My favorite things
Selecting a sole standout off the Brasserie Zentral menu is the equivalent of asking Capt. von Trapp to choose a favorite kid (although we all know it's Liesl). The foie gras terrine? Rabbit spaetzle? Turkey schnitzel? Veal tongue salad? For me, the choice is a no-brainer, in part because it also happens to be the tastiest vegetarian dish I encountered all year, and that's the stuffed cabbage, done up chef Russell Klein-style. Klein replaces the slow-braised veal from his grandmother's holishkes recipe with nutty, chewy kamut berries tossed in an herb-infused oil. Two more chef tricks: For maximum visual interest, Klein calls upon quick-blanched, color-saturated Napa cabbage, and he punches up a bright San Marzano tomato sauce with a shot of the bar's house-made sweet-and-sour mix. Hasta la vista, pasta Primavera.
505 Marquette Av., Mpls., 612-333-0505, www.zentral-mpls.com
Super soups
With the rapid-fire parade of dishes that constitutes the Travail Kitchen and Amusements tasting menu — a dozen-plus is a conservative estimate — the general takeaway is a culinary blur. A dazzling Fourth-of-July-fireworks blur, but a blur nonetheless. Still, there are flashbulb moments that cut through the euphoric haze, and for me, it's the meticulously composed and dramatically presented soups that remain embedded in my memory, each presented with an ever-escalating flourish. I'll never forget a flavor-concentrated lobster bisque garnished with a minuscule lobster roll, or the way sage-scented panna cotta slowly dissipated into a velvety butternut squash soup. My all-time favorite? Pan-seared gnocchi and braised octopus splashed with a vividly tinted, teasingly smoky orange bell pepper broth.
4124 W. Broadway, Robbinsdale, 763-535-1131, www.facebook.com/Travailkitchen
Besting the Colonel
At his Lyn 65 Kitchen & Bar, chef Ben Rients, a Restaurant Alma vet, ingeniously informs his bar-food fare with four-star kitchen know-how. Perhaps the highest example of Rients' prowess is his delicately crispy and outrageously juicy fried chicken. Here's the shorthand drill: The birds are cured, soaked in buttermilk, poached in duck fat, dredged in a gluten-free rice flour-rice panko coating and fried in an anti-greasy rice bran oil. The labor-intensive process pays off, like you can't believe; if there's a better fried chicken in the metro area, I haven't tasted it.
6439 Lyndale Av. S., Richfield, 612-353-5501, www.lyn65.com
Bugs Bunny would approve
One of the year's most exciting revelations was Jim Christiansen's discerning, technically impressive and visually stunning cooking at Heyday. A case in point: his take on rabbit (surely the top vote-getter in the Protein of the Year contest), which unlocked subtle differences in the meat by presenting both a grilled leg and a compote enriched with foie gras, then infusing the plate with an ingenious flurry of carrot treatments. It was gorgeous, witty (carrots and rabbit, get it?), thought-provoking and beyond delicious.
2700 Lyndale Av. S., Mpls., 612-200-9369, www.heydayeats.com
Moving on up
When Hola Arepa owners Christina Nguyen and Birk Grudem nudged their mint-green food truck into a brick-and-mortar outlet, this diner was overjoyed at the prospect of accessing the couple's handiwork on a year-round basis. Their south Minneapolis newcomer did not disappoint, on so many levels (the cocktails, for starters), but just knowing that I can drop in for the arepa (a fried corn flour patty) filled with salty ham, Swiss cheese, a juicy tomato, an expertly fried egg and a creamy mango-yellow pepper-cilantro sauce makes me one happy guy. Yeah, they had me at hola.