We dined there last night prior to
Alton Brown's Edible Inevitable Tour (he was at the bar having drinks prior to the show).
Very nice food. Nothing floored me, but all excellently prepared and with pristine service.
Drinks were a Perfect Manhattan (quite nice, balanced sweet and bitter) and the special wine of the month, which was a blend including grenache and syrah -- delicious.

Bread service was a focaccia with sun-dried tomato butter. Nothing special, and my photo came out blurrier than the rest.
Starters were a frito misto (which I felt wasn't particularly misto: one scallop, none of the purported lemon that I could tell) with a light coriander aioli; and pumpkin soup with creme fraiche and pumpkinseeds, which was perfectly poised between sweet and spice.


Sue ordered the duck, which was the hit of the evening: perfectly crisp skin, atop spaetzle with guanciale and chanterelles.

I had the rabbit which included braised saddle and a breast crepinette, atop baby root veg, and a pecan carrot-top gremolata (as written, although the nuts and carrot greens were entirely separate). I had a couple minor issues with the dish: there were a lot of tiny bones in the braise, and the crepinette should probably have been a bit crisper on the outside -- a lot of the fat still remained chewy.

For dessert we split the salted caramel cheesecake, which came with the pretzel crust as a separate "dust" in which we rolled spoonfuls of cheesecake. Very, very good, but the huge plate (on which a nearly-decorative-only guinness syrup was drizzled) made eating a little awkward.

The current menu is being replaced as of February 11 -- instead of starters and entrees, the menu is divided into Grow, Graze and Swim, viewable on the website.
Although it's still called the Atwood Cafe on all the signage, they've gotten a little snootier on their website: The above link forwards to
http://www.atwoodrestaurant.com/
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang