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Farina Alto – Albuquerque, New Mexico

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Farina Alto for outstanding pizza and so much more in Albuquerque’s Northeast Heights

Much thought, deliberation and market research usually goes into the naming of a business, but every once in a while, one linguistic aspect or another isn’t fully explored to the nth degree. Take for example  Chevrolet’s problems marketing the Nova in Latin America where the term “no va” means “it won’t go” in Spanish. Even though the Nova sold quite well, the car’s name wasn’t without irony and humor. Worse, a slogan for Frank Perdue chicken, “it takes a strong man to make a tender chicken,” translated (also in Spanish) as the equivalent of “it takes a sexually aroused man to make a chicken affectionate.”

Obviously, the “Alto” portion of Farina Alto Pizzeria & Wine Bar in Albuquerque is intended to accentuate the “Heights” where the restaurant is located. Alto, after all, translates in both Italian and in Spanish to “high” or “ high up” as in the foothills. Lesser known is the fact that “alto” also translates in Spanish to “stop.” That’s what you’ll read in Spain on octagonal red signs that in America read “stop.” So, Farina Alto not only translates to Farina at the Heights, but perhaps not intentionally to “Farina. Stop!”. Could it be the folks who named Farina Alto knew just what they were doing because stopping at Farina for lunch or dinner is a great idea?

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Farina Alto is one sprawling edifice

Farina Alto is the younger, more cosmopolitan sibling of Farina Pizzeria, the East Downtown (EDO) area Italian restaurant which took the Duke City by storm when it launched in 2008 and continues to be regarded as one of the Duke City’s best and most inventive pizza restaurants. As with its elder sibling, Farina Pizzeria is owned by restaurant impresarios Pat and Terry Keene, founders and owners of the Artichoke Café, long one of Albuquerque’s most highly regarded fine dining experiences.

Situated in the edifice which previously housed the Pacific Rim Asian Bistro, Farina Alto is easily–at 6,500 square feet–three times the size of the original Farina. Its operating hours are expanded, too, with lunch and dinner served seven days a week. Unlike at its elder scion, Farina Alto’s seating isn’t in personal space proximity and a capacious patio is available for overflow crowds and diners who prefer al fresco dining. Few, if any, vestiges of the Pacific Rim remain. In the area which once served as a sushi prep area, you’ll now find a wine cave and a curing room for the high quality meats and oils used throughout the restaurant’s menu.   Alas, only the chef and sous chef enter the curing room so my pleas for a tour were gently rebuffed.

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Meatballs al Forno Balsamico

Farina Alto launched on Wednesday, April 24th, 2013 with an expanded menu featuring fresh, locally-grown ingredients.  Aside from ingredients of the highest quality, another factor which makes it “Farina-style” is the oven which bakes the restaurant’s signature thin pies in an inferno of heat–650 to 800 degrees.  By virtue of their thin crust, these twelve-inch orbs don’t require a lot of oven-time.  The thin crust also means you’re likely to see more char on the pizza’s edges and bottom than you would on a thicker crust.  The taste of char should be relatively innocuous, even pleasant, but it’s also an acquired taste.  If you accept it, if you like it, you’ll enjoy Farina’s pies because char is a flavor.

Other restaurant standards ported over from EDO include some of the very best meatballs in town.  The notion of meatballs at an Italian restaurant conjures images of baseball-sized orbs made from veal, pork and beef and deluged by red sauce.  Farina’s meatballs al forno Balsamico are the antithesis of that stereotype.  This oven-baked deliciousness features four pine nut studded meatballs per order immersed not in tomato sauce, but in a sweet, tangy, savory Balsamic sauce.  The meatballs are accompanied by toasted crostini which you’ll use to dredge up any of the remaining sauce.

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Pasta e Fagioli: (non-vegetarian) bean and pasta soup

Another EDO favorite which has moved on up to the East side is the pasta e Fagioli, a non-vegetarian bean and pasta soup.  Translating simply to pasta and beans, this Italian comfort food standard is simmered until rich, flavorful and redolent with a melange of ingredients working very well together.  The pasta e Fagioli is topped with ground Italian basil and served hot.  It is available in cup and bowl sizes.

In his Local IQ review of Farina Pizzeria, Kevin Hopper wrote of the pizza “each pie’s individual ingredients come together to form a synergistic symphony of flavors.”   Each pie is crafted in the tradition of artisan pizzaiolos who  know what they’re doing in crafting pies with ingredients so complementary, they dance on all 10,000 of your taste buds with alacrity.  Other pizzerias use similar ingredients (for example: pepperoni, salami, mozzarella) to less acclaim, the difference being the high quality of the ingredients used at Farina Alto.

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Carne (pepperoni, salami, prosciutto, tomato sauce, mozzarella)

The carnivore’s choice for pizza is the simply named Carne which does translate to “meat” in both Italian and Spanish.  A triumvirate of magnificent meats–pepperoni, salami and prosciutto–share space on a canvas of perfectly charred dough with a lightly applied tomato sauce and mozzarella.  Selfishly I love when my Kim orders meaty pizzas on which pepperoni is an ingredient because she doesn’t like pepperoni.  Make that she doesn’t like inferior pepperoni.  She loved the pepperoni at Farina Alto which means I didn’t get much of it.  The Carne is a pulchritudinous pie.

For turophiles (connoisseurs of cheese), one cheese just won’t cut it.  Give us quattro formaggio (four cheeses) when you can or due (two) formaggio if the cheeses complement one another.  On the Formaggio di Capra, the two cheeses-farmhouse goat cheese and mozzarella–most definitely complement one another. Other ingredients on this masterpiece are leeks, scallions and crisp pancetta (a salt-cured pork belly meat).  The pancetta isn’t nearly as smoky as American bacon tends to be, lending instead an infusion of pure pork flavor.  It goes especially well with the smooth, savory-tangy farmhouse goat cheese.

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Formaggio di Capra (leeks, scallions, crisp pancetta, farmhouse goat cheese & mozzarella)

Farina Alto’s dessert menu is limited only in the number of options available.  The deliciousness is unlimited.  Among the most popular options is the gelato, an Italian frozen dessert somewhat similar to ice cream.  The difference between gelato and ice cream is subtraction; gelato usually is not made with cream and usually has a much lower fat content.  Although other flavor options are available, you can’t go wrong with plain vanilla and not just as a metaphor.  The vanilla and the chocolate are exemplars of how good and how pure these two flavors can be, how intensely chocolatey and vanilla pure gelato can be.  The gelato is served with a chocolate biscotti which is also intensely chocolatey.

It’s not likely any foodie will ever conceive of an Albuquerque tiramisu trail.  There just aren’t that many trail worthy options save for Torinos @ Home, Nicky V’s Neighborhood Pizzeria, Sara’s Pastries & Deli and the Farina family.  Though it’d be a short trail, it would be a delicious one.  Farina Alto’s tiramisu is an excellent rendition: Savoiardi cookies soaked in espresso with marsala zabaglione.  The strong espresso is perhaps why tiramisu translates to “pick me up” in Italian.  This is an adult dessert, just sweet enough for interest.

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Tiramisu

Great pizza at the Heights can now be found on the gentle up-slope leading to the Sandias. It’s a pizzeria and more whose very name beckons you to stop.

Farino Alto
10721 Montgomery Blvd, N.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 298-0035
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 12 May 2013
# OF VISITS: 1
RATING: *
COST: $$ – $$$
BEST BET: Tiramisu, Gelato, Meatballs al Forno Balsamico, Pasta e Fagioli, Carne, Formaggio di Capra

 

Farina Alto Pizzeria & Wine Bar on Urbanspoon

La Cantina at Casa Sena – Santa Fe, New Mexico

Our server Jennifer belts out a Broadway tune

Our server Jennifer belts out a Broadway tune

In the dark ages of 1979 when the world wasn’t nearly as connected as it is today, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) ruled the airwaves throughout the United Kingdom just as it had since its founding in 1922. Young listeners complained that the monopoly of control had forged a monotony in programming. For Yanks like me, however, the so-called “monotony” provided the most interesting diversion. In perhaps trying to appeal to listeners of all demographics with a one-size-fits-all approach, the BBC’s programming didn’t seem to make any sense…at least by American standards.

My own musical tastes tend to be very eclectic, but the BBC sometimes stretched eclectic beyond logical sense. One of my favorite examples of the “diversity” of the BBC’s music programming was a succession of songs that included True Love by Bing Crosby, Werewolves of London by Warren Zevon and If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body by the Bellamy Brothers. This example of the BBC’s programming was antithetical to that of American radio stations which then and now subscribe to fairly predictable programming formats. Country music stations will play country music, Oldies music stations will play oldies and so forth. Never the twain (not Shania) shall meet.

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Seafood Sampler – Lobster Sausage, Tortilla Crusted Shrimp, Pasilla Crusted Tuna Sashimi, Edamame-Wasabi Puree

The BBC’s varietal selections immediately came to mind when one of the performers of La Cantina’s singing wait staff announced the evening’s program, a repertoire that would include jazz and musical revues of the best of Broadway as well as selections from Walt Disney movies. Among the Broadway tunes to be showcased were selections by Cole Porter, coincidentally the composer who wrote the aforementioned True Love. Wouldn’t it have been appropriate if Werewolves of London was also on the night’s parade of tunes?

La Cantina is Santa Fe’s best year-round attraction for audiophiles, especially those who enjoy great food presented artistically in a warm and intimate environment. La Cantina is part of the sprawling Casa Sena complex on Palace Avenue just east of the famous Santa Fe Plaza. The singing wait staff, accompanied by some of Santa Fe’s most accomplished pianists, performs daily starting at 6:00pm. This terrific troupe of troubadours has been featured collectively and individually in media across the country. Reservations are highly recommended and there is no cover charge.

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Guacamole and Chips

Doubling as your servers and as the night’s entertainment, the performers are superbly talented in both roles. As servers, they’re highly personable and surprisingly attentive, especially considering each one performs several numbers. As performers, they shine, each with professional caliber voices that resonate strongly across the entire room. Engage them in conversation during a lull in the program and you’ll find they’re genuinely happy to be performing and serving guests. Two and even three hours will pass quickly as you thoroughly relish the evening’s entertainment.

It’s a rare restaurant in which the menu takes second or equal billing to the wait staff, but perhaps only the chef wouldn’t agree that at La Cantina, the night’s entertainment is on par with the excellent food. La Cantina’s menu showcases locally farmed and sustainable foods. The Casa Sena family of restaurants participates in Santa Fe’s Farm to Table program and supports local farmers outside the program. Chef Patrick Chef Gharrity believes in “building community through the vehicle of food,” demonstrating this approach through his commitment to supporting local farms, dairies and ranches.

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Pan-Seared Scallops with Oregano Sauteed Zucchini, Purple Potato Chips and New Mexico Harissa Sauce

The culinary offerings are described as “New American West Cuisine.” The flavors and configurations of New Mexico products are proudly showcased on the menu, but so is a surprising diversity considering there are fewer than a dozen entrees on the menu. Entrees range from New Mexico’s ubiquitous green chile cheeseburger and traditional enchiladas to pan-seared scallops and grilled venison Italian sausage. The appetizer menu is similarly diverse. There is truly something for all tastes.

For the seafood lover in you, the Seafood Sampler (lobster sausage, tortilla-crusted shrimp, Pasilla-crusted tuna sashimi, edamame-wasabi puree and a mango-sesame dressing) brings the bounty of the sea to your table.   The only thing not to like about this sampler is how very little of each item there is, especially if you’re sharing among any more than two.  The lobster sausage is especially notable with the texture of a sliced sausage and the unmistakable sweetness of lobster punctuated by flecks of red pepper.  We didn’t discern horseradish on the wasabi which has the earthiness of the real thing.  The sashimi is fresh and lightly seared.

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BBQ Pork Sliders with House Sesame Slaw and Sweet Potato Fries

At the risk of stereotyping, you might expect a restaurant named La Cantina to serve good guacamole and chips.  La Cantina certainly does.  The blue and yellow corn tortilla chips are housemade and the guacamole is made-to-order which means it arrives at your table at the height of freshness.  It’s made with perfectly ripened avocados tinged with a citrus influence more common in Mexican guacamole than it is on New Mexican guacamole.

There are a couple schools of thought about scallops.  Most chefs believe in saucing simply so as not to detract from the sublime sweet richness of pan-seared scallops.  The risk-takers among chefs will introduce elements that change or ameliorate that flavor profile.  The latter approach is what La Cantina does, generously applying a deeply red New Mexico harissa sauce.  Harissa is a piquant North African sauce often used as a condiment, so it’s not necessarily a great departure to envision a New Mexican version.  The New Mexico harissa sauce is made with red chile, olive oil and cilantro, emphasis on the red chile.  The scallops are served with oregano-sauteed zucchini cut into julienne-type strips and with purple potato chips.

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Aztec Dusted Salmon – Pan-Seared Filet with Spiced Mocha Crust, Yellow Mole, Quinoa-Radicchio Salad and Mango-Sesame Dressing

For more casual fare such as you might have on a fancy picnic, you can’t go wrong with BBQ Pork Sliders, shredded pork slathered in a guava BBQ sauce sandwiched between buttermilk biscuits and served with a sesame Napa cabbage slaw and sweet potato fries.   The guava BBQ sauce imparts a sweet Tropical flavor on the delicate pork.  It’s a biscuit sandwich as good as you’ll have anywhere.  The sweet potato fries are served with a smoky barbecue-flavored ketchup, but it’s the house sesame slaw that will really grab you. 

If you think you’ve seen and had salmon every conceivable way it can be made, Chef Gharrity will surprise you with a rendition called the Aztec Dusted Salmon.  The Aztec dusting is a spiced mocha crust, but this dish owes its  amazing flavor to perhaps the very best yellow mole I’ve ever had.  It’s a mole so good you’ll want to sop it all up from the plate with the restaurant’s bread.  Yellow mole, a specialty of Oaxaca, is usually made for chicken.  Salmon, it turns out, is an excellent vehicle for the mole, too.  The salmon is made with a quinoa-radicchio salad and a terrific mango-sesame “dressing” which involves finely chopped mangoes tempered with green onions and red peppers.

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Left: Sour Cream-Blue Berry Sundae (Frozen Sour Cream Mousse, Blueberry Compote, Blue Corn Crumble)
Right: Warm Chocolate Pudding Cake (Pistachio Whipped Cream, Blackberries)

Desserts remain a strong suit of the Casa Sena family although the sublime chocolate red chile soup is no longer on the menu.  The sour cream-blueberry sundae is a worthy successor. It’s made from a frozen sour cream mousse punctuated with a blueberry compote and a sweet blue corn crumble.  The frozen sour cream is a textural success and is surprisingly flavorful.   The blueberries ensure it’s not too sweet, lending a tangy flavor.  Another terrific dessert is the warm chocolate pudding nestled neath a pistachio whipped cream and a handful of blackberries. 

Had the BBC allowed the singing wait staff at La Cantina to perform every song in its nonsensical playlist, this is one listener who would have enjoyed the programming much more.  But not nearly as much as I enjoy it today within the comfy confines of a wonderful restaurant serving excellent and adventurous food.

La Cantina at Casa Sena
125 East Palace Avenue
Santa Fe, New Mexico
(505) 988-9232
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 11 May 2013
# OF VISITS: 2
RATING: 23
COST: $$$ – $$$$
BEST BET: Sour Cream – Blueberry Sundae, Warm Chocolate Pudding Cake, BBQ Pork Sliders, Aztec Dusted Salmon, Pan-Seared Scallops

Oak Tree Cafe – Albuquerque, New Mexico

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The Oak Tree Cafe is now on Alameda as of April, 2013

This isn’t Burger King!
You can’t have it your way.
You get it our way or you don’t get it at all.

For some reason, human beings seem inclined to level criticism by the shovelful while apportioning praise and plaudits by the thimbleful.  We  seem genetically predisposed to put more stock into negativity than we are to believe the best of others.  We consider compliments to be based on insincerity or ulterior motives.  Even our television viewing preferences gravitate toward gratuitous depictions of misbehavior and depravity.  We consider unwatchable any movie or television show portraying kindness and humanity.

That grim indictment of humanity is, by virtue of its own unflattering characterization, itself an example of misanthropic pathos.  In the spirit of John 8:7, I will cast the first stone at myself.  For years, I heard about a humble little sandwich shop in which customer service was said to be more than a slogan; it was a way of doing business.  Instead of embracing this supposed people-pleasing panacea, my first inclination was skepticism and a willingness to lump the Oak Tree Cafe with any number of other eateries which provide good service, albeit with transparent insincerity.

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Affable proprietor Rob Carson at the counter where you place your order

You’re no doubt familiar with the type of restaurant of which I’m talking  (chains are especially good at this). The minute you walk in, a painted-on smile approaches you and begins the well-rehearsed wait “schtick” that typically begins with something like, “I’m Julie and I’ll be your server tonight.”  Periodic visits to your table (usually when your mouth is full) include perfunctory chit chat as well as refills and more napkins.  Though typically not unpleasant, this type of service is still rather impersonal and unmemorable.  It’s essentially a game of reciprocal expectations between customer and client; both parties know what to expect and fulfill their respective roles.  It’s basically harmless.

Unfortunately, as feedback to this blog will attest, for some restaurants, harmless would be a vast improvement. Some restaurants, it seems, don’t seem to understand that good customer service is the lifeblood of any business. All too often, customer service appears to be of the “This isn’t Burger King!  You can’t have it your way.” variety.   This type of service is characterized by a haughty disregard for the axiom that the customer is always right.  Its rendition of the golden rule stops at “do onto others” as in “do ignore them,” “do belittle them,” do patronize them.”  Quite naturally it dissuades return visits.

The Taos: Hot USDA Choice Top Round Roast Beef, Melted Monterey Jack, Grilled Onions, Grilled Chile, Tomato, Mayo and Lettuce on a Fresh-Baked Kaiser Roll

Since most customer service seems to fall somewhere between the impersonal and well-rehearsed wait schtick and the “you get it our way or you don’t get it at all” approach, you’ll forgive me if I was skeptical about the Oak Tree Cafe.  It really is too easy to be cynical about a restaurant which has made its reputation not only because of its great sandwiches, but because of its genuinely warm, personable and attentive service.  Though I’m not from Missouri, Oak Tree would just have to show me.

The Oak Tree Cafe was founded just over a quarter century ago by the father-son duo of Michael and Rob Carson who worked side-by-side until Michael’s death at age 86 in 2009.  Today Rob is ably assisted by a kitchen staff which abides with the cafe’s long-standing tradition of excellent customer service.  In the tradition of Cheers, television’s friendliest bar, it seems everyone–or at least Rob–knows the name of all regulars as they walk in.  He also knows each regular’s “usual,” what those regular patrons like to order when they visit.  If my first visits are any indication, the regulars outnumber new visitors undoubtedly eager to find out if the cafe’s reputation for outstanding food and exceptional service is well deserved.

Special of the Day: Hot Corned Beef on Rye toast Topped with Grilled Onions, Monterey Jack Cheese, Banana Peppers, Lettuce, Tomato, Deli Mustard Served With a Side Order of Chips and Fresh Fruit

In April, 2013, the Oak Tree Cafe relocated from its Uptown location to a new shopping center at 4545 Alameda, N.E. (if you’re coming from the west, you don’t have to cross I-25 to get to the cafe).  The Oak Tree Cafe’s digs are 2,500 square-feet of welcome to west side diners whose sandwich options were primarily chain restaurants which blight their neighborhoods.  An outdoor patio with umbrella-shaded tables accommodates another forty guests or so.  At its expansive new location, the Oak Tree Cafe now serves burgers, beer, wine and appetizers. 

As of my initial visit to the Alameda location on 10 May 2013, only the famous Oak Tree bell hasn’t made it to its new home.  At the Uptown location, once you took your seat, conversations with your dining companions were periodically be punctuated by the tintinnabulation of a bell positioned by the cafe door.  As customers exited, they were invited to please ring the bell “if the food was great and service was crazy.”  Without exception, everyone exiting the premises rang the bell.  Look for the bell to make its way to Alameda soon.

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The Oak Tree Combo Sandwich (USDA Top Round Roast Beef, Turkey Breast, Corned Beef, Ham, Melted Swiss Cheese, Melted Cheddar Cheese, Mayo, Lettuce, Tomatoes on a Kaiser Roll

For a restaurant with a reputation for service, it’s surprising to find that there is no tableside wait service.  Instead you’ll place your order at a counter, interacting with an affable server who’s happy to answer any questions you may have or to make recommendations if you need them.  When you first walk in don’t be surprised to be greeted with a friendly handshake and an introduction “I’m Rob Carson.  Welcome to the Oak Tree Cafe.”  It probably won’t be the only time you interact with Carson who’s a peripatetic presence at the restaurant, flitting throughout the premises with an ambassadorial flair.

The sandwiches warrant not only bell-ringing, but cheers. They’re that good! The sandwich and wraps menu is formidable, nearly two dozen different sandwiches crafted on fresh bread, (sub rolls, wheat, rye, white, Kaiser rolls and French rolls) either toasted or untoasted.  Meat products come from Boar’s Head.  Sandwiches are named for faithful customers, New Mexico landmarks and celebrities such as Monty Hall and Al Capone.  Each sandwich towers with meats, condiments and ingredients, some of which are infrequently found at other Duke City sandwich shops.

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Beer-battered onion rings, some of the very best in Albuquerque

If you’re uncertain as to what sandwich to order, focus your study of the menu on those crafted with roast beef, a specialty of the house. The roast beef is slow-cooked on the premises from choice top round. It’s as tender as a marshmallow and as moist and delicious as any roast beef you’ll ever have anywhere! The Taos–hot USDA choice top round roast beef, melted Monterey Jack, grilled onions, grilled green chile, tomato, mayo and lettuce on a fresh-baked Kaiser roll–showcases layer upon layer of roast beef, so juicy and unctuous it resembles a hamburger patty until you taste it.  That’s when you gain an appreciation for how wonderful roast beef can be.  It’s especially wonderful when its flavor profile melds with the other ingredients which make this my choice for best roast beef sandwich in town.

During my inaugural visit to the Menaul location, the special of the day featured an ingredient combination–hot corned beef on rye toast topped with grilled onions, Monterey jack cheese, banana peppers, lettuce, tomato and deli mustard–that made my taste buds very happy.  The combination of banana peppers, deli mustard and grilled onions was especially notable, a complementary mix of sweet, savory and tangy flavors.  This sandwich is piled about twice as high as many other sandwiches you’ll find in local eateries.  It also stands tall above the rest in terms of pure deliciousness.

A rare way of acknowledging you liked your meal

The sprawling Alameda location is every bit as accommodating and friendly as its previous home.  Even the menu bespeaks of friendliness with the slogan “A warm, friendly atmosphere full of camaraderie and congeniality.”  Location aside, the biggest difference between one location and another is the menu which now includes three gourmet burgers, chicken sandwiches, salads and appetizers.  Sandwiches are the Oak Tree Cafe’s raison de’etre and will probably always be the most popular draw, but burgers and chicken sandwiches will beckon, too.

Although all sandwiches are served with a pickle spear and your choice of homemade apple coleslaw, homemade macaroni salad or fresh fruit, you owe it to yourself to try some of the other sides on the menu: hand-cut fries, sweet potato fries or beer-battered onion rings.  The beer-battered onion rings are among the very best in the city.  These golden hued beauties are served on a tree-like apparatus, just ready to be plucked.  Bite into them and onion juiciness squirts out, a wonderful departure from the usual desiccation you experience with out-of-the-bag onion rings most restaurants serve. 

Much as the burgers and chicken sandwiches beckon, chances are you’ll succumb to the stronger calling of a sumptuous sandwich.  One of the best is the Oak Tree Combo, a sandwich honoring the years spent at the San Mateo (Uptown) location.   This is a sandwich’s sandwich, a meaty behemoth on a Kaiser roll.  The ingredients–USDA top round roast beef, turkey breast, corned beef, melted Swiss cheese, melted Cheddar cheese, mayo, lettuce and tomatoes–go very well together.  It’s such a good sandwich, you may mourn finishing your last bite.

The Oak Tree Cafe has made a believer our of this cynic who often laments the absence of truly sincere, truly personable service coupled with excellent sandwiches. This cafe is an anachronism, a throwback to the days in which the customer was always right and you could get things done your way. At its new Alameda location, the Oak Tree Cafe is open Monday through Saturday from 11AM to 8PM.

Oak Tree Cafe
4545 Alameda, N.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 830-2233
LATEST VISIT: 10 May 2013
1st VISIT: 5 July 2011
# OF VISITS: 2
RATING: 21
COST: $$
BEST BET: The Taos Sandwich, Hot Corned Beef Sandwich, Oak Tree Combo, Onion Rings

Oak Tree Cafe on Urbanspoon