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Best Of Portland: 2000
Restaurant Guide 2000-2001
Cheap Eats 2000

masthead
photo by Basil Childers

Henry's Cafe
2508 SE Clinton St., 236-8707 Open 8 am-3 pm Monday- Sunday for breakfast and lunch, 5:30-10 pm Wednesday- Saturday for dinner.
Moderate.
Meatloaf $9.95, Meat-N- Potatoes Omelette $6.95, Curly Pasta & Cheese $5.95
Cash, MasterCard, Visa



Picks: Meat-N- Potatoes Omelette, meatloaf sandwich, coffee drinks



Nice touch: The studied decor, which includes antique chairs covered in subtle green paisley or fading leather, large mirrors in gilt frames, and a few choice pieces by local artists.

recent dish columns:

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12/13
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12/5
Crowsenberg's; Le Happy
11/28
My-Cahn

 

Henry's Cafe looks like a four-color photo shoot, but the home cooking is as real as it gets.


REVIEW
Oh, Henry's!
Henry's Cafe is a modest little spot with a modicum of magnificence.

by KATHERINE COLE
KatherineCole@home.com

Sometimes I daydream that I live in Ladd's Addition. It's perpetually summer, my neighborhood rose garden is in glorious bloom, and I while away my evenings drinking gin-and-tonics on my front porch.

Oh--and once a week or so, I saunter a few streets over to Henry's Cafe. Restrained and simple, "It's that wonderful little neighborhood bistro you always wish you had," one Southeast resident gloats to me. "And we have it!"

Back to reality. I have power over neither the real-estate market nor the good Lord's thermostat. But a meal at Henry's is always an affordable possibility.

The small storefront, nestled under a peaked red-tile roof, is one of seven eateries crunched into the retail pocket at Southeast Clinton Street and 26th Avenue near the Clinton Street Theatre. Henry's arrived on the scene in February '99, replacing Greg's, a trinket shop that had moved to Hawthorne Boulevard. With the help of her father (the eponymous Henry) and a business partner, owner-chef Michelle Wong gutted the place and remodeled.

The result is a remarkably tasteful update on the traditional diner. The requisite stove and hood are in full view, part of a gleaming stainless-steel installation that includes a high shelf for wine bottles. Far from Formica, the counter is walnut, with a soapstone surface that echoes the tops of the wrought-iron-based bistro tables. Floors are fir; walls are a mossy green up to wainscot level, where they become the shade of cappuccino foam.

When Wong is cooking, it's as though a prop stylist has prepped her workspace for a photo shoot. There is the wide loaf of Pearl Bakery ciabbatta, knife at the ready; the glass bowl, brimming with new potatoes; the 20-some petite skillets stacked atop the gleaming stainless hood. Even a glass jar of Cap'n Crunch has charm. It is impossible to fathom how this still life can look so pristine so near frying bacon.

The genre of the fare--simple comfort food with restrained panache--brings Mother's Bistro to mind. Everything is made from scratch, so the sausage is zesty and herbaceous, the granola fresh-baked. Henry's Meatloaf--garlic, onion, sage, Italian parsley, brioche breadcrumbs, pork and ground beef (with pinches of sea salt and cayenne pepper)--is more a rich country pâté, particularly when it reappears as a lunch item, wrapped in bacon and served cold between floppy ciabbatta slices.

Evenings here are quiet, characterized by neighborhood habitués who like to relax with an interesting bottle of wine (the short list is eclectic). Le petit déjeuner is the dominant meal; breakfast items are served into the afternoon, and the place brims with weekend hipsters seeking brunch and mimosas.

Wong had no formal culinary training when she opened her first venture, the more casual and bohemian Common Grounds Coffee House on Hawthorne. So it was wise to focus on breakfast at Henry's before branching out to dinners a year ago. That's why, if you ask Wong to name a signature dish, she'll say the omelettes. Her basic offering is the 36 Francs, flavored with two cheeses. Although at $6.25 it's a bit pricier than the name might imply, fresh rosemary, thyme and Italian parsley plus a side of those new potatoes justify the extra buck. Even better is the Meat-N-Potatoes, a hunter's breakfast for the kind of sportsman who fills his flask with 21-year-old scotch. A spicy, savory hash of crumbled sausage and apple-smoked bacon is folded into fluffy egg pillows aromatic with extra-sharp cheddar.

As if to remind us we're only one degree of separation from a diner, each dish arrives with a wink: a fresh wedge of orange. And the ubiquitous grilled polenta, with its glob of marinara sauce, blanket of baby spinach greens and melting lid of extra-sharp cheddar, is the sloppy Joe of this establishment.

Wong still has a few kinks to work out. For example, her laudable respect for ingredients leaves one longing for a toothbrush after dining on either the polenta or the otherwise-smashing grilled vegetarian sandwich. The culprit? Baby spinach greens, just wilted by the heat of other ingredients, but still bald enough to be chalky.

The max wait staff is two, so service can be spotty. During one brunch I had to politely request a fresh-squeezed orange juice not once but thrice (still, it was worth the wait). And menu items may not always be available, as one frustrated lunch companion found out.

But in other ways, Henry's glimmers with grace. The espresso drinks are perfection: piping-hot milk, creamy foam. Tea arrives steeping elegantly in the pot, with an extra saucer for the leaf strainer. A linen-clad dress form (a designer's refined mannequin) stands sentry by the bathroom door. And the pastry case is a downright dapper display of Wong's skills with sweets.

Unfortunately for my Southeast confidante, Henry's has blossomed, and the rest of us have discovered its purlieu. Anyone know of any cheap rentals in Ladd's Addition?