We first checked out SOE back in 2010 and liked the food fine, but the FOH was such a mess that our meal dragged out over two hours. I guess I had written them off, since I did not return until this summer after raves from my co-worker last summer.
We ate there three times this summer and fell in love with the place. While we have had the occasional robotic or overly attentive server– if you spend as much time eating out in this area as we do, you notice a pattern of shitty service that seems to land on these two sides of the bad service spectrum. All in all, the flow and organization of the place is running much more smoothly these days.
The drinks are fine, though I appreciate their local beer and cider list (Virtue, Short's, Founder's to name a few).
The food is really dynamite– quality, locally sourced ingredients prepared with finesse and large portions to boot. The pizza is fine, not my favorite, a bit too bready, though well topped. The bread service, itself, is quite good, gratis and plentiful with high quality butter (though their head baker split last year to open her own bakery,
Kismet who I source in my kitchen up there and love). Their signature Seedy Salt bread is a fave. I've enjoyed all the apps and salads across the board. Their confit of pork belly, thick quivering slabs of caramelized bacon, should not be missed. The scallops that were on the menu in July were delicious, if not too decadent, sort of a deconstructed Rockefeller– fatty bay scallops plated with spinach, breadcrumbs, bacon, cream, and cheese. Their salads shine just by the virtue of their lovely ingredients.
Red meat seems to be their strong suit. All the steaks I've sampled have been spot on. A toothsome flank steak paired great with a zippy chimichurri and polenta salad. A dead medium rare hanger lusciously melted in the mouth. The burger rules too, crusty on the outside, bloody on the inside, served on a great house roll with sharp local cheddar. Even the fries kick ass.
This place does farm-to-table American cuisine at its best. I recently enjoyed a meal at Nightwood, which to me is a kindred spirit to SOE, and it was great (and certainly a notch more creative) but did not quite reach the highs of my meals this summer at Salt of the Earth. Its a tucked-out-of-the-way gem in a sometimes pretty bleak dining scene.