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Boston
Globe
April 17, 2003
Getting
Ourselves Back to the Garden
by Denise Taylor
Globe Correspondent
Dining at Organic Garden Cafe in Beverly, an all-organic, all-vegan,
raw-foods restaurant, was a Life cereal moment. Yes, this was some stuff supposedly
good for you, but hey Mikey, we liked it. The raw or living
foods credo limits cooking to the use of low-heat dehydrators because they cook
without reaching the high temperatures that break down natural enzymes. Raw-food
devotees believe intact enzymes make food healthier.
But for owner-chef Robert Reid, raw doesn't mean you're stuck with carrot sticks.
Reid may be a health enthusiast, but he thinks and cooks like a gourmet. His
beautifully presented organic salads, sandwiches, and entrees aim to please
as much as they nourish. The pretty, petite dining room awash in rich, soothing
colors and the selection of organic beer, wine, sake, and hot teas, too, are
part of his plan to make raw dining a pleasure for vegetarians and non-vegetarians
alike. To this end, he also prepares masterful faux dishes.
Take the falafel ($9.95). This Middle Eastern delight topped with an excellent
sesame-cucumber-dill sauce and served on a gorgeous tangle of salad greens delivers
all the joy that good falafel should. But it's not fried, it contains no chickpeas,
and, heck, technically it's not even cooked. The savory imposters are neat little
balls of ground almond and sunflower seeds seasoned with lemon, extra-virgin
olive oil, fresh herbs, and cumin all crisped in a dehydrator until they taste
fried.
We started with mushroom satay ($6.50), skewers of juicy portobello mushroom
strips deliciously flavored with a garlic-tamari-olive oil marinade and a basting
of galangal-spiked BBQ sauce. Like every cooked dish we were served, they were
about room temperature.
Guacamole with tasty housemade vegetable sun chips ($4.50) was a hit that exemplified
Reid's focus on fresh flavors. "A perfectly ripe avocado is one of the
most delicious foods in the world," Reid says. "So we keep our recipe
simple and let the avocado speak for itself. We just use scallion, red onion,
lemon juice, tomato, and a hint of sea salt. That's it. If we don't have perfect
avocados, we won't make it."
Tomato towers ($6.50), looking more like doublewides than skyscrapers, were
the only visually unappetizing dish. Thick tomato slices came glopped with what
looked like fresh concrete sprinkled with chopped kalamata olives and fresh
basil. Nonetheless, the garlicky, lemony cheese of ground pine nuts had a nice
kick. White miso soup ($2.95) served hot was a muddy, bland disappointment.
Better was the cold Thai coconut soup ($2.95).
The dinner salads were vibrant extravaganzas of baby greens, sprouts of all
kinds, and veggies of every color. At just $6.50-$7.95 for such an organic abundance,
they are also a bargain. Pate and rice salad ($7.95) was a standout. Atop a
riot of greens was a scoop of fragrant pecan and rosemary pate sweetened with
apple and a hint of date next to a little hill of wild rice (cooked by soaking).
Our entrees were stunning with rich, raw colors - colors usually lost during
cooking. Ravioli ($12.95) came with a striking fan of thin garnet-red slices
of beet folded into half-moons stuffed with a tasty herbed nut-olive pesto.
Set off by spaghetti noodles cut from green zucchini in a cashew alfredo sauce
and a salad dotted with purple cabbage, the plate was so bright it could have
been plugged in.
The sampler plate ($12.50), a sort of a vegan answer to the cobb salad, was
my favorite. Falafel, pate, a mini portobello and nut sunburger, and wild rice
came aloft a sea of salad greens. Vietnamese Dream ($9.50) arrived with spring
rolls of julienned veggies and fresh basil atop salad. I found both dipping
sauces oddly cloying with date and apricot as sweeteners, but my dinner partners
loved the chili and garlic hints in the almond butter sauce.
Lasagna ($12.50) came layered with delicate zucchini pasta, pine nut cheese,
and marinara alongside a sunburger meatball and salad. Again, I found using
raisin to sweeten the tomato sauce distracting, but my friend was perfectly
pleased, though he found the portion small.
The vegan at the table, thrilled that he could order without a long discussion
with the wait staff, chose the garden taco ($9.50), a fold-over wrap sandwich
stuffed with sprouts, sunburger, cheese, and salsa. It reduced his conversation
to sighs of "mmmm."
Of the desserts we liked the strawberry pie ($4.95) best. The pecan-raisin crust,
strawberry filling, and frozen cashew-orange cream topping made for a sweet
and pleasant treat. The macaroons ($2.40) and cookie ($2.40) tasted like fruit
bars and were outshone by their scrumptious garnish of cream-like cashew-date
drizzle over strawberry slices. Or just order the wonderful chai tea with frothed
cashew milk ($3.50) or one of the myriad fresh fruit smoothies and juices.
Organic
Garden Cafe
294 Cabot Street, Beverly
(978) 922-0004
Credit Cards: All major cards
Handicap access: Fully accessible
Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
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