The New 'Due Focacceria' on Fairview
Intriguing reviews on Yelp, obtuse website....best thing to do is show up in person at Due Focacceria and figure out what it's all about.
Due Focacceria Ambience
Exterior: The exterior is an improvement over the previous coffee shop look, which became a bit shabby over time....more of a clean, sleek look. The parking lot is just as awful as ever...but we persisted and parked near a planter of grasses.
Interior: The interior could be described as unfinished industrial or roughened
Italian or '20th century trying to be 21st century modern meets 200 year
old building' look. Eclectic combo of sleek and roughly finished to
look unfinished...that's the best I can do
to bring you into the space.
Seating: The seating seems inadequate/non-functional. The whole food prep side
of the building had tabletop along all the windows seating...so not
comfortable for any more than 2 people together since there was no way
to converse. It seems like there was adequate
space for cafe tables that might have served diners in a more
comfortable way.
In the booze and espresso room there were a couple of counter height long tables...that would have worked for a larger group...but were partially filled by groups of 2-3 people. There was also a long bench with 2 cafe tables, but no chairs...where it appeared that you might wait for your espresso. We found it an odd configuration of seating arrangements. There are about 30 seats (the same as Marianne's) but we found none of the options very welcoming. Awkward.
In the booze and espresso room there were a couple of counter height long tables...that would have worked for a larger group...but were partially filled by groups of 2-3 people. There was also a long bench with 2 cafe tables, but no chairs...where it appeared that you might wait for your espresso. We found it an odd configuration of seating arrangements. There are about 30 seats (the same as Marianne's) but we found none of the options very welcoming. Awkward.
No WaitStaff at Due Focacceria: The staff is a terminal
Ordering is Painful |
What we ordered at Due Focacceriea...
As always, we tried to select from 2 different menu categories, so we chose a focaccia and a salad. Since sorrel isn't yet a very common ingredient on many local menus (and since I just created a kale pesto recently), we opted for the sorrel pesto focaccia.....essentially with a base of sorrel pesto as the bottom layer of the sandwich. The pesto was topped with prosciutto and sorrel leaves. We chose the caponata salad with farro, greens, and perfectly-made veggies (eggplant, celery and carrots--all perfectly tender with a hint of celery crispness).Immediate Reaction to Due Focacceria...
Within a few minutes of being there, I announced to John that Due Focacceria was not a very welcoming place. Is that too strong? Maybe...I'll mull my initial response over the next few days. John responded with "That's pretty harsh...but I've found nothing to like."
First, the seating was unappealing.....there were a few people in the
restaurant, but with even those few, the seating options
were....non-existent. We ended up along the window in the 'single'
seats. Okay for two of us...glad we didn't bring anyone else
along for conversation.
Then there was the ordering. If it's dark outside
and you want the customers to do the McDonald's kiosk routine, give us some light. You're trying to read the small menu in poor lighting, then key into the screen...then it tells you to swipe your card....except in the dark, you can't see the dark-colored card reader--kind of a shot in the dark approach. If you want a drink or a receipt to show that you really did manage to order, you have to go to the drink counter and tell the person you're waiting for your receipt. Awkward. If you want to order alcohol, you do this at the same counter, although there are people sitting at the counter having conversations...... Again, awkward.
and you want the customers to do the McDonald's kiosk routine, give us some light. You're trying to read the small menu in poor lighting, then key into the screen...then it tells you to swipe your card....except in the dark, you can't see the dark-colored card reader--kind of a shot in the dark approach. If you want a drink or a receipt to show that you really did manage to order, you have to go to the drink counter and tell the person you're waiting for your receipt. Awkward. If you want to order alcohol, you do this at the same counter, although there are people sitting at the counter having conversations...... Again, awkward.
So on the second try, I managed to get the order in, swipe our card in
the dark, and get a receipt (the girl's team won this round!!). John
had given up....he ordered, then tried to get his cc from his
wallet...in the meantime, our whole order disappeared
because he 'timed out' on the screen. He was now an unhappy camper (John: "I was ready to walk after the terminal ordering labyrinth...and I'm quite techie!").
We retreated to our seats (John: "Weird seats.") and grabbed some water from the cute 'outside
faucet'...the kind you use to attach your garden hose to the outside of your house. It was a rustic touch.....but turning the handle on and off for each glass was, well, awkward as well. The glass glasses were so small, that people were all taking larger disposable glasses for their indoor dining...which seemed a little wasteful when providing slightly larger re-usable glasses would have been an easy fix.
faucet'...the kind you use to attach your garden hose to the outside of your house. It was a rustic touch.....but turning the handle on and off for each glass was, well, awkward as well. The glass glasses were so small, that people were all taking larger disposable glasses for their indoor dining...which seemed a little wasteful when providing slightly larger re-usable glasses would have been an easy fix.
What we tried to drink at Due Focacceria...
We had ordered a chai, so were hoping it would appear immediately since it was such a windy, chilly evening. Not only didn't it arrive right away...it never arrived.I looked at the food 'pick up' counter...where a woman was grabbing her food while running her sleeves through everyone else's food that had yet to be picked up. Not there. I finally went to see if there was a 'drink pick-up' counter, too. Nope. But the guy who had handed me my receipt said 'oh, I didn't see your ticket....I'll make it right away'. After a couple of minutes I went back and then he said he'd bring it to our table when it when it was ready.
A few minutes later a young woman 'awkwardly' brought it to the table....hardly able to keep the chai in the cup...and then didn't really know how to give it to us--she looked really uncomfortable and expressed her indecision in how to deliver the filled to the top cup...because we were sitting along the window, facing away from her....where exactly would you place the cup and saucer? I turned and gently took it from her hands (in my best Marianne's Kitchen balancing style)...for which she seemed grateful. The problem now....if I returned for another meal...where DO you pick up a drink? I have no idea.
The 'awkward' food pick-up stand at Due Focacceria...
Similarly, after a few more minutes, I looked for our food at the 'pick-up' stand. There were many food items there....all chillin' and waiting for someone to give them some attention. But, there were 2Where you pick up your food... |
Due Focacceria: Finally...the food
The food: our conclusion is that the ingredients were high quality, and the person at the 'sandwich station' or 'salad station' who seemed to be prepping the food was doing a very careful, diligent job (there were 4 other people at a back counter ....they seemed to be putting food in plastic containers which were later dumped into bins at the front station that was manned by just the one person. Their exact roles were fairly unclear to us).$14 |
The salad was tasty, although unevenly dressed.
The farro was
perfectly cooked, as were the veggies. But the bites varied in flavor
quite a bit. The serving size was adequate...but many people would
walk away hungry if they didn't add dessert to their
salad lunch....and it certainly wouldn't be a dinner course, even
though the price is $10. It was a fine salad...not an outstanding salad
and not a great value.
Farro Salad $10 |
We returned the chai at Due Focacceria...
The chai was,well, returned to the maker. It was bitter and watery.....and we found it undrinkable. The person who carried it out to us asked us to describe what we found unpleasant, and then explained that they steeped their tea for 4-6 hours. John and I both expected a rich, aromatic drink...and that isn't what this drink was. The barista thought he might have improved it if he had steamed the milk a bit longer...but he had already forgotten to make the drink...so perhaps the pressure was on. They did cheerfully exchange it for a cold brew to go.....so we took our drink for the road.Observing the staff, the kitchen, food handling, health codes, operations, etc.
We always observe the kitchen, health code, organization and staff on our restaurant visits. We came to the conclusion that our description tonight would be 'slow motion confusion'. There were people in street clothes with backpacks walking through the kitchen and grabbing drinks or standing and talking to staff...one later appearing as staff...a bit-um, awkward? The people working all seemed a little dazed. Everything was just like molasses......sort of a slow motion flow that wouldn't end up in disaster if you, as the customer, paid attention and were diligent in finding your order in the various places it might show up.
Many, many employees...maybe 7 or 8...for about a dozen customers. On a
busy night, this could have turned into massive disaster. No one
appeared to be in charge of how things flowed....the one person doing
final food prep would set the food on the 'pick-up'
station...usually with an accompanying ticket to identify it. Then it
just sort of sat there. No apparent order....should the customer pick
it up, is someone going to bring it out to a table......again, awkward.
Due Focacceria: Overall Rating
We'd rate our experience for the evening about a 3 or 4 on a 10 point scale. John might say that was too high. Ordering was painful, seating was odd, the chai didn't appear even after 2 inquiries....and when it arrived, it just wasn't a very good chai. The food appeared at our table due to the diligence of one person...she was the best asset they have. The sandwich was good quality, but missing ingredients on one third of the focaccia...unacceptable for $14. The salad was tasty and the woman prepping worked hard to stack it into a nice pyramid on the plate..but it was uneven in taste and a little light on value at $10.Everything just seemed like slow motion confusion.
The best word we could find to describe the Due Focacceria experience overall: awkward.
Details:
Location: Google Maps
Social Media: Facebook
So, I am kind of amazed you found it open. My wife works across the street, and we go to yoga several times a week driving down Randolph. For two months we drove by with anticipation of some new shop opening there. When it opened, we were excited to try it. We'd leave for our morning yoga hoping to stop by for lunch. It was a sandwich shop, after all. So lunch, right? Well, apparently it is not open for lunch. We have driven by dozens of times at all hours on many different weekdays and weekends. It is never open.
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