When St. Paul's 18-year-old 128 Cafe quietly came up for sale last year, chef Max Thompson jumped at the opportunity.
No big surprise. After more than a decade of cooking for big-name chefs in New York City (Andrew Carmellini, Rick Moonen) and Boston (Tony Maws, Chris Douglass), the Minneapolis native had returned to the Twin Cities with the purpose of owning and running his own place.
Emphasis on his own. While words like reliable came to embody my accumulated feelings toward the 128 over the past decade or so, Thompson has injected a new and welcome adjective: Surprising.
Thompson seems to take great pleasure in tamping down the been-there/done-that quotient. Why settle for a dreary mixed-greens salad when there's the prospect of adding a firm poached pear, crunchy (and not-too-sweet) candied pecans, salty blue cheese and fragrant fennel?
Rather than relying upon wine, he turns to a brawny beer broth — with wisps of bacon and perky Fresno chiles — as the vehicle for coaxing open a bowlful of plump mussels.
He's also a skilled terrine maker. Last week, Thompson was turning out a variation on a coarse country pâté, grinding luscious Duroc pork back fat, hickory-smoked country ham and top-flight Wisconsin bacon with a five-spice-style seasoning. Truly, superb.
News of fresh-caught walleye from Manitoba's Lake Winnipeg became an inventive freshwater shore dinner, starring strips of the flaky, piping-hot fish gingerly fried into a delicate golden crispiness. The rest of the heaping plate was filled with tender, waxy yellow potatoes and snips of smoky bacon, while a fairly traditional tartar sauce was countered by swirls of what the kitchen calls twang sauce, a hot-blooded blend of fermented chiles and vinegar.
Thompson's cooking also reflects his extensive and far-flung travels. Northern Thai accents transform the standard Minnesota winter hunk-o-short-ribs dinner, with a floral fermented green curry — and a splash of coconut milk — insinuating itself into that rich, fork-tender meat. A slab of tantalizingly blackened pork belly, the meat deeply juicy and flavorful, bore a nuanced Chinese twist.