Blue Plate, on the south side of genteel California Avenue, has one of the slickest locations and layouts of any restaurant Iโve reviewed. Itโs one of the classic brick former residences that dominate the stretch of businesses extending west from Virginia Street before to Arlington Avenue, offering proximity to downtown without the crowded fuss of casino row.
On a weekday, my husband and I managed street parking and beat what turned out to be a real lunch rush by about 20 minutes. I suspect the place has locked in a faithful set of regulars from the Bank of America building and similar ilk within walking distance. The weather was great, and we made the most of the covered outdoor seating, although some fool apparently thought Blue Plateโs patrons needed, between bites of Pastitsio ($6.95), to reflect on how tough he was, so we had to endure the visual foible of graffiti on an adjacent building. But our server was as quick and friendly as the semi-domesticated bird that dropped in every few minutes in the hope of scoring crumbs.
The dainty tiropita and spanakopita appetizers ($5.50 apiece) were good enough but unsubstantial. Baked Phyllo bread with feta, or feta and spinach, is a pretty sure bet, but in such diminutive quantities, not so much, especially for a woman competing with a quick-fingered spouse who skipped breakfast.
Entrรฉes were also a mixed picture. On the one hand, my husbandโs โPatโ salad ($8.50) was genuinely delicious. The menu explains that โwe couldnโt decide whether this was a salad or a mein [sicโpun presumably intended] course, so we decided to name it Pat.โ He declined the chickenโno worries from the kitchenโthat normally accompanies the noodles and vegetables. Still, the flavor blend of sweet and spicy peanut sauce was excellent, and I repeatedly bilked forkfuls from his bowl.
Part of the problem was that I preferred his dish to my Great Greek salad ($8.50). The vinegar-and-oil dressing could pass as good, and all the listed ingredientsโincluding tomatoes, onions, feta and kalamata olivesโwere present, but were swamped by the iceberg lettuce. Iโm more of a flavor freak than the targets of this creation. As with the appetizers, the whole light-dining premise didnโt hit me right.
Nonetheless, Iโd be interested to know the story behind Blue Plateโs unique culinary motif: Greek-Chinese fusion. I assume some of the specialties we had are among those featured on Greek Night, but there is also an array of Asian-themed alternatives, including appetizers, such as the Szechuan chicken dumplings ($5.50) and spring rolls ($4.25), and entrรฉes like the Kung Pao chicken ($8.25) or the Mein Dish ($7.25 with chicken or pork).
I suspect a lot of these are very, very good, based on my husbandโs Pat Salad and the establishmentโs ongoing success after 13 years in business. With a great location and dynamite service, Blue Plate has clearly found a market for its selective, eccentric menu.
