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Grezzo Restaurant

Raw power
By ROBERT NADEAU  |  March 19, 2008
3.0 3.0 Stars
CRW_9282INSIDE
RICH BROWNIE SUNDAE: The brownie, based on Brazil nuts, served with housemade gelati.

Grezzo Restaurant | 69 Prince Street, Boston | Open Wed–Sun, 5–11 pm | AE, DI, MC, VI | Organic wine | No valet parking | Access up two steps from sidewalk level | 857.362.7288

Grezzo, which means “raw” in Italian, is an upscale vegan restaurant specializing in “raw and living food.” No heat above 112 degrees is permitted, so the only cooking appliance is a dehydrator. Cold is allowed, so there’s gelato. But since there’s no dairy, the ice cream and cold sauces are made from nut milk. The menu is also pretty much devoid of gluten. The compensation for all of these limitations is the ingenuity of chef Alissa Cohen, who’s been eating this way for more than 20 years, plus an enormous variety of top-of-the-line vegetable ingredients.

There’s also a reusable, recyclable, hemp-fiber bushel bag of hype. On alissacohen.com, it’s not just a restaurant — it’s a book, a DVD, lessons, supplements, and before-and-after weight-loss photos. This diet, it’s claimed, relieves 24 medical and psychiatric complaints, from diabetes to cancer.

So how’s the food? In March, when local greenhouses are straining for enough light to grow greens, no less? Well, fabulous — but perhaps more interesting than soul-satisfying. There are certainly some things here that other chefs are going to steal. For example, if you dehydrate thin slices of beets and squash, not only are they edible, slightly sweet, and a teeny bit like pasta in texture, but all the colors are preserved. So the Chioggia beet slices have all the beautiful red and white stripes, and a golden beet is the color of corn. I will be very surprised if this doesn’t show up in all the fancy bistros. (I’m going to try it at home.)

Grezzo looks like any tiny North End trattoria. The walls are cranberry-salmon, and there are oil paintings of vegetables. There is a little bar. Tabletops are copper. There are a lot of candles, apparently not raw but possibly organic. The servers, clad in black, are slim and lively. The chef-owner, in street clothes, is present but not hovering.

At the table, there’s no breadbasket. (No baking equals no bread.) Already one wonders, why are we in the North End? Would we like a drink before dinner? That could be the featured Grezzo mojito ($6) or cucumber martini ($7). The mojito is a pretty good no-alcohol fake of a mint-lime drink. The martini has some kombucha (fermented sweet tea) for fizz and a bit of alcohol, but lacks the resinous, herbal flavors of a classic martini. It tastes like cucumber.

One successful appetizer is “maroon carrot bisque” ($8). These purple carrots purée into a tasty cold soup, and the garnish of razor-thin unusual carrot slices, some crisp pear, and onion is a nice texture contrast. Gnocchi carbonara ($11), on the other hand, is deep in the genre of faux food, since the kitchen can’t poach dumplings, use bacon or eggs, or even liquid-smoke seasoning (which is made by burning wood). So what we have are nut balls in a nut-cream sauce, and it tastes more like halvah than pasta. What excited me on this plate was the garnish of raw green peas and micro-green pea shoots.

An entrée of winter-vegetable lasagna ($22) is in the same zone. There’s no pasta, no cheese, and no cooked-down tomato sauce, so the dish looks and tastes more like salad than lasagna. The tomato sauce is a few dabs of chopped stuff, while the “béchamel” sauce mentioned on the menu is another nut cream, and not much of it. What stood out was the spectacular variety of greens and edible flowers, plus sliced and sometimes dehydrated vegetables. This is certainly great eating — once you get the idea of lasagna out of your head.

Massaman coconut curry ($21) lacks heat, but there’s also no coconut milk. Again, one thinks of stew but crunches along on salad. The nut cream has some curry flavor, but the lasting positive impressions are of shredded snow peas, shredded coconut, a variety of sprouts and micro-greens, and the intriguing vegetable vermicelli, which are long and stringy but aren’t pasta and don’t look like spaghetti squash. What are they?

Wines are available but not featured. A glass of organic zinfandel ($9) was rather good. My guess would be that raw-food promoters are not terribly interested in wine (and beer has to be cooked in the brewing process). But there’s a parallel movement in the wine world called biodynamic winemaking, which fosters wild yeasts and has produced some impressive and unusual flavors in French wines.

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  Topics: Restaurant Reviews , Culture and Lifestyle, Beverages, Food and Cooking,  More more >
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Comments
Grezzo Restaurant
I think the pasta like things you couldn't identify might be straw mushroom stems. My wife has prepared several raw meals and the straw mushroom stems remind me of your description.
By asp3 on 03/20/2008 at 11:54:25
Grezzo Restaurant
I think Alissa's attempt is noble but since this is the comments section I would like to share some much needed advice with her, 1.)Stop going to the tanning salon you look like a Ompha Lompha from Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory 2.)Learn how to smile, you look like a horse with all the gums going on, take a smiling training course 3.) Food Raw or Cooked is not about making it really complex and crazy looking, simple and normal prices is what it is about 4.) The food you make does not look like food or a good deal so you may want to work on that if you want customers, a lasagna that is $22 and does not look or taste like lasgna what is that about?
By Boston Beans on 04/06/2008 at 1:52:50
Grezzo Restaurant
Also I am not sure if Alissa is that good, I noticed on The Tyra Banks TV Show she revealed that both her and her husband have Hepatitis! Then I find out that Hepatitis is easily transferred and contagious through food, this makes me not want to go to her restaurant because of the risks.
By Boston Beans on 04/06/2008 at 11:33:32
Grezzo Restaurant
As a fan of the vegan movement, I unfortunately have to give this restaurant poor rating for service! I should have taken the hint from the women whose table we had taken over. We sat for 45 min and had to ask for menus, then after we had finally ordered we were told that a large group was coming in an hour, and they couldn't possibly serve us and them, and since we didn't order enough ( ie an overpriced non alcoholic drink, entree and desert wasn't enough) that they couldn't serve us, so please leave. If we had been load or obnoxious in some way, i could have understood, but we were all there , excited to try a new vegan restaurant, in a very peaceful vegan kind of way! I felt it was poor planning on part of a restauranteur to not be able to deal with a two tables at seven and have them served and cleared by 9, If it is too much, then she should not have taken our reservation, or increased the staffing.
By veganfoodie on 05/04/2008 at 11:07:23
Re: Grezzo Restaurant
I know a waitress who used to work at Grezzo and was unbelievably surprised that NOT ALL OF THE FOOD IS ORGANIC (or even truly raw); even though Alissa claims it to be and waitstaff are told to tell the customers it is. She said it was nearly impossible for the restaurant to keep organic food in stock because of availability and cost. (She is a raw vegan and wouldn't even eat the food prepared at the restaurant.) Are products for sale from Alissa, even on her website, really truly organic, even though it says they are? Apparently, the law doesn't reach that far down to small businesses to regulate how the food is marketed so there is no way for the consumer to tell if they are being lied to or not. If organic is truly important to you, your better off making your food at home. Paying $22 or more for a dish of gourmet veggies you think is organic is one thing, how about finding out now that you paid that much for regular produce?! BUYER BEWARE! Once my friend got to know "insider information" she just couldn't work there anymore. She didn't like lying to the customers. Apparently, Alissa has no problem with that. This lady is incorrigible and will do anything to make a buck.
By klampnor on 02/18/2009 at 11:11:09

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