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Simple arithmetic

John & George adds up, but not to much more than average
Restaurant Review | Search restaurants | Archives


By Dave Faries
Staff Writer, The Prague Post
September 20th, 2006 issue

Cookies, cakes, and café favorites served in style by the Lennon Wall
By my count, there were 90 legs in one of the dining rooms at John & George. This was the tally from my first visit to the new place by the Lennon Wall. Two of the legs were mine, and 24 belonged to spiders — although that's more of an assumption, as I didn't get close enough to make certain they had a full allotment. The remainder were nailed to chairs or benches.

I know this because, after bringing out a menu, the waitress apparently forgot about her solitary indoor guest. She and other staff members yammered in the next room, and trays clinked as one of them returned from serving folks lounging in the garden. But she never returned to my table.

So after about 15 minutes, I started to count things.

A well-trained, professional staff knows the state of every guest at every table in a crowded and boisterous room. The best can recite, at any moment, which group will shortly call for another round of drinks, who is ready for dessert and when to approach that business lunch with the tab. But even rookie wait staff shouldn't forget a lone mathematician.

Nor should a restaurant of any caliber pour beer from cans. Pop-top Gambrinus tastes pretty much like stale Krušovice — tinny, with a residual character similar to loam or mulch.

John & George

Velkopřevorské nám. 4
Prague 1–Malá Strana
Tel. 257 217 736
Open daily 9 a.m.–10 p.m.

Food
Service
Atmosphere
Overall

Such was my introduction to this new café/restaurant, hidden in a drab field-gray building that must terrify occupants of the French Embassy across the square. There are some nods to Francophilic tastes on the menu, such as a pedestrian quiche Lorraine. But the crust fared badly in its battle against time, apparently having spent much of the day in a showcase. Either that or the kitchen purchases chewy, flavorless commercial pie crust and fills it with a substantial mélange, heavy on the cheese. The result is smoky, with some tartness and a nice, mellow finish. Unfortunately, the mixed greens served alongside aged poorly as well, showing flecks of brown around the edges.

Otherwise, the emphasis is on pasta and other simple dishes, the pasta with Parma ham and sun-dried tomatoes marking the simplest presentation of all. Consider the difficulty of simmering flat noodles slightly past the al dente point, shaking them with olive oil and tossing in a few slivers of meat and tomato. You have to appreciate the kitchen's refusal to overburden the dish with heavy sauces or discordant flavors. But you also have to recognize the entry-level nature of the combination.

From the Menu
  • Carrot cream soup 50 Kč
  • Pickled herring 82 Kč
  • Goat cheese 115 Kč
  • Pasta with Parma ham 139 Kč
  • Quiche Lorraine 80 Kč
  • Poached Williams pear 80 Kč
  • Espresso 55 Kč
  • Canned beer 35 Kč

Pickled herring is even easier: two thin, gently brined fillets paired with a quite-sour lemon créme fraiche. The sauce beats down sharper elements in the preserved fish, making for a curiously satisfying but all-too-common plate — perfect with an iced vodka, less so against a timid metallic beer.

Only a few items push the boundaries of elementary cooking. One is a rather blasé carrot soup, a basic puree deriving richness from a swath of the now-ubiquitous créme fraiche (as if the kitchen mixes up a batch each day and ladles it into everything) and peppery bitterness from a sprinkle of fresh herbs. The other is a beautiful and mild goat cheese, initially tart with an essential creaminess and a little waft of something like newly cut hay on the finish, warmed on a piece of toast. The rarebit rests on a bed of passable mixed greens glistened by honey. Adding a dabble of sharply sweet dressing transforms mundane lettuce into something interesting and complements the mild, meadowy goat cheese. It's a nice idea, not played out as well as possible thanks to less-than-stellar greens, but worthwhile nonetheless.

Given all that, why did I come away liking this place? They turn out some respectable desserts, such as a whole Williams pear poached in wine, and very good coffee. And despite the first-visit service fiasco (and watching things break down a bit on subsequent visits), I found the staff surprisingly convivial. You feel compelled to forgive their blunders.

John & George falters in other ways, too. I just haven't stopped to count them yet.

Dave Faries can be reached at dfaries@praguepost.com


Other articles in Night & Day (20/09/2006):

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