March 16, 2009 Issue

   
 

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Going to Market in Snowshoes

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The Secret Garden

Thursday, March 19th

Crime and Punishment

Friday, March 27th

8:00pm

Noble Dreams and Simple Pleasures: American Masterworks from Minnesota Collections

Saturday, April 18th

10:00am - 5:00pm





Photo by Robb Long

The mini lamb BLTs feature lamb bacon made in-house at Saffron.

Food: Fine dining happy hour

Sameh Wadi probably looks as cool in a tuxedo as he does in his chef's whites, and that's a good thing. Sameh — co-owner, with brother Saed, of Saffron — has been nominated for this year's Rising Star in the James Beard Award competition, the industry's equivalent of the Oscars.

Who knew?

Well, more than a few local foodies, who welcome the turnaround of a former nightclub in the Warehouse District into one of the most innovative kitchens in the metro. (Metro? No, let's think bigger; if the Beardies have spotlighted it after just two years in business, let's make that "in the country.")

The Wadi boys grew up in Palestine, and Sameh honors the cooking traditions of his home in the Middle East. But don't expect the usual been-there, done-that list of kofta, tabouli and baba ganoush of tradition-bound cafes. Indeed, he honors the lush market fare of the Mediterranean/North African region — lamb, eggplant, olives, yogurt, and the endless intricacies of the spice bazaars of that sun-kissed part of the planet — but first he deconstructs that archetypical food, then remakes it with the exacting techniques of today and new marriages of flavors, worthy of fine-dining status.

But when you're feeling not quite so fine, or flush, here's the deal: Stop in for Saffron's happy hour (weekdays 4–6 p.m.; weekends 11 p.m.–1 a.m.) to enjoy the same white-tablecloth setting (though I prefer a stool at the generous bar) in which to savor your choice of six nibbles, typical of Sameh's thinking, and irrigated by discount prices on libations.

Parking can be iffy, but at least there's no Kraft truck taking up space, for everything — and I mean everything — is made in house, including the lamb bacon featured in the happy hour menu's mini lamb BLT. Man, it's tasty! What comes your way is, essentially, half a sandwich composed of thick-cut, toasted bread spread with a slide of Sameh's tomato jam (you'll scent a hint of saffron), spicy arugula leaves (who need iceberg?) and crispy strips of the house-smoked bacon from the Middle East's favorite source of protein, lamb.

Want more? Silly question. Then order the potato samosas, a pair of phyllo-wrapped triangles stuffed with spuds spiced with India's garam masala blend, then flash-fried and plopped atop a pool of thick, lusciously tart, dill-laced yogurt, rife with chunks of cucumber.

Or the baby-size tagine in its clay casserole — a long-cooked collaboration of piquillo peppers, cilantro, chickpeas, tomatoes and hefty chunks of housemade lamb sausage that warms its way into your heart. Last fillip: The whole thing is topped with a baked egg, whose still-limpid yolk you stir into the stew. It serves as harbinger of good things to come, for there are several entrιe-size tagines on the regular menu.

Saffron • 123 N. 3rd St., • 746-5533 • SaffronMpls.com


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