Dinner is happening at Madison Square and Garden Cafe
Glori Fickling
Laguna Beach foodies are well aware that this summer season brought a
happy diversity of dining out news. Not everyone is aware, however,
about the launching of dinner at Madison Square and Garden Cafe.
This popular alfresco creation devised by enterprising Jonathan
Madison has long been popular as a breakfast and lunch respite. When
the word continued that Madison had also acquired a beer and wine
license, the enticing garden setting became even more inviting as the
place for a refreshing evening outing.
Enter this charming vintage cottage, circa early 1900s and wander past blooming rose gardens. Walk inside through the front room and
enjoy an array of gifts, bath and boutique displays. Glance outside
and you will be instantly enchanted with the tantalizing aroma of
home-style cooking coupled with an alfresco setting of tables
scattered around a path illuminated with moonlight. Under a central
weeping willow adorned with glowing little Christmas lights, lush
greenery sprouts proudly beneath a glass-top table for six, the
surrounding scene bountiful with scattered arrangements of imported
and domestic artifacts available for purchase.
The thoughtfully conceived menu, created by Madison and his
associate Andre Hebert, is family friendly in price and style. Salads
are particularly noteworthy, more than half a dozen designed to order
as satisfying entrees as well as intriguing sides or beginnings.
Organic mixed greens in tangy grapefruit vinaigrette, for instance,
are crunchy with crisp apple slices, a hefty sprinkle of pine nuts
and gorgonzola. Top this $5.25 presentation with tender seared rare
pink ahi, and for $13.75 you have an entree worthy of raves. For a
dollar less, the same luscious ahi tuna appears fresh from the grill
atop focaccia with chunky avocado-tomato salsa, a side of mixed
greens and fresh fruit. At all of $12.95, the dish is crowned with a
chunky filet of perfectly grilled halibut. Or, at $11.95, order the filet amondine style on focaccia with lemon and fresh fruit.
The popular chicken breast for $11.95 is served on a cheese
focaccia bun sandwiched with sauteed wild mushrooms and roasted
peppers. Or enjoy the chicken Cajun style atop the excellent Caesar
salad for a mere $9.25. Ordinarily hesitant to include burgers on the
menu, Madison finally capitulated when Hebert suggested an upscale
version constructed of Black Angus chuck grilled to taste. The hefty
8-ounce burger at $9.50 is topped with lettuce, tomato, red onion
with a side of house fries or fruit; add $1.50 for cheddar and bacon.
The $9 veggie version bursts with grilled mushrooms, cheddar and the
same accompaniments as does the $5.95 grilled cheddar sandwich.
Shrimp or chicken vegetable spring rolls with cucumber and sweet
spicy sauce are $6.75. Rich chocolate cake and velvety cheesecake are
$5.50 per serving. Corona, Heineken, Samuel Adams and Amstel Light
comprise the $4 selection of beers. Much attention, too, has been
given the concise wine list. Five chardonnays and fume blancs, a
sauvignon blanc and Riesling are priced from $6 to $9 a stem, $24 to
$36 a bottle. Of 10 red wines in the $25 to $36 range, seven are
available by the glass at $6 to $9. Splits of sparkling wine are $6
to $12, 1/2 bottle of Veuve Clicuot, $30. Simply place your order at
the entry, relax at a garden table and dinner will be served post
haste. And do bring your favorite pet to share your enjoyment.
NEWS BITES
Congratulation to the Beach House on the fabulous new alfresco
dining area it has constructed overlooking the wide stretch of sea at
Dana Point Harbor. The beautifully appointed setting brings one more
picturesque dimension to the sprawling restaurant’s many
splendiferous seating areas, each with a view of the Pacific. Try for
the corner seat at the kitchen display bar in the lounge where the
heady aromas of garlic, herbs and spices waft the air as you feast
your eyes on steaming skillets bountiful with fresh seafood, steaks,
pasta and an inviting assortment of grilled specialties. Prices are
equally amazing with most dishes in the $7 to $12 range, the martini
menu is a mere $7.95, and wines by the glass start at $5. Phone:
(949) 496-7310
Managers Robyn Nakamura and Michael Fitzsimmons have announced
plans for a forthcoming Sunday brunch menu at Pomodoro, the quaint
little Italian ristorante, which debuted on bustling Forest Avenue
late last year. Recent additions to the low-cost menu are salmone
pomodori, grilled salmon filet embellished with sundried tomatoes,
capers and white wine and Marsala, sauteed chicken breast with
portabella mushrooms anointed with Marsala wine. At $12.50 and $11.95 respectively, each comes with a side dish of choice. Interestingly,
multiple servings of all dishes are available at appropriately
escalating prices, up to $100-plus to tantalize as many as a dozen
diners. Phone: (949) 497-8222.
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