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Pizzeria Luca – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Pizzeria Luca launched in November, 2011

Can there truly be too many pizzerias? Perhaps only among pizzeria owners who don’t want much competition might you hear that ridiculous notion about one of America’s essential food groups. Take for example one monopoly-minded pizzeria owner in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania who had a resolute belief that there was too much competition in the area and determined to do something about it. It apparently didn’t dawn on him that by serving a better pizza or lowering prices, his business might improve. Instead, in the tradition of villainous scofflaws everywhere, he decided to sabotage his rivals.

Alas, his exploits only proved fodder for late night talk show hosts who lampoon stupid criminals. In perpetrating his nefarious misdeed, the perfidious proprietor of the poor-performing pizzeria created such a ruckus that his intended victim quickly investigated and discovered a bag full of mice had been deposited in his drop ceiling. As luck would have it, two uniformed officers were dining at the presumably palatable pizzeria at the time. They quickly apprehended the would-be rodent rapscallion and charged him with criminal mischief, disorderly conduct, harassment and cruelty to animals. There’s no indication as to whether his room mate at the local hoosegow was Mr. Murphy or whether the competitor’s pizza was served for dinner.

Pizzeria Luca is proud to offer a traditional East Coast Italian pizzeria experience in an upscale yet casual environment

So, just how many pizzerias are there?  With more than 65,000 pizzerias (58 percent of which are independent and 42 percent of which are chains) in the United States, pizzerias make up nearly seventeen percent of all restaurants in America and gross over 30 billion dollars per year, accounting for greater than ten percent of all food service sales.  Independent pizzerias account for 52 percent of those sales totals. In 2005, the average store earnings for all pizzerias was nearly $450,000.  The “big four” pizza chains–Pizza Hut, Domino’s, Papa John’s and Little Caesars–represent nearly 37 percent of industry sales at nearly $11 billion per year.  The top fifty pizza chains across the United States own 42 percent of all pizzerias and control greater than 48 percent of all pizza sales.

According to PMQ Pizza Magazine’s “Pizza Power Report” for 2010, Americans consume approximately 3 billion pizzas per year.  That translates to a whopping 100 acres of pizza each day–an astounding 350 slices per second over each of the 86,400 seconds in each day. 93 percent of Americans eat at least one pizza per month with the most popular ingredient being pepperoni.  The United States has an average of one pizzeria per 4,350 people across the fruited plain.  Surveys indicate 45 percent of pizza orders are take-out, 36 percent are delivery and 20 percent are dine-in. Sixteen percent of all pizzas ordered across the country were ordered on-line.

The bar at Pizzeria Luca

In its 2010 Food and Wine edition, Albuquerque The Magazine chronicled its search for the best pizza in the Duke City area, reviewing and rating some 37 independent restaurants (and subjecting themselves to take-out pizza from five chains).  That’s barely scratching the surface.  Urbanspoon lists 151 pizza restaurants in the metropolitan Albuquerque area which translates to one pizza restaurant for every 6,012 residents (based on the 2011 census estimate of 907,775 as of 2011).  That pales in comparison with the 2,070 pizza restaurants in New York City or the one pizza restaurant per 3,600 residents in Miami. 

According to Slice, a Serious Eats blog, there are 21 regional styles of pizza.  In the Duke City, perhaps the most prevalent regional style–or at least the one most often claimed–is New York-style (characterized by having a puffy, bread-like, outer crust which quickly tapers down to a very thin, crisp middle).   When Pizzeria Luca, a locally owned company which launched in October, 2011, purported to offer a traditional “East Coast Italian pizzeria experience” in an upscale yet casual environment, it was interesting to note that the pizza itself is certainly not New York style nor does it resemble any of the East Coast pizzas with which I’m familiar. It’s only the look and feel that bears a resemblance to Metropolis.

Antipasto: Artisan cheese plate with salami, olives, fresh fruits and baked rustic bread

Pizzeria Luca is ensconced in a shopping center on the far Northeast Heights not too far from the Duke City’s first Jinja restaurant and the über popular Trader Joe’s.  From the outside the pizzeria is fairly inconspicuous despite the prevalence of the red, white and green colors of the Italian flag.  Step inside the doors and you might indeed get the impression that you’ve stepped into a cosmopolitan setting that will tell you you’re not in Kansas any more.  It’s a setting quite unlike that of any other pizzeria in Albuquerque.

The restaurant’s high-ceilings bear the popular exposed industrial-style ductwork that seem to express modernity.  The height of the ceiling seems exaggerated because the back wall more closely resembles an external wall with its distressed brick and faded Pizzeria Luca signage, two vintage touches.   Floors are tiled in large red and white squares not unlike nostalgia restaurants. To your left is a serpentine wine bar whose cynosure is a semi-circular wine tower sporting some 56 different wines from Italy, Washington and California (none from New Mexico as of this writing).  A flat screen television seems somewhat out of place next to the wine tower.  Televisions, by the way, can also be found in the pizzeria’s restaurants though if you don’t know this, you might freak out to hear the voice of the opposite gender as you walk in. Walls are adorned with movie posters.  The musical stylings of Italian crooners of the 1930s are piped in via the restaurant’s sound system.

Calabria: Prosciutto di Parma, Shallots, Fontina, Truffle Oil and Marinara

The menu offers four appetizers (referred to as “piccole piastre” or small plates) including an antipasto and littleneck clams in a white wine-based broth.  Four salads (insalate) of the designer variety are also available as are five panini sandwiches available in half or full sizes.  The sandwiches are crafted from house-prepared meats served on fresh baked bread.  Five pasta dishes adorn the menu not including a “doggie plate” consisting of a housemade meatball with dry kibble.  There are seven pizza options as well as a “build your own pie” option which starts with mozzarella and marinara.  You can also have a large slice if you prefer. 

The antipasto, a piccole piastre is described on the menu as an artisan cheese plate with salami, olives, fresh fruits and baked rustic bread.  It’s the fresh fruits that make it some what unique for Albuquerque.  Four slices of lightly toasted bread with shaved cheese and parsley flank a bed of mixed greens drizzled with a light balsamic dressing atop of which and within you’ll dig out sliced strawberries, olives, raspberries, salami slices, more shaved cheese, a whisper-thin slice or two of prosciutto and slices of hard cheese.  As with all good appetizers, it serves very well to make you look forward to your entrees in hopes they’ll be as good, if not better.

The Moderna: Italian sausage, pepperoni, crimini mushrooms and roasted garlic

The pizzas are as clever as the antipasto platter with inventive ingredient combinations festooning each twelve-inch pie.  Even the Margherita, the pizza which started it all, is unique for Albuquerque in that it’s made with mozzarella di bufala, fresh water buffalo mozzarella.  For turophiles,  only the tasty, creamy, milky buffalo mozzarella will do on pizza in which mozzarella is called for.  At my request, the accommodating pizzeria added it to the Calabria (Prosciutto di Parma, shallots, Fontina, truffle oil and marinara) I ordered.  That meant two of my very favorite pizza ingredients–buffalo mozzarella and Prosciutto di Parma–in the world were available in one pie in Albuquerque. 

Prosciutto de Parma is a sweet-tasting prosciutto, not as salty as the characteristic Italian bacon, and it’s bright and save for the white, flavorful fatty edges, is uniform in its rosiness.  The creaminess of Prosciutto de Parma is attributed, in part, to the fact that the pigs are fed whey left over from the making of Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese.  It’s my favorite of all prosciutto.  Pizzeria Luca’s pies are generously endowed with the ingredients you order encircled by a thick, crusty rim (a good crust, no throw-away here).  The pies are thin-crusted and are prepared on conventional pizza ovens (not of the brick variety).  They aren’t speckled in black and white char as are some thin-crusted pizzas, but they’re also not served doughy as at one popular local pizzeria.

Cannoli and Tiramisu for dessert

The Calabria is a very good pizza, its sauce reminiscent of fresh, well-seasoned tomatoes.  Indeed, the sauce is made from tomatoes from Italy’s San Marzano region.  Another good pie is the Modena (Italian sausage, pepperoni, crimini mushrooms and roasted garlic).  Most notable is the thickness of the pepperoni and sausage.  While many restaurants serve pepperoni so thin you can almost see through it, Pizzeria Luca’s pepperoni is probably the thickness of five or six of the competition’s pepperoni stacked. 

Dessert options include some of the “usual suspects” such as cannoli (traditional or chocolate) and tiramisu.  The tiramisu is made in-house and doesn’t really distinguish itself (remember, Albuquerque is home to several restaurants proffering truly outstanding tiramisu–Torinos @ Home and Farina Pizzeria, for example).  The cannoli is similarly just okay, nothing about which to write home. 

Perhaps because of the wine bar, Pizzeria Luca is most decidedly a restaurant in which young urban professionals will feel right at home, toddlers in tow.  It’s the type of pizzeria which will many will call home away from home, a hang-out type, making it a good candidate for expansion–and indeed the ownership group is planning on several sites in the Albuquerque area.  That’s a great thing for the Duke City because as everyone knows, you can’t have too many pizzerias!

Pizzeria Luca
8850 Holly Avenue, N.E., Suite J
Albuquerque, New Mexico
505-797-8086
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 27 November 2011
# OF VISITS: 1
RATING: *
COST: $$
BEST BET: Antipasto, Calabria, Modena, Cannoli, Tiramisu

Pizzeria Luca and Wine Bar on Urbanspoon

Chez Axel – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Chez Axel and its familiar Eiffel Tower rooftop

“Another Land of Enchantment.” That’s how the menu at Chez Axel describes the Provence region in France. No one who’s ever traveled through the region and luxuriated in a café crème at a sidewalk café on a leisurely Sunday morning would ever dispute that the region is as enchanting as any in the world.  It truly is a soiree for the senses, especially for those who believe food is art and that it can restore not only the body, but the heart and soul.

For freshness of ingredients, there is no region in France more renowned than the Provence region in southern France. The cuisine raised in this verdant, sun-drenched region has earned the nickname “la cuisine du soleil” or “the cuisine of the sun” a tribute to freshness and quality.  The produce in Provence perfumes the Mediterranean air where it competes with the wafting bouquet of lavender, oleander and olives.  Is it any wonder French cafés associate their freshest cuisine with this food-lover’s paradise?

The colorful and romantic interior of Chez Axel

High aspirations have been meeting consistently good execution at Chez Axel since it launched in 1996.  Owner-chef Stefan Springer is not the founding owner, but he’s raised the bar so much that in 2010, he was named Chef of the Year by the New Mexico Restaurant Association.  This award is accorded to an outstanding chef in recognition of excellent cuisine and excellent service.  Chef Springer was cited not only for his culinary skills, but for his civic-mindedness.  An organization he founded to keep at-risk students in school provides clothing, school supplies and other necessities.  Albuquerque can use more chefs like this. 

We can use more French restaurants like Chez Axel.  Interestingly, the restaurant’s exterior edifice does not have a Provencal theme.  Instead, its most conspicuous feature is a replica of the Eiffel Tower on the roof.  At night the Tower is illuminated, a beacon to lead hungry diners to a terrific menu of excellent cuisine in a colorful and romantic ambiance.  Each table is draped with white linen table cloths and red napkins folded into wine glasses.  Bottles of wine are displayed on floor level racks and on shelves above eye-level.  Service is personable and attentive.

French bread with herbed butter

The menu showcases French cuisine at an affordable price point, especially for lunch when you can have a two-item lunch combination meal for under ten dollars.  That combination features you choice of two items from a list of soups, salads, quiches and crepes.  You can also opt for entrees the type of which Julia Child herself might have featured had she operated a restaurant–Chicken Provencal, Beef Bourguignon, Cassoulet, Shrimp Provencal and Trout Almondine.  

The dinner menu shines even more brightly with an appetizer menu which includes Snails a l’Aixoise and frog legs as well as salads and soups.  A pageful of meat offerings is even more luminescent.  All meats come from the Adkins Ranch whose animals are “naturally raised” and are guaranteed high in protein, vitamins and minerals and low in fat and cholesterol.  All seafood (sole, trout, salmon, shrimp and scallops) come from Whole Food Market.   The desserts are made on the premises and are guaranteed absolutely delicious.

Tomatoes / mozzarella salad - Lettuce, basil, olive oil, croutons.

A basket of thinly sliced French bread and herbed butter arrives at your table shortly after you’ve placed your order.  The exterior is crusty while the insides are soft.  It’s a bit of a challenge to spread the cold butter, but once you do, it’s a bigger challenge not to eat two or more baskets full of the staff of life.  You’ll want to save a slice or two to dredge up the soup or an entree in which a magnificent entree with rich, delicious broth is showcased.

Culinary history is rife with examples of “rags to riches” foods–items writers often refer to as “peasant foods” by virtue of their humble, economically borne origins which rise to the level of sought after gourmet favorites.  One such food is French onion soup which is, at its essence, simply onions, a scrap of old bread, grated cheese and veal stock. Chez Axel’s French onion soup is amazing–a brown-and-tan crock brimming with thick, stringy cheese bubbling on top; perfectly caramelized onions; croutons softened by a rich, delicious beef broth; and the herbaceous hint of parsley, basil and bay leaf.  This is one of the most fragrant and delicious French onion soups in Albuquerque.

My favorite French Onion Soup in Albuquerque

Julia Child once said, “When beef stew is in the oven, all’s right with the world, and Beef Bouruignon is the best beef stew known to man.”   She loved this stew so much that in her first episode of The French Chef in 1963, that’s what she prepared.  Because of the time and care required to prepare it correctly, Julia’s recipe for this hearty stew may have been filed away in a recipe book, but it wasn’t endeavored often save for by the most intrepid of cooks.  It wasn’t until after the movie Julie and Julia that the home cook began to attempt it. 

Chez Axel’s rendition of Beef Bourguignon has that deep, rich flavor made possible only when it is carefully prepared in a slow and loving manner and with excellent ingredients and good wine.  It’s a version which might even be better the next day when the flavors have melded even more fully.  It’s a deep, rich flavor combining slowly braised, fork-tender beef with a very good wine and fresh, perfectly prepared carrots.  The entree is served with two sides, chef’s discretion.  Count your blessings if it’s the peppery snap pea pods and the buttery long-grained rice.

Beef Bourguignon a l'orange: pieces of beef loin sautéed in olive oil with garlic, herbs, orange zest, carrot, onion & grilled mushrooms, stewed in red wine

In the process of making cooking a national pastime (back in the days before most women entered the workforce), Julia Child introduced the American television audience to quiche in the early 1960s.  Two decades later, an American author named Bruce Feirstein wrote a best-selling book called Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche which lampooned masculine stereotypes.  Men who were all too conscious of fashion and who followed all the trends were referred to as “quiche eaters.” 

My friend Señor Plata is one man confident enough in his masculinity to admit his love for quiche, especially if it’s nearly as good as the  mushroom and spinach quiche at Chez Axel.  The base for this quiche is a light, delicate and flaky crust that would be the envy of any blue-ribbon award-winning pie.  Atop that fabulous crust is more than an inch of fluffy eggs topped with mushrooms and spinach under a blanket of molten Gruyere cheese.  All quiche should be this good. 

Mushroom and spinach quiche with carrots

Julia Child wrote in The French Chef Cookbook that cassoulet can be prepared in one day, but “two or even three days of leisurely on-and-off cooking makes it easier.”  In his Les Halles Cookbook, celebrity travel host Anthony Bourdain was more definitive, calling for three days of preparation time.  One thing is for certain–if you want to prepare a cassoulet dish, you should have the patience of a saint.  Kate Hopkins, who writes as The Accidental Hedonist, puts it best: “you have to want to make this dish, as it is an all day affair. A person doesn’t casually make a cassoulet. This dish is best made with an obsessive desire.” 

Said to date back to the Hundred Years’ War during the 14th century, history and legend tell of a communal dish so hearty, it revitalized war-weary soldiers who promptly dispatched the invading forces.  As with French onion soup, cassoulet is an archetypal peasant dish–an earthy, rich, slow-cooked casserole of beans, meat and herbs meant to be shared.  Chef Springer’s version is made with pork, lamb, bacon, tomato, garlic, herbs and white beans.  It is absolutely the perfect dish for a blustery winter day when its comforting qualities embrace you in a soul-warming embrace.  The pork, lamb and bacon penetrate deeply to flavor the broth with fat, flavor and utter deliciousness.

Cassoulet - Pork, lamb, bacon, tomato, garlic, herbs, beans stew

Even as the captivating voice of Edith Piaf resonates over the restaurant’s sound system with Les Trois Cloches, Chez Axel seems woefully out-of-place in the timeworn shopping center that houses an international menagerie of restaurants in Ho Ho Chinese, Viet Q and Wings N Things.  It frankly would be a better fit for the countryside in Provence.  Duke City gourmets are thankful it’s here and not there.

Chez Axel Restaurant
6209 Montgomery, N.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
505-881-8104
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 25 November 2011
1st VISIT:  28 October 2011
# OF VISITS: 2
RATING: 23
COST: $$
BEST BET: Beef Bourguignon, Mushroom and Spinach Quiche, French Onion Soup, Cassoulet

Chez Axel on Urbanspoon

Cafe Dalat – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Cafe Dalat, one of Albuquerque's very best restaurants of any genre.

Cafe Dalat, one of Albuquerque's very best restaurants of any genre.

Da Lat is one of Vietnam’s most well known vacation destinations, serving since the turn of the century as the vacation spot for affluent Vietnamese and foreigners. Considered the unofficial honeymoon Mecca of Vietnam, it is located on the greater Central highlands of Vietnam and at 1500 meters (~4920 feet) above sea level is one of the few cities in Vietnam surrounded by pine trees, just like James Nguyen’s adopted home of Albuquerque.

That’s one reason James named his latest restaurant venture after the beautiful city of Da Lat. James opened Cafe Dalat on Sunday, August 31st, 2003 after nearly ten months away from the Duke City dining scene. Formerly the proprietor of May Hong, he has brought with him all the great recipes from May Hong and added some 15 or so other great entrees and appetizers, including some dim sum. His wife, in fact, returned to Vietnam for several months before Cafe Dalat’s launch to learn dim sum from a dim sum master.  Every year James travels to California, the progenitor of new trends in Vietnamese cuisine, to see if there are any new dishes or trends he can bring back to Albuquerque.

Proprietor James Nguyen with a plate of lime beef

Proprietor James Nguyen with a plate of lime beef

Alas, Cafe Dalat isn’t nearly big enough to serve an extensive dim sum menu, but it is certainly one classy restaurant and has surpassed May Hong and Saigon as my highest rated Vietnamese in the city and one of my highest rated in New Mexico in any genre. It’s easily on par (maybe even better) than Cyclo, a nationally regarded Vietnamese restaurant in Chandler, Arizona and it’s better than many of the Vietnamese restaurants I frequented in the San Jose area.  In 2004, Weekly Alibi readers selected Cafe Dalat as the very best Vietnamese restaurant in Albuquerque. Two years later, it earned a four-star rating from the Albuquerque Journal’s luminous restaurant critic Andrea Lin.  Competition is increasingly formidable, but Cafe Dalat continues to outshine its competition.

Since James launched Cafe Dalat on Central Avenue, several other Vietnamese restaurants have sprung up across the city. In fact, the Duke City area (including Rio Rancho) now has more than two dozen Vietnamese restaurants, most serving very good to outstanding food. Curiosity-seekers will try the other Vietnamese restaurants and some will spread their business around to the ones considered worthy of their appetites, but invariably when you ask them which is the city’s very best, it’s Cafe Dalat that comes immediately to mind for most of them.

Banh Mi, the outstanding Vietnamese sandwich!

Banh Mi, the outstanding Vietnamese sandwich!

There are many reasons–not the least of which are James and his lovely wife–that Cafe Dalat gets the nod over formidable competition. For one thing, it’s probably the most striking Vietnamese restaurant in the city thanks to James’s complete refurbishment of the drab, dingy remnants of the previous tenant, the Little Saigon restaurant.  Attractive upscale touches, a competitive wine list; rich, dark woods and subdued lighting add those subtle touches of class and ambience to which most restaurants aspire. Not even the acid etched graffiti on an east-facing window detract from the restaurant’s panache.

Then there’s the menu. Eighteen different appetizers (not to mention five additional tofu and vegetarian appetizers), four cup-sized soups and fifteen different swimming-pool sized bowls of pho and stew–and that’s just the first page of the menu. Just trying to narrow your dining choices is a tremendous challenge.  The really great thing about Cafe Dalat is that you can’t go wrong no matter what you order. You may not like (make that love) some items as much as you’ll like others, but there’s probably nothing on the menu you won’t dislike.

Shrimp in Bacon: jumbo shrimp wrapped in fried bacon and topped with crushed peanuts

Okay, maybe you’ll dislike the durian shake, made from what is considered the stinkiest fruit in the world. Most Americans consider durian malodorous and they might be right. It’s an acquired taste, one of which I’m proud to boast I have. Even if you don’t like durian shakes, there are other rich, creamy and fruity cold concoctions on the menu–strawberry shakes, jackfruit shakes, fresh coconut juice, the incomparable Vietnamese lime aid and even an avocado shake (like sweet guacamole you ingest with a straw).

The appetizer line-up is like a “who’s who” of the very best Vietnamese appetizers ever assembled all in one menu. If you love spring rolls or egg rolls, Cafe Dalat’s are among the very best in the city, but even better are other appetizer alternatives, including some interesting starters you might not associate with Vietnamese cuisine.  One example is the shrimp in bacon, called Mariscos Costa Azul in Mexican mariscos restaurants where they’re served.  Cafe Dalat’s rendition is topped with crushed peanuts and served with fish sauce.  Bacon with anything makes for a great combination.  You’ll love these.

Luscious lime beef!

Luscious lime beef!

The lime beef is fabulous! Nearly carpaccio thin slices of seared steak are blanketed with refreshing mint and cilantro and crushed peanuts as well as grilled onion and invigorating spices. This is an appetizer for which it’s okay to use your fingers to use the razor-thin steak as a scooping device for the complementary ingredients. Provided with the lime beef is a bowl of nuoc cham, the quintessential Vietnamese condiment based on fish sauce. Cafe Dalat’s nuoc cham is among the very best in Albuquerque, but that’s a common theme.

Best in the city honors might also be accorded to the Banh Mi Thit (pictured above), popularly known as a Vietnamese sandwich and described on the menu as a hoagie. Banh mi is a Vietnamese word for bread and indeed, the French inspired baguette on which this sandwich is crafted, is worthy of adulation. At Cafe Dalat, the Banh Mi Thit is engorged with small slices of pickled carrots, daikon, cilantro, jalapenos, soy sauce, black pepper, onions and your choice of meat: barbecue pork, grilled pork, grilled beef, grilled chicken or ground beef. No matter what your meat selection, you’ll enjoy the contrasting and complementary sweet, savory, piquant and tangy flavors as well as the textures.

Baked rice cake

Baked rice cake

One of the things that may surprise you about Cafe Dalat is that something with a simple name hold an adventure in complex flavors and deliciousness. Take the rice cake for example. Anyone who’s been in a diet is familiar with the tasteless cakes of puffed rice. Cafe Dalat’s baked rice cake (pictured above) features a shrimp enrobed in a yellowish pastry made from a mixture of flour, coconut milk and basil. It is meant to be wrapped in lettuce and dunked in fish sauce and is even better than it looks.

Even on a sweltering summer day, it’s nearly impossible for me to pass up Cafe Dalat’s spicy beef stew, my very favorite soup anywhere in Albuquerque. It’s like an aromatic elixir, one sip of which instantly cures whatever ails me. This soup is brimming with flavor and served steaming in a swimming pool sized bowl. It’s flavored with fifteen different spices, giving it a piquant, spicy and savory taste. It also receives a slight tang from pineapple chunks. Its savory flavor is derived from thinly sliced eye round and beef brisket. The round rice noodle is thick and always perfectly prepared.

Banana Beef Stew

Banana Beef Stew

For sheer comfort, however, the restaurant’s best stew is probably the banana beef stew (pictured above) which contrary to its name has nothing to do with fruit. This stew is made with banana shank, a boneless cut of beef with a lining of fat for flavor. It is simmered slowly in a five-spice broth and served with your choice of rice or egg noodle or vermicelli or bread. The bread is warm, yeasty baguettes perfect for sopping up the flavorful broth. This stew truly has properties that uplift the soul. 

Mothers everywhere will tell you there’s nothing better than a steaming bowl of chicken noodle soup when you’re under the weather.  Vietnamese mothers and chefs make the very best chicken noodle soups anywhere.    One of the very best on Dalat’s menu is a pho brimming with wontons filled with ground pork, barbecue pork and a thin egg noodle swimming in a chicken broth along with onions and scallions. The paper-thin wrapping skins are barely resilient enough not to fall apart in the steaming broth, but when you do break into them you’re rewarded with a delicious ground pork seasoned with anise.  The broth is rich and luxurious, so good it might make you wish you were ailing.

Won Ton, barbecue pork and egg noodle soup.

Won Ton, barbecue pork and egg noodle soup.

Over the years we’ve sampled just about every entree James has offered either at May Hong or at Cafe Dalat, but he’ll occasionally surprise us with something new. A 2007 addition to his novel-sized menu is an eggplant and pork entree (pictured below). This entree is constructed with sliced eggplant and ground pork stir fried in a sauce that seems to be equal parts tangy, spicy and sweet, a combination that only the most skillful cooks are able to consistently get absolutely right. Cafe Dalat gets it right!  Eggplant, in particular, is one of those items which if made incorrectly can leave an inky and bitter aftertaste.  Dalat’s rendition is tender, each slice absorbing the flavors of the sauce.

Ask James if his restaurant serves the type of food served in Vietnam and he’ll openly tell you he serves the type of food only the affluent can afford in his native country. It’s the type of food served in restaurants most citizens can’t afford to visit.  Like most Vietnamese families, the Nguyen family diet consisted mostly of vegetables, fish and bread. James fondly remembers the catfish pond and vegetable garden in his family’s back yard and to this day prefers the simplicity of a limited diet to American extravagance. It’s not, however, as though a fish and vegetable diet ever became mundane. Vietnamese cooks are very inventive and became experts in the use of flavorful sauces, many of which have made their way to his restaurant.

New to the menu: eggplant and ground pork

New to the menu: eggplant and ground pork

One such example is the catfish in ginger sauce, a whole catfish which is perfectly prepared–crispy on the outside and lovingly tender on the inside. A slightly piquant but mostly sweet ginger sauce the color of Day-Glo glazes the catfish. The fish itself is bony and caution must be exercised when you eat it, but it’s so good, you’ll work around the bones and pick off ever bit of the flaky, tender and delicious fish. This is an inspired entree! 

So, too, is Cafe Dalat’s rendition of cube steak (pictured below), as delicious a beef entry as I’ve had at any Vietnamese restaurant anywhere. It’s better, in fact, than many a prime steak I’ve had. Cubes of eye of round steak are marinated in a sublime mix of lime and spices then stir-fried to an unbelievably tenderness and served with stir-fried green pepper and caramelized onions.

Cafe Dalat's rendition of cube steak

Cafe Dalat's rendition of cube steak

American tastes which lean toward grilled meats will quickly become enamored of Cafe Dalat’s grilled pork in which pork is marinated with the sweet spices of anise and cinnamon to create an olfactory treasure that dances on your taste buds.   One of the best ways to have it is with patter noodles which don’t really seem to be noodles at all.  In fact, they seem to be more like a one large rice noodle sheet in a cheesecloth pattern. The grilled pork is topped with crushed peanuts and scallions.  It’s traditional to wrap the pork first in patter noodles then in lettuce leafs with cilantro, julienned carrots, daikon, ribbons of cucumber, bean sprouts and fresh mint leaves inside.  These lettuce wraps are then dipped in Cafe Dalat’s pleasantly piquant fish sauce.  If freshness has a flavor, it’s something like this dish.

All dishes at Cafe Dalat are attractively presented with a diversity of colors and forms. Plating is almost an art form and this restaurant has a penchant for eye-pleasing arrangements. Everything on your plate is where it should be for optimum harmony and appearance. The balance of color, texture and appearance gives diners pause to reflect on how great everything looks. It tastes even better!

Grilled beef over patter noodles

Other Vietnamese restaurants may come and go, but Cafe Dalat will stand the test of time because it consistently prepares and serves the very best Vietnamese cuisine in Albuquerque.

CAFE DALAT
5615 Central, N.E.
Albuquerque, NM
266-5559
Web Site

LATEST VISIT: 19 November 2011
# OF VISITS: 8
RATING: 25
COST: $$
BEST BET: Spicy Beef Soup, Catfish in Ginger Sauce, Grilled Pork with Patter Noodle, Banana Beef Stew, Rice Cake, Cube Steak

Café Da Lat on Urbanspoon