Getting the dish on dish
Kathy Mader
Sustenance is food’s most basic function. Its trade, if you will.
Dish, on 17th Street in Costa Mesa, succeeds in raising the level of
its food beyond the basics to an education abroad.
Let’s get something out of the way. Yes, the name of the
restaurant is dish, all lower case. But once you eat there, you may
well agree that it should be all caps, with perhaps an exclamation
point on the end.
Tom Curran, the owner and instructor of the dish cooking school,
attended culinary school in Scottsdale, Ariz., and trained at Cordon
Bleu in France before coming to California and working as part of the
team at the renowned Aubergine. This is all good news for us, believe
me.
Tom is most notable (until you eat, that is) for his flaming red
hair, colored that way for his future TV show, “A Zany Kids Cooking
Show.” How neat is that? Dish originally started as a cooking school
and culinary retail store, but the retail side of it left and,
thankfully, a cafe took its place just two months ago.
Cooking school is kind of a misnomer, as I see cooking as what I
do, creating is what they do. But they are more than happy to teach
you the tricks of the trade. Make sure to ask for a list of available
classes when you stop in to enjoy. I’ll be enrolling in the dessert
courses for starters. Anyone who offers the new nirvana, fried
Snickers bars, on the menu must know what they’re doing.
Here’s the real dish: Brian Dobbin, formerly one of the creative
minds and driving forces behind Haute Cakes, is the new partner and
catering manager at dish. Television is in his future, too, as he is
set to depart for Miami to film his new show, a food style (as in
stylish) show geared toward the VH-1 crowd. Clearly, food is hip.
Credit must be given to Josh Opp, dish’s executive chef, the man
responsible for dish’s fascinating menu. Everything about this
restaurant -- the outdoor cafe feel, the menu and the kitchen -- says
that the creators and staff of dish care very much about what they
do.
The closest local equivalents to dish are Plums, in both
atmosphere and food, and Haute Cakes, more in the food sense. But
where Plums has that wonderful and unique inspiration of the
Northwest, dish boasts what I would call a fresh French influence. To
get a real feel for what that means, we sampled quite a few items on
the both the lunch and breakfast menu.
We went for it and ordered my new destination salad, simply called
a mixed green salad ($8.50) with teardrop tomatoes, plenty of
gorgonzola cheese and spiced pecans in a creamy but not heavily
delivered peppercorn dressing. The croque monsieur ($8.25), bufala
mozzarella and honey ham dipped in an egg batter and pan fried until
crispy, was very good eating.
Mild does not describe Grandma Helen’s blackjack barbecue beef
brisket ($8.25), served on the softest of French rolls with
provolone, red onions and tomatoes. “Mighty tasty” better describes
it.
One of the stars on the breakfast menu is the “pancake omlette”
($9), one large, slightly sweet pancake folded over crumbled honey
pepper bacon and maple apple sausage. Simply wonderful. The corned
beef hash ($8.50) is a meat lover’s dream, with chunks of
skillet-cooked corned beef and seasoned potatoes. We will be back
next Saturday morning for the crispy, creamy waffles, with bananas
and pecans baked right in.
If you are like me and dessert suits every occasion, the baked
French toast strata ($9), almost a French bread pudding with maple
syrup, golden raisins and cream cheese baked with a cinnamon sugar
crust, fills that bill.
If you just can’t decide, and need comfort food, dish is
presenting a Thanksgiving dinner to go, replete with cranberry ginger
compote, garlic-roasted mashed potatoes, brown sugar sweet potatoes,
three bread sausage apple stuffing, herb-roasted turkey, pan gravy
and pies (apple, pecan or pumpkin). Nice way to get started, I say.
I did overhear a woman next to me tell the server that dish should
put a burger on the menu to appeal to the masses. Don’t dumb them
down, I say. Food is an art form that can be both educational and
interesting, and dish seems to specialize in this.
And get this: For you true foodies, you can travel with the dish
crew once a year on a culinary tour in Europe. The last three
educational journeys have been in France, but next year is booked for
Tuscany. Ahhh, just imagine.
So yes, there is life before and after the Angels, and it must go
on. But be good to yourself, and ease into it at dish.
* KATHY MADER’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday.
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