Saturday, January 31, 2009

Angelina Italian Bistro: The Perfect Eye-talian Place for Detroit

As much as I'd love to take credit for that clever little pronunciation pun, I must dutifully concede credit to Supergay Detroit. When Angelina Italian Bistro opened a mere three months ago, amidst a flurry a local buzzers buzzing, I quite frankly didn't know what to expect. I feared another lackluster "Eye"-talian joint with overpriced, mediocre food in an overly trendy, overly self-important atmosphere. Then I ran into Supergay at the Park Bar one night in October, and he raved about it, calling it an "Eye-talian place for Detroit hipsters."

Though I personally would have replaced the term "hipster" (see: shaggy hair, skinny jeans, Converse shoes, always at the Magic Stick) with "scenester" (your everyday semi-affluent+ Detroit know-it-all; spends a lot of time at Park Bar and Proof), the message was the same: I needed to check out Angelina.

And so I did. Once. Twice. Again and again. I liked it so much I spent New Year's Eve there. I returned again for a 50-person supper club last week. I've become familiar with one of the owners, Tom Agosta, as well as servers Vince (whom I knew from Enoteca and Atlas Global Bistro) and Remi (who had an uncanny recollection from a time I went there for lunch back in November). I don't simply enjoy the place; it has become my new favorite Detroit restaurant, not only for the food and drink but for the ambiance and hospitality.


Occupying the space that was once the old Madison Theatre in Grand Circus Park, the restaurant is not only in a prime location in the cultural center of the city, but it is also a rather nostalgic place for many of its patrons who remember seeing films in the old theatre before it closed its doors in 1984 (I've heard stories of first dates and first cinema experiences from a number of fellow diners happily reminiscing). The space sat empty for many years but, after some by-no-means minor difficulties, the current owners were able to secure this prime property and transformed it into the casually chic, inviting dining spot in the epicenter of Detroit's social scene. All that remains of the Madison Theatre is the marquis, which now boasts the name "Angelina." And Detroit should be happy to have it.

Even in these trying economic times, there have been no shortages of restaurants opening in the city recently. Each offer their own unique vision and flair, but not all of them really nail the essence of Detroit. Some are truly great, and would be truly great perhaps in another city in another state (Spa 19 24 Grille comes to mind here), or maybe just at another time. But where many of these new places miss the mark, Angelina Italian Bistro gets it right on all counts.

After speaking a little about the business with co-owner Agosta, I learned more about the concept behind the restaurant. Partners Tom and Mike both come from families with grandparents hailing from the Old Country--Sicily, in this case. Both grew up with Grandma in the kitchen making fresh pastas and sauces on a daily basis, and both wanted to bring a little of that home-cooked, authentic Mediterranean flavor to their own restaurant after decades of studying and working in other establishments. Between them they have millions of dollars in restaurant experience, but this is a first venture for both.

They wanted to create a place that would suit Detroit--a place that offers excellent food at reasonable prices in a comfortable atmosphere, where they could share their vision and their skills in a way Detroiters could appreciate. The décor is pure Detroit, with exposed brick walls, exposed airducts in the ceiling, and one wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. It's got that trendy urban loft feel tempered by a spacious, glossy wood bar and soft, warm lighting. And when you do stop by, make sure you ask about the pièce de résistance hanging in the corner, a boldly-colored sculpture of handblown glass.


What Mike and Tom ultimately created was a restaurant that is the right place at the right time for Detroit. Since the day it opened it has attracted crowds of theatre-goers and Detroit social scenesters alike, and it is often crowded to near-capacity around game times, concerts, and other downtown events. It's also in the best location imaginable, being centrally located to all the sports arenas, theatres, concert venues, and other bars and highly visible from Woodward Avenue. The look, the location, the vibe, and the crowd is all right...and so is the food.

Specializing in southern Italian cuisine with a Mediterranean flair, Executive Chef Joel Vassallo has created a menu which highlights the various flavors of the proprietors' families' homeland. Sicilian cuisine is a bit different from the traditional understanding of "Italian" food, and exhibits traces of all of the various cultures that have established roots on the island. It is as much influenced by the mainland as it is by the nearby Greek islands and Arab countries, and thus is also heavy on use of chick peas, kalamata olives, fresh fish, pine nuts, and couscous (all ingredients that appear regularly throughout Angelina's menu). And so it is you'll begin your meal with a generous portion of warm sourdough bread with accompaniments of olive oil, sweet cream butter, and Italian white bean "hummous."


As I've already stated, I've been here a few times, and with each visit I find a new dish to fall in love with. Where do I start? Perhaps with the starters.

The Antipasti menu is a selection of house-smoked and house-cured fish and meats, as well as marinated and pickled vegetables, all served with marinated olives, arugula, whole grain mustard and Pecorino Romano. This is a solid start to any authentic Italian meal, echoing the experience of being served in a small Sicilian eatery in which they don't even allow you menus.

The "Tasting Plates" offer a more common understanding of a four-course meal, with appetizers that speak towards more American appetites. The Bruschetta Trio--with classic tomato basil as well as marinated Portabella mushrooms and toasted chick peas--is a nice sampling of different flavors which represent well the different culinary traditions that inform the menu. There are three different appetizer pizzas to choose from (enough for a meal for one or to share with a group), including the Braised Pork Shoulder Pizza with mushrooms, arugula, and Parmesan Reggiano with classic sauce that I just simply could not resist on my first visit. The pork was tender, the pizza dough itself crispy and cracker-like, which is more similar to the pizza one would find throughout all regions of Italy than the pizza one finds in America.


The Kalamata Pizza, made with kalamata olive tapenade, tomatoes, caramelized onion, and blended cheese is a perfect balance of highly salty and slightly sweet. The real standout here, though, is the Crispy Calamari--calamari steaks cut into strips and lightly breaded and fried, served with a "Carmelo" dipping sauce. The calamari is seasoned to absolute perfection, each bite filled with flavor, which the champagne butter sauce only enhances. I must say, without hesitation, that this is simply the best calamari I've ever tasted, and would recommend this as a must for anyone who dines here.

Angelina offers a variety of soups, salads, and sandwiches (lunch only), though all entrees are served with their House Salad, which consists of simple organic field greens, red onions, toasted pine nuts, gorgonzola, and herb vinaigrette dressing. The salad is light and flavorful, a nice second course to ramp up your appetite for the main event. On a casual lunch trip, I found the Italian Panini--made with salami, coppa, mortadella, pepperonata, and buffalo mozzarella--extremely heavy, and would recommend to other lunch diners they stick with the lunch portion of Angelina's house-made fresh pastas.

Pasta--Italian cuisine is nothing without it. The house-made pastas are made fresh from scratch daily in the kitchen--nothing is ever from a box or frozen. The freshness is most obvious is the shapes of the pastas themselves--perhaps a little bumpy, not quite fully even or consistent in shape, the tell-tale signs of a true homemade pasta. The pasta is always prepared to perfection, with a flawless balance of tender yet firm noodles expertly complimented with simple, flavorful homemade sauces and choice ingredients. The classic Parppardelle Bolognese, made with classic meat sauce and Parmesan Reggiano, is a deceptively simple dish that explodes with well-balanced flavor. The pasta here also has its chance to shine, decorated only with a richly flavored meat sauce and cheese accents. It might be the most "boring," but it's my hands-down favorite.

The Little Neck Clam and Linguine is also a fine choice, made with a light olive oil and garlic sauce, pancetta, mushrooms, spinach, and clams in-shell. The clams are cooked well and blessedly free of grit, but again--it is the pasta that shines here, and the strips of salty pancetta add a nice contrast to the bitterness of the clams and spinach and the otherwise mild sauce.


The Roasted Butternut Squash Ravioli is soft and pillowy, slightly sweet with a buttery sauce accented with Amaretto, toasted almonds, and rapini.


On another trip I decided to be a little more daring and sampled the Carmelized Onion and Gorgonzola Strucolo I had been eyeing. Served with potato hash, wild mushroom, and grilled fennel and cooked into a crisp, flaky phylo dough, I quickly remembered that I don't much care for onions and realized that a dish with predominant onion flavor might not be the one for me. The cubed potaotes lightly fried in olive oil with garlic in parsley were delicious, though; I wouldn't mind an order of just these for breakfast.

I rarely save room for dessert, but I have sampled several of those at Angelina. The Tiramisu--espresso-soaked ladyfingers with mascarpone and cocoa--is classic, though not breaking any new ground. The Apple Tart, with Michigan apples and calvados caramel sauce served with vanilla ice cream, is another classic and done well here, though again, not earth-shattering. A new menu item which just debuted last week is the Cheesecake (made with half ricotta and half cream cheese) in an Orange Anisette sauce, and though the cheesecake was perfectly creamy and decadent, the anisette sauce (with slight hints of black licorice) killed it for me. The Spiced Pumpkin Bread Pudding, made with pumpkin custard and crème anglais, is absolutely wonderful. It is moist and rich, full of comforting autumnal spices like cinammon and nutmeg and cardamon, and the generous dollop of crème anglais is a cold and creamy contrast to the warm and spicy bread pudding it tops.


The wine list at Angelina is modest yet full of handsome choices from all over Italy, Argentina, and even a smattering of Michigan, with most priced very affordably at $35.00 and below (the Solterra Carmenere Reserve is a value at $6.00/glass and $21.00/bottle). They also offer a wide selection of Detroit-brewed craft beers on tap, and carry my very own favorite Young's Double Chocolate Stout by the bottle. The teeny-tiny martini list is a wallop of creative cocktailing: the Guiness Espress Martini is my new favorite drink of choice, made with triple espresso vodka, sweet vanilla, and Guiness, and tastes like heaven in a glass. The GreenTeani tastes like a slightly sweet alcoholic green tea, and no more can be said about that.


Have I tempted your tastebuds yet? Angelina is a perfect destination, whether it be for a night out with friends, cocktails after work, dinner with a date, or drinks before a show. It has the best of everything you could possibly desire in a Detroit dining destination, including location, location, location. I cannot possibly recommend it enough or emphasize just how much I feel that this is the ideal spot for Detroit right here, right now. Service with a smile, friendly and inviting, stylish and contemporary, and with incredible food, Angelina Italian Bistro is The One. The rest are simply what remains.

Angelina Italian Bistro is located at 1565 Broadway, 313-962-1355. Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 11:00AM-10:00PM; Fri.-Sat. 11:00AM-midnight; Sun. 11:00AM-8:00PM; closed Mondays.

Love at First Taste: Taste Pizzabar


After a friends and family test-run last weekend and three years in the making with planning and development, Taste Pizzabar officially opened for business this past Monday, and the buzz so far is something most new business owners could only dream of.

I stopped in for a bite on Friday because (a) I love pizza, and (b) I love new places, and what I found was a gourmet pizzeria with a menu full of comfort food in a comfortable, loungey atmosphere condusive to just hanging out and meeting people.

And this is really the whole basis of the concept behind Taste Pizzabar: Executive Chef and co-owner Dale Daniels chatted with us for a bit and told us some history on the genesis of Taste. His background is in baking, and though he took what he calls a "backwards route" to get to where he is today he finally ended up back in the kitchen after a stint in the business world, and this is when he fell in love with dough. Daniels has a passion for making and perfecting dough, which by default led to a passion for pizza (as the dough--as any good pizza fan knows--is not just the base but also the single most important component of a good pizza). Daniels wanted to create a lounge-like space that is trendy but also welcoming, where people can come to socialize. The history of pizza is very much about people coming together to share a few slices and socialize, and this idea was the launch pad for Taste.

General Manager Will also came and chatted for a bit, and told us a little more about the venue and his own vision. Taking Daniels's idea for a friendly yet trendy space to socialize, Will (a techno-head and DJ himself) wanted to also make it very Detroit. He insisted on playing house music over the speakers, and they also have DJ Seoul spinning in the lounge during dinner on Fridays and Saturdays. The décor is very Detroit loft: exposed brick walls, exposed pipes and airducts in the ceiling, large windows running along one wall with a view of the nearby People Mover, airy and spacious and very chill. The lounge and restaurant areas are all decorated in warm tones, from the dark wood tables to the deep red carpets. The lounge area has high-backed chocolate leather booths accented with candlelight. Will refers to it all as a "work in progress," though you'd never think it to just walk in.

So the atmosphere was all right, now how about the food?

The taste of Taste is equally on-point. From the Starters menu, which has comfort food classics like Tater Tot--tossed in garlic butter and parsley and sprinkled with parmesan--and "Wanys," spicy pickles dipped in seasoned batter and deep-fried. You can also order shrimp and chicken wings tossed in their own housemade BBQ sauce, or Veggie Spring Rolls if you want to start a little lighter.

Taste also offers a nice selection of salads and paninis, including the standout "Taste Salad"--mixed greens, red onions, tomatoes, cucumber and smoked mozzarella with a blueberry pomegranate vinaigrette. The Bella panini also sounds like a quick favorite, a gourmet version of the classic club sandwich with smoked turkey, apple wood smoked bacon, smoked mozzarella, lettuce, tomato, and "Taste sauce." Paninis are also served with a side of Tater Tots.

But Taste isn't called "pizzabar" for nothing: they've got 17 different kinds of specialty pizzas, along with 7 meats, 6 cheeses, and 11 "accessories" for you to build your own. All pizzas are made as 10'' personal pies, enough to fill one hungry person or two snacky people. Specialty pizzas range in price from $8.99-$12.99, with the most expensive (and decadent) being the "Ocean 21," made with scallops, lobster, and shrimp with a white sauce, roasted red peppers, garlic, grilled onions, and smoked mozzarella for $21.00. It's Detroit's answer to New York's infamous "Luxury Pizza" at Nino's Bellisima Pizza which sells for $1,000/pie ($125.00/slice). I say leave the caviar, take the lobster.

After tossing around such selections as the "Royale with Cheese" (a classic pepperoni pizza made with imported Italian pepperoni and creamy mozzarella cheese), the "Mona Lisa" (a white-sauce pizza with spinach, grilled chicken breast, roasted red peppers, sweet onions, roasted garlic and smoked mozzarella), and the "Detroit Red" (housemade BBQ sauce with chicken breast, crisp red onions, yellow peppers and premium Dutch Beemster cheese and fresh cilantro), I ultimately opted for my four-cheese comfort zone, the Bianco. Described on the menu as "Cheese lovers say it's the cheesiest!", I didn't even need to read on to where it said "our perfect crust sprinkled with extra virgin olive oil then topped with mozzarella, parmigiano reggiano, smoked mozzarella, goat cheese and oven roasted garlic" to know that this was the pie for me. My fellow cheesehead server Nate confirmed my opinion, and Chef Dale told me that it took him a "long time" to perfect it and hoped that I would enjoy it.


Oh, I did. I DID. Cheese + Roasted Garlic x Perfect Crust = love at first Taste. The different cheeses melded together nicely for a consistently sharp, tangy flavor (oftentimes four-cheese pizzas will not be blended well, and pizzerias often like to present goat cheese and fontina as gobby dollops which, when bitten into, are usually gobby overkill on the tastebuds), the roasted garlic scented the whole pizza, and the crust was a perfect balance of doughy and firm, chewy and tender.

The dough is really the standout with the pizza at Taste, as well it should be. Dough-making is not just Daniels's specialty, it's his passion, and he makes the dough at Taste fresh daily, getting in at 5:00AM to produce this well-balanced basis for the perfect pizza crust made with organic flour and extra virgin olive oil. He also takes his dough quite seriously--when my lactose-intolerant dining partner asked for a pizza without cheese, Daniels had to deny this request as the crust would burn. He wasn't being a prima donna chef by doing this, either--in fact, the better chefs of the world who take their craft very seriously will not always cater to diners' requests when they feel those requests will in effect "ruin" their final product, which they see as their own art. Daniels exhibited this kind of pride in his own work, and I fully appreciate that.

Right now Taste does not offer an official "list" of wines and beers, but both Dale and Will told me that they will be working with a sommelier to create a list of fine wines at fair prices hand-picked for perfect pairings with their pizzas. There will also be a craft beer list on the way--because gourmet pizza and craft beer were simply born to be together.

Oh, and if you have a sweet tooth you need to satisfy, they've got a Caramel Apple Pie and Brownie Bartell, both a la mode, and you just can't go wrong with Cheesecake Cupcakes.

As if great food in a great atmosphere weren't enough, the hours are the best in the city. Grabbing a bite to eat on your lunch break? Head to Taste for lunch from 11:00AM-2:30PM Monday-Friday, and sample one of their hearty and reasonably-priced lunch specials. Dinner is served until 11:00PM weekly, and they are open until 4:00AM on Fridays and Saturdays so you can get your fill after a night of heavy drinking.

And perhaps you did all that drinking downstairs at Premium Resto Lounge, the nightclub/lounge occupying the space that was formerly Times Square Nightclub, owned by the same partnership that owns Taste. Premium has been open for Saturday old school nights and private parties since late November, but was just celebrating their grand opening last night with DJ Jenny LaFemme and Bruce Cobb on percussion. The space is unlike any other Detroit club, but very much fitting Detroit--a pared-down, understated feel with panels of L.E.D. lights in another exposed brick/exposed pipe loft-like atmosphere, with two DJ booths, two bars, a performance stage, lots of chairs and booths for lounging, and a VIP all-white "Miami Room." Premium is primed to become one of Detroit's best lounges, and Taste will be right behind it (or, rather, above it) with more space for lounging, dining, and socializing late into the night (or, rather, early into the morning).


If last night's crowd was any indication, Taste Pizzabar is already a hit. Filled with people doing exactly what the owners had envisioned--hanging out, dining, socializing--and with a staff in which each and every individual from the hostess to the server to the management and all the way up to the owners all seem personally committed to the success of the restaurant, Taste has everything they need in place to make it in this city. And if lounging and socializing and all the rest doesn't appeal to you, just go for the pizza.

Taste Pizzabar is located at 1431 Times Square, 313-962-8700.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Year of the Ox Celebration at Mon Jin Lau


We're in the midst of the 15-day celebration that is Chinese New Year, and Mon Jin Lau of Troy is celebrating with its own two-day fete.

On Tuesday, February 3rd, you can head to Hour Detroit's "Restaurant of the Year" Mon Jin Lau for a special prix fixe Year of the Ox dinner (see details below), or skip the dinner and head straight for the party on Wednesday, February 4th in conjunction with their weekly "Shanghai Wednesdays."

Tuesday, February 3rd 2009
Chinese New Year Dinner & Entertainment
Multi Course Dinner, Lion Dance, Firecrackers, Magicians, Fortune Tellers, Martial Arts
7:00PM
$89/person including tax/gratuity
Limited seating. All ticket sales are final.

Menu for Chinese New Year (Subject to Change, Call for Vegetarian Options):

First Course
(Trio Tasting)
Glazed Duck Breast - Asian Pear, Pomegranate Balsamic Glaze
Seared Kobe Beef Roll - Shrimp Tempura, Cucumber Topped w/Seared Kobe, Jalapeno, Sweet Miso
Blood Orange Tuna Tartar - Asian Pear, Jalapeno

Second Course
Cucumber Wrapped Baby Field Greens with Jumbo Lump Crab
Tomato Medley, Mango, with Yuzu-Asian Pear Dressing, topped with Crunch Filo and Goat Cheese

Third Course
(Choice Of)
Seafood Noodle Nest - Long Life Lo-Mein Noodle, Shrimp, Scallop, Mussell, Lobster, Black Bean Sauce
Wok Seared Filet - Medallions Wok Fired with King Oyster Mushrooms, Chinese Leeks
Chilean Sea Bass - Soy-Mirin Broth, Three Mushroom Wonton, Pea Shoots
Asian Braised Short Rib - Shitake Mushroom, Baby Bok Choy, Asian Eggplant
Sushi Bento Box - An Array of Sushi Rolls and Chef Special Sashimi

Wednesday, February 4th 2009
Shanghai Wednesdays Celebrates the Chinese New Year
DJ's Tom T & Matt A, featuring Bruce Cobb on Percussions
Lion Dance, Firecrackers, Laughing Buddhas
9:00PM


Free Admission with confirmed Tuesday Dinner Reservation
(Note, Dinner will not be available Wednesday night)

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Johnny Rockets No More

The Johnny Rockets location on Woodward at Montcalm has vanished without a trace. While it is unfortunate to see a business go under, especially after a good string of years in the same location, I can't help but feel irregular business hours and an alcohol-free diner-like atmosphere in a heavily sportfan-trafficked area with so-so service to boot might be to blame for the ultimate failure of this franchised location. It is my hope that a more fitting enterprise now take its place in this otherwise prime location.

Even More Good Girls to Love

It's been a fine half a year for Good Girls Go to Paris Crepes! After barely 6 months in business, the crepe stand--located on John R east of Woodward--has expanded its original location to nearly double the size, and plans to open two new locations in the spring: one in the Park Shelton in Detroit's Midtown area, and one in Grosse Pointe Park in the former Moo-Moo's location.

Congratulations to proprietor Toreah on her monumental success!

Spa 1924 Grille Now Open, Possibly Maybe

Well, that took longer than expected and brought less buzz than even I would have anticipated. But the Spa 1924 Grille is now open for business; theoretically it should be open for both lunch and dinner when I hit the "publish post" button, but since there has been no follow-up in the online newspapers or the blogs that I can easily find after about 37 seconds of Internet searching, I conclude it inconclusive.

I wish I could get more behind this venture. I'm just...not. I'd like to be--I'm all about the increase of local fine-dining establishments. It's just that something about this place screams "gimmick," to the point that I've lost all interest in it otherwise. Perhaps I need to just check it out; I mean, "Truffled White Cheddar Mac and Cheese" and "Sweet Potato Brulee" sound incredible, and I'm sure executive chef Jason Gardner is producing amazing dishes. But...yeah, I just can't seem to get hyped about this one. Maybe this also has to do with the glut of new restaurants opening lately? Finn & Porter, Detroit Fish Market, Taste Pizzabar, Roast, Angelina Italian Bistro, Mercury Coffee Bar...it's a little hard to keep up during these times of economic no-money-having.

Coming in Feburary, the various extensions of Spa 1924 Grille, including the Spa19, the Champagne Bar (featuring more than 30 Moet Hennessy products by the glass or bottle), and the private dining room called the "Plate Room" featuring a display wall of original Book Cadillac china.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Taste Pizza Bar Now Open!

Just barely six months ago South Beach Ultra Lounge, originally called South Beach Pizza Bar, opened inside the Fisher Building. Without hardly any major publicity at all and without benefit of a standard weekly promoter to pull in crowds, the ultra-chic, ultra-refined Miami-style nightclub and gourmet pizzeria is a guaranteed hotspot every weekend, catering to vastly different clientele and popular amongst them all. The pizza is also supposed to be fabulous.

Now, there is Taste Pizza Bar. They just opened for business this past Friday, and--much like South Beach before it--have succeeded in drawing in enough buzz to fill the place without benefit of a promoter, a website, or any publicity whatsoever. I did not dine there yet but I did get a peak inside: on the second floor at 1431 Times Square, Taste Pizza Bar has nailed the trendy lounge look--dimly lit with stylish accent lighting, spacious and sleek, and with one full wall entirely made of windows, the décor is definitely on-point to make this a popular hangout for late-night dining and drinking in a comfortable yet chic lounge atmosphere.

And can I just say, I'm quite fond of this new "pizza-bar-cum-ultra-lounge" trend that Detroit seems to very much be on the forefront of (a trend that, by my best estimations, began in California and has yet to really hit in New York). For a city that is considered so desolate and so "behind" by so many, our nightlife is on par with what any other city might have to offer (just possibly not in the same quantity). The gourmet pizza lounge concept is on the cutting edge of new culinary/nightlife trends--think "sushi lounge" five years ago, a bandwagon which Detroit was also very much on, and from the very start I might add (Crave, Corner Bar, Ignite). Now sushi lounges abound and we're moving on to the next hip trend in high-class-nightlife-meets-reinvented-comfort-food.

All we need now is a restaurant like Beverly Hills' CUT, with gourmet kobe beef sliders, and we're at the forefront of all the trends. But wait--Toast seems to be headed in that direction, with their Sliders made with blue cheese, basil aoili, tomato jam, feta tapenade, sharp cheddar and carmelized onions. California--eat your heart out.

I really like the idea that now we can go to a trendy, chic venue and have food that is actually substantial, aside from picking at sushi rolls and really is there anything less attractive than watching someone eat sushi? It's about time these places started serving REAL food. But the main reason I love this trend: because I. Love. Pizza. And now I love pizza bars.