A friend & I ate at The Bedford last night and left with mixed feelings.
The food was good, but most of the dishes seemed to be near misses. In other words, with just a little more *something* each could have risen to the level of being great/memorable/crave-able. Instead, most of them just left me wishing it had been prepared a bit differently.
The menu is one of these ambiguous types that is divided into categories such as meat, seafood, etc., but not into appetizers and entree. (A couple exceptions: It does have two sections for snacks and sides.) Instead, you're supposed to judge plate size based on price and the dish's placement within the category...dishes toward the top are small and generally grow in size toward the bottom.
We decided to craft a tasting menu, to be split between two of us. Our menu:
deviled eggs: hot sauce and powdered bacon ($1.50 each)
* These could be a great flavor combo. Two minor problems, one mine, the other The Bedford's: I didn't pay enough attention to the "bacon powder" part of the description, so I assumed that the bacon was incorporated into the deviled filling. No, the egg was sitting on bacon powder. (I had quickly tasted the powder--which was in such quantity that it kept the eggs from tipping over--and assumed it was just a neutral stabilizer. I got burned a couple weeks ago when I assumed a clam shooter was sitting on a bed of ground horseradish & ended up eating a generous spoonful of salt chaser.) Alas, I ate half of my egg without the bacon powder, which was terrific once I had a second bite with bacon powder. My other complaint: The egg white was a bit overcooked & rubbery.
beets: tri color beets, horseradish puree, rye crisps, candied nuts and honey vinaigrette ($13)
* Tasty, only minor complaint was that there wasn't enough of the horseradish puree.
heirloom tomato: grilled speck, melon, manchego and scallion oil ($13)
* Another good dish, but nothing to write home about. I wish there were more variety in how their dishes are plated, because this one visually looked almost identical to the beets.
wild salmon tartare: marinated cucumber, shallot, coriander yogurt , rye crumbs, caper berries, quail egg ($14)
* Mason jar trend alert! With a little more of an acidic element, this would have been a great dish. As it was, it was a little bland unless you happened to get a bite with a caper berry. Served with too-small (but very tasty) homemade crackers.
yellowtail sashimi special: sous vide egg, yellow tomatoes and other things I don't remember (price unknown)
* Good, but not great/memorable. I wish the yellowtail pieces had been cut into consistently sized pieces. Some were far too thick. I'm the kind of person who wants a piece of each (or most) elements in each bite of a dish. Unfortunately, there wasn't enough egg or tomato to go around, but the bites I had with all 3 elements were terrific.
charred baby octopus: crispy pork belly, grilled peaches, pickled carrot, basil aioli ($16)
* Probably the best dish of the night. Flavorful, well-cooked octopus & pork belly? Who can argue with that! Well, I can: The ratio of ingredients was also off in this dish. There was far more pork belly than octopus & only 2 small slices of peach. Our server had described this as a "small entree" but there were only about 3 octopus tentacles in the entire dish, each about 1.5" long.
donut holes: cinnamon & sugar dipped with a coffee-cream dipping sauce (price unknown)
* These were great, even if the donut holes were a bit dense. It was obvious they were freshly fried & not too greasy. A bit more crisp on the outside than your normal donut hole, but I love fried stuff, so I wouldn't complain. The coffee cream sauce was intensely coffee flavored...really terrific.
sorbet: strawberry & basil ($2, comped)
* Comped because it was my friend's birthday. Who can argue with the strawberry+basil combo? I'd almost describe their sorbet as whipped--very light & fluffy, not at all icy. This is the kind of thing that, given a big container of it, I'd probably eat the entire thing without realizing it.
Cocktails: We had tried two different cocktails, the Cucumber Cooler and the Bedford Bramble. Both were flavorful but relatively weak.
Service: Service at The Bedrod is a bit strange, for lack of a better word. It's almost as if they're overstaffed/trying too hard.
Specifically, they have a ton of runners/busboys who are very eager to the point of becoming obtrusive. On the other hand, we never saw our waitress as each dish arrived, and only once did she stop by while we were eating to ask how the food was. But the busboys were always there--a few times in a bothersome way.
Once, my dish was taken away while my dining companion was still finishing his food. Another once or twice, the busboys tried to take away the plate we were sharing while where was still food on it. My rule: Don't take plates with food on them without asking first.
Plates & silverware were removed & replaced after every course, regardless of whether we'd used them. That's fine, but the table was also wiped down & silverware set down on a wet table. That grosses me out. Once I left the table & set my napkin on the ledge to the side of the table because a piece of octopus had landed on the table squarely in front of my seat. I came back to find that the table had been wiped, the octopus had relocated (but not left the table) and my napkin was put back on the table. In other words, the busboys are trying, but not trying hard enough/in the right way.
Bottom line: I can't imagine rushing back to The Bedford, particularly when there are so many other fantastic places in Chicago, but could see myself giving it another shot a year down the road.