The Mockingbird

By | March 13, 2019
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Chicken pot pie at The Mockingbird

This past Saturday night I found myself faced with a typical conundrum: I have friends in town- where should we eat? I work for a food magazine for crying out loud, this is what I do. One friend graciously narrowed down his dinner hankering to “comfort food” and I was off to the races.

Let’s be honest, most of us rely on online menus to choose a restaurant anymore. Though it’s a tried and true fact that you return to a place for its atmosphere, hospitality, and whatever stand out dish you had, when going for the first time you can’t rely on anything but what sounds good.

As soon as I read pimento cheese arancini it was settled that we were going to The Mockingbird.

Open just a little over a year and a half, The Mockingbird is a unique diner/upscale comfort food hybrid nestled in The Gulch next to Tansuo. Something about walking into the place set the expectation that not only were we about to have a special evening, but we were going to have fun.

And fun it was! Brought to our table were punchin’ bags – a daily “fruit punch” (that evening’s was cherry and mint) combined with your booze of choice served in a bag. With a bendy straw. We ordered a light rum, a dark rum, and a champagne because… champagne. Besides these quirky (and delicious) delights, they also serve well-crafted, smartly on-trend cocktails like the “Rye Here, Rye Now” (Rittenhouse rye, allspice dram, dry curacao, egg white) which means there’s something on the list for everyone.

The pimento cheese arancini was everything I dreamed it would be and the fried brussels with white balsamic gastrique and blueberry jam were downright excellent. However, the stars of the appetizer round were the pork belly and tatchos. Yup- tatchos. Golden brown nuggets smothered in lamb chili, beer cheese, scallions, pickled onions, and crema. It surprises me that there isn’t a line out the door during happy hour. The pork belly, in a glaze of Italian Calabrian chili, sat on a bed of hazelnut grits with sliced red grapes. Hazelnut in grits is a brand-new idea to me, and thus I was floored. The pop of the grape was perfection and a welcome refreshment from the fat of the belly. I scraped the plate.

Photo 1: punchin bag cocktail
Photo 2: pimento cheese arancini
Photo 3: pork belly and hazelnut grits
Photo 4: tatchos

For our entrees, we ordered the chicken pot pie, beef short rib, and a dish called poultry in motion consisting of caramel chicken draped in a “spicy umami sauce” over Korean fried rice. This dish really swung for the fences and my taste buds were excited. I’m not ashamed to admit that I have thought about that dish every day since.

The Mockingbird serves lunch, dinner, and brunch (which I can’t wait to try). They have a great happy hour and host a ridiculously adorable “tiki taco Tuesday” from 4 – 10 PM. Culinary duo Brian Riggenbach and Mikey Corona are doing it right over in their little corner of The Gulch, each element crafted well, with purpose and a touch of whimsey, reminding us what going out to eat is all about. Yes, it’s about great food, but it should also be great time – even fun!

Take your friends- you’ll be glad you did.

 

More information available at mockingbirdnashville.com

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