Le Vieux Logis
The Old Lodge
Try Le Vieux for Old Times' Sake
By Eve Zibart
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, Aug. 12, 2005
You don't go to Bethesda to dine at Le Vieux Logis: You go to Le Vieux
Logis to escape Bethesda.
The post-Metro Bethesda, that is, that gold-rush restaurant town with
its colored drinks, its BlackBerry dinks and its X-treme garage sports.
For 25 years, Le Vieux Logis, which chose to identify itself with the
"old" values from the very beginning, has quietly, politely declined to
jostle for position, relying on a few old-fashioned virtues -- personal
attention, embracing hospitality and solid, unshowy cooking -- to keep
more than one generation of customers happy. And with the recent closing
of Cafe Bethesda, another bastion of quiet civility, the genteel
comforts of Le Vieux Logis seem even more of an endangered anachronism.
More like sanctuary.
Trendy decor, elaborate platings, ingredient buzzwords be damned. Le
Vieux Logis -- "The Old Lodge," a salute to the (much more formal)
Dordogne, France, inn that inspired it -- looks pretty much as it has
for at least a decade. The outside is famously painted with flower boxes
and blooms, a metaphorical hedge against traffic. The inside is, well,
"inn sided," faux-timbered and busily hung with copper pots and plates
and plants. Cocktails are the size they ought to be for
pleasure rather than tripled for maximum effect.
It's immediately obvious that this is the sort of place where the phrase
"regular customer" is redundant, where the owner (in this case, Diana
Dahan) is known to nearly all by her first name and vice versa. One
hears Le Vieux Logis described as an older folks' restaurant, and that's
happily true: Patrons dress for dinner, at least a little; women have
carefully smoothed hair and sometimes hats; only a few men haul out cell
phones or glance condescendingly at the wine list; and those children
who come -- the third generation, in some cases -- know they have to be
on their best behavior. (The bathrooms are not equipped with rails for
wheelchair users, but diners who are only moderately restricted may find
them sufficiently large.)
The menu is generally and conservatively continental, although with a
few curious twists (the pickled herring, for instance). The kitchen
knows its strengths and generally stays within them. One of the nicest
dishes, a frequent special rather than a menu item, is a warm-weather
version of veal osso buco with a lovely, light broth, clean-flavored
vegetables and, quite often, marrow so delicious it's silent testimonial
to the high quality of the meat. The seared scallops over a similarly
light ratatouille, really a vegetable saute, are exactingly seared and
creamy-textured, and when the menu promises the Dover sole meuniere is
the real thing, it means both the fish and its restrained flouring. Even
more satisfying, for those who love that slightly mustier flavor,
are the monkfish medallions a l'Americaine , that is, in a sauce of
sauteed lobster shells and morsels deglazed in brandy, tomato and cream,
a vanishing classic. And for those who consider snails just the excuse
for garlic butter, this version's a real stunner; a vampire could suffer
secondhand stroke from 20 feet.
Perhaps in deference to its customers' restricted diets, the kitchen
errs on the side of blandness and not only when it comes to salt. The
cold soups, vichyssoise, cream of cucumber and the like, have recently
emerged a bit too thin (even for the European taste) and verging on
lackluster, especially as chilling food takes even more edge off
seasonings. Calf's liver, sauteed and topped with browned onions and
bacon that reiterated "animal fat," begs for spice or acid splash. (It's
certainly a generous slab, however.) And since batter is another of
those items that really cannot be made salt-free, one night's soft-shell
crabs were all texture and no taste.
On the other hand, a cautious hand with the vinaigrette just prevented a
salad of red and yellow beets with greens, goat cheese and walnuts from
falling victim to too many pushy elements. And a steak sauce that might
well have been over-reduced by many cooks survived with its juices and
wine nearly intact.
Caution is also a virtue when it comes to cooking vegetables. It's hard
to imagine quarrelling with the accompaniments, particularly the
crisp-tender haricots verts that are a house staple. The unusually sweet
and greaseless sweet potato fries that arrive as a little surprise with
the calf's liver are a rare modern touch, and their mildness is a clever
balance to the liver's forwardness. (It's easier, however, to quarrel
with one modern "convenience" -- foil-wrapped butter.)
Le Vieux Logis may once have been more of a special-occasion
destination, but these days it seems like a mental health day. As they
say on TV, take a little time to stop and enjoy le vieux.
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