A bevy of Easter brunch options
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Greer Wylder
On Easter, after discovering the last egg, raiding Easter baskets and
attending church services, it’s time for one of the tougher
decisions. Where to go for Easter brunch? Some local restaurants
offer traditional Easter offerings including leg of lamb, baked ham,
hot cross buns and chocolates, and others prepare variations of
in-season dishes. Or, if you’re not up for a full brunch, take home
wonderful bakery items from local bakeries that specialize in holiday
treats.
At the Balboa Bay Club & Resort, Easter brunch is served in the
Grand Ballroom from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Executive Chef Josef Lageder
has planned an enticing buffet that includes fresh seafood, carving
station selections, imported cheeses, fruits, antipasti and freshly
tossed salads. A few offerings include a BBC bay shrimp salad in
lemon herb dressing; crisp applewood-smoked bacon and breakfast
sausages. There’s also ricotta cheese ravioli, sun-dried and yellow
Roma tomatoes, braised chicken breast with beech mushrooms in Merlot
reduction. Seafood choices include grilled salmon medallions on
confit of fennel with chardonnay cream; and cioppino of local seafood
and shell fish. Traditional Easter dishes include rosemary-garlic
roasted Colorado leg of lamb, whole-roasted pork and prime rib.
Tortes, cakes and pastries from the resort’s in-house pastry kitchen
complete the experience. The cost is $50 plus tax and gratuity; $25
plus tax and gratuity for children 4 to 12.
The Clubhouse at South Coast Plaza serves Sunday brunch from 9:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. There’s a prime rib and baked ham carving station,
chilled seafood display, omelet station, salads, entrees, breakfast
items and desserts. There’s also a special buffet for children. The
Easter Bunny will make a guest appearance. For adults, brunch is
$29.95; add $5.95 for a bottomless glass of champagne or mimosa. For
children 10 and under, the cost is $12.95. Call (714) 708-2582.
Pinot Provence at the South Coast Plaza Westin Hotel offers a
three-course brunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Select from appetizers
like grilled lemon-yogurt marinated shrimp brochette with chilled
wild watercress soup or exotic fruit sangria with yoghurt-thyme ice
cream. Entrees include eggs Benedict with Nueske applewood-smoked
ham, sauce Bearnaise and asparagus or grilled Alaskan halibut with
morel stew, lobster froth and fingerling potatoes. Select from
desserts like peanut butter and chocolate mousse cake with peanut
brittle or berry, lemon and peach sorbets. The cost is $35 per person
(food only); $22.95 for children 12 and under. It’s at 686 Anton
Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Call (714) 444-5900.
Scott’s Seafood Grill & Bar offers a traditional two-course brunch
(choice of appetizer and entree) from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Appetizer
choices include marinated ahi salad on butter leaves with citrus
dressing or grilled asparagus with goat cheese, roasted red peppers,
fresh basil and extra virgin olive oil. Entree selections include
broiled New York steak served with scrambled eggs and bliss potatoes;
crab cake Benedict toasted English muffins topped with poached eggs,
Dungeness crab and hollandaise. No children’s menu, but the chef can
make pancakes or scrambled eggs. The $28 per person cost includes
champagne. Scott’s is at 3300 Bristol St in Costa Mesa. (714)
979-2400.
The French Influenced, Aubergine Restaurant serves Easter dinner.
Its first seating at 4:30 p.m., and last seating at 8:30 p.m. The a
la carte menu features seven starters, with selections that include
Fruitwood-smoked Idaho trout served with applewood-smoked bacon and
potato tartlette, wilted frisee and wasabi cream ($16). Five entree selections include Manila clams, Bouchet mussels, baby fennel,
chorizo and blood orange ($26); and a trio of Oregon rabbit, a
sausage of rabbit with foie gras, sauteed rack bacon-wrapped saddle,
glazed carrots and thyme-scented jus ($32). There’s also a cheese
menu; and four desserts ($10 each) including a lemon meringue parfait
with a cornmeal crust and caramelized blood oranges; and a Valrhona
chocolate souffle cake, prune Armagnac ice cream, and bittersweet
chocolate veloute. Dinners end with adorable mignardises, miniature
pastries designed to accompany coffee and after-dinner drinks. The
Ritz is at 508 29th St. in Newport Beach. (949) 723-4150.
Rainforest Cafe at South Coast Plaza offers a Saturday breakfast,
egg hunt and visit with the Easter bunny. The egg hunt begins at 8:30
a.m., followed by a breakfast buffet at 9 a.m. Kids ages 3 to 12,
$6.99; 13 and up, $9.99; two years and younger free. Level 1 near
Sears. (714) 424-9200
At Moscow Deli in Costa Mesa, you can find traditional Russian
Easter dishes served to celebrate the end of Lent -- the seven weeks
spent fasting on vegetarian foods. There’s kulich, an Easter Russian
cake available in three sizes ($5 to $12). It’s a tall cylindrical
cake, similar to sweet yeast bread, and typically flavored with
raisins, candied fruit and saffron. Kulich is served with paskha,
sweet farmers’ cheese flavored with raisin and citrus ($5.99 per
pound) The classic way to serve paskha is to mold it into a
four-sided pyramid, with nuts or candy arranged on top in the
letters, XB, meaning “Christ is risen.” It’s open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday to Thursday; 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Friday and Saturday; and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. It’s at 3015
Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Call (714) 546-3354.
SunFlour Natural Bakery has adorable Easter bakery items. There’s
even a festive and simple -- no baking required -- Easter Cookie
Decorating Kit for $14.95. Each kit contains a dozen egg-shaped
cookies, with three tubes of icing and a set of sprinkles. It’s a fun
project for kids and a nice gift for families. Their beautiful
pastel-colored iced cookies come in egg, chick, bluebird and rabbit
shapes ($2.95 each). SunFlour can cellophane-wrap them in baskets for
gift giving. Other creative bakery items include a chocolate
egg-shaped cake with fondant ($4.95 to $14.95) and a spring daisy
cake ($39.95). There’s also fresh hot cross buns (six for $3.95); and
rabbit-shaped dinner rolls in plain, seed and potato varieties (3
dozen for $14.95). The bakery is open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to
Friday; 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at 427 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa.
Call (949) 646-1440; the other location is open from 7:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday at 2950 Grace Lane in Costa Mesa. Call
(714) 424-0176.
* BEST BITES runs every Friday. Greer Wylder can be reached at
[email protected]; at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; or by
fax at (949) 646-4170.
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