I guess that if it is only every 4 or 5 years that I get to a restaurant, it says something. Went back to Adelle's tonight and I cannot say the results varied much from the first time. I do not think we will be going back.
On a very cold night, they had dimmed the lights, the rooms were twinkling with Christmas lights, there was a nice little faux fireplace in at least one of the rooms (probably both) - the whole place clean, sparkly and welcoming. It went downhill from there.
Service: I rarely complain about service, but Adelle's has achieved that rare distinction both times. Service was more slow witted than anything else, exemplified by the announcement of the specials, achieved very haltingly and by peaking at the list in front of me and reading it back to us. Half-assed.
For a starter we shared the scallops wrapped in bacon, on a bed of turnip puree, sprinkled with almonds and sweet potato shoe strings piled on top - probably a bad decision to order these, based on the menu description, way too many ingredients for a less than stellar chef. The scallops themselves were decent, but the poor guys were overwhelmed by the supporting cast. I think there was an entire thick slice of bacon wrapped around each scallop, pretty much twice around, so bacon was the dominant flavor and texture, rather than an accent. The same applied for the large mound of turnip puree, and the pile of sweet potato shoe strings - a very generous starter that we were glad to have split, but it did not really respect the lightness and subtlety of the scallops.
On to salad - this was safe. Iceberg wedge with buttermilk, blue cheese dressing, sprinkles of bacon and some cherry tomatoes. Quite good, really and perfect for sharing, again.
The Bride moved on from there to a filet in a red wine sauce, garlic mashed potatoes (graciously) substituted for the standard side. She did not like this because the filet had more texture and character than the standard, buttery, bland filet one gets at a Morton's, say. I found it an improvement, but what they considered medium (yes, the Bride does take her steak overcooked, but on the farm, growing up, really, it was well or medium well so she is making progress), looked and tasted medium rare, at most, to me, so there was an issue with execution. She opted not to send it back.
I went with the short ribs (it was between short ribs and cassoulet, and our waitress said the ribs are much more popular). Bed of garlic mashed potatoes, pretty good roasted brussel sprouts with bacon bits (note: bacon in every dish). Beef was unseasoned (not that easy to achieve in this dish) and a little on the chewy side, probably slightly overcooked. Good enough, no better. Could have benefited from a little more sauce/gravy, maybe some braised vegies.
We did continue to dessert. My PB&J - peanut butter pie with a chocolate ganache topping, and drizzled with a concorde grape jelly was good, but the ganache was a bit cold, and thus too solid and the whole thing lacked a freshness and finesse that I expect in a $7 dessert plate. Clearly, right out of the fridge, dress, plate, serve.
The wife had key lime pie with mango puree - a cliche by now and one she deemed fine. We left well fed, warmed by the room, happy to see the back of our waitress for the last time and resolved to not go back.
One of the reasons I had gone back was that I remembered the theme of haute southern cooking, striving to be something one might find in the better restaurants of Charleston or Savannah, just not quite making it. I admit to being partial to that cuisine (note to self: need to get back for some coastal southern food) and I returned to Adelle's hoping for that, just better than last time. Likely unrealistic of me - after 5 years, I am sure the chef has changed, and the menu has moved toward a French, and old-school "continental" style that would have fit well at Henrici's, for those who appreciate a historical context.
Disappointing on every level, then, tho not bad. <sigh>
d
Feeling (south) loopy