The burger: After a four-month construction hiatus – one where chef/owner Max Thompson did much of the heavy lifting ("We did pretty good for a bunch of amateurs," he said), his 128 Cafe is back. Well, sort of.
Along with giving his garden-level (that's a Realtor euphemism for "semi-basement") restaurant a sharp-looking facelift, Thompson has also changed the restaurant's name. It's now Stewart's, with a new menu to match.
Along with keeping prices within reach of the neighborhood (nothing tops $19), Thompson takes his cues from around the globe, but doesn't overlook the all-American burger. And what a burger.
The patty weighs in just under a half pound (6 ounces, to be exact), an impressive heftiness that's a function of necessity, since the cooking instrument of choice is the kitchen's shiny new toy, a char grill.
"And with that grill, you need a certain thickness to get the right char," said Thompson. "The grill has taken a lot to get used to, I'm still sort of surprised by it. If we're not paying attention, we can really smoke out the kitchen."
Thompson's meat purveyor of choice is Peterson Limousin Beef, and he coaxes a dry-aged blend of chuck and short rib to a spot-on medium rare. The results have a pronounced beefy bite (it's not called the "Steakhouse Burger" for nothing), and a criss-cross of thick-sliced bacon only adds to the richness. I don't often encounter blue cheese on burgers, but after inhaling this one, I'm beginning to wonder why; the combination really works.
"I don't even like blue cheese," said Thompson with a laugh. "I mean, I like it, but it's probably my least favorite cheese, as a general rule. I was probably 20 years old before I started to eat it. It's kind of like olives. I hated olives. Now I love them."
It's all about the funkiness of the cheese. "It plays well with the funkiness of that dry-aged beef," said Thompson. He's right. "That funky beef, that bacon," he said. "What else can you put on it but blue cheese? There's so much going on. Anything else is going to get leveled."