Mattison's Riverside
941.748.8087
Mattison's Steakhouse
at The Plaza
941.387.2700
Mattison's City Grille
941.330.0440
Mattison's Forty One
941.921.3400
Mattison's Catering Company
941.387.2700
Mattison's Culinary Outfitters
941.387.2700
Mattison's International
Cookery
941.387.2700
Sarasota Magazine, February 2008
More Mattison's, February
2008
Chef Paul Mattison, a veteran restaurateur with
a reputation and a following along this stretch of Florida s Gulf Coast, seems
to have done it again with his latest venture. Even a mere five days after
opening, when most new restaurants are just beginning to find their legs,
Mattison s 41 was running as smoothly as a seasoned marathoner.
It
started for us at the granite-topped horseshoe bar, where I was treated to a
perfect martini and Colette, following the advice of a demure black-and-white
Felix the Cat poster on the wall, drank her wine. She was glad she listened to
Felix. The by-the-glass selection at Mattison s 41 is as tempting as they come,
achieving a surprising depth in a relatively short list. Bar service was
unobtrusively attentive and cheerful, as was the service later at table. A
single flat-screen bar TV allowed those so inclined to keep an eye on the game
without intruding on conversation.
If you were in a hurry or a certain
mood, you could put together a light but satisfying meal at the bar by pairing a
glass of good wine with an item or two from a list of soups, salads, appetizers,
sandwiches and pizzas, priced from $6.95 for French onion soup with sherry,
thyme, Gruyére and Parmesan to $14.95 for a Greek salad featuring grilled New
Zealand lamb chops. We were not in that mood and soon moved to a comfortable
booth to pursue our research in depth.
The decor throughout the single
big room is a study in understated lighting, colors and especially textures,
punctuated by clever, equally understated art. The effect is soothing and lends
the open space a welcome intimacy. There is live music each evening, which is
fine, but the food will keep discerning guests coming back.
Let s fast
forward to the undisputed culinary star of our evening, which I can t wait to
describe. Colette ordered it, and her radar was really working. The main dish
served to her treated a luscious, precisely medium-rare New York strip steak
($31.95) as few steaks have the good fortune to be treated. The roasted shallot
butter was certainly a plus, but it was the pre-grilling rub, compounded of
coarse sea salt and crushed red sumac berries, that formed a pluperfect crust
and launched this deceptively simple prep into the stratosphere. Pair it with
impossibly light and greaseless Parmesan-dusted French fries and you have a
course to make a carnivorous angel sing.
Colette may have snagged the Big
Wally, but I did just fine by indulging my taste for scallops, billed here as
being of the jumbo Boston variety ($22.95). I ve tasted sweeter scallops, but
these were impeccably fresh, thoughtfully sauced in a vanilla beurre blanc, and
beautifully paired with a super savory pancetta and potato hash with smoked
oyster mushrooms.
Mushrooms, shiitakes this time, played a prominent role
in my starter, too, which featured sweet and tender escargots bathed in a dreamy
roasted garlic sauce spiked with thyme and served with big crisp croutons worthy
of the sauce. The snails were not those shriveled little gray things tasting of
the can they came in, which escargots, even at some otherwise good restaurants,
too often are.
Colette s artichokes Esther began with flash-fried hearts,
crisp outside and tender within, and served on a bed of mixed baby greens with
chopped tomatoes and capers, all asserted by a snap of lemon.
Delightful.
Gelato was our choice at dessert, mine a vivid espresso
served au naturel and hers vanilla atop a fresh and toothsome berry cobbler.
Espresso sent us humming happily home, reminding ourselves to keep an eye on
chef Michael Caraballo, the man on the firing line who executed the boss s
recipes and inspirations so beautifully.
Mattison s Forty One, 7275 S.
Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, (941) 921-3400
Dinner: 5-10 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday; until midnight Friday and Saturday; bar opens at 4
p.m.
Cards: Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover
Handicap
accessible
Ample lot parking


