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  • REVIEW: Mercury Cafe and Grill

    The Round-up:

    • Food - 3 out of 5
    • Decor - 3.5 out of 5
    • Service - 3 out of 5
    • Overall - 9.5 out of 15
    2936 13th Avenue
    Regina, SK
    306-522-4423

    ________________________________________________

    Several months ago a food-loving group was created on Facebook. Its name was the "Cathedral Village Needs a Cheap Breakfast Place", or something like that. It seems that the Village just hadn't been the same since the Quality Tea Room shut down several years back.

    I quickly joined the group, as did several hundred other Regina folks (What did we ever do before Facebook groups became the new face of activism, by the way?).
    The Facebook fan page continued to grow, many of its members calling for a cheap plate of hash browns and bacon... like now.

    Well, some wishes do come true.

    The Mercury Cafe and Grill opened its doors in April. The place seemed to spring up overnight on the corner of 13th and Robinson streets in a spot that has housed numerous other restaurants.

    The Mercury is a diner, no doubt about that. From the bright red vinyl booths to the formica and chrome tables, stepping into The Mercury is like stepping back 50 or 60 years in time. The Mercury is also under the same ownership as Regina's well-loved Novia Cafe, another all-out diner. This is a good thing -- who better to start a new diner than the folks who run one of the city's oldest and best?

    I've been to The Mercury twice now, once for breakfast and once for supper. It's hard to find the right word to describe both experiences. It wasn't fantastic, but it wasn't horrible either. Perhaps satisfactory is the right word.

    Weekend breakfast bustles and hustles in The Mercury. If you're not there by 11 on a Sunday, you're going to wait in line for awhile. Granted, The Mercury could easily jam a few more tables into the dining room in order to shave some time off the waiting game.

    Your choices for breakfast are classic standbys: bacon and eggs; hash browns; pancakes; an omelette. You get the picture. Now, is it cheap? That depends on your definition of cheap. Most items run around the $8-9 mark, plus the cost of coffee and/or juice. I've had cheaper, but I've also had more expensive.

    Service can be a little disorganized, but hopefully the servers work that out amongst themselves as the restaurant irons out the operating wrinkles. We had to wait 30 minutes for any food to hit the table at breakfast, almost enough to push us to the breaking point, but not quite. Fortunately, our waitress took good care of us in the meantime.

    Now let's talk about supper for a moment. Once again, there are few surprises on the evening menu. Nachos; chicken wings; chicken fingers; burgers; clubhouse sandwiches; and grilled cheese are a few of the choices.

    We ordered up a plate of nachos to get things started. With a $10 price tag, we pictured a nice platter of cheesy chips and veggies. We couldn't have been more wrong. A dinner plate with a puny pile of nachos on it was what we got. Even worse: the scarce bits of cheese on the chips were overcooked and rubbery. Epic fail, my friends. Epic fail.

    Next up: the burgers. Now this is where the action is at. Tender homemade beef patties are smooshed between fresh buns with all the fixins. I went for the Mushroom Swiss. Big Willie had The Mercury Burger (two patties with fried onions, mushrooms, shaved ham, Swiss and cheddar cheese). All burgers come with a side. We went for the french fries and they were done to perfection.

    Big Poppa (my dad) went for the open-faced Hot Turkey Sandwich... which came with hot chicken, oddly enough. But he got past that.

    All in all, The Mercury offers up decent food in a comfortable room. The motto seems to be: come as you are, eat what you will. Now if they'd only fine-tune the nachos and up the portion size for most of the breakfast menu, we might have a sure-fire winner on our hands.

    (no website)

  • REVIEW: J & A Restaurant

    REVIEW: J & A Restaurant


    The Round-up:

    • Food - 1 out of 5
    • Decor - 1 out of 5
    • Service - 2.5 out of 5
    • Total - 4.5 out of 15
    $10 for lunch, $15-20 for supper. Open seven days at 11 a.m. for lunch and supper.

    2201 11th Avenue, Regina, SK
    306-757-2288

    _______________________________________________________

    To me, there's something comforting about tucking into a restaurant below street level.

    Those few stairs that lead down to the dining room make the noise of traffic outside seem even further away behind the glass windows. It's like discovering a secret getaway in the middle of the city.

    Big Willie and I popped into J & A Restaurant across from The Bay on 11th Avenue last weekend. The place was fairly full for a Saturday so I figured we were in for a good time.

    Friends told us that J & A, which specializes in Chinese cooking, does a mean dim sum. Being dim sum fans, we just had to check it out.

    We settled into a table fairly quickly -- our waitress just had to wipe it clean before we could sit down. She wiped it, though I wouldn't say it was clean. But we got past that. We were hungry, after all.

    We waited a few minutes for tea and then a few more minutes to order. With only two waitresses working the floor, the service wasn't exactly speedy.

    Unlike most dim sum restaurants, J & A does not bring carts of hot food by your table. Instead, you are provided with a slip of paper on which to tick off your choices from the menu.

    We went with a range of standbys, like dumplings and spring rolls, along with a few more unique items (like cassava cake).

    As we waited for the food we started to take note of J & A's decor, which includes a strange mixture of fake flowers, pink chairs, and Walt Disney characters on the walls.

    First to hit the table were the Salt and Pepper Chicken Wings. These weren't exactly proper Chinese food, but they sounded good. And they tasted good. At first.

    I was on my third wing when our whole experience started to go downhill. I bit into the wing and noticed that underneath the crispy skin was a whole lot of blood. How a chicken wing can be deep fried and crispy on the outside, but bloody on the inside, I'm still not sure. I stopped eating the wings and waited for the next item to arrive.

    The Vietnamese Spring Rolls were up. Three puny spring rolls came on a small white plate. That's it. No sauce, and an odd number of rolls (there were two of us, as I said).

    The rolls tasted about as good as they looked. In fact, they really reminded me of frozen appetizers from Costco. I'm just saying....

    We asked the waitress if she had any type of sauce for the rolls. She brought us some plum sauce. In a package.

    Next we got the Cassava Cake. This dense, yellow cake was hearty and very filling. Cassava, a root vegetable common in the tropics, is mixed into a sweet cake and then cut into squares. It tasted OK but I'm no cassava expert so I'll refrain from judgement here. Big Willie grew up eating the stuff and he thought J & A's version was on the sweet side.

    Next up, another item and another disappointment: the Shrimp and Vegetable Dumplings.

    Unlike any other dim sum restaurant I've ever visited, J & A serves dumplings in metal steam baskets instead of traditional bamboo steamers. That's a bit of a shame because the metal seems to dry the dumplings out while bamboo seems to retain more moisture. Plus the bamboo adds a touch of authenticity.

    These dumplings were overcooked and the pastry pockets weren't even staying closed. And they had almost no flavour. Good Lord, it was time to take action.

    We still had at least three more items to come, but me and Big Willie had more than enough by this point. We called the waitress over, pointed out the bloody chicken and asked her not to send any more items. Oh, and Big Willie mentioned that his teacup was dirty when it came to the table.

    You might be thinking that we should have pointed out the chicken incident sooner. And we probably should have. But I like to be an easygoing diner and I was willing to let it slide at first, until everything else turned out to be a disappointment too.

    We asked the waitress for our bill and she brought it quickly. Thankfully, she took the chicken and the items that never made it to our table off the bill.

    We settled up, threw on our jackets and made a beeline for a real dim sum restaurant: The Four Seas on Rose Street.

    To read my review of Four Seas, follow this link: http://www.reginafooddude.com/2009/10/four-seas-restaurant.html

    As for J & A, your quaint basement location in a convenient spot downtown almost had me at hello. Unfortunately, you blew it. Big time. We won't be back. And please lose the Mickey Mouse decorations.

  • REVIEW: Rock Creek

    REVIEW: Rock Creek



    The Round-up:

    • Food - 3.5 out of 5
    • Service - 3 out of 5
    • Decor - 4 out of 5
    • Total - 10.5 out of 15

    $15 for lunch, $30 for supper. Open 7 days a week for lunch and supper.

    3255 Quance Street, Regina, SK.
    Phone: 306-586-7625

    ____________________________________________

    I have to admit, Regina's East End isn't a part of town I visit all that often. I make the long drive down Victoria Street East once every week or two, usually to pay a visit to Costco. The rest of the time, I prefer doing my shopping in other parts of town where the traffic is a little less likely to cause a headache and a little more likely to support local business.

    As a result, I often forget about one of our city's best casual restaurants. Rock Creek Tap and Grill opened about three years ago. The sight of a locally owned restaurant among the many chains that line the East End's streets was a welcome one. To boot, the food was great and the decor was classy, without being all uppity.

    I've made several more trips to Rock Creek for good appetizers and great meals since then, but my last trip was almost a year ago. Until yesterday.

    We arrived around 1 o'clock and the parking lot was almost totally full. A pretty good sign for a Saturday afternoon. As usual, we sat in the lounge where a table for six was easier to come by. We made ourselves comfortable and managed to score a couple of menus (literally two). Like I said, it was busy. Drinks were a bit slow to come by, as was the waitress to take our order, but thankfully we weren't in any hurry.

    When it came time to order, we stuck mainly to pub-food classics, or Comfort Food, as the menu calls it: Chicken Fingers with fries; the Hickory Barbecue Chicken Burger; the Black and Blue Burger (a Cajun-style sirloin burger with blue cheese, bacon, lettuce and tomato); and the Quance Street Club (grilled chicken breast, smoked bacon, pea shoots, tomato, avocado, jack cheese and pesto aioli).

    The food hit our table in good time and we dug in with gusto. Things suddenly got very quiet. Only the sound of chewing and the odd, "Mmm, this is good," broke the silence. The portions were hearty, as were the sides. I had a spicy cup of Chicken Vegetable with my Club. With four or five slices of jalapeno pepper floating in the broth, it was an interesting soup. I'll leave it at that.

    Big Poppa, my dad, was making short work of his burger with yam fries next to me. Across the table my sister, normally an adventurous diner, was munching on the chicken fingers. It was a choice she didn't regret. The Calgary Boys also had no complaints about their sandwiches. Actually, they ate them so fast that I'm not totally sure what one of them ordered.

    Rock Creek's menu is a savvy one -- there's the right mix of classic standbys and new inventions to keep you interested, and to keep you coming back. On the appetizer menu, you'll find everything from Cajun Blackened Guac Scallops to good-'ole nachos (with bacon and banana peppers). The lounge has food and drink specials almost every night of the week, and a bevy of fancy TVs. Can't get tickets to the next Rider game? Try hanging out here. If you can get a parking spot, that is.

    www.rockcreekgrill.com

  • EXCURSION: Jerry's Food Emporium

    EXCURSION: Jerry's Food Emporium

    (NOTE: this is a new feature of the blog, featuring restaurants within driving distance of Regina -- we all need to get out of town once in awhile, right?)

    The Round-up:

    • Food: 3 out of 5
    • Service: 3.5 out of 5
    • Decor: 4 out of 5
    • Total: 10.5 out of 15
    1115 Grosvenor Avenue Saskatoon, SK 306-373-6555 ______________________________
    If you’re anything like me then watching an episode of Restaurant Makeover on the Food Network before bed is something of a hobby.
    That show has it all: suspense, intrigue, transformations, and a grouchy Ukrainian foreman.
    A few times I’d thought to myself that it would be nice if Restaurant Makeover did an episode somewhere other than Toronto. I mean, Toronto is the centre of the universe. I’m not questioning that. But still, we’re one giant country with plenty of fine cities.
    About two months ago I heard that Restaurant Makeover was doing an episode outside of the T-Dot... in Saskatoon. Excellent choice! (True, Regina would have been an even better choice, but I’ll settle for our neighbor to the north this time.)
    Jerry’s Food Emporium, just off 8th Street, is the lucky makeover recipient. Designer Meredith Heron, one of Restaurant Makeover’s best, and a team of worker-bees went to town on Jerry’s in late January.
    So, last weekend on a trip to Saskatoon we decided to survey the results. Our conclusion: the place looks great and the food was fast, fresh and filling.
    And judging by the huge lineup when we arrived at about 1 p.m. on a Saturday, the rest of Saskatoon agrees with us. As we were standing in the long line, which moved quickly by the way, we overhead one of the employees say that the restaurant was already up to $6,000 in sales.
    Holy Mother! Apparently being on Restaurant Makeover is the best advertising that money can buy. Granted, my Saskatoon pals tell me that Jerry’s has always been busy since practically the day it opened.
    For food, I went with the Moroccan Chicken – served with mango salsa on a fresh-baked bun and a nice side salad (hand-cut fries were an option and after seeing them I wished I’d ordered them). Big Wilie and the lovely Ms. Kells Bells both went for the pulled pork sandwich on a plump ciabatta bun. Truth be told, the pulled pork was a bit different. Jerry’s version is sweeter than the usual barbecue/hickory flavour that one gets elsewhere.
    Some diners feel that Jerry’s open-concept dining room is too loud. It is definitely not a peaceful retreat but we personally felt that the noise made Jerry’s all the more hip-and-happening. It’s a diner after all, not a romantic bistro on the lake.
    As I said, the place was very busy but Jerry’s staff handled it well. Our food was served (the way we ordered it) in about 10 minutes time.
    As for Meredith’s work? The interior is bright and quirky – reds, greens, wood, fabric, and chairs of varying types give diners a lot to look at. The chairs at our table were ultra comfy.
    Overall, the makeover is stylish and classy without being too trendy. As a bonus, there’s a children’s play area separated by a glass wall from the rest of the dining room.
    Jerry’s menu full of stand-bys and comfort foods won’t likely win any awards for ingenuity; but it’s a quick, clean, affordable, and family friendly place to go in the middle of the city. Oh, and they have wicked gelato and ice cream, too.
    www.jerrys.ca

  • NEWS: The Mercury Cafe and Grill

    Fans of cheap breakfast have a new reason to celebrate.

    The Mercury Cafe and Grill opened on 13th Avenue the other day. This is diner-food, through and through. And so far, business looks brisk.

    Address: 2936 13th Avenue.
    Phone: 522-4423

    Review coming soon....

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