Dining Out
Mary Furr
Ibiza Bistro and Cocktails, named for an island on the Mediterranean
side of Spain, offers a a new taste to the mix of restaurants now finding
a home in the first few blocks of Main Street.
The deep storefront restaurant opens to a bar with tall tables and
stools and just beyond are tables and a banquette that fills a corner
near a fireplace. Look above at the ceiling with two faux openings that
reveal pink clouds and a fiery sunset our server changed at the touch of
a switch. Pretty snazzy stuff for a once rather bleak Main Street.
Ibiza’s menu for lunch is as different as its decor offering salads,
soups and sandwiches with the distinctive touch of experienced chef Fred
Gonzales who got his training from his father who was executive chef at
the Sky Room in the 1960s heyday of Long Beach’s downtown.
If it’s a foggy day, begin with a bowl ($3.95) of thick black bean
soup, a Caribbean specialty with its slightly sweet flavor topped with
melting cheese, a dab of sour cream and strips of green onion with
toasted French bread on the side. When the fog lifts, there’s a wonderful
spinach salad (small $3.95, large $5.95), a big flat bowl filled with
tender oil-slick baby leaves and generously sprinkled with Parmesan
cheese.
Sandwiches are served on thick, soft, warm rolls. The grilled chicken
with walnut ($6.95) is topped with balsamic vinegar and pesto with a
slice of tomato and shredded lettuce -- excellent with a subtle flavor
and a huge side of peel-on, thick French fries. Servings at Ibiza are
very generous.
Another sandwich choice is pepper-crusted, fresh mild ahi (the
Hawaiian name for yellow fish) ($7.25), a thick slice with the zesty
flavor of coarse ground pepper. It is spread with aioli, a strongly
flavored mayonnaise from France -- which plays off the milder fish and is
just right. Also included are those good fat French fries.
Chef Gonzalez came from the kitchen to supervise the flaming bananas
Foster dessert ($4.95) -- an absolutely delicious bowl of sliced bananas
and vanilla ice cream to which he touched a lighter to ignite a blue
flame leaving warm bananas afloat in a rum-flavored syrup.
Another dessert choice is key lime pie ($4.95). It carries an intense
punch for such a slender slice, but its tart taste goes well with the
sandwiches.
Ibiza Bistro, owned by John and Peggy Gallanger with son Eugene and
daughter Carin, brings the creative cuisine of chef Gonzalez to steadily
progressive Main Street.
FYI
Ibiza Bistro & Cocktails
WHERE: 209 Main St.
HOURS: open 11 a.m. Monday through Friday; 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday
PHONE: (714) 536-7887 * MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant
critic. If you have comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or
e-mail o7 [email protected]
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