Meals at Pairings Food & Wine Market include a gratis side of déjà vu. The cheese counter. The prepared-foods selection. The showy pizza oven. The point-and-serve salad bar. The adjacent wine and beer store. The dessert case. The small grocery selection. The meeting room, booked solid with events. The moderate prices. The swarms of staffers. The gigantic patio. Heck, even the communal dining table. Where have we seen all of this before?
Nowhere, and everywhere. When forging their contemporary canteen, owners Holly Damiani and Mark Peregory clearly pinched popular elements from a handful of familiar ventures, then cut and pasted a business plan together until the result suited the demands of its convenience-minded target audience.
Pairings' something-for-everyone menu isn't revolutionary, but behind its fast-casual formula lies an obvious commitment to consistency and quality.
The pretty plate-sized pizzas are a definite highlight, notable for their crispy-chewy crusts and attention-to-detail toppings (duck confit-butternut squash-arugula, chicken-pesto and red pepper-spicy pork sausage are three combos definitely worth eating). Salads are fresh and abundantly portioned, if occasionally overdressed.
Pastas are fairly boilerplate -- shrimp and pesto over linguine, four-cheese ravioli, fettuccine tossed with a Bolognese, to name a few -- but they do the trick. There are nearly a dozen hearty, well-stuffed sandwiches, and my only complaint is that the breads could be more distinctive.
Because Pairings aims to be a one-stop shopping and dining destination, grazers will enjoy the generous cheese and cured-meats platters, each laden with three ever-changing choices and paired with figs, olives, sun-dried tomatoes and other nosh standards. They're best during happy hour, when they're $5 cheaper (the price they should be in the first place).
Time-pressed drop-ins can choose from a dozen or so heat-and-serve options, but aside from a hearty turkey meatloaf and a robust lasagna, the majority would not seem out of place in supermarket deli case (think Byerly's rather than Rainbow).
Daily delights