Pat’s Pick

Fireside Pies

Fireside Pies

What, me praise a pizzeria? Two months ago I would have questioned my sanity. But that was before I discovered distinctly un-cheesy Dallas newcomer Fireside Pies. This place has the right stuff: crisp, hand-stretched crusts, classy toppings, substantial salads, and a list of wines that you actually want to drink. Speaking of salads, the well-dressed Serious Caesar arrives with a bonus of two large bruschette topped with white anchovy filets. The chicken-pesto-sausage pizza, gilded with a roasted-tomato sauce and a blend of four grated cheeses, comes on strong with crimini mushrooms and nuggets of blue cheese. Sensibly, the dessert list consists of exactly two items: a sumptuous but light vanilla-bean cheesecake and a fruit pie of the day (the Granny Smith apple with pineapple marinated in a brandy-based liqueur rejuvenates that American classic). Couples and families laze around the shady flagstone patio sipping ice cream floats or prickly-pear margaritas, happy in the knowledge that when the check arrives, the bottom line will be as minimal as the meal was ample. PATRICIA SHARPE

DMT's Blackberry Vanilla Swirl Cheesecake

Hep Cat

Big lips, wiry whiskers, a questionable lifestyle: The catfish is like that distant uncle at your family reunion—peculiar-looking, a little shady, and uninspiring at mealtime. Relegated to the culinary backwaters as a bottom feeder, even deemed unkosher for its scaleless body, the fish with the Fu Manchu mustache was long snubbed by everyone except poor folks because of its murky habitat and muddy flavor. But these days the whiskery one's image problems have been greatly improved by new digs (man-made ponds) and a better diet (grain-based feed). As a result, its mild, sweet flavor and flaky white flesh have made it the fifth most popular type of fish in the U.S. Texas does its part by consuming more catfish than any other state in the nation. This August, observe National Catfish Month by trying out these irresistibly crunchy filets from chef Mansour Gorji at Addison's Canary Cafe. As Mark Twain once said, "The catfish is a plenty good enough fish for anybody."

1/2 day-old baguette or 1/2 loaf rustic Italian bread
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 teaspoon coarsely ground pepper
5 1/2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
4 boneless, skinless catfish filets
1 tablespoon butter

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Pulse bread into crumbs in a food processor. Mix with the salt and pepper and 1 1/2 tablespoons of the olive oil. Cook on an ungreased baking sheet until golden brown, about 30 minutes. Let cool, then pulse in a food processor until a little coarser than cornmeal.

Rub fish with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and thinly coat with breadcrumbs. Sauté over medium heat for 3 to 4 minutes per side in remaining 4 tablespoons olive oil and 1 tablespoon butter. Serves 4. KATHARYN RODEMANN

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