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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Nick and Eddie is Near Death—And Resuscitated! Resulting in Free Corkage.

I’ve been anxiously following Nick and Eddie, the Loring Park restaurant, for the last few weeks, as most restaurant-watchers have. Why? Well, first there’s been a lot of gossip swirling for a few months: They were down; they’re heading out… But restaurant gossip is ceaseless and often wrong, so I try not to listen too closely. However, then they were ‘posted,’ an industry term for when the state announces you are behind on your alcohol taxes, and distributors are therefore legally not allowed to sell you any new alcohol. Well, posting happens a lot to restaurants; I tend to think of it like finding a lump and heading to the doctor—it might be nothing, it might be something. But then Andrew Zimmern published a blog post saying they were finished and that Steven Brown was out. That got my attention. I called Steven Brown, who told me he was in fact on his way to work, at Nick and Eddie, so I didn’t know what to think. Finally, people began posting all sorts of things in Zimmern’s blog’s comments about how the place no longer had alcohol to serve and that really got my attention. That’s bad.

So, I went in on my own to check it out and: They had no alcohol! Well, some. They had wine. But it was quite shocking to see that there were no vodka or gin bottles back behind the bar where vodka or gin bottles should be. The shelves were empty.

The day of my lunch, Doug Anderson, the restaurant’s manager, told me that they were meeting with their various partners and creditors that night to figure out if the restaurant was closing. So, I zipped in for lunch, wondering if it would be my last at the restaurant. The meal was lovely. Bialys were tender and perfect, a tuna Niçoise salad, with oil-poached tuna, was the nicest I’ve had in years, with herbal, sweet, lively, fascinatingly nuanced pale-pink (though thoroughly cooked), gorgeously tender tuna paired with fruity local summer heirloom tomatoes, pale purple hand-pitted olives, and exquisite little crisp haricots verts. Then I paid my bill, hoping my tuna Niçoise dollars would do something to help, and went home to wait. Well, finally the word has come through: As of today, the restaurant seems to be on the path to recovery.

But some limbs were lost to save the patient.

Indeed, Steven Brown and Steve Vranian are no longer cooking there. Instead, 23 year-old Derrick Moran, a formerly Brown’s sous, and a cook with a glowing reputation among the younger chef community, is now head chef. (Hey, Adam Vickerman, 24-year-old chef of Trattoria Tosca, are you sick of getting guff for being the youngest chef in town? It’s over!) Moran’s vision for the restaurant includes lots and lots of scratch cooking; the restaurant will soon make their own Irish bacon, and he’s even going to be making his own hot dogs, which will be paired with hot dog buns baked by Jessica Anderson—renowned local baker and now Nick and Eddie’s sole proprietor.

“We’re going to run it all a little more family style,” Jessica Anderson told me. “Simpler food, much simpler. The spirit of the place is very much a bar, and that’s what we’re going to be. We don’t need a maitre d’ sitting in the front of the house. We have to run it more like a family restaurant in Europe, just simple good food. I’m talking to you as I’m baking, and I’m really looking forward to the next phase. It’s a good excuse for me to be here all the time, to watch how people work, and make sure everyone does things that are only good and simple.”

And so the next phase begins! Okay, okay, yes. I too was curious about the behind-the-scenes machinations of the big names going, but everyone on staff sings the praises of both Brown and Vranian, and speaks of their leaving with great sadness. The core issue seems basically to have been this: Half the restaurant’s gross receipts were going to payroll, and there were too many adults drawing their livelihoods from the restaurant to make the bottom line work. So now it’s basically an owner-operator, a young chef who’s essentially going to be paid with the chance to make his name, and a couple line cooks, dishwashers, servers, bartenders—and that’s it. The plan going forward is to get paid up with the state by the end of the weekend and start restocking the bar after that. Till then they’ll be serving the wine they have left, or, if you want to bring in your own, you can do that with no corkage fee (the fee restaurants typically charge to bring in wine). Yes, free B.Y.O. wine!

For some people this will be a chance to trot out some of the gems or unknown quantities in your cellar; for others this will be a chance to stop at Trader Joe’s and buy a $5 bottle of red. Whatever it is, Nick and Eddie staff tell me they will be very happy for your business, so if you’ve ever felt awkward about bringing wine into a restaurant, don’t—they’d consider it a great vote of confidence and a friendly face in a stormy sea.

Nick and Eddie
1612 Harmon Place, Mpls.
612-486-5800
http://nickandeddie.com

 

Posted on Thursday, September 10, 2009 in Permalink

Comments may be edited for length, clarity, or appropriateness.

Reader Comments:
Old to new | New to old
Sep 10, 2009 09:28 pm
 Posted by  kiersa

Yay! I'm so pleased Nick and Eddie may make it - I've enjoyed every meal there so far. Many use the ability to make a simple roasted chicken as a barometer for a good cook - I use salad as that same barometer for restaurants. It's hard to make an inventive salad, and though it should be simple to make a flavorful one just by using good ingredients, it seems to rarely happen. I completely concur with Dara - the Nicoise at Nick and Eddie is yum yum. I just hope I get the opportunity to try it once more.

Sep 18, 2009 10:27 am
 Posted by  majesticmrp

I went to Nick & Eddie's this week with wine per your suggestion and our server didn't know about the deal with the wine - even though it's on the webpage (and this blog). If they'd like their customers to not feel like idiots they might want to communicate a message like this to the staff.

On a positive note - the food was really great!

Nov 16, 2009 10:47 am
 Posted by  decemberbaby

We've gone to Nick & Eddie's six, seven times in the past year -- most recently for an august wedding anniversary and an October birthday. Its worth the drive from the burbs always with a wish that we lived in town so it could be our "hang out" bistro for good eating.

Our last meal was with the new chef and we found no difference in quality. The breads and desserts -especially heavenly butterscotch pudding- always are the best. Keeping my fingers crossed!

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About This Blog

Dara & Co. is led by Minnesota Monthly dining critic and senior editor Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl. She’s been reviewing restaurants and covering food and wine in the Twin Cities since 1995, most notably as City Pages’ restaurant critic, but also for Gourmet, USA Today, Wine & Spirits, Bon Appetit, and Saveur. She answers your questions (though probably not all of them) here, dishes on her latest discoveries, reflects on breaking news, and generally bring the plate to the page.

Marie Flanagan is known to the Twin Cities food blogging community as Reetsyburger—but she's also Senior Editor for North Central Region SARE, a sustainable agriculture research and education program funded by the USDA, and MNMO's sustainable food correspondent.

Elizabeth Dehn is MNMO's former lifestyle editor and writes the blog beautybets.com. She's the Dara & Co. chief blogger in charge of things that are really cute.

Jason DeRusha is WCCO TV's Good Question reporter and Minnesota Monthly's suburban restaurant reviewer. He will be blogging about various interesting foods and food moments, while also tweeting at DeRushaEats.

Stephanie Meyer is an avid home cook and blogger, she writes the blog FreshTart.net, and is contributing home-cooking posts to Dara & Co.

Send your dining questions to Dara! Email her at dmgrumdahl@minnesotamonthly.com.
 

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