Just back from a late lunch at Terzo Piano, the new Tony Mantuano restaurant in the Art Institute's Modern Wing. As expected, it was fine, but rather pricey. The service, too, was just fine. Not great. I think it's a place to go when the weather's rotten and you're spending much of the day at the museum. I probably wouldn't go again otherwise. It's not a destination restaurant. But some of the food was good.
Before we ordered, the server explained that many of the dishes on the menu had been changed - - porcini are no longer in season, so the pasta dish is now carbonara(ish). One of the fish dishes used a different fish. One of the flatbreads had different ingredients. I understood from the server that this was because the chef is using seasonal ingredients. I could see, though, how some might be irritated with all the substitutions and not understand that the switches were to make the food better. Especially considering how beat up our paper menus were, it's surprising they don't print new ones as the menu changes - - or make the dishes likely to change be specials and explained verbally.
Step mom and I shared three dishes. The highlight was the
antipasto platter: La Quercia prosciutto and coppa, Russo soppressata, Pleasant Ridge Reserve cheese, olives, marinated shaved celery with red onions, and pickled cauliflower, carrots, and onions. The veggies were solid - - the celery had some really nice heat, while the cauliflower mix was in oil, reminiscent of a giardinera. Cheese was good, but not great. Decent rolls were provided to enjoy with the platter. The prosciutto, as expected, was excellent. Both the coppa and soppressata were good, but a little mild for my tastes. At $15, not cheap, but would make a nice light meal.
We also enjoyed the
olive oil whipped smoked whitefish. Another winner. I'd get this again.
Finally, we had the
"What came first salad." Major blah. The medium boiled chicken egg was closer to hard boiled. Boring. The chicken was dry and tasteless. The dressing didn't have enough zing. They called this a "main course" salad. Sure, if you also have your own starter and a dessert you might be able to approach fullness. It was bigger than an average starter salad, but really not filling enough for a main course. The non-salad mains around the table (burger, fish) appeared much more substantial. I'd recommend strongly against this salad.
I didn't get to try the other dishes, but did steal a french fry from one of the burger eaters. Way better than I'd expected, even though it was fairly lukewarm by the time I'd tasted it.
Terzo Piano
Art Institute, Modern Wing
Entrance on Monroe
Ronna
(Didn't see a dedicated thread for this restaurant. Mods, feel free to move, as appropriate.)