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Angus Beef Steakhouse

Steaks good enough for a lobbyist, at prices a civil servant can afford once in a while
By ROBERT NADEAU  |  January 23, 2006
1.0 1.0 Stars

Angus Beef Steakhouse is in the newish Bulfinch Hotel near North Station. It’s also not far from City Hall, the state Department of Mental Health, and the O’Neil Federal Building, and serves steaks good enough for a lobbyist at prices a civil servant can afford once in a while. The appetizers and desserts we had were pedestrian, the service was uneven, and the wine list was overpriced. But given that it has little serious competition in the immediate area, Angus has time to fill out its portfolio. And for a good steak on your way to or from a Garden attraction, you can hardly do better.WHERE’S THE BEEF? At Angus, and it’s good.

If you can’t skip appetizers, you have the money, and you don’t have the ethical qualms, then the fresh foie gras ($21) is the only thing to have. It’s so rich you can split it. Basically, eating foie gras is like eating meat-flavored butter, but this is just sautéed lightly and is “light” enough — an odd adjective for foie gras — that it becomes like eating meat-flavored custard. The garnish is caramelized apples, good enough, and a caramelized strawberry, which takes on some of the meaty characteristics of the sautéed “watermelon steak” at Metropolitan Club. And a biscuit they could just throw away.

For a regular appetizer, the portabella mushroom ($12), layered with other mushrooms and a creamy garlic sauce, is rather meaty, too. But onion soup au gratin ($7) relies on what the menu frankly describes as “beef base” when it ought to start with stock and an enormous number of caramelized onions. It does get almost as much onion flavor as beef flavor into the broth, and not too much salt, but the topping is the usual mushy bread and melted Swiss cheese. Okay, one more time: 1) it’s supposed to taste like onions; 2) any bread in it should be fried like a crouton or very stale or toasted so it retains some texture; and 3) the cheese is a garnish, not a fondue. I don’t want to have to talk to you about this again.

For entrées, you have a choice of about 13 things, of which five are steaks, one is “surf and turf,” and another is rack of lamb. And you’re sitting in the Angus Beef Steakhouse. Is the picture coming into focus yet?

For the nearsighted, I would recommend the porterhouse steak ($35), some 24 ounces (probably weighed before cooking and bone-in, but this is still a very large piece of red meat). The porterhouse is the reviewer’s pick because it has a sirloin side and a tenderloin (or filet) side, and because of that it’s the hardest steak to cook correctly. The filet side tends to be cut thinner because it is more expensive, but it also cooks faster because it’s better marbled. The Angus Beef program selects prime and the top third of choice-grade beef, all quite decently marbled, and the restaurant named after it does a good job in the kitchen, even with the porterhouse. Mine was medium-rare as ordered, on both sides. Moreover, both sides were delectably tender and fully flavored, where an inferior porterhouse will divide these characteristics down the T-bone. I didn’t taste a lot of age, just very high-grade beef correctly cut and cooked. The original restaurant is in Montreal, so the steak was covered with cracked pepper in the Montreal style.

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