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October 06, 2005

Cazenovia Restaurants

[Updated 1/19/2006; Nicolena's is no longer open and the space is for lease. Circa (in the former Hummingbird Pantry) expects to open in February, according to the Post-Standard. I've had meals recently at Cazenovia Grill, Golden Pheasant, Seven Stone Steps, Stone's Throw, and the Brae Loch Inn. Only the last of those was disappointing.]

[Updated 9/16/2005 and again 10/6/2005; a recent lunch at the new Nicolena's, a great meal at the Lincklaen House, and the closing of three establishments - Marshall's, DiPaulo's, and Hummingbird Pantry - made me realize I really ought to update this! Please bear in mind these are my opinions and are based on my personal experience over a few years - places change all the time and I hope everyone will try all Cazenovia restaurants at least once to see for yourself what they're all about.]

I got to thinking the other day about the dining choices we have here in Cazenovia. I have occasionally fantasized about opening a restaurant, but I know nothing about the business and I can't cook. I just know what I like - which I guess makes me better suited to be a critic. So I wrote down quick thoughts and a rating for all of the places we have to get a bite to eat.

I am very interested in your opinions, too - where do you agree, where do you disagree, and what did I miss? If you find this kind of thing interesting, I also reviewed the Syracuse beer scene for MaltBlog.

Read on:

Kimberly's Ice Cream Factory. Serves ice cream and chocolates in a very cool little shop. The ice cream is made right there (you can even watch). An excellent product and a beautiful shop, succeeding in a very tough location. In a very short time the product and the friendly staff have made Kimberly's a community destination. 5/5.


Seven Stone Steps. Image from www.lincklaenhouse.comAmbitious and interesting menu of casual, relatively inexpensive lunches and pub grub. Their salads are really great - I've had a sliced duck salad and a grilled swordfish salad over mesclun greens that were among the best I've ever had. Some of their more familiar dishes have a twist to them - for example, the nachos are served with wheat chips instead of corn tortillas, and they serve homemade chips instead of fries. The service is usually good but sometimes it's slow or seemingly understaffed. Good bar selections (beer, wine, cocktails, liquors). The only place in Cazenovia to get a good draft brew - they always have Brooklyn IPA and Cooperstown Benchwarmer on tap [9/16/2005: a recent visit reveals they are also pouring Coopertown's Old Slugger pale ale]. Great that you can order off of the Lincklaen House menu. Prices are good. I always wished they would serve French fries, if only for the kids, instead of those chips. But I'm getting over that. I like that they do fruit salad as a side for most lighter dishes. Bisque is top-notch, signature popovers are usually great. 4/5.

Lincklaen House. Image from www.lincklaenhouse.comExcellent quality and above average service, reasonably priced for what it is. The dinner menu is limited but the selections are all very good. The multiple dining rooms are a cool way to get a different experience each time you go, and the "grand hotel" atmosphere feels special. 4.5/5

Stone's Throw. From www.lincklaenhouse.comVery ambitious for Caz, priced right for what it is. I'm impressed that they can continue to have good sushi and sashimi (which I love) with so little turnover. Great classy bistro atmosphere (except for the filthy windows [9/16/2005: Windows are much improved, at least now that it's summer. Hopefully they'll stay clean!] and car lights shining in at night). Very limited wine list. Service could be faster for dinner; it's usually quick at lunch. Weird hours. 4/5

The Brewster Inn. We don't get here much now that we have a child, but when we have gone the food and service have almost always been excellent, and you can't beat the atmosphere and the grill. I have noticed that some things are a little weird (lobster ravioli with gruyere cheese? Hmmmm) but overall this is the most consistently ambitious and excellent high-end place we have. The pub menu and the salads are great for the lunch or quick dinner crowd, the wine list is terrific. Beer list leaves much to be desired! 4.5/5.

Brae Loch Inn. As an aficionado of things Scottish, I love the setting. I love their outdoor seating, live music, good people, and just the presence of the place. The bar is disappointing considering the way the place is put together - a good scotch selection but I would expect more draft beer and a bigger bar counter. But the evening buffet and camaraderie is great. For dinner it's very hit and miss. I have had great meals there leaving me satisfied and ready to sing BL's praises from the rooftops, then I'll go back and have an absolutely terrible meal - poorly cooked, poorly presented, bad service, sometimes even bad-tasting food. I've had similar experiences with the brunch, but overall the brunch is a fine way to get used to the BL. One thing that will never cease to amaze me - this place has the absolute worst coffee I have ever had. It's not a fluke - every time I go I have a TERRIBLE cup of coffee. 3.5/5. [Atmosphere gets 5/5 from me, food and bar 3/5, coffee 0/5]

Golden Pheasant. A step above basic, extensive if not imaginative menu, good beer/wine selection for the kind of place it is. Lots of chicken and pasta dishes, hearty soups, good lunch selection. Service is usually top-notch for a casual restaurant, sometimes it's surprisingly weak. Downstairs bathrooms are a minus but I don't know what else they can do about it. 3.5/5.

Albert's. For the basic, cheap, fast, hot meal, Albert's is a Cazenovia institution. (Even more so for cold beer) No nonsense at all, from the staff or the menu. We usually end up at GP instead of here, but you always get what you expect from Albert's. 3.5/5.

Cazenovia's Country Kitchen. Reliable, diner-esque food at good prices. My daughter really likes it there and has been counting the days until spring when she can go back again. I am never terribly impressed - there's a lot of homemade items but a lot of Sysco basics, too. The plates on the wall are cool though! 3.5/5

Cazenovia Grill. Ambitious dining room design and great idea sabotaged by very slow kitchen, bland food, well-meaning but undertrained staff, small portions (for fair prices). Disappointing. 2/5 [9/16/2005: Getting better, as the owner has hired new management. I still have concerns about the preparation and temperature of foods, but the service and overall quality is improving: 3/5]

Common Grounds. My comments for Cazenovia Grill apply, but with lower expectations because it's a cafe and not a restaurant. Certainly the best coffee in Cazenovia and the only place to get real coffee drinks. Decent tea selection. They have pizza, which is passable for a quick lunch/snack. I give them a 3.5/5. That rating has nothing to do with Project Cafe (which is a great organization) or with the space inside Common Grounds for meeting, watching a band, or just hanging out -- all of that is superb and great for Cazenovia as a whole.

Emma's Cafe on Main. Excellent, homemade food and interesting specials. Great, friendly service. Intentionally limited menu. A "real" diner. Really great prices. Only open for breakfast and lunch. 5/5 because I like a no-nonsense diner.

Great Wall. For a tiny Chinese place in a small town, they do a very good job. Their General Tso's chicken (which I no longer order for health reasons) is comparable to the best take-out I've had. The atmosphere is dingy, which I guess I expect for all of the open cooking done in that small location, but this place would get a better rating if it felt cleaner. It would get the maximum rating if they would only just deliver! 3.5/5.

Caz Pizza. Good pizza, solid ordering system (computerized and effective), attractive interior for a pizza shop. Would be even better if they had a regular delivery schedule and slightly longer hours. 4/5

Nicolena's. [1/29/2006: This restaurant closed in winter 2005.]

Pepi's Pizza. This had been gross but they have improved their pizza. Location is dirty and unattractive though they have made some effort to improve it. 2.5/5.

Subway. I like the way they handled the design, though I don't particularly love the neon signs and food posters on the main drag. I have not eaten there but based on my experience with other Subways I'd give it 3/5.

Angel's. Expensive but very good quality sandwiches. Friendly staff, clean and inviting store, good soups and salads. 4.5/5.

McDonald's. I try to avoid it and I can't really rate something this generic! It's as clean and the people are as friendly as any McDonald's I've been to.

P&C. The roast chicken is really good - I like that markets are doing that now. Their salads are OK. Their fried foods (chicken wings/"fingers", fried chickens) are greasy and gross. Subs are OK, a better selection of bread would be nice. 3/5 for what it is.

Xtra Mart. I get the occasional sandwich here. It's what you would expect from a gas station sandwich.

Red Apple. They used to have more prepared foods but now it's mostly microwaveable stuff. The staff are really friendly and fun.

DiPaulo's Pizza. [9/16/2005: This restaurant closed in summer 2005.]

Marshall's Diner. [9/16/2005: Marshall's closed in the spring of 2005.]

Hummingbird Pantry. [9/16/2005: This bakery closed in the summer of 2005; a restaurant named "Circa" is going into this location.]

I am still amazed that there are that many different places to get a meal or snack in town. And there are a dozen places I gave at least 3.5/5. That's not too shabby for a tiny town.

What did I miss? What would you say? Please include your reviews in the Comments area! :)

Posted by jimj at October 6, 2005 02:50 PM | TrackBack
Comments

I generally agree with all your comments. thanks for such a complete listing. You have done alot of work to do this..I guess the reasearch was the easy part..eating at all the restarants

Posted by: sharye at March 1, 2005 07:43 PM

Yes, it was (and is) fun to get out and try these places. I am concerned that I was a little harsh on a couple of them (I hate saying anything negative) but I hope that if somebody reads a point that they disagree with, they'll follow up here.

I appreciate your feedback, thank you!

Posted by: Jim J. at March 2, 2005 09:27 AM

I generally agree with your comments, but you've undervalued DiPaulo's. They consistently try to excel, and often do. Pizza is pizza -- they do it as well as anybody -- but try the other stuff. It's delicious. The hot sandwiches are great and the specials are delicious. And I've saved the best for last -- the potato salad is genuine, New York potato salad. Absolutely the best I've had since I left New York City. There's very little I miss about the Big City and now one of those few things -- the potato salad is right here in Caz.

Posted by: Barry Schreibman at March 6, 2005 09:09 PM

Hi Barry - Thanks for the tip - I love good potato salad and I will definitely try theirs!

Posted by: Jim at March 6, 2005 09:21 PM

I agree with you about the Brae Loch bar. Great selection of scotches, including Blue for about 35 bucks a shot. The bar is weird downstairs. We only ate the meatballs and apps at the bar, but they were good. I didn't care for the waitresses in those outfits, especially, my vision of Scottish lasses is more of a size 6 and under with cute blonde hair and a big smile.
The Brewster is a hit...fantastic food, great wine list, even got a tour of the wine celler from the manager, great view, we go every last Saturday in March to relax and welcome the coming of spring. The Brewster has the best bartender team in Upstate New York. They are super qualified to make any drink, and serve it with a smile and bit of wit and charm. If you ask for a good story you'll get one, even if it is JUST a story. Next time, ask the gentlemen bartender about the time he and his wife used the hot tub in the Big room. (chuckle)....As for the other places, I'll get back to you, we're heading up to the Brewster in one hour.

Posted by: John Adams at March 26, 2005 10:00 AM

Yes, the Linklaen House lobster bisque (it really tastes like lobster) is what I anticipate when in the neighborhood for lunch. The Brewster Inn terrace is the place to be later in the day, however.

Posted by: Paul Malo at June 16, 2005 10:27 AM

Thanks, Tricia - Sorry for the late reply. I hope I can continue to keep this useful and always I welcome others' reviews and comments. Welcome to Cazenovia!

Jim

Posted by: Jim at October 5, 2005 08:32 AM
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