Man of my word, this once anyway, I made it to Bistro Maisonette this evening before the snow closed in completely.
Good News:
The place had one full seating. The wine list was interesting and fairly well priced. The food was generally pretty well done, and a couple of dishes, the son's as it happened, were quite interesting. Nothing was oversalted and the wait people were uniformly quite nice. A full meal - appetizer, main course, dessert, some drinks, ran $50 ppm and represented decent value at that.
Overall, it was just a little reminescent of a recent meal I had at Sweets & Savories - it is a personal restaurant, run by the chef/owner (this is a guess, admittedly for Maisonette, but it felt that way).
Half the menu is very traditional Bistro, Roast Chicken, Roast Pork, Steak (Strip, tho, and no frites), and the other half was pan-European, with the specials having a surprisingly Italian touch.
Overall, the food was well done, seasoned deftly with a nice touch of herbs, and a lighter touch of garlic and salt - defying the excesses of many places these days.
The son started with a lobster/crab cake - a short, fat cylinder of meat bound with a touch of crumbs and egg, sitting on a bed of spinach and mushrooms. Quite well done. His main course was more of the same - big fat capelacci, filled with crab meat in a tomato cream sauce finished with truffle oil. The whole thing was surprising - the pasta was either overcooked or cooked longer of necessity because of its size so the noodle was soft and silky, not at all al dente, and the sauce had a rich earthiness, redolent of truffles, and not at all tomatoey or even creamy. Wonderful.
The rest of the meal was serviceable. A few things had some flaws - a heavy, almost bready chocolate souffle, which took some time to get, but clearly was not prepared to order, a rack of lamb, tiny chops with a light herb crust in a red wine sauce - nice, but uninspired and a bit overcooked - no red, no squeal as I bit into them.
The service was fun, and funny, comic in its amateur aspect. Someone took a drink order, and delivered the drinks quite promptly, then our waitress arrived, and quizzed us on what drinks we had ordered. 30 seconds after we ordered she tried to deliver the daughter's salad, only it was the wrong salad. Then she zipped around the room speculatively for a few moments, finally settling at a table where she found the proper home for the salad. Service was prompt, pleasant, generally accurate, just unpolished and a bit disorganized. So I suppose if things went wrong they could get terribly out of control, but that was not the case.
The little second floor room was quite cozy with the snow swirling outside. And everyone thanked us for coming and cheerfully wished us to return soon. Doted on us.
Good - yes. Pleasant - definitely. If it was a couple of miles from home, I would love having Bistro Maisonette nearby. But it is pretty unlikely I would drive the 15 miles to go there again soon. To be fair, the Bride liked it very much, so I may go back sooner than I think. She liked it specifically because of the intimacy of the place, the lack of pretension, and the way we were doted on.
Critical guy that I am - I would rather take a heaping serving of pretension with my food at Bistro Banlieue, tho Maisonette is better in every way than Bistro Margot in N'ville.
d
Feeling (south) loopy