A ‘Spark’ of Italian inspiration
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Doug Tabbert
Spark is an Italian-American Bistro that serves a wide array of
upscale cuisine. It’s on the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Main
Street, overlooking the Pacific Ocean. The heated patio, with an open
fire pit, offers an intimate setting over which to enjoy tantalizing
appetizers and wood-fired entrees, as well as one of the many bottles
of California and Italian wines available. A glass wall, which
partitions the patio, enables diners to gaze on the western sky from
the indoor dining room.
My dining partner started with the baby field greens and Sonoma
goat cheese salad (small $6.95, large $9.95). This was an eminently
edible starter with homemade oven-dried tomatoes, toasted pine nuts
and dressed with sherry wine vinaigrette. I went with the seared Ahi
tuna appetizer special ($10.95). The peppery-spiced crust and a sweet
teriyaki dipping sauce were a perfect match with the natural flavor
of the fish.
The partially exposed kitchen reveals a staff dressed in neat
black and white striped caps against a stone slab wall. This Italian
restaurant, which does get a little raucous toward the weekend, has a
subtle, but unmistakable aura of Main Street.
I tried the arugula, shaved Pecorino Romano and prosciutto pizza
($11.95) for an entree. “Imagine a delicious Arugula salad on a
pizza,” quotes the online menu. Frankly, this was not the choice for
me, nor would I imagine anyone else. Perhaps the ensuing experience
was just desserts for an incessant bargain hunter, but anyway you
slice it, this was (add heavy Italian accent) “not a pizza.”
The thin or Roman-style crust was terrific on the Chicken Alla
Romana (10.95), which was enjoyed with my dining partner and topped
with roasted chicken, mozzarella cheese, sweet peppers and tomato
sauce.
My pizza crust was more akin to a giant olive oil doused pita
bread chip, from which patrons apparently are intended to rip bland
pieces. What’s more is that as a salad, this was a poor example, it
would have been improved with any remotely flavorful dressing. The
prosciutto was much too thick and lacked the tasty, salty gumminess
of that found in delicatessens and upscale restaurants. Eventually, I
found I was burning more calories masticating this banal specialty
without a spark, and I gave up thoroughly disenchanted.
The good news is that the fresh fish, ribs, beef, lamb chops, pork
and chicken have been highly acclaimed and are on the menu for those
more discriminating than myself. These are served in variety of ways,
with delicious sides like creamed spinach and scalloped potatoes au
gratin. For example, the smoked pork “Porterhouse” chop ($16.95) is a
center-cut chop with red wine honey sauce and poached pear that is
served with sauteed spinach and chive mashed potatoes.
If you are craving something sweet, there is the triple chocolate
cake, ($5.95). The menu describes a slice as a “triple dose of
sinfully rich chocolate; chocolate cake, chocolate butter cream and
chocolate ganache.” There is also tiramisu, cheesecake, bread pudding
and gelato.
* DOUG TABBERT is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, e-mail [email protected]
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