Buy a gift at DUMC, build a home
Shop. Eat. Browse. Get in the Spirit: The Casserole’s in the Oven. Spend Saturday at the Holiday Festival and you can have dinner done by the time you get your shoes off and take a look at all you’ve bought.
You can judge a good deal about a restaurant before you even crack the menu. As we sat down to dine at the Brooklyn Café, we immediately noticed that the mood of the restaurant was vibrant and positive. The diners seemed to know each other and they knew the staff. Locals lined up for tables, casually chatting with friends while they waited. Even though it was our first time there, we felt immediately like a pair of regulars, the staff warm and inviting. The menu reads “contemporary neighborhood cuisine” and those three words echoed exactly the vibe we were getting. Even if the food were merely average, the comfort level of the place would be enough to attract a crowd. Lucky for the crowd, the Brooklyn Café’s food rivals its neighborhood appeal.
Our meal began with a huge grilled California artichoke, an item that seems virtually extinct on many menus these days. The artichoke was blissfully tender with hints of smokiness from the grill, and served with a whole-grain-mustard dipping sauce. The lobster bisque arrived with twin sidecars of sherry and oyster crackers and topped with lump crab meat. The bisque was rich and velvety, reminiscent of a good she-crab soup. Other starters include hickory smoked salmon, shrimp and vegetable fresco, and Miguel’s bruschetta with basil and house-made mozzarella. If you’re a salad lover, try the fig and walnut salad tossed with a ratatouille vinaigrette and topped with Danish blue cheese.
There are many restaurants that claim to have amazing crab cakes, but the Brooklyn Café has every right to brag. Constructed from jumbo lump crab meat with no fillers and served with crisp green beans, the crab cakes will have you wishing you lived next door. Jack’s Creole Chicken, Sausage, and Rice was delivered by the young man for which the dish is named. Jack is owner Jeff Trump’s son who, along with his brother Sam, can be seen working beside their father, further contributing to the family atmosphere of the Café. Jack’s favorite dish is comfort food at its finest; pulled chicken, Italian sausage and Basmati rice in a glowingly warm Creole cream sauce. The Alaskan halibut was captivating, pan seared and tender, topped with a sweet mango relish and served with sweet summer corn and a fat slice of ripe tomato with blue cheese. Excellent. Other items include slow roasted short ribs, roasted pork tenderloin, shrimp tacos, and a Black Angus filet served with whipped potatoes. Chef Mike Horosh changes the menu regularly so the place stays as fresh as the seasons.
If you want to feel a part of the Sandy Springs neighborhood, you owe it to yourself to visit the Brooklyn Café. Make sure to introduce yourself to the regulars. Chances are, you’ll soon be one, too.
The Brooklyn Café is located at 220 Sandy Springs Circle, just across the street from Target. For more information, visit them online at http://www.brooklyncafe.com or call 404.843.8377.
Brooklyn Cafe Jumbo Lump Crab Cakes
1 pound fresh jumbo lump crab meat, drained
1/3 cup aioli
¼ teaspoon creole seasoning
½ whole egg, beaten
1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh parsley
1 to 2 teaspoons clarified butter
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. In a bowl combine crab meat, aioli, creole seasoning, egg and parsley and gently mix. Do not overwork the crab as it will break up into pieces easily. Form into 4-ounce patties and refrigerate for at least one hour.
In a nonstick pan over medium-high heat, add the butter. Add the crab cakes and cook until both sides are golden brown, turning just once. Transfer to the oven for 90 seconds. Serve immediately.
Aioli
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 egg yolk
Juice of ½ lemon
½ teaspoon Dijon mustard
¾ cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup olive oil
In a blender, combine garlic, salt, egg yolk, lemon juice and mustard. With the motor running, add the oils, 1 Tablespoon at a time until thickened.
NEIGHBOR NEWSPAPERS
Giving Back by Monica Burge
Brooklyn Cafe owner Jeff Trump presents a dish of grilled halibut, fresh mangos and grape tomatoes with a flourish. A few minutes later he brings out a bowl of creamy lobster bisque and a plate of the restaurant's popular grilled California artichokes. In between runs to the kitchen Trump, 40, calls out to guests as they walk in, pauses to chat with a customer who has just finished her meal, and takes a moment to converse with business partner and executive chef Mike Horosh, 44. The ambiance complements the expertly prepared contemporary cuisine and the neighbor-friendly atmosphere.
The restaurant was recently honored by the Sandy Springs Business Association as the Spotlight on Business for the month of June, said SSBA Communications Manager Lindsay Kling. "We're really excited about highlighting such a wonderful business," she said. With nearly 40 years of combined restaurant experience, the pair decided in 2005 to open their own restaurant, the Dunwoody resident said. Sandy Springs seemed the most logical place. "We knew we wanted to be a part of a neighborhood and we thought we could take the restaurant's reputation and build on it with high quality cuisine," Trump said. "We know the people and we believe wholeheartedly in what Sandy Springs is doing as a city."
When it first opened in the early 1990's, Brooklyn Cafe was known for it's Italian fare, but since Trump and Horosh revamped the menu and added a fully stocked bar, the cuisine varies from crab cakes to Creole chicken. Staff member Stephanie Strenger has worked under both owners and said the transition has been seamless. "It's been fantastic," said the 26 year old Atlanta resident. "The food is consistent, which is always a good thing, and it really is a place where people can come in and they will remember your name the next time you come back." Brooklyn Cafe's dedicated to the Sandy Springs community stretches far beyond the walls of the restaurant.
In addition to food donations to the Sandy Springs Mission, Leadership Sandy Springs and Heritage Sandy Springs, Brooklyn Cafe will donate to an event for the Breakthrough House in Decatur. " We really feel good about this community," Trump said. "We just want to give back and show this community how much we appreciate them."