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Far From the Lebanese Crowd

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  • Far From the Lebanese Crowd

    LA Weekly
    Jan 7 2010


    Far From the Lebanese Crowd
    Mantee, via Beirut, on Ventura Boulevard
    By Jonathan Gold
    Published on January 07, 2010 at 1:15pm
    Anne Fishbein

    Pretty spectacular: mantee, at ManteeWhatever sort of Lebanese
    restaurant you may be thinking of at the moment, Mantee is the other
    kind, a tiny, stuffy café near the eastern end of Ventura Boulevard,
    not too far from the studios but a million miles from the brash good
    cheer of places like Carnival and Skaf's. Mantee isn't where you come
    for a falafel plate or roasted chicken; it's where you go to watch a
    stunningly beautiful waitress set a plate of sausage aflame.

    The restaurant has a claustrophobic, overdecorated look you may
    associate with tearooms, a dining room spackled with framed
    orange-crate labels and with windows trimmed with lace; it is
    furnished with murderous sub-decorator chairs, a plague of houseplants
    and a wash of appalling music. The desserts are outsourced from a
    pastry chef who never met a passion-fruit mousse she didn't like. The
    first time I walked into the restaurant, I would have bolted if the
    friends I was meeting weren't already seated on the patio. Mantee
    really does feel like a restaurant your great-aunt's bridge partner
    might suggest after her second 7 and 7, and the list of house
    specialties, which include filet mignon with cherries, filet mignon
    with brown sauce, and canapés of sliced sujuk topped with fried quail
    eggs, reads like a catering menu.

    But that tan, the thick, salted yogurt drink that is standard at
    Lebanese joints ' here it's rich, barely soured, almost buttery, like
    fresh mozzarella sipped through a straw. The hummus is complexly
    nutty, expressing the round, toasty taste of chickpeas instead of
    concealing it with sesame paste, and it's even better sprinkled with
    Lebanese pine nuts fried in olive oil. In the fattouch, the fried
    shards of pita bread are tossed with fresh mint and slightly
    astringent leaves of purslane instead of the usual assortment of
    lettuces, and the simple dressing of oil and lemon juice quivers with
    the tartness of sumac. The house-made lebne has a creamy depth of
    flavor you may never have experienced in yogurt.

    Mantee is run by Jonathan Darakjian, whose family owns one of the
    best-known Armenian restaurants in Beirut, and his menu, down to the
    lamb chops and the basturma canapés, turns out to be pretty close to
    that of the Lebanese original. (That odd sautéed fillet is cousin to
    kafta karaz, a very good ground-meat kebab with a cherry-studded
    sweet-sour sauce, which is a specialty of both Mantee and the Beirut
    restaurant Al Mayass.) So while the pomegranate-sweetened
    walnut-pepper dip muhammara may be stodgy and the stuffed grape leaves
    are exactly like every other stuffed grape leaf you've tasted, the
    raw, pounded-beef kibbe nayeh has a real, sinewy presence; and a dish
    of baked feta, which you would expect to be on the dull side, is
    transformed into something like a pungent Levantine version of a
    Mexican queso fundido. The spicy sujuk sausage sizzles to a tawny,
    caramelized shine above its flaming, waitress-tended crock. The
    su-bourek, a flaky pastry of cheese-stuffed filo, crackles and oozes
    when you stab it with your fork, which is just what you expect a good
    bourek to do. And as you'd reasonably expect, Mantee's namesake dish
    is pretty spectacular: a white-hot gratin plate bubbling with
    garlic-infused yogurt and a handful of crunchy little beef dumplings.
    If you squint, the dumplings look a bit like hats plucked from a
    platoon of Napoleon dolls.

    As at most Lebanese restaurants, the best dishes tend to be the mezze:
    the salads and dips and bits of sausage that form most of the menu.
    The kebabs, though professionally prepared, come as an afterthought.

    So is the cooking here better than what you find at local places, like
    Alcazar and Marouch? Not necessarily, but the flavors have an edge
    quite unlike anything else in town. The comparison is inexact, but you
    may be reminded of the sensation, after years of eating polished
    Hunanese dishes in the San Gabriel Valley, of running into the rough,
    sturdy cooking of a chef freshly arrived from Hunan.

    MANTEE: 10962 Ventura Blvd., Studio City. (818) 761-6565,
    ManteeCafe.com. Open Sun., Tues.-Thurs., 11 a.m.-9:30 p.m.; Fri.-Sat.,
    11 a.m.-10 p.m. MC, V. No alcohol. Street parking. Mezze $4.95-$7.95;
    entrées $12.95-$17.95. Recommended dishes: Hummus with pine nuts,
    lebneh, mantee `traditional,'' sujuk flambé.

    http://www.laweekly.com/2010-0 1-07/eat-drink/far-from-the-lebanese-crowd/
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