Tag: pierogi

  • Polish Fusion: An Idea Whose Time Has Come

    Last night in the bar-restaurant at the Bedlam Theatre, I
    couldn’t help feeling like I was in a play – to judge by the funky décor, maybe
    Lanford Wilson’s Hotl Baltimore, or something by Beckett. Every few minutes,
    somebody would trudge through the bar – a woman carrying an enormous potted
    plant, a man pacing with a look of intense concentration. The bartender had a
    shiny metal ring in his nose. The bar and theater occupy the former Baja
    Riverside / Knickerbockers building, a few steps from the West Bank light rail
    stop.

    The menu seemed like a perfect set up for a comedy: it’s
    billed as Polish fusion. Head cook Jim Bueche, whose mother is Polish, decided
    to put an eastern European spin on the current trend towards local and
    sustainable fare: he tries to buy everything from local producers and
    distributors, and to offer a seasonal menu, which in mid-winter means lots of
    cabbage, beets and beans.

    The limited menu offers pirogi, a kielbasa plate, a dish of
    beans and barley, or chicken stew and barley, and a list of small thin crust
    pizzas ($7.50) that includes a Polish pizza
    topped with sauerkraut, beets and mushroom, a Polka pizza with sweet-potato sauce, chipotle chicken, spinach and
    red onion; and a John Paul II pizza, which commemorates the Polish pontiff with
    a pizza topped with olives, sun-dried tomatoes, red onion and feta.

    I
    ordered the kielbasa plate, which came with a small piece of juicy Polish
    sausage, three delicious pan-fried pirogi, (obviously homemade), stuffed with
    cabbage and mushrooms, pickled beets, horseradish, and a generous dollop of
    sour cream, all for $9.50. The salad of goat cheese, pickled beets and pecans
    with balsamic dressing wasn’t quite as refined as it might have been at, say,
    Lucia’s, but for the price ($4.50), it wasn’t bad. Ditto the John Paul II
    pizza.

    There’s
    a nice selection of cheapy wines by the glass, mostly priced at $4-$5. We
    arrived a bit, too late for the 4 to 7 happy hour, but the bar tender offered
    us the wine special anyhow: any bottle of wine for half price. This knocked the
    price of a bottle of La Vielle Ferme Syrah down to $10 or so, and the bill for
    dinner for two came to a whopping $39.83, including tax, tip, and a bottle of
    wine.

    It turned out there was a play going on, or rather a
    rehearsal, behind the red curtain that separates the bar from the theater: the
    20% Theater Company’s production of After Ashley, by Gina Gionfriddo, which
    opens Friday. Tickets are $15, or $12 for seniors, students and Fringe Festival
    button owners, and you get a $2 rebate if you arrive on foot, by bike, or by
    public transportation.

    I still haven’t made it to a play at Bedlam, but I like
    their style. Bedlam’s website says their mission is to "produce radical works
    of theater with a focus on collaboration and a unique blend of professional and
    community art…" and describes their "distinctive aesthetic as "combining an
    overtly playful performance style with low-tech spectacle, bold visuals,
    experimental absurdism, both cuttingly-direct and nonsensically-obtuse satyric
    barbarism, socio-political imagination, and usually some live music."

    That sounds like it’s worth going back for. Especially if
    you arrive in time for happy hour.