DINING OUT -- MARY FURR
My New Year’s resolution for reviews is to explore and share,
beginning right now with Laurette Bistro on Beach Boulevard and Garfield
Avenue in Huntington Beach, a small cafe hidden deep in the corner of a
half-empty mini-mall. But what a wonderfully fragrant cafe and bakery it
is where Jordanian Mary Kort cooks the Middle Eastern dishes of her
homeland while owner/son Robert greets and serves the few marble-topped
tables that curve around the order/display counter.
Robert, a former Carl’s Jr Restaurant manager, explains the dishes and
sometimes joins his mom, as he did for us, in the kitchen to prepare our
appetizer order. The house combo special ($7.95) includes four falafel
patties (fried vegetable mix), hummus, a chickpea dip, tabbouleh, a fresh
minced vegetable parsley mix and spinach pie. The combo can be any four
of the six appetizers listed -- it’s a bargain to share or as lunch with
a cup of hot or iced Diedrich coffee ($1.25-$3).
A basket of warm pita bread is served to scoop up the creamy sesame
flavored hummus or the excellent lemon-scented fresh chopped tabbouleh
Mary makes daily. The spinach pie, a folded pita stuffed with spinach,
feta cheese, onion and lemon mixed in olive oil, is fresh and good.
Dinner entrees include a salad, fresh greens, cucumbers and spinach
with a very good oil and vinegar dressing or a crock of homemade soup --
thick clam chowder this day, filled with pieces of canned clams, minced
celery, potato, onion and green pepper with a flavor so good you could
forgive the clams being canned. Also served is an excellent thick
vegetarian split pea.
A broiled salmon fillet ($6.95) was the blackboard special, well done,
topped with herbs and delicately flavored pine nuts served with broccoli
and carrots and a dark rice pilaf studded with bits of meat.
Also on the special was eggplant ($6.95) -- thick juicy slices served
with a ground sirloin and potato mix and light rice cooked in chicken
broth with added pine nuts. The boiled potatoes and ground meat is a
hearty dish with a depth of flavor like a memory of the best meat and
potato dinner your mom ever made.
If you’re in a rush, wraps are your thing. The Mediterranean ones
($2.99 a la carte) made with pita bread, not tortillas, have garlic sauce
or hummus, peppercini, onion and tomato with big chunks of chicken or
kefta, nutritious strips of ground beef rolled up like a sausage. A combo
includes one side and soda ($5.19), a complete bargain lunch; “very
popular,” says son Frank.
Typical Middle Eastern pastries are all made by Mary -- there are
flaky triangles, layered baklava, rolls filled with crushed nuts, mounds
with chocolate bits, rich but not sweet. There is also a wonderful honey
and rosewater syrup she makes to pour over the flaky baklava.
Laurette Bistro serves home-style Middle Eastern food -- “like I’d
make for my boys,” says Mary, a “taste of the season” cook who doesn’t
use recipes but reads Gourmet Magazine and watches the Food Channel with
Emeril Lagasse and Molto Mario for recreation. The bistro is a cafe where
love is mixed with every dish.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
LAURETTE BISTRO
* ADDRESS: 19070 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
* PHONE: (714) 847-5305
* FAX: (714) 847-1353
* HOURS: 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday. Closed New
Year’s Day.
* MISC.: Credit cards
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