their lives on a farm, so Grandpa still got up by four every morning to begin tinkering in his workshop.

And Grandma would be in the kitchen making the kind of hearty breakfasts that I suppose only those who worked on a farm could truly appreciate.

At the first sign of daylight, my siblings and I would scramble out of our beds and head for the kitchen, enticed by the intoxicating aroma of buttermilk pancakes, scrambled eggs, sizzling bacon and fried hash browns.

Somewhere over the years, I’d forgotten how good those farm-style breakfasts were, my memory obviously blunted by too many Grand Slams and breakfast burritos.

Sure, the Valley boasts some worthwhile breakfast restaurants. I’ve eaten my share of O’Pear Grenache Omelettes at T.C. Eggington’s or Protein Pancakes at U.S. Egg.

But somehow these creations, however delightful, don’t match the simplicity of pancakes and eggs made by hand from farm-fresh ingredients.

Owners Sylvia Hilligardt and her daughter, Milli, have been making such breakfasts, as well as lunches, at the Farmhouse for two decades. They started in a stand-alone building — an actual farmhouse — at Warner and Gilbert roads, but moved to “new” digs in downtown Gilbert in 2001.

I say “new” because the cozy space with crude wooden booths and a floor of wide hardwood planks, is anything but new. In fact, if you follow the plain white walls up to the exposed ceiling you still can see some of the adobe bricks that were cut from the restaurant’s cellar.

Every Sunday morning, people young and old regularly wait for more than an hour (the wait’s shorter on weekdays) for one of the 50 or so coveted seats at small tables covered with mismatched vinyl tableclothes.

Two dozen omelets filled with various combinations of meat, vegetables and cheese ($6.50-$8.25) are the centerpieces of the breakfast menu (see menu pdf). Each comes with a generous side of delicious home-fried potatoes and two long slices of toast made from whole wheat French bread.

Buttermilk pancakes (two for $5) are amazingly light and fluffy. But if you really want to throw carbohydrate caution to the wind, indulge in one of the Farmhouse’s giant cinnamon rolls with cream cheese frosting ($3.25).

Breakfast and lunch specials are numerous and change daily — you can find them detailed on a signboard out front. One of the most popular fixtures on the every-day lunch menu, though, is the meatloaf, two thick, well-seasoned slices served with mashed potatoes and coleslaw ($8.50).

Best of all: Except for an occasional daily special, nothing on the menu costs more than $8.50.

My Grandma Schank will celebrate her 90th birthday with a big party next week in North Dakota. I’m not sure what kind of present to get her.

But it would be easy if she lived here in the Valley. I would take her to the Farmhouse.

The Farmhouse
Where: 228 N. Gilbert Road, Gilbert (quarter-mile north of Elliot Road)
Open: 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday.
Prices: Omelets $6.50-$8.25, pancakes $5-$6, salads $4.75-$7.95, sandwiches/burgers $6.50-$8.25, entrees $8.50-$8.95.
Info: (480) 926-0676.

Get free tacos today at Jack in the Box

February 24th, 2009, 2:00 pm by Jess Harter

Jack in the Box is giving away free tacos until midnight. All you have to do is print this coupon and bring it in.

Get free pancakes Tuesday at IHOP

February 23rd, 2009, 2:00 pm by Jess Harter

IHOP is celebrating Pancake Tuesday by giving away free short stacks of buttermilk pancakes from 7 to 10 a.m. Tuesday.

There’s no charge, but customers are asked to make a small donation to the Children’s Miracle Network. Last year, IHOP raised $875,000 for the charity; this year they hope to raise $1 million.

Pancake Day, for the uninitiated, is not some made-up IHOP holiday. It’s another name for Fat Tuesday, and also is known as Shrove Tuesday in the United Kingdom and Australia.

Historically, Pancake Tuesday was an opportunity for people to use up the last of their eggs, milk and sugar before the 40 days of Lent.

Get a free sub sandwich from Quiznos

February 23rd, 2009, 1:39 pm by Jess Harter

Quiznos is trying to give away a million sub sandwiches this week. Go to the chain’s website to register for a free coupon while supplies last. According to the website’s tracking counter, Quiznos has given away about 86,000 subs so far.

Digestif adds pizzas, fresh mozzarella bar

February 23rd, 2009, 8:40 am by Jess Harter

Digestif, one of my top 10 new restaurants of 2008, continues to tinker with its Cal-Ital menu. The hip Old Town Scottsdale eatery has added pizzas and a fresh mozzarella bar for lunch.

Chef Payton Curry has created four pizzas:

• Ricotta ($10), with Queen Creek olive oil, garlic confit, house ricotta and arugula;

• Margherita ($12), with tomato, house-pulled fresh mozzarella and basil;

• Salsiccia fresca ($14), with house sausage, roasted peppers, cipollini, broccoli rabe and pecorino;

• Bolognese con funghi ($12), with house-grind, hearth-roasted forest mushrooms.

The mozzarella bar ($10) offers pulled-to-order mozzarella served warm on toasted bread with a choice of pepperonata, olive tapenade, roasted mushrooms, balsamic-marinated cipollini or braised sunchokes and olives.

Check out the update Digestif menus for lunch, dinner and dessert.

5 to try: Valley-grown restaurant chains

February 19th, 2009, 8:09 pm by Jess Harter

“Chain” is usually a negative word for serious diners. Chain restaurants conjure up images of nameless, faceless corporations in faraway states producing bland food for the masses.

Here in the Valley, though, several popular, locally owned restaurants have grown to more than a half-dozen locations. Here are five favorites that are exceptions to my anti-chain mentality:

Oregano’s Pizza Bistro: Fifteen years after debuting his thin-crust pizzas and huge sandwiches at his first Oregano’s in Scottsdale, Mark Russell now has eight Arizona locations, including five in the East Valley. It’s not unusual to find devoted customers waiting in line during the lunch and dinner hours to get into these fun and casual hangouts.

Ra: Scott Kilpatrick, Rich Howland and Taison Obata opened their first sushi restaurant and bar in Old Town Scottsdale in 1997. One of the first places to combine quality sushi with a high-energy, nightclub-like atmosphere, Ra has grown into a nationwide empire, including five often-packed locations in the East Valley.

Pete’s Fish & Chips: Since 1947, this family-owned chain’s eight Valley locations have offered deep-fried fish and shrimp, served with Pete’s Special Sauce. Non-seafood fans can enjoy greasy-good burgers and corn dogs. Prices are very wallet-friendly: Two pieces of fish and chips are $3.55, while a Double Super Burger is $2.

Native New Yorker: Floyd and Judy Anderson arrived from Buffalo, N.Y., in 1978 and bought a pizzeria. After a difficult first year, they were on the verge of bankruptcy when they tried something new: adding Buffalo wings (pictured) to the menu. Today, Native New Yorker’s 24 Valley locations are known for the best wings in the Valley.

Serrano’s: The Serrano family had been operating clothing stores in Chandler since 1919, but it wasn’t until 1979 that Ernie and Eva Serrano decided to get into the restaurant business. The family now has seven Sonoran-style Mexican restaurants in the southeast Valley, as well as the breakfast eatery Brunchie’s.

SanTan Brewing introduces WallyToffee

February 18th, 2009, 11:31 pm by Jess Harter

The bad news: The last pint of SanTan Brewing Company’s wonderful Winter Warmer is likely gone by the time you read this.

The good news: The downtown Chandler brew pub has unveiled its new seasonal beer — WallyToffee — and it’s another winner.

Similar to an English brown ale, WallyToffee (pictured) is a dark amber ale with hints of toasted nuts and caramel. The sweet malt character makes it remarkably smooth with no bitterness.

Owner and brewmaster Anthony Canecchia was aiming for somewhere between 5 percent and 5.5 percent alcohol, “but it ended up being about 6 percent,” he says.

Canecchia says WallyToffee, which sells for $4.75 per pint, will be available for about a month, depending on how quickly SanTan customers consume the 30-keg batch.

Winter Warmer, a holidays-themed dark ale made with ginger and honey, will return in November, he says.

In addition to a seasonal beer, SanTan offers five signature “everyday” beers: Sunspot Gold, Big Red, HopShock IPA, HefeWeizen and Gordo Stout.

The brew pub’s lunch and dinner menu features a variety of salads, burgers, sandwiches, pizzas and entrees.

Kabuki celebrates 1-year anniversary with deals

February 18th, 2009, 7:46 pm by Jess Harter

Kabuki Japanese Restaurant is celebrating its one-year anniversary at Tempe Marketplace by offering premium sushi rolls, usually $6.95 to $7.95, for $5. That includes the Alaskan roll, shrimp tempura roll, spicy tuna crunch roll and Gold Rush roll.

The specials, good today through Friday, also include $1.50 Kirin drafts, $7.50 Kirin pitchers, $1 sake shots, $3 sake sodas and $3 you-call-it Bacardi cocktails.

El Pollo Loco honors competitors’ coupons

February 18th, 2009, 7:36 pm by Jess Harter

El Pollo Loco is now honoring competitors’ coupons. Bring in any coupon for an individual chicken meal and get $1 off any El Pollo Loco combo meal. Bring in any coupon for a family chicken meal and receive $3 off any El Pollo Loco family meal.

Sushi Roku offers 3-course tasting menu for $30

February 18th, 2009, 7:13 pm by Jess Harter

Sushi Roku, the stylish restaurant at the W Hotel Scottsdale, has introduced its own version of a stimulus package: A $30, three-course tasting menu available Sundays through Thursdays.

As an appetizer, there’s a choice between “land” (Kobe tataki, chicken Tandori skewer, miso eggplant dengaku) or “sea” (tuna tataki and salmon wrapped with daikon kampachi).

Entree choices are either a selection of sushi (tuna, yellowtail, albacore, shrimp, spicy tuna and California roll) or jidori chicken teriyaki served with shittake mushrooms and garlic green beans.

Green tea mochi ice cream served with fresh fruit is the dessert.

Goodbye, Uncle Bear’s; hello, Skybox Sports Grill

February 18th, 2009, 1:37 pm by Jess Harter

Uncle Bear’s Grill and Bar has closed on the southeast corner of Cooper and Warner roads in Gilbert. In its place, the Gilbert Skybox Sports Grill opened Monday. The decor hasn’t changed much. There’s a new menu, although some of the Uncle Bear’s favorites remain. The phone number hasn’t changed: (480) 792-1945.

Restaurant review: Cornish Pasty Co.

February 17th, 2009, 7:35 pm by Jess Harter

Humans having been stuffing meat, vegetables and fruit into pockets of baked dough ever since … well, since they’ve been baking dough. Almost every culture has its own creations, ranging from pies to calzones to empanadas.

In England, Cornish tin miners are credited with popularizing what are known as pasties or oggies, semicircular pastries traditionally filled with a mixture of beef, potatoes and onions.

According to legend, these hearty, one-hand meals were tucked inside a miner’s clothing, keeping the food warm until lunch so they didn’t have to return to the surface until the end of their shift.

Over the centuries, pasties (pronounced pass-tees) have evolved to incorporate all kinds of fillings, savory and sweet. Since 2005, East Valley diners have been able to enjoy these English favorites at Cornish Pasty Co., a tiny strip-mall eatery in Tempe.

Last month, though, owner Dean Thomas finally opened his much-delayed second location on the southeast corner of Dobson and Guadalupe roads in Mesa. Best of all, it’s three times the size of the often-crowded Tempe site.

The new location pays its respects to the pasty’s blue-collar roots with a simple, industrial décor. Black-and-white photos of Cornish miners, enlarged to the size of posters, are about the only adornments on the white walls.

Seating is provided at booths made from pew-like benches and a 14-seat slate lunch counter with fixed stools that affords a front-row view of the action in the kitchen. Eight-inch-long bolts are cleverly used as menu holders, and food is served on tin plates.

Except for a couple salads, the menu is entirely made up of pasties, available in nearly 40 varieties, including 11 vegetarian.

The traditional oggie ($6.50), filled with what’s almost a thick paste made from beef, potatoes, onions and rutabaga, tops the roster. It’s easy to see how this well-seasoned comfort food could keep a miner going all day.

Some of the pastries — such as the Meat and Cheese (pork sausage, Swiss and cheddar Jack cheese, $7.50) and Shepherd’s Pie (ground beef, potatoes, carrots, peas, onions and cheese, $8.50) — are a tad  bland for my taste, but this is English cuisine, after all.

Others, however, feature big, bold flavors, including two of my favorites, the Cajun (blackened chicken, bacon, ham and cheese, $7) and the Rosemary Chicken (pictured above, with Brie and roasted red peppers, $8.50).

For more of an international flair, I heartily recommend the Italian (pepperoni, ham, salami, mozzarella and tomatoes, $7.50), the Spicy Asiago Chicken (with roasted corn, black beans and hatch chiles, $8.50) and the Chicken Tikka Masala ($8).

Each pasty is accompanied by its own sauce. Many come with red wine gravy, but others are paired with everything from marinara or chipotle sauce. The British staple HP Sauce also is available.

For dessert, don’t forget to try the dessert pasty with hot, gooey peanut butter, raspberry jelly and bananas ($5, pictured at right). Delicious.

Cornish Pasty Co. also offers a nice selection of six draft beers and 18 bottled beers, about two-thirds European.

After all, after a hard day in the mines, everybody looks forward to happy hour.

Cornish Pasty Co.
Where: 1941 W. Guadalupe Road, Mesa (southeast corner of Guadalupe and Elliot roads). Additional location in Tempe.
Open: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday, noon to 10 p.m. Sunday.
Prices: Pasties $6.50-$9, salads $4-$8, desserts $5.
Info: (480) 838-3586 or cornishpastyco.com.

Photos by Darryl Webb / Tribune

Chef H restaurant closes in Gilbert

February 16th, 2009, 7:03 pm by Jess Harter

Chef H, the small, chef-driven Mediterranean restaurant that placed No. 4 on my ranking of the best new restaurants of 2007, has closed.

The restaurant, located on the northeast corner of Lindsay and Pecos roads in Gilbert, featured the cuisine of Egyptian-born chef Hesham Khalik.

As I noted in my 2007 review, Chef H’s biggest challenge probably was the restaurant’s location. Lindsay Road, with no ramps to or from the U.S. 60 or Santan Freeway, has relatively light drive-by traffic.

In fact, I discovered Chef H because I was driving from the Chandler Crossroads to SanTan Village on Lindsay to avoid the busier north-south streets of Gilbert Road and Val Vista Drive.

Chef H is the third restaurant on my 2007 list to close, an indication of just how difficult the economic climate is for eateries. It joins the late Brush Fire Arizona Grill (No. 2) and Luc’s (No. 7).

Binkley, MacMillan, Fox among Beard Award semifinalists

February 13th, 2009, 6:07 pm by Jess Harter

Cave Creek chef Kevin Binkley, Paradise Valley chef Beau MacMillan, Phoenix chef Vincent Guerithault and Scottsdale restaurateur Sam Fox (pictured) are among the semifinalists for the 2009 James Beard Awards, the “Oscars of Food.”

In addition, Phoenix’s Noca is in the running for Best New Restaurant, and Scottsdale’s Kazimierz World Wine Bar is up for Outstanding Wine Service.

Binkley (Binkley’s Restaurant) and MacMillan (Elements at Sanctuary Camelback Mountain Resort and Spa) are among 20 semifinalists for Best Chef – Southwest. Binkley also was a semifinalist last year.

Guerithault (Vincent on Camelback) is a semifinalist for Outstanding Chef, where his competition includes such notable names as José Andrés, Tom Colicchio and Michael Mina.

Fox, whose Fox Restaurant Concepts include Sauce, Olive & Ivy, True Food Kitchen, Blanco, Greene House and other brands, is again up for Outstanding Restaurateur.

Each category will be cut to five finalists on March 23. Winners will be announced May 4.

See the full list of semifinalists (pdf file).

5 to try: Cajun restaurants for Mardi Gras

February 12th, 2009, 9:44 pm by Jess Harter

Mardi Gras, also known as Fat Tuesday, is Feb. 24, and while New Orleans’ famous carnival season leading up to Mardi Gras kicked off Jan. 6, the celebration really begins in earnest Friday. Twenty-four parades will be held this weekend alone. If you can’t make it to Bourbon Street during the next 17 days, here are five Valley restaurants that at least can offer you a taste of The Big Easy:

Chez Monieux
This ultra-casual newcomer (pronounced “shame on you’) took over the former Middle Eastern restaurant Sinbad on the northwest corner of Baseline and Price roads. The menu features all the Cajun standards — from jambalaya to fried frog legs — but the highlight is the chicken-and-sausage gumbo (pictured below), which took top honors at the Valley’s Great Cajun Cook-Off last November. 5004 S. Price Road, Tempe, (480) 755-0551, chezmonieux.com.

Cajun Seafood Corner
Daily specials at this 18-month-old strip-mall restaurant on the southeast corner of Dobson and Baseline roads in Mesa include such exotic offerings as alligator bites or an alligator po’boy, but the specialty is fresh crawfish (pictured above), which is flown in twice a week. The freshwater crustaceans are sold in three flavors — original, garlic butter and lemon pepper — for $8.95 per pound. 2051 S. Dobson Road, Mesa, (480) 491-1680.

Pier de Orleans
A favorite of winter visitors and senior citizens, this longtime Mesa establishment is selling oysters on the half shell, fresh from Louisiana, for 60 cents apiece. Seafood dominates the menu, which includes crawfish chowder, shrimp etouffee, seafood gumbo, deep-fried catfish and frog legs, all served in large portions. Early-bird specials run from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. 61 E. University Drive, Mesa, (480) 844-7437, pierdeorleans.com.

Metro Brasserie & Bar
The latest restaurant to open at SouthBridge in Old Town Scottsdale, this New Orleans-style French brasserie debuted in October. The menu features rustic French dishes with influences of the Deep South. A seafood raw bar showcases shellfish flown in daily. Entrees, which range from shrimp and grits to bacon-wrapped rabbit, are around $20. 7114 E. Stetson Drive, Scottsdale, (480) 994-3663, metrosouthbridge.com.

Baby Kay’s Cajun Kitchen
Located in the Town & Country Shopping Center on the southeast corner of Camelback Road and 20th Street in Phoenix, this granddaddy of Valley Cajun restaurants is famous for its Wednesday night crawfish  boils. Four types of gumbo include a duck-and-andouille-sausage version. Other treats include Tabasco-glazed wings and Cajun shrimp cocktails. 2119 E. Camelback Road, Phoenix, (602) 955-0011, babykayscajunkitchen.com.

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