
Our restaurant reviewer finds true love in this Orange
County gastropub.
By By Jessica Forsyth
Imagine a straight line, one extreme representing love and
the other, hate. Now, bend that line into a circle, where
love and hate
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Photos By Ed Olen |
are so close to one another as to almost be the same thing.
That’s how I feel about The Crow Bar and Kitchen: I love
it so much that I almost can’t stand it.
I’m aware that it’s a dysfunctional relationship.
You should never hate the things you love. But even from the
start, just being there was too annoyingly wonderful. It was
like looking in the mirror to discover that the person staring
back is a better, more refined version of yourself. I felt
at one with The Crow Bar and also at odds with it; it made
me feel secure by its very nature, but contemptuous for the
same reason. There was only one explanation for these warring
emotions: I had fallen in love.
I remember clearly the first time I met The Crow Bar. It was
online, through its Web site. I admired the rough-hewn typewriter
font and the artistic food photos and looked forward to the
day when we would meet in person. When the time came, I was
not disappointed. It has been a whirlwind romance ever since.
But how did The Crow Bar become what it is? Who is responsible
for creating this heaven-sent gastropub? Two brilliant minds
in fact: Steve Geary and Scott Brandon. Like a destined partnership
of its own, Geary, the owner, and Brandon, the chef, met at
Oysters Restaurant, a stone’s throw from The Crow Bar’s
prime PCH location, where Brandon had been working for 11 years.
The two hit it off and became partners in bringing to Orange
County the concept of the gastropub, a version of the British
pub that serves high-quality food along with an extensive assortment
of artisanal beers and wines.
“We built this place thinking that it would be a place
that we would want to go,” says Brandon, a James Beard
recognized chef who began in the restaurant business as a dishwasher
at the age of 14. Judging from the throngs of people both inside
the restaurant and out, they are not the only ones who want
to be at The Crow Bar, which made me a little bit jealous,
so I focused on the menu.
Perfection has its price. First and foremost is the beer selection,
which is inspirational, to say the least. The qualifications?
It has to be interesting and it can’t be readily available. “We
didn’t want to have anything you could buy in a supermarket,” says
Brandon.
My intention was to try one beer from each category: light-,
medium- and full-bodied, but I only made it to medium and opted
instead to save the last beer round for dessert (more on that
later). First up was the Craftsman 1903 Lager from Pasadena,
which we paired with a selection of Fra’ Mani salumi
(handcrafted, cured meats such as mortadella and salami in
the Italian tradition) and blue crab deviled eggs, which were
stuffed to the brim with crab meat, the perfect ensemble to
head into more advanced fare, like the brick oven flatbread
with Bilbao chorizo, spicy tomato sauce and smoked mozzarella.
My love affair quickly on the ascent, I was surprised to experience
a brief hesitancy at this point. Somewhere between a pizza
and cracker bread, the discrepancy between the über-flavorful
toppings and the relatively bland crust seemed off balance,
though options like the flatbread with Serrano ham, quince
paste, tetilla, and rocket (that we did not try) might have
fared better. One always grants a few oversights in great romances
such as this was turning out to be.
The first rounds over, we moved on to the main menu and a beer
from the “medium” list: Wychwood Hobgoblin, a hoppy
red
ale from England, which was the perfect accompaniment for one
of The Crow Bar’s celebrated burgers, the Japanese Wagyu
beef burger. Made with the highest-ranking, authentic A5 Wagyu
beef available, it has an effect ecstasy-like in nature, especially
when the brioche bun is slathered with the truffle allioli
that comes on the side. Served on the side were the heavenly
duck fat fries accompanied once again by the ambrosial truffle
allioli.
We also sampled the Scotch eggs, which Brandon downsized by
using quail eggs instead of the traditional hen eggs. Wrapped
in sausage and deep-fried with spicy brown mustard for dipping,
they were every bit classic pub grub. It is almost moot to
announce at this point The Crow Bar’s commitment to using
only the best organic, sustainable and local foods available;
freshness can be tasted in every bite, but, refreshingly, it
isn’t a point they dwell on or proselytize about. As
Brandon puts it, “We’re not trying to shove anything
down anyone’s throat.” The results, however, speak
for themselves.
It is with great deliberateness that ample space has been left
to describe the desserts prepared by pastry chef Dave Rossi.
The house-made churros were abundantly covered in a layer of
cinnamon and sugar, perfectly crispy on the outside with a
warm, soft inside. Iced horchata as well as a chocolate dipping
sauce completed the experience.
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Next up: The Irish car “bombe” with Jameson whiskey
crème anglaise, a domed concoction with a base chocolate
layer, dense cream interior and crunchy cookie covering. Following
these successes was the best in show, the sticky toffee pudding
with buttermilk walnut ice cream. The perfect balance of sweet,
rich and substantial, it’s a Scottish pub favorite that
translates impeccably at The Crow Bar. Remaining in the spirit
of the gastropub, we paired these desserts with a beer by Rochefort
Trappistes, one of only seven trappist breweries in the world.
Made by monks of the Abbey of Saint-Remy in Belgium, the beer
is dark and deeply flavored with a richness that suggests sweetness.
I may be in love with The Crow Bar, but it turns out I’m
not the only one. Brandon rolls up his sleeve to demonstrate
his undying affection for the gastropub: a tattoo on his forearm
of the rustic-looking kitchen tool logo. “I’m here
for life,” he says.