Lechon prensado at Oro by Nixta
“It takes two days to make it,” chef Gustavo Romero said, clearly in response to what must have been our stunned faces as we forked more bites of the lechon prensado (pressed suckling pig). Described as a terrine, the menu couldn’t possibly convey the amount of labor and care that goes into this rectangle of nose-to-tail-to-shoulder-to-belly pork, which has been broken down, roasted, chopped into chunks and stacked, pressed with weights, and finally fried for ultimate crispness.
Romero was beaming the night I dined at Oro, on the heels of a nomination for a James Beard Award for best new restaurant in the country. Dishes like the lechon ($28) are only part of the story. Oro began as Nixta, a COVID-era takeout-only business operating out of what looked like an office foyer, became a supplier of nixtamalized heritage corn tortillas to grocery stores and restaurants across the Twin Cities, launched an acclaimed restaurant that celebrates masa in all its forms, recently added a tequila bar, and now is putting Minneapolis on the national map for Mexican cuisine.
If you can get a reservation (I snagged mine for 4 p.m., which might be your best bet, too), pay them a visit and wish Romero and company well on their continued rise to masa stardom. And make sure to order the lechon. (Sharyn Jackson)
1222 NE. 2nd St., Mpls., 612-200-8087, nixtampls.com/oro
Lemon bismarck from Bittner’s Bakery
When readers take the time to write, we pay attention. When they say something is the best they’ve ever had, we really pay attention. Such is the case with this lemon bismarck, and why I was watching the sun rise from historic downtown Shakopee this week.
“The bakery makes you feel like you are stepping back in time,” Tana Erickson wrote via email. Indeed, it’s in a 1890s building that housed the Shakopee Bakery for decades. Don and Lauri Bittner reopened the bakery in 2021, and make everything from doughnuts, cookies and wedding cakes to bread and buns.
But back to the bismarck. Erickson went on to sing the praises of the huge, ethereal powdered sugar-dusted doughnut that surrounds a burst of lemon filling. It’s so dreamy, light and delicate that you wonder how it could possibly hold its tangy contents. The tartness of the lemon cuts the sweetness, but sweet tooths needn’t worry, it’s still plenty sweet. And, at $2.75, it’s a steal. (I walked out with a dozen doughnuts for less than $20.)
“I really can’t get the bismarck out of my mind,” Erickson said. Same. (Nicole Hvidsten)