A Taste of France in Huntington Beach
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DINING OUT
It looks like many casual California cafes, this place on Center
Drive east of Golden West College, but step inside and voila! You’re
in a French bistro along the Champs Elysee facing a display case of
gorgeous pastries in a bright room filled with wicker and
wrought-iron chairs and tables.
Manager/co-owner Ellen Kortiziga, a Croatian, waves you to a seat
and Laura, your French-Canadian server, suggests the lunch special of
the day -- a slice of quiche, green salad, pasta salad and bread
($5.95). It’s a plate overloaded with a generous slice of golden
brown quiche filled with potato slices, lots of mushrooms (that was
our choice, but whatever you’d like) and a wonderful salad of baby
spinach leaves, red-tinged radicchio, frieze and apple slices with
Dijon dressing and a side of cold rotelli pasta.
Another excellent choice is spinach quiche ($5.50), a light pastry
shell filled with pureed spinach with a freshness you really can
taste in a custard of cream and eggs and whiff of onion. It’s thick
and deep and so filling.
Hot French roast coffee ($1.50) in heavy mugs entice you to linger
as you would in Paris and watch walk-ins try to decide between cheese
cake ($1.75), an eclair ($2.50) or the specialty of the house, a
napoleon ($2.50). All the baking is done daily in a nearby building,
as the cafe could not accommodate the large ovens required for
catering orders.
Ten sandwich choices ($4.25 to $5.25) offer lots of variety.
Prosciutto and provolone ($4.95) -- ham that has been salt cured
rather than smoked -- is layered with the mild smoky-flavored cheese
in a big soft-crusted roll beside a pile of greens.
A simple dessert crepe ($2.50) is a marvel as thin as tissue paper
scrolled with chocolate. It’s just right, not too sweet. It’s hard to
achieve the proper lightness of a good crepe, Ellen says. “We are
simple here -- a bistro, not a restaurant.”
But who can pass up a strawberry and custard napoleon ($2.50) made
with layers of crisp puff pastry, one spread with creamy custard and
the other with strawberry jam, and a thin icing of strawberry
preserves? Legend has it napoleons were developed for the royal court
-- it’s easy to believe the chef preparing a unique creation to honor
the Little Corporal’s conquests.
If lunch is going to serve you as a early dinner, consider the
entree of rotisserie chicken on Tuesday and Wednesday ($5.50), tomato
wine chicken ($5.50) Thursday or Italian sausage salad ($4.95)
Friday.
Owners Christopher Rousseaux and Pascal Chedau often return to
France to explore cafes and scout out new recipes. To end our lunch,
chef Jacques Berthelot brought a wonderful dessert -- clafouti, a
small round chocolate cake with a center of soft intense chocolate
custard that is based on a country dessert originally from the
kitchens of Bordeaux.
Taste of France is a cafe that celebrates good French food and
welcomes you to enjoy their special way with crepes, quiches and
napoleons.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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