

Description Ĭaffe Mingo is an Italian restaurant on 21st Avenue in northwest Portland's Northwest District.

He admits that everything is "different" in the new kitchen at this new location.

With a new kitchen, smart digs, the MAX shuttling out Caffe Mingo regulars, and appreciative Beavertonians eating Mingo up, it's no wonder Uhnak is enthusiastic. More training and a specials chalkboard would be merciful solutions. Perhaps having to muddle through detailed descriptions of four nightly specials makes the wait staff neglect to notice missing plates, uncleared dishes or the right time to offer dessert choices. Marring this near perfection, sadly, was sloppy service on more than one occasion. But worth the trip to Beaverton by itself is Uhnak's panna cotta ($6), a chilled cloud of cooked cream topped with raspberries and blueberries. The chocolate mousse cake ($6) is better, at once dense and light, with the mousse contrasted by a crunchy amaretti cookie crust. A dry cornmeal pound cake ($6) is saved by orange cream and fresh berries. Uhnak manages without a pastry chef, and his desserts are served on homey, mismatched dishes that lend an Italian mother's touch to the presentation.
Mingo beaverton full#
At the new place, the dish is on the menu ($8 half, $16 full order), but the description doesn't mention the option of ordering the even-larger serving, which feeds four people ($32). It's a well-established tradition for Caffe Mingo regulars to request a family-style serving of penne al sugo di carne, a pasta dish tossed with beef braised in Chianti and espresso. The New York strip steak ($22) was served more medium than medium-rare but made tasty with a horseradish butter. The orecchiette with sausage ($8 half, $16 full order) is a satisfying pasta dish, the richness of the noodles rounded out with fennel and cherry tomatoes. The crust is thin and slightly crisp at the edges, with toppings ranging from pesto and chicken ($10) to mushrooms and rosemary ($11) to the excellent sausage, tomato and mozzarella ($12). The asparagus with lemon aioli ($7) is another good bet.įor a shared light meal, opt for a pizza. The arugula salad ($10)-dressed in lemon oil and paired with parmesan and bresaola, a thinly sliced, air-cured, salted beef-is a classic, delicious combination well executed. The chef describes Mingo's menu as "upscale, simple but elegant," and the starters deliver just that. Uhnak's Italian cooking skills are well honed after working at Pazzo (with Tabla's Matt Johnson) and a four-year stint as sous chef at Caffe Mingo (with Vito DiLullo, now of Ciao Vito).īefore Mingo opened, Uhnak had the rare good fortune to design the kitchen. Michael Uhnak, formerly a chef at the old and now the opening chef of the new, is amped about Mingo, and with good reason. But it's the food at this cleaner, crisper version of Caffe Mingo that poses the question: Is newer better? Clever glass wall insets display bright dried lemons and oranges that lend the place a cheerful, casual feel.Ī date meal or a family dinner seems appropriate in this atmosphere.

Inside, the decor seems inspired by a high-end loft, as the spaces of the bar, private room and dining room are loosely defined by visual cues-a round wooden table here, a handful of lime-green booths there, and rice-paper lighting sculptures everywhere. Mingo, as the new cafe is dubbed, is three times the size of its paterfamilias and sports a wall of modern, window-laden, rolling garage doors that look like a feature in a glossy architectural magazine. So it goes with Mingo, the new incarnation of Northwest Portland's Caffe Mingo that launched last March at The Round in Beaverton.Ĭaffe Mingo owners Michael Cronan and Michael Tocchini decided to launch a Beaverton outpost in the suburb's most downtown-esque location, a sea-green semicircle of angular, forward-looking condominiums stacked atop retail outlets. Recent conquests often get more loving attention than old stalwarts. Empire-building can be a tough job, especially for restaurant owners and chefs.
