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Inside Annapolis
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A Creative Kitchen
By Patricia Barry
If your name includes
"seafood," the dining
public of the Chesapeake area expects something extra special.
O'Learys Seafood Restaurant, owned by partners Paul Meyer and
chef Charlie Bauer, opened in the fall of 1998 on Restaurant
Row on Severn Avenue in Eastport. Named O'Learys by a previous
owner in 1983, the new owners chose to prepare and serve dinners
only---their way to capture the time needed to prepare the level
of food they seek. As chef Charlie says, "If we don't improve
each day, we're not moving forward."
Lucky enough to talk with Dale Lyons when making dinner reservations
during the set-up for the Sailboat Show, I had trepidations
that we would not be accommodated during such a busy time. She
said she'd find a way and squeezed us in. We found a full house
and, before we were seated, had time for only a taste of our
wine selection, a bottle of Hogue's "Genesis" chardonnay from
the Columbia Valley in California. We were at the standup bar
(it's a relatively small space, so no room for stools) that
separates the two modest-sized dining rooms. The wine was a
good choice with medium body and layers of oak flavor.
Seating a total of 76 diners, O'Learys welcomes guests with
jewel tones, ochre on the walls, burgundy diamond-pattern carpet
and cobalt blue cylinders that hold bold candles on a pewter
stem and base. The Dermott Hickey collection of black and white
photographs depicting the beautiful and diverse architecture
and vistas of our unparalleled historic city sit beside the
multipaned windows just a stone's throw from Spa Creek. When
you visit, don't miss the fisheye mirror opposite the bar.
That day's appetizer menu offered a choice among 11 diverse
seafood temptations and, for the carnivorous, a grilled Merguez
lamb sausage with orzo, roasted tomatoes, pine nuts and goat
cheese. I selected the "special" crab cake appetizer that proved
to be a generous ball of jumbo lump blue crab meat, with a light
binder and hints of gentle herbs. My ally in food adventures
chose the fried oysters dusted in corn flour, fried crisp, and
served with chili and black bean sauces and spicy cucumber salad,
an altogether outstanding combination that he described as "something
succulent and crunchy to bite into."
I also sampled the "Gravad Lax Timbale," an extraordinary dish.
Molded in a cup or timbale, the center is hot, smoked char surrounded
by cured salmon and topped with American black caviar encircled
by dill crème fraiche and American red keta caviar garnish.
If you fancy gravlax and caviar, it's first in its class.
For the entree, I elected the New Zealand blue nose sea bass
(like butter fish), baked with gremolata crust, lemon beurre
blanc, creamy potatoes and haricots verts. True to the prior
selections, the elements of this plate were all cooked to perfection.
It is an interesting tradition at O'Learys that fresh seafood
received on a daily basis can be prepared to your selection.
I requested a simple preparation for the sea bass and our server
Dan Burks recommended the baked choice out of six possibilities
on the menu. This is fun to select.
The sometime meat-and-potatoes man ordered the center cut filet
mignon, a 10-ounce. "Red Oak Ranch" fillet grilled and served
with maison butter, smashed potatoes, roasted tomatoes, shallots
and haricots verts. His comment was, "That was delicious and
soon I'll save up room to order the coffee crusted rib eye steak."
That is 18 ounces of prime rib eye steak given a dry rub of
coffee, brown sugar, salt, garlic, cumin and chipotle and pasilla
chilies, seared in a cast iron skillet and served with black
beans and rice and crispy Vidalia onions.
On a return visit, I could not resist the sautéed Gulf shrimp
served with Parmesan cheese grits, sweet potato chips, garlic
beurre blanc and roasted red chili hot sauce. The shrimp were
juicy, the grits good enough to make one a southern convert,
the sweet potato chips tall and tasty and the sauce spicy.
Dan recommended the strawberry shortcake, the favorite dessert.
It was a mountain of cake, huge strawberries and tart raspberries.
Your waiter will recommend desserts of the day.
Remember, O'Learys serves dinner only, but seven days a week.
If you are hopeful to find one of the mentioned dishes, don't
be disappointed if you can't find it. Chef Charlie is creative
and regularly invents new combinations. And it is wise to call
for reservations.
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