Canary Cafe
5100 Belt Line, Addison
972-503-7080
I seem to remember a time, shortly after engineer-turned-chef Mansour Gorji bought the Canary Cafe space, when he served sushi at lunch.
The previous occupant had been a Japanese restaurant and so many of that venue's regulars dropped by hoping for a raw fish fix, Gorji couldn't afford to drop it from his menu.
But that was then. Nowadays, the chef-owner can rely on his own set of regulars in a restaurant that has grown in sophistication over the years. Instead of a casual Mediterranean cafe-sushi bar hybrid, Canary Cafe shows off white tablecloths and a group of well-trained, extraordinarily gracious servers. The menu includes several of his award-winning steaks and the bar stocks Estrella Damm Inedit, the $19 beer brewed with input from the staff at El Bulli.
On the other hand, it's one of the few places to list calf fries...
Seeing as how I have a rule against eating testicles, my most recent visit involved fried polenta and beef anar. The former presents a ribbon of silken corn meal as both a centerpiece and an afterthought to a complex pomodoro, at once sharp, sweet, husky and minty--with a kick.
Beef anar features prime tenderloin tips and red onion in pomegranate cream sauce spike with pepper. Because the sauce is so pronounced in flavor, the beef tends to disappear--showing only as a texture under all that cream.
Ah, the the texture is beautiful, a pillow-soft cushion of red meat. Gorji knows how to handle beef.
You can't help but like this place--and the chef-owner who strolls from table to table checking on guests, offering a polite bow when they issue a compliment. And that a man born in Iran, trained in Scotland as an engineer, has several Texas steak cookoff titles to his name...well, that's just cool.