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Insights, tips, and restaurant reports from CHOW editors and Chowhound.

Cane Rosso’s Meaty Lunch Options

High-quality sandwiches make Cane Rosso, a new rotisserie-centric place opened by Coi’s Daniel Patterson, a great bet for a Ferry Building lunch.

The beef brisket sandwich uses “tender, flavorful beef brisket with a tangy and sweet tomato conserva and dandelion greens for a nice bitter edge,” says Morton the Mousse.

The PLT one-ups a classic with pancetta, lettuce, and tomato on buttered brioche. There isn’t a lot of pancetta, notes Pei, but that’s kind of the point: “You eat a small piece of perfectly smoked meat, and it’s enough to flavor the whole sandwich.”

RichInMV tried Cane Rosso the first day it was open, and enjoyed a sandwich of tender, flavorful pork shoulder au jus with baby mustard greens.

Sandwiches are mostly $9, compared with $5 at Acme Bread nearby.

Also worth trying is the bacon-caramel popcorn. It’s a great balance of sweet, salty, and crunchy, says Morton the Mousse, with “just the right amount of bacon to make it work.”

Cane Rosso [Embarcadero]
1 Ferry Plaza, San Francisco
415-391-7599

Board Links: Cane Rosso - Open in Ferry Building
Cane Rosso Report

The Double Life of Dohatsuten

Palo Alto’s new Dohatsuten does double duty as a noodle joint by day and an izakaya, or Japanese-style pub, by night.

At lunch, the emphasis is on ramen and mini donburi (rice bowls), plus a few sushi rolls. There’s basic shio (salt) and shoyu (soy sauce) ramen, but “when I asked the waitress for her recommendation of shio vs shoyu, she said shio was better without batting an eye,” K K reports. The broth’s kombu seaweed base brings out the best in the delicious chashu (roasted) pork; there’s some fluffy-textured ground pork scattered in the bowl, plus bamboo shoots, bean sprouts, and chives.

A new specialty is yuzu miso ramen. It’s intricate in subtle ways, says Melanie Wong with citrus notes from the yuzu and some red chile heat overlying the meaty chicken-and-pork broth. It comes topped with bamboo, chashu, chopped cabbage, and corn. The cold ramen, though, “can’t hold a candle” to Ryowa or Maru Ichi.”

Most bowls of ramen at lunch are $8; mini donburi are $3. Rice bowls and sushi rolls both use brown rice.

The small plates at lunch are more of a draw, Melanie Wong says. Hotate (scallop) cream croquette falls apart too easily, but the panko-crusted, deep-fried croquette is a lovely blend of sweet scallop and corn kernels in cream sauce. Nagoya teba sake are a Japanese take on chicken wings, slit through the skin so they fry up extra crispy. There’s also chicken kara age, which is something like popcorn chicken made with juicy boneless, skinless thigh meat in a gingery marinade, lightly battered and fried to a delicate crisp.

No word yet on desserts, but they should be a lot like those at Gochi, where the chef/owner used to work.

Dohatsuten [Peninsula]
799 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto
650-493-2878

Board Link: Dohatsuten - new ramen soju tapas place in Palo Alto

Cuban Sandwich with a Homemade Touch

Don’t be fooled by the guacamole and chips or the (housemade) tortillas at the new Havana Sol in Vallejo: This place is a real Cuban joint, and foremost among its offerings is a standout Cuban sandwich on housemade bread, available only at lunch.

The fluffy roll gets perfectly compressed in the sandwich press, says rworange, wrapped around flavorful roast pork, ham, and housemade pickles with just the right amount of Swiss cheese to round it out. A citrusy slaw and crisp, greaseless plantain chips come on the side.

Dinner entrées aren’t as impressive yet, although there’s water bread, with a citrus-like aroma, from a family recipe, rworange says. There’s also a nice escarole salad with roasted chiles and garlic-cumin dressing, says Dan Wodarcyk.

Decor is modern and tasteful; it would be a good place for a date—on weekends they have live music on the grand piano in back. Happy hour (Monday to Friday, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.) brings $4 mojitos, $3 well drinks, and $2 draft beers.

Havana Sol [Solano County]
326 Virginia Street, Vallejo
707-554-3777

Board Link: Vallejo: Havana Sol - finding the holy grill at last … Authentic Cubanos with house-made Cuban bread

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English Diners Pig Out

During a recession that’s killing restaurants off by the hundreds, one English chain is thriving. Not by serving the best-quality food, but by piling it high. As UK Guardian writer Tim Rich puts it: “Now, in an age where the spell of the celebrity chef has been broken, the biggest attraction of Taybarns’s food is that there is lots of it.”

Evidently, the sight of teeming hordes carrying groaning platters of cottage pie, sausages, and treacle tarts is a novelty in England, because Rich gets off several good ones at their expense:

“Just as an all-you-can-drink pub would be a haven for alcoholics, there are plenty of customers who smash the recorded average of 3.37 platefuls.”

And:

“The management say they can always spot first-timers because they totter around with ludicrously overloaded plates.”

And:

“The dessert counter is next to the carvery; some customers have been known to pour gravy on to their sweets under the impression it is chocolate sauce.”

Ha! Those gluttons sure are funny. Founder Simon Ewins supposedly got the idea to launch the chain from the success of America’s Golden Corral. Yeah, I can see why this would be appealing:

Fresh Berries for Dessert

Blueberries and raspberries are at the height of their seasons now, and ripe for transforming into delicious desserts.

Blueberries are a classic component of casual cakes and muffins, such as the colorfully named blueberry boy bait. It’s “really fabulous,” raves newfoodie, “and everyone—boys or not—loved it!” For an elegant dessert, this blueberry buttermilk tart is delicious, says Candy.

Cheese Boy recommends raspberry tiramisu, while kattyeyes likes to add slightly crushed raspberries to brownie batter.

Olallieberry crushes berries a bit to release their juices, pours them into ice cube trays to freeze, and uses them in lemonade, cocktails, and club soda. “Or you can just pop a whole one in your mouth for a mini popsicle!” she says.

Also check out CHOW’s Nectarine and Blueberry Slump and Almost Summer Pudding, which uses both blueberries and raspberries.

Board Link: Just picked raspberries and blueberries