KATHY MADER -- Dining Review
Rarely nowadays do we feel after going to a restaurant that we have
given ourselves a much needed break. The noise, the hurriedness, the
pre-made food can make us feel like we need to go out to dinner just to
recover from our lunch.
Or is that just me?
The Garden Cafe on 17th Street, behind the Harp Inn at the end of
“antique row,” is a little cafe full of country charm, blooming flowers
and buyable antiques that will give you the break you deserve.
The Garden Cafe is a real life Charles Wysocki painting, where
everything is in the colors of the season and life’s little treasures are
found throughout. This is the garden you would have if you planted one
and the food you would make if you cooked.
Since I don’t do either, this is the perfect place. And that is
exactly the feel that Kim Morgan-Simpson and her brother, chef Tom
Morgan, hoped to create.
The menu says this is a “trip to the country,” and by God, it is. It
is the kind of place where you expect to see a handwritten sign on the
back of an old Ford that says “Break out the sarsaparilla, Ma just made
cobbler!”
The garden patio is the cafe’s biggest treasure with fichus trees,
ferns and a fountain creating atmosphere. Morning glories climb the
trellises, and the token gnome stands guard.
Jaunty red lanterns hang from the beams, and a funky, giant window
pane divides the patio into sections. Go for the table next to the
fountain; it’s the best seat in the house. You feel better for having
walked in.
Inside the store is pretty great as well. Pictures, pillows and
teapots surround you, and the old counter just begs you to belly up and
order a Stewarts Old Fashioned soda.
This is not just a “chicks” place, even though Morgan-Simpson and
Morgan encourage all kinds of private parties -- from bridal and baby
showers to birthdays.
My husband, Brian -- an expert on peaceful surroundings and all things
charming -- and I went there on Sunday morning for omelets. It was so
peaceful and perfect that we hung out for an extra half hour. There are
not too many places you can say that about.
I don’t know how you feel about iced tea. I used to be a Diet Coke
drinker myself, but I have found myself craving one of the cafe’s iced
teas almost daily. It is positively perfect. Or maybe it is just the kind
of place where everything tastes better.
The menu is simple and not without its own charm.
Life is short; start with the scone. This is not your dry and dusty
found-in-the-actual-countryside scone. This is a sweet, crispy on the
outside, soft and sweet on the inside delight.
Hmmmm. Tea and scones. Do you see where I am headed? Time to start
taking the afternoons off. And if tea isn’t your thing, espresso, lattes
and ice blended mochas might fill the bill.
If you are there for lunch, you will soon understand that sometimes
the simplest food tastes the best. Turkey breast and cranberry sauce
sandwiches on whole wheat bread ($5.95), honey cured ham and Swiss
($6.25), turkey and avocado on squaw ($6.95), and a chicken pesto
sandwich on foccacia bread ($6.45) are all tempting. I go for the old
fashioned BLT.
Tasty, yet simple, salads are also available -- from a Cobb with all
the trimmings to fresh tuna salad or turkey salad.
For the record, Morgan-Simpson makes fresh desserts daily and cobbler
is one of the stars.
The Garden Cafe’s breakfast menu is equally as unpretentious with the
strata -- a ham, cheese and egg casserole -- and the baked cinnamon roll
French toast ($5.99) as the standouts. Bacon and eggs, breakfast bagels
and yogurt and granola are just a few available choices.
Although the menu is not large, there is something for everyone. On
Sundays the Garden Cafe puts away the menu and offers a made-to-order
omelet bar, which comes with a bowl of fresh fruit, a basket of warm
muffins, and rosemary potatoes.
It’s neither the food, nor the garden alone that will bring you here.
It is the magical combination of both and the restaurant’s ability to
transport you to a better place that make the Garden Cafe truly special.
* KATHY MADER’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday.
FYI
WHERE: 130 E. 17th St.
HOURS: Closed Monday, Tuesday-Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Sunday (omelets only) 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
PRICES: Inexpensive
CALL: (949) 722-1177
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