Dining
January 17, 2008 |
THE DAILY DISH
2205 Hillsboro Road,
Franklin, TN 37069
(615) 791-1255 |
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A New Begin-ning
Copper Kettle co-founders dish up a
friendly concept in Franklin
by Carrington
Fox
Rare is the meat-and-three restaurant
that can claim salads among its signature
dishes. More often than not, the fresh-vegetable
proxy is a pale mixture of cucumbers and
onions, maybe some sliced tomatoes or a
scoop of slaw. But at The Daily Dish, bountiful
and creative salads go head to head with
mac-and-cheese, gumbo and almond-encrusted
chicken for top billing. It’s a happy
schizophrenia of country cookin’ and
big-city cuisine that owners Sean and Jill
Begin describe as “meat-and-three
cooked by a chef.”
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The Daily Show
Jill and Chef Sean Begin
Photos: ericengland.net
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After selling their share of the Copper
Kettle on Granny White last June, the Begins
took some time off from the restaurant
business to think about their next move.
Just as Sean was settling into a cushy
gig as a personal chef, the couple learned
that Grassland Grille was vacating a space
they had long eyed. Next thing they knew,
they were back in the business of running
a quaint neighborhood restaurant—but
this time they were in their own Franklin
neighborhood.
Anchored by a traditional buffet line
with an ever-changing array of comfort
foods, The Daily Dish also offers a menu
of salads and sandwiches with a surprisingly
modern twist. Alongside the usual suspects—fried
okra, candied yams and mashed potatoes,
to name a few steam table regulars—there’s
a less predictable roster of ingredients
ranging from mahimahi and mozzarella to
cranberry chutney and brie. Diners can
call the restaurant to hear a recorded
message of the day’s dishes.
Underlying the whole dining experience
is a visible creativity and an attempt
to bring modern flair to traditional favorites,
the result of Chef Sean’s experience
in elite kitchens from Palm Beach, Fla.,
and Vail, Colo., to the esteemed Capitol
Grille in the Hermitage Hotel. Take the
coconut chicken, for example. Ask for a
piece of the nubbly golden meat, and one
of the ever-friendly servers manning the
line will quickly advise you to try it
with some tangy pineapple chutney, available
at the end of the counter. There’s
also a chunky remoulade studded with bits
of smoked corn and herbs, which goes well
on a sandwich of cornmeal-encrusted mahimahi—not
your standard steam-table fried-fish affair.
Eight-and-a-half
bucks buys a meat-and-three plate, and
kids get meat-and-two with a drink for
a mere $4.50. On any given day, the buffet
of three entrées might boast meat
loaf, pork loin, barbecue beef or chicken
that has been country-fried, pecan-encrusted,
grilled, roasted, baked or coated with
coconut. We particularly enjoyed the gumbo,
a chunky version loaded with andouille,
crawfish and chicken, which benefited from
a few shakes of hot sauce on the table.
Baked chicken offered a crisp breadcrumb
coating, without the grease of frying.
Veggies and starches run the gamut from
cheese grits and creamed corn to red beans
and rice, turnip greens braised in chicken
broth with strings of tender pork, and
other country-cookin’ staples. Mashed
potatoes with the skins provided a welcome
homemade touch, and mac-and-cheese delivered
a rare equilibrium of creamy texture and
sharp flavor.
Not everything on the bountiful spread
is homemade. Fried okra announces itself
as a once-frozen product, with a familiar
coating of cardboard-textured breading.
Begin also takes a shortcut with the sweet
potatoes, which come in uniform orange
discs that he cooks in a sweet cinnamon-clove
glaze and tops with brown sugar, pecans
and toasted marshmallow. For anyone with
a sweet tooth, the Nerf-colored casserole
is a near-perfect infusion of sugar masquerading
as a side dish. Its only shortcoming is
the mushiness of the patties—somewhere
between a solid and a liquid, lacking any
of the fibrous texture of the real thing.
Among
the sandwiches, we particularly enjoyed
the roast turkey breast with brie, apples
and cranberry chutney on whole wheat toast.
In a dining era when more and more restaurants
are sneaking in sandwiches well above the
$10 mark, The Daily Dish offers relative
value, with Begin’s BLT at $5.95
and the most expensive sandwich on the
menu—grilled pesto chicken with mozzarella
cheese and lemon aioli on ciabatta—topping
out at $7.95.
What sets Daily Dish apart from other
down-home restaurants is the variety. Without
overwhelming the menu, the Begins manage
to cover the bases of healthy and hearty,
with equal parts fluffy green salad, inventive
sandwich and meat-and-potatoes. Looking
around the low-key room, decked in earth
tones and a few colorful canvases, there
appeared to be just as many meat-laden
plates slathered in gravy as there were
large white bowls overflowing with fresh
mixed greens, fruits and vegetables. Of
the three salads we tried—including
the grilled pesto chicken salad with a
fried mozzarella cake, mushrooms and pine
nuts, and the roasted turkey salad with
a fried sweet potato cake, bacon, cheddar,
apple-cranberry chutney and maple-cider
vinaigrette—our runaway favorite
was the bed of mixed greens topped with
sliced mangoes, strawberries, candied nuts
and decadent golden-brown globes of almond-encrusted
goat cheese. Rolled in slivered nuts and
deep fried, the gooey mixture of chèvre
and cream cheese added a rich counterpoint
to the crisp leaves and clean fruit, while
a vinaigrette with dried cherries added
a sweet and tangy finish. A vibrant medley
of contrasts—crunchy, silky, tangy
and sweet—the salad offered a little
of everything, from the obvious to the
unexpected.
The same could be
said about The Daily Dish.
The Daily Dish serves lunch
and dinner 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday. |
Kids’ Meat-and-Two
$4.50
Soup $3.75
Almond-Encrusted Goat Cheese
Salad $7.95
Hot Roast Beef $7.50
Orange-Glazed Mahimahi Salad
$8.95 |
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