Posts Tagged ‘Crazy Good Phoenix Food’

Crazy Good Phoenix Food #2

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Crazy Good Phoenix Food #2

THE PARLOR PIZZERIA AND OLD SALON DE VENUS GOSSIP

If you are a Phoenix foodie, and haven’t been to The Parlor Pizzeria, it seems you are in the minority. A recent Google search of The Parlor yielded over 100 reviews of the place, and so it seems lots of people are dining there. Almost all of the reviews are giving big nods to The Parlor for the food, the feel and the fun to be had.

So, even before I step foot into the place, I’m guessing it is a sure thing. Kind of like a glass of wine or a song by The Cult – for God’s sake, who doesn’t love either?

 So, why keep reading?

 Well, if not for the Crazies’ food review of The Parlor, at least keep reading for some really great stories that crop up this week over lunch with these really fun women (check out background on the Crazies – Helen, Ann and Debbi – in the first blog, if you haven’t read about them yet!).

For starters, The Parlor occupies the same building as the former Salon de Venus – an upscale hair salon in its day and the creator of Crazy Debbi’s high-as-the-sky hairdo for her eighth grade graduation in the early 70’s. Over conversation on Deb’s hair, her graduation speech, “Be Somebody,” and her crazy babysitter that launched a memorable lemon meringue pie fight, we have some delectable conversation and try out the food that has lots of people in town talking.

STEPPING INTO THE PARLOR

Truth be told, the Crazies and I have tried The Parlor once before – on a Thursday at noon. When we arrived that day, the parking lot was done-for, the restaurant was fully seated, and we had to wait a good 20 minutes – standing. Us ladies in heels would have at least appreciated a kind offer of water or iced tea while we waited. Oh well. This day, a Tuesday, we arrive at 11:30 to avoid the crowd and are quickly offered a great table by a large window the overlooks a cozy outdoor seating area. Perfect!

This place is really funky and retro inside – and according to Crazy Ann, not much of the architecture of the place has changed from its days as Salon de Venus.

“Most of this is the same,” Ann says, as she surveys the space. “But where the bar and kitchen are now, was, during the 60’s at least, where we used to go to get the FAT rubbed off our bodies,” she says.

“Literally, they rubbed your fat with their knuckles to get rid of your cellulite and then put you in a steam box contraption with just your head sticking out and cooked you!” I’m laughing so hard it hurts, but secretly wonder if it worked. “Well, sure, we wanted to believe it worked. Hell, who knows? We’d have a few drinks after that just to recover and forget all about it! Now, I’m sure it was all just a bunch of hooey.”

ON TO THE MENU

While the menu at The Parlor offers just about something for everyone – a nice expanse of antipasti, salads, sandwiches, pastas, even a kid’s menu – it is the wood-fired pizzas we have decided to make the most of on this visit.

The menu offers signature pizzas and a “worksheet” of sorts, where you can check off your favorite pizza ingredients and concoct your own. Pizzas are offered in 8” sizes ($10) or 12” sizes ($14). We decided to try two of the pizzas straight from the menu, and create two.

Before moving on with our food review, I have to give a shameless plug to Berry Brothers’ Firewood – owned by Ann’s son, it supplies firewood to most of the great food establishments in town, including The Parlor.

So, to start, we decide on the Cauliflower Gratinata ($7), a Caesar salad and Parlor Insalata (both salads are about $6 for the half portion). We submit our pizza orders as well – but more on that later.

While we wait for our first dishes, Debbi dishes about her eighth grade graduation and getting her hair done at the Salon de Venus.

“Mom (Ann) always went to Salon de Venus to get her hair done—big bouffant—and so it was a big deal for me to get my hair done for my graduation,” said Debbi. “These days, I guess young girls get their hair done all the time, but for me, it was really special to go to the salon. And it was a great big hair-do, with my hair teased up to the sky,” she says. “I wore a yellow and white knife-pleat baby-doll dress for my graduation and I thought it sure was something!”

Graduation picture of Debbi

Graduation picture of Debbi

Looking back, she reflects on a photo her mom took of her that day, where she is flanked by her two brothers. “I’m not sure what is funniest about that picture now – my brothers with their shorts practically up to their armpits, or me, with the hair-do that is practically like architecture!”

Debbi goes on, “I was selected to give a graduation speech that year, and I called it, ‘Be Somebody.’” Debbi laughs and adds “but this (pointing to herself) isn’t quite what I had in mind when I wrote that!” We have a big laugh on that.

The cauliflower and salads are served! The cauliflower, roasted with aged white cheddar and a breadcrumb topping, is served piping hot! The Caesar, made of Romaine lettuce hearts, dressing and parmiagano croutons, makes a nice presentation. The Parlor Insalata – mixed greens, feta, olives, crispy chickpeas, salami and nice vinaigrette, is also pretty to see.

First off, as a mom, I can tell you this without a doubt – this cauliflower is sooo crazy good that any mom could get her vegetable-hating kids to eat this stuff and beg for more. It has a great crunchy texture with plenty of gooey cheese sauce. Debbi concurs. “If I wasn’t on such a big diet I would have put the rest of that crazy good cheese sauce on top of my salad!”

Ann thinks the dish is “good but not to-die-for,” adding, “I could make it better, of course.” Inconspicuously, we all kind of roll our eyes to this comment. Helen, who I think is the most reliable and trusted foodie of the bunch, likes the dish a lot, but this day thinks it is a bit watery. All-in-all, we really do like it.

Before we really delve into the salads, Debbi continues to reminisce about her grade school years.

“I loved my home economics class the best,” she says. “Every time we had a school dance, I made a dress in that class to wear.” In particular, she recounts her class fashion show. “I dressed as Nancy Sinatra, with white vinyl boots and a baby-doll dress, just like Nancy wore back in the day,” she says. “I walked the stage to her song, ‘These Boots Were Made For Walking,’ and that’s just what I did – off the stage to everyone clapping!”

On to the salads and a harsh critique from Ann. Foremost, we collectively agree the salads are truly solid and delicious. Helen, Debbi and I really enjoy the Caesar. Ann, however, is quick to disagree with us, stating that “I could get a better Caesar from a bag in the produce section at the grocery store than this one we’ve been served.”

Here, Helen is quick to chastise her older sister, “You only like complicated and overly-flavored food,” she says. “You preferred that Caesar we had a few weeks ago that completely reeked of garlic,” she says. “You must be crazy.” Um, yeah!

The Parlor Insalata seems to be another story – the Crazies are in unison on this one. They adore this salad and say they would order it as a lunch meal on its own.

THE CRAZY BABYSITTER STORY

In between our salads and pizza, Debbi recounts how, as a young girl, her single mom, Ann, was often out on the town, and regularly employed a fine young babysitter by the name of Heather.

“I do remember Debbi’s home-ec teacher saying to me that if she had kids, she would not have Heather as a baby-sitter because she was too wild,” Ann recounts. “But my kids adored her.”

“She was really wild,” says Debbi. “She would always turn the music on real loud and dance when she babysat at our house, and she always danced the ‘dirty dog’ (a popular dance in the 60’s). One time, she put on one of mom’s baby-doll nighties, got on mom’s bed, and danced until she literally threw up – I mean everywhere and all over mom’s nightie.”

“Right, I remember that,” says Ann. “The nightie was red and white, and you kids put that in the washer with hot water to clean it – and everything came out pink!”

Didn’t you get mad at the lot of them, I ask? “Oh, hell no, I didn’t care a bit,” Ann says. “It was a small price to pay to be able to get out a bit, here and there!”

“Then there was the time we had Chicken Delight for dinner and Heather…” Debbi starts in before I interrupt her. What is this Chicken Delight thing– some great new casserole I haven’t made yet?

No, Ann says as she chimes in with a little tune, “Don’t cook tonight, call Chicken Delight,” the jingle to what was apparently a very popular take-out restaurant in the 60’s.

“For about $5, they delivered a chicken dinner and lemon meringue pie right to your house,” Ann remembers. “So I’d have a hot date, right? I’d call Heather to babysit, and Chicken Delight to have dinner delivered to my doorstep.”

“We had Chicken Delight A LOT,” laughs Debbi.

“But this one time after we ate, Heather got the lemon pie, and then just stuck her hand right into the pie, scooped out a big chunk of it, and just plain threw it at us!”

For no reason, I ask?

“For no reason at all. I guess she thought it would be fun to have a pie fight, and we did – each of us throwing pie at the other,” Debbi says. “It was hilarious and it was a mess. We tried to clean it up best we could, but mom could tell something had happened when she got home.”

Ann nods and winks, “I even gave them my left-over lobster I brought home!”

Finally, the pizzas arrive, just in time as our wait for them was wearing a bit on the long-side.

We ordered two of the signature pizzas, the Smokey (smoked prosciutto, olive tapenade, ricotta and arugula) and the Puttanesca (calamari, rock shrimp, spicy tomato sauce, capers, olives and fennel).

Of our own concoctions, we order a pizza (#1 for reference) with sausage, mushroom, bell pepper and arugula, and another one (#2 for reference) with prosciutto, goat cheese, artichokes and arugula.

Never mind any of the toppings we had on our four pizzas, the Crazies agree that the crust on all them was over-the-moon. These are so-expletive-awesome!

The Crazies all agree they would order Puttanesca again and again. As far as the Smokey goes, Debbi thinks it would be great with a glass of wine, which we don’t imbibe at this lunch, most unfortunately!

Helen likes the sausage on #1. It’s from Schreiners Fine Sausage, and they churn out the best sausage in town. We all love this one! Pizza #2 also gets high ratings, especially from me – I adore the combination of goat cheese with anything! And everyone else at the table pretty much loves it too. Though Helen offers that she does not like goat cheese so much, she thinks this combo works.

So, we love the pizzas, but what about dessert? Not that we haven’t stuffed ourselves to the gills…

DESSERT AND ANN’S PINK HAIR

First off, we are all shameless dessert whores, and today will be no different. We order two fabulous desserts.

The Chocolate Cake is served with Italian cherries and vanilla crema. “I’d go back just for a bite of that cake,” Debbi says. “To me, it was heaven with an angel cloud on top!” Helen, nearly a cake authority (she makes—and takes—the cake for every family celebration) thinks the cake is moist with great texture and flavor.

The Tiramisu – made with espresso-soaked lady fingers, mascarpone filling and pine nut brittle sprinkled on top – is bliss, pure and simple. The pine nut brittle on top is genius.

So, the four of us in a food coma – we’ve had a starter, two salads, four pizzas and two desserts between us – wait for our waiter (who, by the way, offered us impeccable service) to bring Ann’s requisite take-home boxes so she can have a few snacks later. I ask Ann if she remembers any of the stylists or clientele from the old Salon.

Ann’s bouffant hair-do, pre-pink!

Ann’s bouffant hair-do, pre-pink!

“Oh, let’s see,” Ann starts in, “there were several hairdressers, as we called them in those days, who were there for a long time, like Rita the glamour puss and Zee, a wild guy from the real old days. There also were lots of movers and shakers around Salon de Venus getting their hair done, wives of biggies from the sports and business worlds. There was one lady I remember in particular, a stuck-up sort from an old department store family in town. I would always make bets as to whether she would speak to me or not. We’d see each other in the salon all the time, but only once in a while did she acknowledge me. You know the kind. Oh well, she was an ugly sourpuss!”

On that note, I ask Ann if her world came tumbling down when Salon de Venus closed its doors.

Helen chimes in, “Well, it was practically a good thing. Her hair had been pink for several years.”

Pink?

“Well, my hairdresser put lots of different colors in my hair to make it look natural, you know?” Ann says. “And she added in some pink. She told me it looked natural so I believed her. So, yes, I guess I was the original Pink!”

Ann’s take-out boxes secured, we head out and I’m not sure which was more delicious this day – the food or the conversation and great company.

The verdict: The Crazies agree The Parlor is a really hip place – quickly becoming, if not already, a see-and-be-seen place – with good food, decent prices and great crowd watching. Go, if you haven’t yet.

Crazy Good Phoenix Food

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Crazy Good Phoenix Food

A BRIEF INTRODUCTION

This blog is about Phoenix history and lore told with a twist—through fascinating conversations and glimpses into Arizona’s past from the unique perspective of a group of my native Phoenician in-laws, specifically three formidable women affectionately called the “Crazies” in our family (more on that later).

These Crazies eat out a lot. Over lunching and dining with them I have become privy to some really great stories about Phoenix—stories of coming-of-age in a different era, anecdotes of scandal, and “scoops” of gossip.

I didn’t realize that dining with the “Crazies” would become a unique and welcome perk of my married life, but it has. These women meld a “what-on-earth-did-she-just-say” conversation style with insightful banter on Phoenix history.

From discussions on places the Crazies used to haunt for hang-over food in their teen years, to their memories of where their parents dined, to their uncanny and dead-on dissection of food service and quality–eating with them is just plain delicious and addictive.

So, that is the twist: great insight into Phoenix history and some gossip along the way, all served up over critiques of yummy restaurant tables in Phoenix.

THE “CRAZY” BLOG’S NAMESAKE

The namesake of this blog, Crazy Good Phoenix Food, is Ann, one of the cast, who is affectionately called “Crazy” by everyone in the family. By default, the trio of my in-laws has been collectively dubbed the “Crazies,” and they all love food.

No one in the family would discount that Crazy Ann is over-the-moon in love with food. I wonder if any of her paramours in her younger days ever received the unadulterated attention she pays these days to good food. She takes a cooler in the car whenever she dines out so she can take leftovers home (and she takes everyone’s leftovers)!

Anyway, wherever the Crazies go to eat, the food is usually crazy good because they all love food so much. Just every once in a while when we dine, however, the food or service isn’t what we might expect and there can be a “crazy” mood! (Ann also is interchangeably called “Moody” by her family.)

In this initial entry, I offer a quick overview of the Crazies and our first dining experience for this blog. This is all in fun–we are not food critics by a long shot. No great generalizations or dissections of chefs and their origins and pedigrees are offered here–just our personal thoughts about our experiences.

An introduction to the Crazies….

The Crazies are an eclectic group of three amazing women in my husband’s family: my mother-in-law, Helen; her sister, Ann (“Crazy”); and Ann’s daughter, Debbi.

The Crazies hail from an old Phoenix family that settled in Phoenix in the late 1890’s. Helen and Ann’s father and uncle were prosperous insurance men in Phoenix and started a firm that exists to this day. Their mother was a homemaker, but she more than moonlighted as a staunch Republican and hostess/socialite in town.

Helen

Helen is my mother-in-law, and the true matriarch of the Crazies. She is the organizer of our eating-out experiences, and she is a “foodie” bar-none. Dining at her home is better than eating out.

To imagine Helen in her coming-of-age years in Phoenix is simple. Think taffeta dresses, tiny waist, perfect porcelain skin, impeccable manners, country club dances with her father, and there you have her as a young girl in early Phoenix.

Helen married my father-in-law, Joe, a mover-and-shaker in his own right in Phoenix, and raised two sons, my husband, an ASU marketing professional, and his brother Greg, a savvy business owner in Scottsdale. Unfortunately, Joe passed away a few years ago. He was a great man in Phoenix, known and loved by so many, and Helen was his devoted wife of 45 years.

Ann

Far as I can tell, Ann is not certifiably crazy. I think “closet eccentric” describes her a bit better. She was dubbed “crazy” by my husband and his brother when they were young, and from there she let her “crazy” flag fly with pride.

Ann raised three children, for the most part as a single mom–no small job, for sure. But literally thousands of Phoenix-area children, some now grown with children of their own, know Ann as the grand-dame of Junior Assembly.

A nearly 70-year institution in Phoenix, with Ann at its helm for over 40 of those years, Junior Assembly is a dance and etiquette program for sixth graders.

Ann shepards these awkward ‘tweens in dance instruction, from fox trot and waltz, to disco and rock. She teaches them proper manners along the way—manners befit, no less, of a 1950’s debutante dance. The girls in the program are required to wear white gloves and dresses, and the boys wear coats and ties.

I’m pretty sure Ann knows every top 10 hit since she was born, and can keep up with the ‘tweens and their “speak” better than most parents dropping their kids off at the program. She is practically a cultural icon in Phoenix.

Ann is a “foodie” too. Though she used to serve legendary surf-turf-and-cocktail dinners to make comers to her table beg for more, these days, she mostly enjoys dining out…a lot. Just about every restaurant in town has enjoyed real estate in her refrigerator since she “doggie-bags” it from every establishment she visits.

Debbi

Debbi is charming, warm and generally fabulous all the way around. She retired from school teaching soon after marrying her husband, now a retired firefighter, and became a full-time homemaker and then mother to their son. Now, Debbi and her husband are at the cusp of a new era in their lives—their son is starting college.

To imagine Debbi is to conjure Stevie Nicks of the rock group Fleetwood Mac. Debbi donned a Stevie persona early on in the Fleetwood Mac heyday, which were her coming-of-age years. Flowing and ethereal dresses, long blonde hair and a tan to make any 70’s-era Phoenician green with envy–Debbi took it all in and put it out there with pride. A consummate homemaker and mother, she has been and remains a respectable and conservative “hippie” at heart.

In describing Debbi, it has to be noted that she has probably scoured every lawn and estate sale ever had in Phoenix since her early married days for “treasures” to trove in her home. This, however, is an eternal point of consternation between her and her betrothed as every inch of their home is adorned with her “junk-turned-treasure” decorating style. (He wants less, she wants more.)

The bottom line, however, is that her house is one of the most fabulous and inviting homes I’ve visited. Though a bit dizzying, the home drips and is drenched in personality, saturated with pictures of family from floor to ceiling. I think it is a museum of family love, and I have still yet to take it all in.

Ann may upstage Debbi in the “found treasure” decorating style–her home is a masterpiece of dozens of unique collections as well. Suffice to say, Ann and Debbi should share a Wikipedia entry under “Top 10 Crazy Home Decorating Styles You Can’t Live Without.” The entry could start with Ann’s “Hall of Fame” wall in which she has framed pictures of her most fave movie stars (most of whom are now dead) that glimmer under a glittering disco ball that sheds new life to their still-life pictures.

First Food Review – Gallo Blanco

For this first blog entry, our destination is Gallo Blanco at the Clarendon Hotel. The Clarendon has been around, we think, since the 60’s and was a swanky hotel and food destination in its day. These days, the hotel is a great mid-town boutique hotel that is popular with a younger crowd for its hip pool and late bar scene.

For those who may not know, a tragic part of Arizona history took place at this hotel. It was at the Clarendon Hotel that a reporter for The Arizona Republic, Don Bolles, was assassinated in 1976. Bolles went to the hotel to meet an “informant” who promised information for a story involving land deals, top politicians, and possibly the mob. The informant was a no-show, and Bolles returned to his car in the hotel parking lot to leave. Moments after he started his car, a bomb was detonated. He lost his life a few days later.

I meet the Crazies at the hotel, and we find our way into the restaurant, which is just off the hotel lobby. It is not crowded this day, and we are allowed to find our own table. We pick one that is next to a picture window—a window that overlooks the parking lot where Bolles stepped into his fate many years ago.

It is a solemn feeling to look at that parking lot.

Bolle's CarBefore eating, I excuse myself to go wash my hands in the restroom. I hate this restroom for the daytime–it is way too dark for lunch during the day, but I guess it might be great for the later bar crowd. What I do notice coming out of the restroom is the hallway of oversized photos documenting the murder of Bolles. It is harrowing.

I mention this to the Crazies. They remember the Bolles murder very well. Crazy Ann excuses herself to view the photos of Bolles in the adjacent hallway. On her return, the Crazies have quite the discussion on their memory of the Bolles murder.

“You have to understand that Phoenix was still a small enough town in those days that just about everyone knew someone connected to the Bolles case,” Helen offers. “But all these years later, I still feel sensitive talking about it.”

While they share plenty of stories of who they knew and side stories about the case, they are adamant their conversations remain private. Darn–it is really juicy stuff. Oh well, on to lunch.

Wow, wow and wow!

First, there is nothing pretentious about Gallo Blanco. Second, it is truly comfortable. How nice it is to be able to walk into a really great restaurant in town without a reservation and not have to wait for a table.

The restaurant has a relaxing vibe, and the menu offers great food and flavors of Central Mexico. It is uncomplicated, supports local agriculture and is truly affordable. Trifecta!

Our waitress is well-informed about the menu and answers our myriad of questions with ease.

We start with Ensalada Cortada ($7)–a mix of kale, red and white cabbage, corn nuts, egg, avocado, Manchego cheese and a house ranch dressing.

It should be noted that dining with the Crazies means sharing every plate of food–not a tradition I warmed up to in my early days of dining with them. But these days, trying to watch the waistline, it seems like a great way to taste lots of food without feeling all the guilt. I’m in!

Everyone at the table tastes this salad and the decision is unanimous: perfect. It is satisfying and the corn nuts add a texture that is at first peculiar but soon addictive. The salad could be a meal by itself for someone looking for a lighter meal.

We also order the house French fries ($2), served with an Aji Aoili dipping sauce. Made fresh, they are irresistible!

Between our starter and main courses, Ann and Helen recount how their parents used to dine at the Clarendon’s signature restaurant during the 60’s, which was then the El Jardin and occupied the same space of Gallo Blanco, with a big picture window in the front of the restaurant.

“It was real fancy and upscale in those days,” says Helen. “It was a special occasion place and Mother and Daddy would get real dressed up to go to El Jardin.”

Neither Ann or Helen remember dining there. “I really wanted to go because it was so glamorous,” Ann says. “I really wanted to go too, but I was married with little kids and it wasn’t in the budget.”

Our entrees arrive.

Between us we share a cheeseburger ($8) and a platter of tacos (appx. $2 each)–the Cochinita (locally procured pork with Achiote, garlic, orange and Guajillo), and the Carne Asada Beef (grilled rib-eye with charred tomato salsa). I am in love with the Carne Asada tacos. They have a spicy and smokey flavor that I crave. I want to have a great dinner party at my house with this smell in the background–everyone would think I was the best cook in town!

The Crazies, however, are hanging their hats on the Cochinita’s, which have a citrus spell that is magical and offers a little bit of sweetness to the savory flavor.

Meanwhile, the conversation meanders to other great hotel destinations in the “Crazies’” day and talk turns to the Westward Ho.

Westward HoA legendary Valley landmark, the Westward Ho has hosted Hollywood royalty, presidential icons and was made even more famous as the exterior shot for the 1960 Alfred Hitchcock thriller, “Psycho.” These days, it is home for low-income elderly.

“Mother and Daddy would often visit with a reporter friend of theirs–I think Sally was her name, a national correspondent of some sort,” recalled Helen.

“She was so right-wing,” offers Ann, with a nod that is hard to interpret–does she approve or not?

With a return nod of affirmation, Helen continues, “Sally always stayed at the Westward Ho when she was in town, and once mentioned to Mother that the elevator boy thought I was cute, so she set us up for a date.”

I asked her where they went on dates. “To church, mostly,” Helen said, “but then we made out a lot in Encanto Park!!” Scandalous!

Elevator boy’s name was Bob. When I asked Helen what became of Bob, just before our dessert arrived, she shared this. “He was leaving for college in Georgia,” she said. “Mother and Daddy had rented a house in Coronado (CA) for the summer, and I didn’t want to go because I wanted to visit with Bob.”

She went to Coronado, of course, but thought often of Bob.

“He wrote me all the time, and I thought of him kindly,” Helen reflected with sentiment, “but my friends teased me about it.”

I asked why they would tease her about a possible love-match, the stuff girls’ dream of in their teenage years. “They were jealous, I guess,” she offered. “I never wrote back.”

Our dessert arrives – an orange cake the chef has concocted without placing it on the menu. We are lucky to get the last piece. Fanfare ensues. The cake breaks up the solace around the languished love discussion and the Crazies are in Heaven again. I find out a few days later that the Crazies went back to Gallo Blanco the very day after our lunch to get a few more slices of orange cake to keep at home for their cravings.

“That orange cake was so damn good,” Ann shares.

Helen did give me the last name of Bob, the elevator boy, but a moderate computer search of his name did not yield results.

Bob – are you out there?

RESULT

The Crazies say Gallo Blanco is beyond crazy good.  Crazy great food, crazy great service, crazy great atmosphere, and crazy love for a restaurant that has a “profound” vibe in Arizona history. A must destination…

NEXT

We dine at the Parlor in central Phoenix, formerly the space of Salon de Venus. We discuss Debbi’s architecturally perfect hairdo concocted at the salon for her eighth grade graduation in the 70’s, and her commencement speech, “Be Somebody.”