American cuisine is trendoid, of course. And if the 90s was the decade of internationalism, best represented by the ascendancy of salsa to the pinnacle of American condiments, then I think the 00s will be called the decade of playing with our food.
Alinea and Moto are the local leaders in food as humor, commentary and lab experiment, but almost every place is doing it. Okay, the places whose menu descriptions appear to be a laundry list of every fashionable ingredient they can shoehorn into a dish are only inadvertently humorous, so they hardly qualify, but fusion and experimentation even seem to have become key concepts in the Denny's test kitchen. And Mickey D's salad shooter seems to be a direct inspiration for a lot of what Achatz is doing

.
I think this is a pretty good thing, and I do like some humor, some experimentation and some interesting juxtaposition in my meal. In fact, it is those things, in combination with tastiness, that I look for in fine dining these days.
Tonight I had the pleasure to dine at 112 eatery in Minneapolis. It is a small place, about 15 tables and a bar, in a historic building in downtown Minneapolis. Long, narrow, comfy space.
We started with complementary walnuts (I think) in a sugar and cayenne coating, a little lighter than brittle, and olives that seemed to be cured in nutmeg. Point made: "Diners, we will be playing with flavors tonight." Nuts very good and not particularly challenging. Olives were thought-provoking, and I still am not sure whether I like them or not.
The menu is organized as appetizers, sides and entrees (plus desserts and beverages), but with the exception of 7 entrees, it really is all small dishes that one can combine any way one wishes. I ordered one of each - lamb scottadito with sheep's goat yogurt (3 crispy little chops in herbed and lemoned yogurt), eggy, lemony, crispy cauliflower fritters, and a bacon, egg, and harissa sandwich (thick base of bacon with a fried egg on white toast with a slather of spicy harissa).
My companion settled on a single, real entree, stringozzi with lamb sugo - long, chewy, curly, fresh pasta with light sauce and chunks of lamb.
We finished with some Izzy's vanilla ice cream.
It was all excellent, except the sandwich which did not come together for me.
The wine list is great - no less than 10 or 11 wines by the glass that were of interest to me. Lots of spanish, obscure southern france, obscure west coast, and sprinklings of other regions like Austria, Alsace and more. Things I have not tried but would like to, and priced reasonably.
Decent value, too, the whole meal was under $70 with 2 glasses of wine and before tip.
Fun place. Good, creative food. Check out the menu here. It is popular, so make reservations or be prepared to wait a bit. But it is also open late.
http://www.112eatery.com/
112 eatery
112 north 3rd street
minneapolis
612-343-7696
Last edited by
dicksond on July 10th, 2005, 5:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
d
Feeling (south) loopy