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The Arcadia News
features restaurant reviews each month.
If you have a question or comment, please see our
contact page.
Méthode
Bistro
6204 N. Scottsdale Rd, 4809988220
I want to start
this article by briefly expressing a concern I have for all restaurants
in Arizona who pride themselves on their interpretation of French
cuisine. I feel it’s my duty to lounge on my cloud of culinary
righteousness and hand down judgments to everyone in the business.
So here it is: What is it about Foie Gras with you people? No
one seems to really nail it the way it should be nailed. I love
Foie Gras and I always end up ordering it when it’s available,
thinking it is going to be like, you know, Foie Gras. But it always
comes out different. It never seems to be about the Foie Gras
itself, it’s about the treatment, the gastrique, the poached
pear, the orange glaze, the flaming pool of vodka. And it never
seems to complement it. It conspires against it; it sneaks its
way on to the menu looking clever but then at the last moment,
voila; your dream of succulent Foie Gras is a childish fantasy—a
shroud of false hopes. The first time I had it is the same way
I would want to have it again. I was dating this French girl in
California. Her mother was very traditional, and they ate it every
Sunday. It had been sautéed briefly in a small amount of
butter and it came out sizzling in its small worn skillet with
a plate of toasted bread that had been given a little brush of
olive oil, some cracked black pepper and salt. (I guess we call
that a crouton.) It was summer time so there was a cold bottle
of chardonnay on the table. That’s all I remember, oh yeah,
they served the salad last. (Mindless foreigners.) Whatever sins
the Méthode Bistro has to answer for have already been
absolved. They do too many things well and enough things differently
to get foodies excited that they are in business. Once we had
dropped off our two year old zoo animal at Gramas, Rosie and I
were ready for some serious R&R. I wasted no time sliding
the car keys across the table and ordered a very cold very good
glass of chardonnay. All it took was one sip and the summer heat
had been ordered to the time out room indefinitely. The tapas
menu offers eight different items at the generous price of $5
each. We started off with two of them. The Medjul Dates with Merguez
Sausage wrapped in sugarcured Bacon and the Rock Shrimp and Sweet
Corn on Brioche. Both of these were great, my favorite was the
shrimp. My tightwad wife wanted us to fence ourselves in to the
tapas menu but I wasn’t having it. The reckless brute in
me ordered more wine and began rambling off the story of how my
smartmouthed Uncle Ricky took me fishing when I was a kid at four
in the morning on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. After two hours of nothing,
I caught a Walleyed Pike; Ricky reeled it in. It was huge and
by the time we had beaten it to death with our bare hands, the
boat was in shambles, the quad barbed hook seated in my shoulder
blade was drawing blood and screams and the aluminum bottom of
the crowded trout boat was covered in the bricabrac of the dumped
tackle box which slid about over a thin layer of foam from Ricky’s
last can of Hamms. I don’t know how Matt McLinn, Chef Owner
of Méthode came about his Walleye Pike featured as a special
($17) but I like to imagine it was more dramatic than a phone
call to one of his vendors. Méthode did a great job featuring
this tender fish by giving the skin a crisp bite and serving it
with fingerling potatoes, string beans, Red Bell Pepper and Onion
Jus. One thing which Méthode offers that most bistros won’t
is quite a bit of choice. Eight different entrees offer Seabass,
Halibut, Wood Oven Roasted Lobster, Prime Rib, Hanger Steak, Filet
Mignon and Roasted Chicken. Our server was ordered to refuse my
dessert request so that we could share a dessert of my wife’s
choosing. A trio of homemade sorbets ($5) soon arrived and as
always with this type of thing, she quickly sampled each one,
decided which was the best and then blocked my access to it. History
has taught her nothing, and I predictably responded by seizing
the remainder of her wine for myself. “Say ‘tata’
to the rest of this silky, long legged red!” was my remark
as I jerked its stem to my side of the field. Méthode’s
bar is a luxedout, cozy place for tapas and drinks and is hosted
by Dave Berntzen who has never short poured anyone in his life.
The staff are quick and know the wine list. The glassware is A+
which doesn’t happen enough these days. Seriously, great
wine needs great glasses and Méthode has both. Dinner is
served at Méthode Bistro from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. (lounge
opens at 3 p.m.), seven days a week.
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