Showing posts with label east side. Show all posts
Showing posts with label east side. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2011

Madison Sourdough Company

Short Summary:  Delicious cafe fare in a comfortable, casual environment.

Location:  916 Williamson St. Madison, WI 53703 

You can get Madison Sourdough Company bread all over Madison, and their tents are a staple of farmer's markets and sidewalk fairs all summer, but the cafe at their home on Willy Street is an establishment in its own right.  Their menu takes the Company's bread and builds off it to make all your basic cafe staples:  breakfast plates, hot and cold sandwiches, and a good selection of sweet pastries. 


Bread on Center Stage

It's the "Madison Sourdough Company," after all -- the bread is front and center in just about all the dishes.  Fortunately, it's good bread.  Fans of sourdough with find the crunchy-on-the-outside, chewy-on-the-inside character they're looking for.  Less adventurous bread-eaters can always try the Country Loaf, which is loaded down with enough seeds and crunchy bits that the sourdough tang is more of an afterthought than a driving force.

The Company makes enough breads that you're not going to get bored with everything being sourdough.  Sandwiches come on white sourdough, toasted buns, open-faced cracked rye, and more.  Breakfast options include a sandwich on a croissant and a killer brioche French toast.

Pleasant Dining

The menu at Madison Sourdough is simple enough that it doesn't need too much describing.  Portions are ample, quality is high, and service is casual and quick. 

The cafe is high-ceilinged with big front windows, making a light and airy space.  Decor is rustic-funky -- lots of art made out of wooden spoons, farm furniture, and more.  Tables and chairs are randomly assorted (and sometimes a little too small for very tall customers).  It can get crowded once the East Side starts waking up, which gives the rest of us plenty of time but can mean a little elbow-rubbing by afternoon.

All in all we're glad to have M. S. Co. around as a dependable "Hey we're on the east side lets..." option. 

Monday, August 29, 2011

Umami Ramen & Dumpling Bar

Short Summary:  Huge bowls of soup and plates of potstickers in a very cool atmosphere.

Location:  923 Williamson St. Madison, WI 53703


Umami, the new "ramen and dumpling bar" on Williamson Street, is still shaking out some of those new-restaurant bugs:  the schedule keeps changing, most recently to eliminate lunch service and go to dinner only starting on Labor Day.  The construction on Willy isn't helping them either, but despite some logistical glitches it's still one of the better new establishments on the Madison food scene.

Atmosphere

Umami is definitely one of those places that wants to be known for having a little "atmosphere."  Seating is funky and sleek, with modern-art chairs in minimalist layered wood (maybe bamboo?  it's made to look like bamboo, at any rate) and walls etched like a Japanese rock garden.  Service is prompt, casual, and very friendly; I felt like we were sharing a bit of fun gossip with our waiter instead of ordering food.

You can opt for a funky-industrial feel in the bar area, where little tables are lined up along a single, wall-length bench, or go for more intimate seating at the tiny tables scattered around the upper section.  There's also an outdoor patio, though they've crowded it a bit more than's conducive to relaxation.

We enjoyed the bar area most -- it feels very modern and even a little cyberpunk, with a sleek metal, backlit bar and the modern-efficiency lunch tables.  Music from the overhead speakers was a little loud, but overall it was one of the more effective dinner settings we've seen in a while.

Not Your College Days' Ramen

People who associate ramen with little rectangular packages might have a hard time grasping Umami's appeal, not to mention prices.  For your $10-12 you get a bowl the size of your head, filled with locally-made wheat noodles, intensely meaty broth, and about five or six different toppings:  meats, seaweed, onion, bamboo shoots, and "flavor-infused egg."  We couldn't tell what the flavor infusion was, but the eggs were deliciously melty half-eggs that broke apart to add their yolk to the broth.

Portion size is definitely nothing to worry about.  You're going to be eating as much pasta as you would on any restaurant's plate of spaghetti, and the broth and extras pack plenty of calories too.  Umami might actually be one of the best bang-for-your-buck restaurants in its price range in Madison.

Dumplings on a Stick 


The "dumplings" section of the menu could use a little explaining:  "small" orders are a plate of six potstickers; "large" gets you nine.  The potstickers are authentic, tougher and crispy on one side from cooking, and filled with a lot of fresh taste.  Chicken and shiitake mushroom dumplings with carrot, scallion and ginger were out of this world.

A warning to hopeless Westerners:  this is not the sort of place that sets forks out on the napkins.  You get a spoon for your broth and a pair of chopsticks, end of story, so be ready to practice the art of picking a dumpling up, dipping it, biting it in half, and not dribbling food all over yourself.  Or you could probably wimp out and ask for a fork, but it felt kind of sacreligious to us.

Salads and Afters

Umami won our love by having small salad sizes -- lots of restaurants have great salads, but almost all of the really good ones only come in full, dinner sizes at the cost of an entree.  The large salads at Umami fill that role just fine, and should leave you plenty full, but the smalls make a great accompaniment to a bowl of soup or a plate of dumplings.  They're uncomplicated and don't try to get too fancy -- good ingredients in tasty dressing, nothing more.

We enjoyed the taste of a green tea creme brulee enormously, though the custard was not quite as solid as I felt it should have been.  It was also the smallest version you usually see at restaurants, very shallow and not particularly broad -- not a cardinal sin, but a bit of a let-down in light of the otherwise-generous portions.  Then again, maybe they were just trying to show my stomach a little mercy.

Umami's in a tough location right now with the construction on Willy Street, and times are tough for new restaurants all over.  We're keeping our fingers crossed and hoping that this one sticks around, because it was honestly one of the best dining experiences we've had lately.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Daisy Cafe & Cupcakery

Short Summary:  A versatile east-side kitchen putting out tasty dishes from a variety of cultures and styles -- with cupcakes for afters!

Location:  2827 Atwood Avenue, Madison, WI 53704

Since we ate on the west side last week, we thought we'd pick an Atwood eatery for our next review.  Daisy's was the first that came to mind:  a perennial favorite that varies its menu regularly, making it an enjoyable surprise every time around. 

Cupcakes on the Center Stage

They're right there in the name -- cupcakes are front and center at Daisy's.  With cupcakes majorly in-fashion and cafes offering them popping up all over Madison, Daisy's does a good job staying ahead of the curve.  Traditionalists can still find staples like chocolate-frosted-in-chocolate, but Daisy's isn't afraid to experiment.  Banana cupcake with peanut butter frosting caught my attention in particular on our first visit (though I haven't been lucky enough to find it since). 

Solid Entrees; Small Portions

We'll get the bad news out of the way up front:  Daisy's can be a little short on portions.  They're not one of those "tiny scrap of meat on an artistic white plate" sorts of joints, but I wouldn't go when you're absolutely starving. 

The entrees are tasty and varied, with a wide range of options to choose from.  Dinner items we liked included the Daisy Cassoulet and the Daisy Pesto Pasta; the meat loafs are all delicious but definite portion-size offenders. 

Breakfast and lunch are worth an extra trip.  The strata -- an egg casserole dish -- makes a nice alternative to other restaurants' diner-staple omlettes (but you can get an omlette too, if you want).  The sandwiches are good, if ordinary, and they make a nice excuse to have another cupcake.

A Nod to the Drinks List

Our authors are divided on the drinks list right now, but we're all willing to give them a nod for effort.  Try the Whoopsie-Daisy (we might have misspelled Whoopsie there?) for a tartly-sweet treat.  The heavy agave nectar focus puzzled some of us, but it's nice to see some variety in a drink list.  The restaurant also has a full coffee bar. 

Daisy's also has one of the better websites we've seen among Madison restaurants, so stop by for more details!