We follow the yellow brick road to Arbor Ridge

The stars shine brighter out in Oldham County’s wide-open spaces, and our suburban neighbor’s country roads call for sharp eyes and a clean windshield to navigate at night. Get far enough away from the towns, and a GPS isn’t a bad idea, either.

In other words, it took some looking to find our way to Arbor Ridge Vine & Grill. All went well as Mary and I and our friend Sarah packed into our car and headed out I-71, reaching Exit 14 in Crestwood a while after sunset.

That’s when things started to get a little dicey. Arbor Ridge’s website offers clear instructions — go two miles down the road past Farmer Brown’s old place and turn left where the big oak tree used to be. Still, I managed in the dark to shoot right past the place on the Crestwood Bypass.

This error required me to wind through downtown Crestwood, back up Highway 329, and, cursing, to trace my way back through Arbor Ridge subdivision with Sarah working my iPhone’s mini-GPS in the back seat.

Once we got there, though, the cool, earth-toned ambiance, artful lighting and vineyard paintings elevated the classy shopping center space, as well as my mood. Friendly service and an attractively chosen wine list (hence the “Vine” in the restaurant’s name) provided quick relaxation while we talked, sipped and waited for our food.

The menu is extensive and, management attests, “serves a fresh, flavorful and healthy cuisine with Californian and Mediterranean flair.” It is certainly a giant step beyond boring, although I wouldn’t rate it adventurous on the other extreme. Call it a good, serviceable wine bistro menu that would make a pleasant addition to any neighborhood.

It’s a particularly welcome arrival in Oldham County, where until voters overturned “dry” alcohol regulations in favor of “moist” restaurant sales a few years ago, quality dining spots like Arbor Ridge and Westport General Store weren’t a possibility.

The dinner menu offers a broad selection of appetizers, soups, salads and sandwiches, with a few creatively offbeat starters ranging from $4.95 to $7.95.

More than a dozen main-course options range in price from $9.95 (for roasted spaghetti squash topped like veggie pasta with Roma tomatoes, leeks, yellow peppers and green onions in a wine sauce with garlic and butter) to $18.95 (for mixed grill, literally a “one from column A and one from Column B” selection that offers the choice of various pairs of meat, poultry or fish, grilled and served with mashed potatoes and gravy and grilled asparagus).

We picked two of the more offbeat appetizers and scored on both. Fried Kalamata olives “sinfully stuffed” with blue cheese ($6.50) were just as described: a dozen salty bites, small black Greek olives with a dab of blue cheese, an unexpected flavor explosion, batter-fried in a thin, crisp and brown coat.

Large white mushroom caps ($5.95) were stuffed to the gills (yes, mushrooms have gills) with feta cheese and rosemary-scented olive oil, topped with seasoned breadcrumbs and baked until the cheese was molten and creamy. It made a great combination with our wine choice, Dry Creek 2008 Chenin Blanc ($28), a crisp, dry and aromatic white from California’s Clarksburg region.

Mary chose the aforementioned “mixed grill,” ordering a surf-and-turf combination of grilled cod and a “petit filet” of beef. The beef was a big winner, more “grand” than “petit,” perfectly prepared as ordered to a bright-pink medium-rare all the way through, seared dark brown and lightly painted with a balsamic reduction. Sustainable New Zealand cod, not the more threatened North Atlantic species, was nicely grilled and boasted great flavor, although it was a bit on the mushy side.

Sarah chose the crab cakes ($19.95), which were just OK, with plenty of clean, fresh crabmeat, but with a lot of creamy filler and less crabby flavor. Neither Sarah nor I cared much for the dark-brown, chewy home-fried potatoes, but Mary loved them, so go figure.

My main dish, shrimp and grits ($14.95), was a decent version: Creamy white grits were topped with a spicy Creole-style sauce with diced andouille sausage, onions and piquant bits of jalapeño. A half-dozen well-cooked, shelled medium shrimp were perched on top. It was a fair addition to the galaxy of variations on this Low Country Carolinas dish that has become popular in Louisville-area bistros.

We split three ways a very good key lime pie ($5.95) and an excellent, dense and tart New York-style cheesecake ($5.50) the size of a wedge of cheddar. Both desserts were good enough that Sarah’s mother did not get the take-home box we had planned to send home.

Arbor Ridge is open for dinner Tuesday through Saturday and brunch on Sunday. A current discount offer gives you the choice of a free appetizer, a free dessert, or 30 percent off wine. We took the wine deal, which brought the total for three to a reasonable $103.19, plus a $25 tip.

Arbor Ridge Vine & Grill
6402 Westwind Way
Crestwood, Ky.
241-5544
www.arborridgevineandgrill.com
Robin Garr’s rating: 82 points

 

Nibbles

Throw Nativity Academy a little something
Rather than tossing Mardi Gras beads, you can throw a few bucks to Nativity Academy at St. Boniface by dining at a participating eatery on Fat Tuesday, Feb. 16. Tell them “We’re here for Nativity!” and a portion of the proceeds will go to the private middle school, which offers educational excellence to children of academic promise from low-income families.

Participating restaurants are four Bearno’s (by the Bridge, U of L, Highlands and Bowman Field), Blue Lagoon, Brendan’s Restaurant & Pub, Chick-Fil-A (St. Matthews and Springhurst — must use coupon available at www.nativitylouisville.org), Come Back Inn, Flanagan’s Ale House, Irish Rover, Meridian Cafe (breakfast and lunch), O’Shea’s Irish Pub, Pat’s Steakhouse, Porcini and Wick’s Pizza & Pub. Event sponsors are Horton Fruit Co. and Faulkner Law Office.

Be sure to say, “We’re here for Nativity!”

More Mardi Gras
Joe’s OK Bayou will celebrate Mardi Gras throughout the long weekend preceding Fat Tuesday with its 16th Annual Mardi Gras party at both locations, Plainview and New Albany. Festivities this year run from Feb. 12-16. If you’re looking for a fine New Orleans-style celebration, head on out and get your Mardi Gras beads and a tall, potent hurricane along with Joe’s Cajun-style fare.

Other local spots with a Louisiana accent that are bound to be celebrating Fat Tuesday include all the J. Gumbo’s shops; Café Beignet at the Fish House (1310 Winter Ave.); Café Lou Lou (2216 Dundee Road and 106 Sears Ave.); Coach Lamp (751 Vine St.); Furlongs (9601 Shelbyville Road); and Selena’s at Willow Lake (10609 Old Lagrange Road), where a crowd of 40 LouisvilleHotBytes forum members will be gathering for an “offline” Fat Tuesday dinner.

 

Seviche dinner helps Haitian earthquake relief
On Wednesday, Feb. 24, at 7 p.m., Seviche Chef Anthony Lamas will offer his 19th wine dinner in the “Gusto Latino” (“Latin Taste”) series, inspired by the culinary traditions of Latin American countries.

This dinner highlights the culinary traditions of Haiti, paired with wines from Chile, Oregon, Italy and France. Profits will be donated to the Lambi Fund of Haiti; even the staff at Seviche will donate their time and effort to maximize the contribution.

Cost of the meal is $85 per person, plus tax and gratuity. Seviche is at 1538 Bardstown Road. For reservations, call 473-8560. 

About the Author

Storyteller and seeker. Writer, editor, recovering metro journalist; playwright, poet, once a classical DJ. Hardcore food-and-drink geek, serious home cook. Seminary grad, part-time Episcopal preacher. Did I say eclectic? Deeply rooted Louisville native who’s lived in NYC, LA and the Bay Area; political junkie and unapologetic leftie. Covering the Louisville dining scene in print media since the 1980s, and doing it online since 1994.

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