Published: Thursday, Dec. 3, 2009 3:53 p.m. MST
If there ever was a restaurant opened just for fun, Mini's Retro Cafe is it.
This new downtown eatery is an expansion of the menu at the popular Mini's Cupcakes shop.
(Besides the downtown location, there's a second Mini's Cupcake in Sugar House.)
The shops seem to be doing just fine, winning local awards and attracting a steady stream of cupcake-loving clients. So
why expand the downtown shop, taking over an adjacent space
to provide
more dining area? Well, if it's not just for fun, they could've fooled
me, since this is one of the most fun places I've eaten in a long while.
Mini's
is painted pink, white, turquoise and gold, with decor that exults in
retro kitsch: mismatched but equally ornate chandeliers provide
lighting; tables are topped with Melamine and edged with chrome; metal
chairs are painted white and pink and featureNaugahyde cushions. There
are old magazine ads and Audrey Hepburn portraits on the walls,
Seventeen magazine from the '60s ("Be a Party-smarty!") for reading,
long couches with nubby upholstery and "The Jetsons" on the white
flat-screen TV. Even the dishes are retro, china with a sea-foam green
and pink pattern.
While you wait
for your lunch, you can browse through the eclectic collection of items
for sale: rubber cleaning gloves with ruffles attached;
traditional-style aprons; cupcake-shaped candles; reproduction metal
lunch boxes featuring Hostess cupcakes and Sugar Babies.
Lunch
at Mini's is designed to groove right into the retro vibe of the rest
of the shop, with a menu heavy on comfort foods of the past: Spam on
Club crackers, Jell-O with fruit and cream, deviled eggs, mac and
cheese, even Fluffernutter sandwiches with peanut butter, bananas and
marshmallow creme.
But perhaps
"heavy" wasn't the right word to use there, because Mini's has taken
these comfort foods, which can be a little cloying, and kicked them up
a notch in quality and appeal.
I
had the tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwich, part of a menu in
which customers pick out a three-course lunch (starter, main dish,
dessert) for about $8. But instead of Campbell's and American cheese, I
got a complex, sweet-and-tangy soup with a velvety texture and a
perfectly grilled sandwich of thick-cut bread and real cheese that had
oozed out the sides and cooked crispy and golden-brown over the bread.
My
husband had the salad and turkey sandwich, a standard but good-quality
presentation of fresh greens with nuts, feta cheese, cranberries and
house-made honey dijon dressing; plus a sandwich on sweet and nutty
wheat bread with sliced turkey, cheese, greens and cranberry sauce.
Our
son started out with the pigs in a blanket, three small but superlative
sausages, coarse-textured and bursting with beautifully seasoned
juices, baked in pastry. He ate one and then demanded part of my cheese
sandwich, which I was happy to trade in exchange for my own little
piggy.
For dessert, you can have
"pudding in a cloud," which takes me right back to childhood, but we
all chose cupcakes this time. This, the seat of Mini's success, was a
fabulous end to the meal. Our little boy had the coconut cupcake, fresh
and light with creamy, coconut-laced icing; I had the s'more cupcake,
an inspired concoction of rich dark chocolate cupcake and fluffy,
delicious royal icing that had been browned just a bit, with a little
graham cracker on top.
As good as
that one was, I envied my husband his cupcake, a darkly delicious gem
of chocolate cupcake (and these cupcakes really straddle the line
between cake and brownie, in a very good way), dark-chocolate
peppermint ganache and crushed candy-cane sprinkles.
I
comforted myself by buying a half-dozen cupcakes to take home, my
favorites of which were the chocolate cake with coffee-sprinkled mocha
icing, the rich tiramisu cupcake and the "Breakfast at Tiffany's," an
elegant creation of vanilla cake, blue cream cheese frosting and silver
and white dragees sprinkled on top.
Breakfast
items $2; lunch $8-$9.50 for starter, main dish and dessert; individual
sides and desserts $2; individual main dishes $6.
Mini's Retro Cafe
Rating: ???
Where: 12 E. 800 South
Hours: Monday-Friday, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; closed Sunday
Payment: Major credit cards accepted
Phone: 801-363-0608
Wheelchair access: Easy, plus lots of room in the dining areas
Web: www.minisretrocafe.com
Also: Breakfast and box lunches available
Stacey Kratz is a freelance writer who reviews restaurants for the Deseret News.
e-mail: skratz@desnews.com