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Dining

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Counter Culture: Taco Trucks

Real taco trucks do not have Twitter accounts. They don’t attend food-truck festivals, charge more than $2 per taco, or shadow the 9-to-5 crowd and Broad Ripple partiers. Which is why you didn’t know that Indy has real taco trucks. They’re all on Washington Street, and you have to go to them, each a no-frills wagon parking in the same rutted lot every day, usually from 11 a.m. or noon until around midnight. The menus posted on the side of the truck stick to the street-food standards—tacos, tortas, and quesadillas in variations of asada, pastor, pollo, lengua, cabeza, and chorizo; maybe some nachos and burritos, and the odd loaded fries or beans-and-rice special. The best of the bunch, El Taco Veloz (2475 W. Washington St.), has been around the longest—five years—and makes good on its name (“fast taco”). Go with the pastor, seasoned pork roasted in the truck on a vertical spit (as it should be, but rarely is in Indy) and served with a spicy, smoky salsa made from five chiles—or five something. We could have pressed the owner for clarification, but it’s not that kind of place. It’s the kind of place where you pay $1.65 for each palm-sized, double–corn-tortilla taco and scoot your white plastic plate and Styrofoam cup of crisp cucumber water down to the end of the counter and eat standing up, trying to chat with the husband-and-wife owners in Spanish before finally ordering dos mas. Other taco trucks on Washington: Taqueria Morales (2200 E. Washington St.), tacos $2 each, huge quesadillas $5 each, a little on the greasy side; Taqueria El Bohemio (4002 E. Washington St.), tacos $1.75 each, deadly hot habanero salsa, cheese between the double layer of corn tortillas; and Tacos al Carbon (on East Washington Street about halfway between I-465 and Washington Square Mall), tacos $1.75 each, expansive menu, a rare greaseless chorizo taco. Take cash.

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Making a Scene: A Review of Brewstone Beer Company

On a balmy friday night, as the sun sets over the Fashion Mall, a crush of well-heeled 40-somethings crowds the patio of Brewstone Beer Company. Bartenders shake up sticky concoctions with names like Mango Tango and a grove of fruit-flavored mojitos while a guy with a guitar and a fedora provides the poppy Dave Matthews–esque entertainment. This handsome spread looks like what you would get if Tommy Bahama threw a party for Crate & Barrel. “Don’t you love this place?” the singer says into the mic. “This is my favorite new spot.” People raise their cocktail glasses and cheer in a scene that gives true meaning to the term TGIF.  

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The Tallents Wine and Dine

Last month, Dave and Krissy Tallent of Restaurant Tallent (208 N. Walnut St., Bloomington, 812-330-9801) packed their knives to slice and serve grub in Sonoma County at Mauritson Winery, where the duo whipped up a three-course dinner that was paired with Rockpile wines. The first course sounds like a heartbreaker: a porchetta complemented with a green garlic polenta, chicory salad, and wild fennel vinaigrette, all drizzled with zinfandel syrup. The second course, an Indiana beef brisket made with Smoking Goose andouille, was smoked with wood from some of the winery’s old barrels. The final course: a mascarpone tart topped with fresh cherries and lemon thyme.

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NEW IN TOWN: Bluebeard

Since January, Indianapolis Monthly has been following the progress of Bluebeard (653 Virginia Ave.). So this past Friday, our forks were at the ready for the restaurant’s soft opening. Fans of Abbi Merriss Adams and John Adams were happy to see the pair back in the kitchen (right behind the bar), plating everything from white-bean salad with chorizo, zucchini, and radicchio fleur to a sharable whole snapper with house giardiniera.

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Swoon List: 5 Things We Adore Right Now

Decadent Gruyere salad at The Pantry, Brad Gates’s City Market stand. Dijon vinaigrette and housemade salmon pastrami top the tender leaves. A warm, gooey, cinnamon-infused homemade cinnamon roll from City Cafe (443 N. Penn

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Made From Scratch: Bluebeard

Editor’s Note: This story on the soon-to-be-opened Bluebeard restaurant appeared in the May 2012 issue. For 10 weeks this winter and spring, we followed father-and-son team Tom and Ed Battista as they faced the joys and tribulations of opening their new restaurant, Bluebeard. It is a venture, however rewarding, not for the faint of heart. […]

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Q&A with Roy Ballard of Central Indiana Food Hub

For convenience, do you hit the big-box chains and bury your prepackaged factory-food crimes deep in your canvas tote? We understand—spending hours going from roadside farm stand to farmers market just isn’t that practical. Roy Ballard, a Purdue extension educator from Hancock County, has a plan to help us out with that. In the coming months, he will be working on getting an exciting new food venture off the ground, a food hub in central Indiana.

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Silver Oak Cellars Event — July 12

St. Elmo Steak House will be serving up wine on a silver platter. The popular downtown eatery is teaming up with Silver Oak Cellars to bring 200 guests an RSVP only event to celebrate the winery’s Tower Tour.  The July 12, social event will include Silver Oak wine and St. Elmo’s appetizers. The hearty hors d’oeuvres will include TKTK. “Everyone’s going to be fed really well,” Director of Marketing Bryn Jones said. The tickets are going for $125 a pop but money seems like no issue for the 50 or so guests that have already purchased their tickets. St. Elmo’s put out a mass email and Jones said “almost immediately” they sold 25 percent of their tickets.  The party’s theme will be silver. “Everything is going to be that color,” Jones said. Guests that attend the shindig are expected to wear “cocktail savvy attire.” Nothing to businessy, St. Elmo’s wants their guests to be the “sexy, fun, party type,” according to Jones. To RSVP to the event, send an email to jandrews@stelmos.com.

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Marsh Onward

Earlier this year, Mayor Greg Ballard announced a plan to add a new Marsh supermarket, apartment complex, and parking garage at the downtown corner of Michigan Street, Senate Avenue, and Indiana Avenue. Though construction has yet to begin, the opening date is estimated sometime in the fall of 2013. 

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TRENDING: Fried Green Tomatoes

The summer season is upon us, which means kitchens are getting creative with the southern classic side dish that dunks crisp slices of green tomatoes in batter for deep frying and mayonnaise dunking. Here are some Indy restaurants that are putting their own interesting spin on fried green tomatoes.

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Swoon List: 5 Things We Adore Right Now

 

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MINI REVIEW: Tin Roof

It boasts one of downtown’s most coveted locations, at the busy crossroads of Pennsylvania and Washington streets, with Bankers Life Fieldhouse framed squarely in its front windows. But the brand-new, Atlanta-based Tin Roof (36 S. Pennsylvania St., 317-951-2220) seems determined not to be mistaken for some kind of nice, uptown restaurant.

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Swoon List: 5 Things We Adore Right Now

The moist, savory pull-apart bread at The Libertine Liquor Bar (38 E. Washington St., 317-631-3333), essentially adult monkey bread made with Sun King Wee Mac, Fair Oaks cheddar, mustard, dill, and crunchy salt. It arrives in a bowl. Tug it out in big, buttery hunks. Crunchy, breaded onion rings served with a creamy horseradish-spiked sa

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Bikes and Bites: New Culinary Bike Tour

On Saturday, I rounded up some friends and joined the “Ridin’ Local” tour–a 9-mile excursion highlighting three restaurants that emphasize locally grown ingredients. Note: Because this same tour happens every second Saturday this summer, I will not tell you the locations along the tour. Tippins guards the identity of the specific locations as fiercely as a chef does his recipes.

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The Raw Deal

Is it healthier? Does it taste richer and creamier? Or is it a bacterial threat and potential health hazard to the larger public?

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