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Friday, November 9, 2007

Best Bites: Dining out in Dallas-Fort Worth November 9

BLT Steak Dallas finally opens this month, the latest out-of-towner steakhouse to come to Dallas -- possibly unaware that steak is the one thing we already do well. But maybe its French-bistro twist will set it apart. It comes from New York chef and Grade-A Frenchy Laurent Tourondel.

Recently named "Restaurateur of the Year" by Bon Appetit magazine, Tourondel has become a restaurant heavyweight with his BLT Restaurant Group, whose roster includes BLT Burger, BLT Fish, BLT Prime, and BLT Market. (No "BLT Coffee" yet.)

The first BLT Steak opened in New York in 2004; subsequent branches opened in White Plains, N.Y., Washington, D.C., Miami, Los Angeles, and San Juan. The Web site describes "steaks dressed with a selection of sauces, ranging from Bearnaise to horseradish, and paired with decadent sides such as Parmesan flavored gnocchi and oversized onion rings."

It's located in Village on the Green, yet-another urban-village project, this time at the northeast corner of Alpha and Noel, across from the Galleria where 202 residential units sit on top of 90,000 square feet of high-end retail and restaurant space.

They don't call them "oversized" for nothing.
They don't call them "oversized" for nothing.

Kathleen's now a flygirl

The promised overhaul of Kathleen's Art Cafe is complete: Say hello to Kathleen's Sky Diner, a ramped-up remodel with a vague airplane theme. Most of the local-art-for-sale on the walls that gave the place its name is gone, replaced by retro photos of New York and road maps for an overall "hangar" vibe. ("I think we ought to be wearing stewardess outfits," said one server.) The menu now features items that were previously specials only; the desserts, breakfasts, and late-night hours remain, as they have since Kathleen and Robert Ellington opened the place in 1988.

Valencia adios

Valencia, the upscale buffet opened by the folks behind Palomina's Buffet, has closed. The restaurant had an insanely plentiful selection of foods from around the world, priced at $11.99 at lunch and $16.99 at dinner. But the words "upscale" and "buffet" do not a successful concept make. Not helping the restaurant's fortunes: the lethal combination of high rent and poor location at the corner of Belt Line Road and Quorum Drive. This is the same strip center that has struck down such perennials as Gilbert's Deli and Monica's Aca y Alla.

And in fact, the location is bad enough that seafood restaurant Go Fish is aiming to move on out, too. Go Fish owner Mike Hoque, a seafood aficionado who also owns Fish Express and Dallas Fish Market in downtown Dallas, expects to relocate Go Fish by the end of 2007 -- very likely in the same center across from the Galleria Dallas as BLT Steak Dallas.

Clay Pit changes hands

Clay Pit, the Indian restaurant that opened in Addison in 2002, has changed hands: Chef-owner Tinku Saini and his sisters Renu and Jo sold the place last month. The family also sold the original Austin branch which opened in 1998 (and was named one of America's best restaurants by Bon Appetit magazine in 2001). When a buyer expressed interest in the Austin branch, it gave Tinku pause. Then, when Rena's husband got a job out of town, the restaurant's fate was sealed. Navin Reddy, who bought the Dallas branch, has barely had a chance to catch his breath but intends to keep the innovative Indian-fusion menu.

Pringles Select

Pringles Select came out about a year ago, but just showed up at the local market. In general, Pringles are gross since their connection to real food is so tenuous. But Pringles Select at least come in a bag -- preferable to regular Pringles' environmentally bogus can. (What does it tell you about a food product when its primary attribute is its reduced packaging?)

The Select line is described on Pringles Web site as "gourmet", with five flavors: Parmesan garlic, sun-dried tomato, Szechuan barbecue, cinnamon sweet potato, and honey chipotle barbecue. (Chipotle = very hot these days.) Both the Parmesan garlic and the sweet potato were pretty addictive. They're small, like the round mini tortilla chips; crisp; and come coated with lots of seasoning. The sweet potato version actually makes you feel like you're eating something healthy, which is such a novel feeling to have when you are eating chips.



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Donna Chen, says:

That location does seem to be bad luck. I couldn't understand why Monica's couldn't survive, yet less than a mile away, Gloria's is always packed.

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2 years ago
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Teresa Gubbins, says:

i'm happy to see that <a href="http://www.pegasusnews.com/places/cafe-brazil-addison/">cafe brazil</a> is keeping its head above water

kirk, says:

Thai Orchid has been in that center for 8+ years, through thick and thin. (Is it alliteration if it isn't pronounced the same way?) Maybe the fact that it is owned by a family who are in it for the long haul has something to do with that. Then again, that didn't seem to help Gilbert's in the final analysis.

Is Pringles packing quarters in with those cinnamon sweet potato processed snack products?

Anonymous

2 years ago
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mizery, says:

I didn't know Gilbert's had closed. Boo hoo. Are they open or planning to open elsewhere?

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2 years ago
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jcangas, says:

Valencia was a very sub-par venue. The food was just not that good. The concept of upscale buffet is risky at best. If you want a buffet style restaurant, you should just accept the fact that the food quality is going to suffer. It's a simple matter of economics. And in the food saturated town of Addison did we need another buffet? You have two steak buffets, one sushi buffet and the rest don't deserve mention. I miss monica's!

Anonymous

2 years ago
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FoodCzar, says:

Food quality does not have to suffer in a buffet style restaurant, my friend. Ever been to Vegas and dined at the buffets at the Rio, Bellagio or Paris? They're all killer! Helps if you have gambling to cut down the costs a bit.

Anonymous

2 years ago
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luniz, says:

Kiku in McKinney is pretty high quality for a buffet but I don't know how long they'll last, not enough sushi aficionados in McKinney and the location isn't great.

I kinda liked the art cafe vibe even if it was a little bit rich-lady-ish. An airplane hangar vibe? Not too sure about that.

Anonymous

2 years ago
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Michael Anderson, says:

My wife and I ate at the BLT Steak in San Juan while on vacation. I can't say I noticed anything that would separate it out from the Crafts or N9NE's of the world. We'll see what the diners of North Dallas think.

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2 years ago
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Teresa Gubbins, says:

mizery, i'm sad to say that gilbert's <a href="http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2007/apr/25/new-cafe-brazil-open-addison/">closed in 2004</a> and decided not to re-open. (if you hit that link, you'll see that their business took a dive after 9-11, from which they never recovered. but i also think that changing locations during that period hurt them, and in particular that location which i maintain stinks, despite the endurance of thai orchid, kirk!!! ha)

i know you always championed them for being a great deli - a category you knew from your years in NYC - but i also liked them because, deli food or not, the caliber of everything they did was excellent ... and yet they weren't overly expensive

bnise, says:

The owner of Gilbert's and the chef who used to work for him went to work behind the deli counter at Cindi's NY Deli on Central Expressway. While he was there he revamped some of the recipes and started purchasing the same products he used to serve at Gilberts. (i.e., replacing Boar's Head corned beef with the real stuff from New York, replacing Cindi's matzo ball soup with his own version, etc.) It has been a while since I have eaten at Cindi's, so I don't know if he is still working there.

Anonymous

2 years ago
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Billusa99, says:

Not only did it take the Valencia build-out forever to finish, it looked cheap from the outside once done. No windows, either.

Where on earth do they keep finding fools to invest in stuff like this that looks so doomed from the very start?

Anonymous

2 years ago
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FatCap, says:

Teresa, one of the reasons I've patronized BLT Steak in NYC (and Alexander's in Cupertino) is for the availability of genuine Japanese beef, which both restaurants claim to be A5 grade. Any idea whether the Dallas incarnation of BLT Steak will have the same offering (at nearly $30 an ounce of strip, as it is in NYC)? Thanks.

Anonymous

2 years ago
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