Santa Ana Pizzeria & Bistro
F-1631 St. Mary’s Rd
Tel: 204-415-1440
January, 2013
When you
walk up to an Earl’s Restaurant, you know what you’re going to get. The modern stand-alone building always opens
into a slick, contemporary dining room.
The same goes for The Keg. The
grandiose shack-like exterior conceals a wood-based, cabin-like interior. You never get any surprises. That’s why I love going into strip mall
restaurants for the first time. The
more-often-than-not dumpy exterior can open into a palace or a bat cave. While Santa Ana is no palace, neither is it a bat
cave. Well, I guess it could be a bat
cave since its dark and moody dining room casts lots of shadows.
Pictures of
wine adorn the outside walls but the inside wall is actually a wine rack. I love it—but too bad it’s a little too high
to reach over and help myself to a bottle.
I guess I’ll have to get it the traditional way, which is still no easy
feat. The menu features a bursting
selection of whites and even more generous array of reds. The usual culprits (Lindeman’s, Wolf Blass)
lurk on the pages but the huge selection of lesser-known names is sure to
capture the attention of the most scrupulous sommeliers.
Although
the servers buzz like bees, our meal took three hours from entry to
departure—so take your time and enjoy your wine. It might be a good idea to start with an
appetiser to keep Mr. Hunger Pang away while you wait. I’m not a squid fan but all my dining
companions love calamari; our tables always seem infested by tentacles. Squid is a hard food to make. The slightest overcooking turns your rolls
into rubber. Not so here—this is some of
the most tender squids that I ever tried.
The light batter adds a bit of a crunch but not enough to mask the squid
flavour. For those of you who don’t like
the taste of squid, the chili sauce has just enough zing to zap any fishiness
the squid may have (and there’s very little).
If you’re
not a seafood fan, think about the Wood Fired Sicilian Sausage. Wander into any grocery store and you find
all sorts of Italian sausages. If you
order Chinese sausage, you know you get a waxy, dried, sweetish sausage; if you
order Kielbasa, you know you get a dense, smoked sausage; if you order Italian
sausage, you never know what you get since everything else seems to lump into
Italy. Ana’s Sicilian sausage comes
grilled nicely and packs a bit of a punch.
The chunks are big, so don’t overindulge and run out of room for pizza!
Ana either
roasts the pizza over a wood fire, or bakes them over stone. Our server recommends the wood-fired for the
extra crispness and you should heed her advice.
The perfectly prepared crust has a crunchiness to it but no evidence of
flame (meaning it’s not burnt). The
wood-fired zas measure 11”, which you can probably finish yourself; the stone
baked zas measure 15”, which would leave you groaning with gut glitches if you
finish it solo.
I’m not a
fan of pineapple on pizza but the Tropicana works it well with barbecue sauce
and saucy pulled pork. If you’re a fan
of alternative sauces, try the Pesto pizza.
The classic pesto-chicken combination works wonders with the pungent
asiago. The Mexican combination of nacho
ingredients yields an equally wonderful pizza.
I often avoid Mexican pizzas since bad Mexican za tastes like Taco Time
on a bun—no worries here. Ana doesn’t
hold back on the alternative sauces, which is great because the sauces taste
divine. However, the tomato based sauces
are lacking as I needed to use my fork as a divining rod to search for it.
Sauce is
especially missing on the meat pizzas, which desperately need a vegetable
injection. Meatheads will either want to
try the 4 Meat or the Meat Lovers’. I
would avoid both since too much meet = too much salt and these pizzas are sure
to constrict your arteries. Instead, try
the Deluxe, which combines three meats with mushroom and green pepper—another
delicious combination.
Overall, I
would like to see a bit more generosity in the toppings. Ana rices the vegetables so it looks like
there’s a lot, but they’re in tiny pieces.
By contrast, most of the meats come in substantial chunks, but there
aren’t a lot of chunks. Don’t get me
wrong, they make good pizzas here—I just wish there’s more of a good
thing.
If pizza’s
not your thing, Ana serves up some delicious pasta as well. The mountain of lasagne oozes with cheese,
meat and sauce (so that’s where the tomato sauce went). My favourite is the pesto sauce. I don’t order gnocchi often as I find it too
doughy but the power of the pesto overcomes the dullness of the dough. The Fungi Linguini is anything but dull as it
leaves a party of textures in your mouth.
Alas, all of the textures come from the fungi as the linguini lie limply
overcooked.
Ana’s food
isn’t perfect, but it’s really good. On
the way out, you can pick up a jar or two of sauces and try to reproduce the
dishes yourself. Better yet, just come
back again. This is definitely one of
those obscure strip mall restaurants that you should keep on your calendar.
**** /5
This is a free product that I'm happy to bring to you. If you enjoyed reading this, please consider clicking on the accompanying ads. This is the only payment I receive for offering this public service. Thank you as always for reading.
This is a free product that I'm happy to bring to you. If you enjoyed reading this, please consider clicking on the accompanying ads. This is the only payment I receive for offering this public service. Thank you as always for reading.
Thanks for giving me a space in your blog on seafood dinner Santa Ana . I refer this to my close friends who are already seeking for the same .thanks again guys…
ReplyDelete