craigie on main
restaurant openings in my neighborhood always cause me some pain along with the joy. i very much like craigie street bistrot, and am quite happy that now it’s around the corner on main street. at the same time, i really am not that happy that craigie street is what moved in on main street, because its prices are so high that it’s not affordable for the vast majority of the neighborhood. while i don’t object that much to the influx of well-heeled yuppie/upper-middle-class strangers coming into the neighborhood – who are we kidding, i mind a whole lot – it’s more that i think that restaurants that purport to be so neighborhoody should pay more attention to who lives in the neighborhood. it just doesn’t seem ethically right that a restaurant should locate itself in a place where most of the diners are not natives (unless we’re in new york). not even brunch is affordable! contrast craigie on main with tosci’s – tosci’s is a true neighborhood place where you can sit, linger, and brunch for not too much. i just feel that craigie is being a little insensitive.
ethical tension aside, craigie on main is pretty good in the food and service department. first, let’s do a couple of notes about decor. overall, quite nice – easy to hear, nice colors, no clashing, etc. but the two-tops are spaced too close to each other. i mean, really – i’m not a huge person, and i had trouble getting in and out of my seat because it was back to back with the seat behind me. you know how you feel like the restaurant doesn’t think you’re going to be that profitable for them, and they give you the most rotten tables? that pretty much sums up how i felt about that table. and the table size is fine – all the plates fit – but the spacing is pretty much horrible. also, i kind of like having the kitchen out in the open (concerns with food odors saturating your clothing aside), but it leaves the entryway space feeling really cramped. i don’t know who their designer was, but they did not do that great a job – good idea, middling execution. i wonder if the draft from the door affects temperatures in the kitchen, or if it’s far enough away?
anyway, the food. we came because they had a restaurant stimulus menu – a $35 3-course prix fixe. it was relatively unexciting, though, and the first course was crispy smelts that i wasn’t sure i would like, so mary and i ordered a la carte. usually craigie street has a $30 3-course prix fixe, so i’m curious to know if at craigie on main, it has been edited out. because i would certainly go more often if there was a more affordable option.
appetizers: i started with grilled octopus with chorizo cream, cipollini onions, and hearts of palm. i’m not a fan of hearts of palm – they just taste bland to me – but the rest was an excellent combination. i haven’t had octopus that many times – i can probably count the number of times on one hand – and the last one i had was at babbo, and it was fantastic. this one was excellent as well; the chorizo cream was a particularly good pairing. i find the difference between the textures of squid and octopus to be really intriguing – you wouldn’t expect such similar creatures to taste so different. mary had the cream of cauliflower soup with rabbit sausage and a bit of brussels sprouts. the soup was pretty delicate in flavor, but was fantastic in combination with the rabbit sausage; in turn the rabbit sausage was definitely the best preparation of rabbit that i’ve had – i don’t typically like rabbit because i find it bland.
by the way, bread service: generally blah. the bread was fine, but i don’t see why craigie street always insists on serving butter that’s too cold to spread.
for main courses, i had the slow-cooked sea trout with frizzled ginger, rock shrimp, and mussels, all in a bit of serrano ham broth with almonds (hot ham water, anyone?). i assume that “slow-cooked” means “sous vide” and i’m coming to understand that i don’t really like the texture of things that are cooked sous-vide. i think i prefer food, or at least meat, with texture and chew to it, rather than it being food for babies and people with dentures. however, the flavors of this dish were really excellent – better than the octopus, i would say. everything was very complementary, and the rock shrimp were almost as good as the ones i had at babbo (the last place i had rock shrimp). the trout didn’t taste overly trout-y (as mackerel sometimes taste overly mackerel-y), and every time i have mussels, i increasingly realize that i really like them.
the surprise of the night was dessert – gingerbread pain perdu, and it was a knockout! I don’t typically think of dessert being a strong suit for craigie street, but this was the best thing we had all night. it was two triangles of cake that had a lot of egg in it – enough for a very moist, almost custardy way, but custardy in a cooked in a hot water bath for a while, rather than a typical creme caramel custardy-ness. it’s difficult to describe, and i’d be curious to know what the preparation was. whatever it was, the slight crunchiness of the very top layer was absolutely delectable, and it was fantastic with the ginger ice cream. it was kind of like a ginger-spiced version of sticky toffee pudding, minus the copious amounts of caramel sauce.
service was excellent – it seems like the restaurant is really trying to please diners so they come back, in these difficult economic times. well…i mean, my views on this are pretty clear. i wonder if it’s just not economically feasible to lower prices, or if there’s a certain level of produce quality that can’t be trimmed in any way to make the restaurant more affordable. regardless, it’s nice to have some seriously good food in the neighborhood – it’s definitely better than everything else (with the exception, perhaps, of salts, a restaurant i haven’t been to). let’s just hope that someday the locals will be able to partake.