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Lombardi’s Neighborhood Italian
It’s Garlic Festival time!
If
you’ve never partaken in Lombardi’s Garlic Festival, we’re not sure
where you’ve been. Lombardi’s is a Northwest classic, opening in Ballard
in 1987 (now closed). The garlic festival followed in 1988. Started as a weekend
special, it included a garlic eating contest, cooking demos and an opera
singer. Now it’s an eight-week seasonal menu that focuses on a variety
of different foods with more than a hint of garlic and, this year, wines
from Castello Banfi from Montalcino in Tuscany.
As always, there’s a story behind the event. Lombardi’s owner, Diane
Symms, has been in the food industry for 38 years. She started with a
deli called Wild Strawberry in south Seattle. Her second place was the
Roanoke Exit on Eastlake Avenue and then she started a pasta
manufacturing business called Ribbons. In 1987, she opened a
full-service restaurant concept she called Lombardi’s.
Italian food was the "new" cuisine and there were no Italian
restaurants in Ballard. The area was growing and Diane saw great
potential in the busy corner space. "Everything above the first-floor
ceiling was boarded up," recalls Kerri Lonergan, Diane’s daughter. "We
opened two floors. The building used to be the Ballard Hospital and the
pharmacy is now the bar." Appropriate, really.
A
success, they expanded to Issaquah in 1990. "Right before opening, there
was a storm and the I90 bridge sank. We’re very close to Issaquah Creek
and the restaurant flooded," says Kerri. Despite the nearly disastrous
opening, it was the right choice. "There was so much projected growth,
we wanted to be there."
Photos: Issaquah dining room (above), Everett (below)
In
1998, they opened a third location: the waterfront in Everett. It’s
taken longer to build business there, but they are now doing well. "We
knew the area had potential. Snohomish County was the fastest growing
county in the state. But the Events Center took longer than anticipated
to complete, there was 9/11 and Boeing layoffs that stunted growth for
2-3 years," explains Kerri.
Kerri worked with her mom at the deli when she was eight and summers
during school years. She got her Business Administration degree from
Central Washington University. Working for a bank for a year, she
realized it wasn’t for her. When personal computers were taking off,
Diane wanted to computerize her system. Kerri helped part time, then
full time. "I saw the business from a different perspective and
developed a different attitude about my mom. I have a love of small
business, having the opportunity to be more successful." She’s been with
Lombardi’s ever since. Both she and Diane are involved with
organizations that promote and lobby for small business. "We also give
back to the communities that support us. It’s a great opportunity to see
what’s right with the world as opposed to what’s wrong."
Their
festival was meant to be a mini Gilroy Garlic Festival and a way to set
Lombardi’s apart from competition. Over time, they realized it was
really all about the food and dispensed with the contests and cooking
demos to focus on seasonal foods and wine. "We run the regular menu plus
the Garlic Festival menu," explains Executive Chef Matt Romeo. "The menu
is different each year although a few things come back, like the crab
and corn chowder. We’ve added a sampler to the appetizer list. Our
bruschetta sampler on the regular menu is very popular, so we tweaked
the idea for the Festival. We have two scallop items and our Angelica
stuffed pork chop. That’s an original recipe that we’ve never changed.
You have to have an osso bucco on the menu, but we do it with lamb and a
vegetarian broth with extra carrots to bring out the sweetness." Matt’s
vegetarian dish this year is truffle mac & cheese. "We added pancetta to
it for an extra burst of flavor, but you can order it without the
pancetta," he says.
Photo above: Kerri Lonergan and Executive Chef Matt Romeo at the
now closed Ballard location
Garlic desserts? "Garlic and sweet is tough to do," laughs Matt.
"This year we’re doing two desserts, one with garlic and one without.
The apple crisp has roasted garlic and we pair it with vanilla gelato.
We’re also offering chocolate gelato with Amarena cherries. The cherries
are cured without alcohol and are just delicious. We get our gelato from
Figaro. It’s the best I’ve had outside Italy."
Born and raised in New Jersey, Matt attended Johnson and Wales
College of Culinary Arts in Rhode Island, graduating in 1992. A born
traveler, he was on a road trip from New York to Alaska when he
discovered Seattle, moving here in 1997. "My parents and sister
followed. I’m now responsible for bringing 17 people here!" He started
work at the Broadway Grill then, after another road trip, moved to
Buongusto on Queen Anne, staying until it closed. In 2003, he started as
Lombardi’s Ballard chef and in 2005 became executive chef for all three
locations.
"Over the past 6-7 years, we’ve gotten away from loading our food
with garlic. Italians don’t use a lot of garlic," explains Kerri.
"Garlic has a lot of health benefits, but people also worry about their
breath. When it comes to the Garlic Festival, we can ramp it up because
people know what they’re getting into. It’s our same style of food with
a focal point of garlic. And it’s always best when shared!"
In 2006, they took a small group of managers to Italy to experience
the food and wine, and spent a day at the Castello Banfi winery. They
loved the wines and decided to focus on them during this year’s
Festival. They offer five wines by the glass or bottle and two estate
wines by the bottle only. They also offer a red wine flight featuring
two ounce pours of three reds. "Our wine pricing is very reasonable. We
offer good value on the regular menu as well as our Festival menu," says
Kerri. "We’ve opened Lombardi’s Enoteca at all three locations so people
can buy a select number of wines to take off premise. We like wines from
Washington and Italy from lesser-known wineries that people can’t pick
up at the corner grocery."
When you’re ready to "celebrate the romance of food, wine and
garlic," head to Lombardi’s. Just be sure to bring a friend.
Connie Adams/October 2008 |
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