DINING OUT -- MARY FURR
- Share via
Just up Beach Boulevard past Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach is
Mother’s Market and Kitchen -- a fascinating bazaar for the
health-conscious who want to eat well and buy organic, pesticide-free
food in one stop.
At the entrance are cottage garden carts filled with tiny pots of
labeled herbs, such as medicinal, “burpless” cucumbers and spritely mint.
Step inside the Market to find cook books and magazines, wander among the
shelves of vitamins, check the fresh organic-grown fruits and vegetables
or the deli display of falafel, dolmas, cheeses, salads and sandwiches of
tuna salad and “range grown turkey.” Go further on to an entire section
of cosmetics.
Half of Mother’s is a market, half is a kitchen with an eight-stool
counter and tables for groups -- this day a welcoming refuge inside
rain-spattered windows overlooking the old Newland House.
A tiny grotto in one corner adds the sound of running water to the
busy cafe. The extensive menu has soups, salads, grilled sandwiches,
pastas and entrees -- some “vegan” that do not contain any animal
products, some of tofu, a soy bean curd. From the daily selection, I
chose the Parthenon special ($6.50), two whole grain spanakopita -- hot
flaky triangles like a turn over -- filled with spinach and paired with a
wonderful Greek salad of mixed greens, spinach leaves, quartered
artichoke hearts, handfuls of Greek olives, cucumbers and tomato heavily
sprinkled with chunks of feta cheese.
The soup, which varies daily, was an overflowing cup of fresh
vegetables with a “meat” ball that lacked much flavor. Salt is used
sparingly at Mother’s, which may have been the problem. The tofu lemon
piccata ($7.50) has quarter-inch thick tofu squares sauteed in a tart
lemon sauce dotted with tiny pungent capers that really make the dish.
Included is a serving of forgettable brown rice, short fat grains without
much flavor.
Mother’s Kitchen also offers Mexican food. Nachos ($5.95) are a great
appetizer with crispy thin corn chips, fresh guacamole, beans and melted
cheese topped with olives and chilies. The combo platter ($7.25) has an
excellent tamale, the masa bound with canola oil (no lard) with a zesty
filling. Burgers with a pureed mushroom, vegetable and grain patty are
not so successful -- for non-vegetarians it’s best to stick with dishes
which do not imitate meat products.
The extensive fresh juice bar can easily substitute for a dessert --
the tropical paradise shake (16oz. $4.25) has a smooth combination of
frozen rice dream (non-daily) with pineapple-coconut juice, orange juice
and banana.
Owners Bruce and Sharon MacGurn opened the Huntington Beach Mother’s
Market, their second, in 1984 “to provide the freshest natural foods
available -- where you can taste and feel the difference.”
Manager Amanda Tremp said there is no better time than March, National
Nutrition Month, to fulfill your New Year’s resolution to eat right just
like Mother always told you.
FYI
o7 MOTHER’S MARKET AND KITCHEN
f7
ADDRESS: 19770 Beach Blvd., in the Newland Center, Huntington Beach
PHONE: (714) 963-6667
HOURS: 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily
MISC.: Credit Cards accepted
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.