Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Pigeon Hole Cafe


Pigeon Hole is as much a social scene as a café. You go there expecting that you will know many of the customers - and that is partly because the place is always crowded with regulars who return again and again for Emma's great coffee and Jay's perfectly-pitched food.

This café would be right at home in New York's Lower East Side or the 11th in Paris. It is quite small with less than 20 seats inside and a few more on the footpath outside. It sits on the fringe of the city in a residential area where people walk to work, stopping in here for their first fix of coffee for the day.

Saturday morning is a real buzz with regulars and visitors claiming tables here from early in the morning. The tables turn over regularly so there is rarely a long wait.

Dishes for the day are chalked on a blackboard on the wall. There are usually three or four breakfast dishes and a similar number of lunch offerings.

Pigeon Hole is famous for its panini which anchor both the breakfast and lunch menus. The fillings tend to vary from day to day but you can usually be assured that the sought-after breakfast panino filled with long-cooked onions and gruyere cheese will be available.

Two other long-time favourites at breakfast are the house-cooked baked beans and the baked eggs with onions and jamon. There is also a comforting dish of yoghurt with fruit and crunch from nuts such as pistachios. A recent addition has been a flavour-packed dish of baked eggs with taleggio and parsley and preserved lemon. The interplay between the tang of the preserved lemon and the punch of the cow's milk cheese from northern Italy form a perfect backdrop to the richness of the perfectly baked eggs.

At lunch there is always a soup and a savoury panino available. We fondly remember a chicken, carrot and trofie soup which consisted of shreds of chicken, circles of carrot and the rolled pasta swimming in a very good stock, punctuated with green flecks of parsley. The trofie is a pasta that is hand-rolled and twisted to form short, tapered shapes that are ideal for a soup.

We have also enjoyed a panino stuffed with meat balls and slathered with grated cheese. The flavour packed into this parcel was amazing.

Jay has increased the bread production now, working as a baker at night and a chef during the day! Every morning the shelves now groan with his flavoursome loaves of perfect bread which you can buy any time of day. The sourdough loaves are particular favourites and you can be assured that they are the 'real deal' with no shortcuts taken.

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