After reading weeks of raves here, and hearing endorsements from another local chef who told me he liked it, we finally made it in to Blackboard Bistro for dinner last week. But I have to say that it was surprisingly uneven, both in terms of service and food.
Admittedly, it was a Friday night and every table was full except for a couple of "two tops." But no one was at the door and it took a while for someone to even make eye contact with us. I noticed that the servers were busy and one was clearing and resetting the empty tables. Waiting a few minutes for a table on a weekend night is totally reasonable. But it might have been better for someone to at least acknowledge us before resetting the tables. A minor quibble but more than five minutes standing at the door feels long. Not a strong start but hardly a felony.
As soon as we were seated I ordered a glass of wine. But it never materialized until much later in the meal only when I reminded our waiter about it.
They first brought out some bread with almost a dipping sauce of clarified butter, herbs and toasted squash or pumpkin seeds. It was really wonderful. I'm often surprised at how many good restaurants can't get bread right. These guys do get it right.
We were excited to dive into what looked like a very interesting and compelling menu. Of course I HAD to order the beer battered okra with the watermelon rind ketchup. We decided to share an eggplant dish that was served over sort of a mash of roasted red peppers. And after deliberating over about six dishes that looked really interesting, I ultimately went with the slow-cooked lamb with gnocchi and summer squash.
Unlike any fried okra dish you order in the South, this okra was served in whole pieces (as opposed to cross sectioned cubes). The trick with okra is for it not to get slimy and the chef pulled it off successfully. The light batter was perfect and the okra was nicely cooked. However, the dish was somewhat under-seasoned and the ketchup was bland and in definite need of some acid.
The eggplant was similarly underwhelming in terms of flavor and texture though the roasted red peppers underneath were wonderful.
After we were finished with the eggplant dish, and sitting there for a good while, our waiter asked us if we wanted to order anything else. And we were like, "Um, no..but it might be nice if you brought out the lamb dish that we ordered." For the second time in the meal he totally forgot something. He covered pretty well though. No apologies but an assurance that it it was on the way. By the length of time it look to come out, it was clear that the kitchen only fired it after he left our table and put the order in.
(Note to servers who forget things: You're busy. Mistakes and oversights will happen. But it is always better to tell the truth about it and correct it ASAP. Trust me. We're people who love good food and you're the nice young person working your ass off to bring it out to us. We're on your side. So don't lie to us because we'll know.)
The lamb dish wasn't worth the wait. It is hard to go wrong with a shredded, slow-cooked lamb. And there WAS great flavor there in the meat. But the gnocchi was under-seasoned, bland and too fluffy. Some of the squash was too crunchy and under-cooked. But the most troubling aspect of the dish was two large pools of oil. If they hadn't been rushing to get it out to us, I wonder if the chef would have stopped this dish at the slide. Having had multiple dishes by that point that were under-seasoned, I wondered if enough tasting was happening back in the kitchen.
Just when we had lost hope, we shared a dessert of an eggy brioche French toast with honey ice cream and grilled figs. All I can say about that is WOW! Definitely in my top five desserts of the past year. The texture of the bread was heavenly. Buttery, eggy, delicate. The figs were grilled perfectly. And the honey ice cream just tied it all together. A brilliant dessert. I really need to find out who the pastry chef is there because that person is a star.
I definitely will be going back in to give it another shot, especially as their menu continues to evolve. But I just didn't find the first experience to be all that rave-worthy.