Because I knew I had lunch planned w/MikeG, I resisted any earlier plunge into this thread, even after I had an especially nice meal there last week. I did not want to press, so to speak. And truth be told, while any time at Freddy's is a good time, some days are better than others. Yesterday was ample, but to a maven, a slow day (!).
A slow day:
- about five types of pizza, including those baked in sheets and those baked in pans.
- pork cutlets, offered ala Chicago, with "gravy (red)" or au juze
- three versions of breaded, fried balls, with rice, peas and ground beef; spinach and cheese, and potato and cheese
- lenten offerings including mini frittatas and molded polenta w/rapini and mozzerella (missing the several versions of fried fish they had last week)
- assorted salads including one with feta batons, another with garbanzo beans, and probably my fave (taken to go) slices of salami in oil.
- three or so pastas, one with a "white" sauce of garlic and oil (too heavily dressed), two in red sauces; plus a vegetable rissoto.
- a baked calzone-ish type of thing, one of the things Mike and I had, which included sausage and riccota.
- two platters of
bright green vegetables: rapini and brocoli.
- logs of saw-sage, either plain or wrapped in dough.
- 3 or 4 types of cold sammies.
- a tray of chicken breasts "limone"
- hidden away, there's lasagna, italain beef, classic meat subs; I'm sure if one asked, Joe would/could whip up an aluminium tray of osso bucco.
So...why list all of this stuff. Are we really a quantity over quality kinda board (well, yeah, but that's besides the point!). What makes Freddy's such a GNR is the daily output. Each day Joe and a couple of others just churn it out. That IS the point, Joe, churning, it, out. Everything tastes like someone's making it. Not Sysco, not a corporate test-driven recipe, not a team of sous-sous-sous-sous chefs*, but the hand of a few committed people. And who's perfect in the kitchen. Would you possibly toss canned peas into your polenta mold (MikeG thought that was an authentic touch, I'm not sure); would you over-sauce your pasta because you've learned that's what your customers want? (not the drama that makes a movie). I so admire and appreciate what they are doing.
It surely is a place that deserves the support and praise of its GNR.
*Although not positive, I'm pretty sure we saw Chef Cantu of Moto there yesterday.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.