Northern Spy Food Co
#1
Posted 29 January 2010 - 02:37 AM
the room is nice but very small, tables cramped. seats by the windows can be a little cold. the bathroom, next to the kitchen, smelled lovely of apple pie. nice and well-meaning staff but understaffed at prime time.
the menu is available all day, i bet it's a very nice, relaxed spot during the day.
Everything is always OK in the end. If it's not OK, then it's not the end.
#2
Posted 12 April 2010 - 02:08 PM
I made some comparisons with another East Village venture, the more traditional Brindle Room (thread here).
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#3
Posted 12 April 2010 - 02:41 PM
“I have a dream of a multiplicity of pastramis.”
"So you want innovative, cool atmosphere, not fancy, killer food, and not crowded?" - Kathryn on Chowhound
"I don't have time to point out all the ways in which you're wrong" - irnscrabblechf52
#4
Posted 12 April 2010 - 03:13 PM
#5
Posted 12 April 2010 - 03:20 PM
I hope I don't give readers the feeling of reading the same review over and over. Something completely different next week, I hope. Which reminds me, the Pythons entered my mind when I was typing something about the aioli being "a bit runnier than you like it, sir."
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#6
Posted 12 April 2010 - 03:36 PM
No, you manage to keep it fresh and readable. It's not your fault that the restaurants are doing the same things.
“I have a dream of a multiplicity of pastramis.”
"So you want innovative, cool atmosphere, not fancy, killer food, and not crowded?" - Kathryn on Chowhound
"I don't have time to point out all the ways in which you're wrong" - irnscrabblechf52
#7
Posted 12 April 2010 - 09:49 PM
Why was it I should visit Brooklyn, again?
#8
Posted 12 April 2010 - 09:50 PM
#9
Posted 12 April 2010 - 09:52 PM
Why was it I should visit Brooklyn, again?
To see if DiFara's is really worth the hype.
#10
Posted 19 May 2010 - 04:17 PM
#11
Posted 19 May 2010 - 04:21 PM
He hasn't heard of Back Forty, then?
Good photo of the terrine. Recommended.
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#12
Posted 30 May 2010 - 02:57 PM
I thought the food that we ordered was quite good - no crazy misfires on anything we tried. The cold cauliflower soup with crème fraîche could've used a smidge more salt and the mesclun salad with feta was slightly overdressed to my taste, but that's just me, after all.
My chicken liver mousse appetizer was excellent, and served with just enough toasts to make it through the whole serving of liver. Roast chicken (BOBO!) came out nice and moist (even the breast) with a crisp skin that was tough to set aside, even though my vow to set aside crisp chicken skin had been kept till now. Another special, "line caught" sea bass, was juicy and moist with a properly crisp skin, and there's no need to set that aside. Pork meatballs were as tender as can be, and I liked these almost as much as Meatball Shop's, though they're of a different style and much fluffier.
So, what's the problem? Start off with perhaps the most uncomfortable seating (on the benches) I've ever experienced. Ssam and Noodle Bar feel like a Barcalounger compared to this. Then there are my pet peeves. Partially bussed tables. Why take 1 plate away when the rest of the party is still eating? The need to ask for glasses when served a beer.
And I really love this one: used knife and fork resting on the empty plate ready to be bussed. Server removes said used knife and fork and puts them on the table. From my dirty plate. As if I want to use the same silverware. No thanks, bring me new ones. She does. And then does exactly the same thing to my dining companions. Please - you can't be saving that much money by giving us fresh silverware, can you? As a matter of fact, I find the food to be a nice value - so how about adding a dime to the cost of the entrees, and just bring fresh silverware without the customer having to ask. This customer would be so much happier.
#13
Posted 30 May 2010 - 04:23 PM
This place seems to me to be the new mean for mid-priced NYC restaurants. Everything was well-prepared, at a level we never would have expected in the midrange years ago. But the menu is BORING. It's all the stuff all the other places like this serve. I wouldn't avoid Northern Spy, but I can't see going there, either.
#14
Posted 30 May 2010 - 04:36 PM
This place seems to me to be the new mean for mid-priced NYC restaurants. Everything was well-prepared, at a level we never would have expected in the midrange years ago. But the menu is BORING. It's all the stuff all the other places like this serve. I wouldn't avoid Northern Spy, but I can't see going there, either.
Wow, two ships... Comfort and service issues aside (for the time being), I think it's nice to have a place where the food is reliably prepared and where one can go with friends who aren't the most adventuresome eaters.
And even though the menu may be BORING (hey, there were pig trotters offered as a special last night - did you order?), I would much rather have the well-prepared roast chicken at $16 than someone else's attempt at tomfoolery at twice the price.
Again, many people do not go out to eat nearly as often or as experimentally as the disciples of mouthfuls. And for them, Northern Spy and, when it's not raining, Back Forty, can fit the bill quite nicely.
#15
Posted 30 May 2010 - 04:51 PM
I mean, should I be grateful that we're now in a place where we can look at pig's trotters as boring? I guess so. And I'm not saying this place is boring because it's not "experimental": Prime Meats, say, which I love, is no more experimental than Northern Spy. It's just that if you sat down to write a menu that exemplifies homey NYC restaurants in 2010, the things we've been offered day in and day out, without a single individuating feature, this menu would be it.













