DISCLAIMER: My cousin, Greg Mistak, is Executive Chef. So of course I visited to see what he's up to, after hearing glowing reports from his mother, and my mother, etc.
La Petite Amelia is a French Bistro-style resto in downtown Evanston, in the space where Mt. Everest used to be (618 Church). There's a new, big, dark-wood bar.
On a day when the weather is over 95, I expect casual, and many of the diners are in shorts, sandals, etc., and the staff didn't bat an eye at us being similarly dressed. My son Thing1, and JohnV, who is an old pal from our NU days, joined us.
For starters, we split an order of Escargot (JohnV's choice -- he went all mollusc tonight). Nice fat morsels of snail, in a garlic bath. Frankly, I'd be happy with roasted garlic in the garlic bath, perhaps even gravel and tree bark in garlc bath, but this was quite good, especially with their chewy bagettes.
The other starter was the crudite of the day: the three items on the patter today were a cucumber and onion slaw (kind of somewhere between new pickles and thai cucumber salad), a spinach/artichoke spread, and a crostini with goat cheese and a slice of tomato. All were quite nice, especially the goat cheese.
For entrees, I ordered the Mussels Frites, as did JohnV (although he asked for haricots verts, a $1 upcharge from the frites, and added a side of rattatouille. The mussels were of a small variety, with a peachy-orange color, and nicely flavorful and tender. The sauce they were in was based on chopped tomatoes and garlic, which were nicely sopped up with the skinny, nicely salty frites.
MrsF had the lamb shank with Israeli couscous. This was very tender and also very flavorful. The couscous had tiny chopped veggies in it, making a nice texture contrast. I'd had a lamb shank at Reza's a couple months ago, and this was significantly better, less greasy and held together in nice chunks of meat.
Thing1 had the Steak Frites, which is offered with Roquefort, Anchovy or Garlic butter. He almost ordered the garlic butter until he we told him what Roquefort was -- kids these days. Didn't get a taste of this.
Desserts were outstanding: creme brulee (didn't taste), three quenelles of chocolate mousse with berries (wonderful texture and deep chocolate flavor), warm flourless chocolate cake (something about the whipped cream atop it was amazing), and profiteroles, which were really cream puff sized, but Thing1 had no trouble munching through them.
Definitely worth a stop, and probably another trip for me soon.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang