Vancouver Sun

RIGHT ON TARGET

Eatery expands its menu

- MIA STAINSBY

Sometimes I walk into a room and suddenly feel freshly showered and laundered. Bows and Arrows is like that — natural light washes over you (in daylight, at least) and the white walls, spare wood furnishing­s (including a gorgeous 26-foot fir table) and great music floats you to a Zen place.

It’s always been a great spot for serious coffee and a dessert, but a few months ago it started flexing muscle, hiring a chef to do dinners — and a pretty serious chef at that.

Like most chefs, Kris Barnholden has been on the move. In Vancouver, he’s done pastries and chocolates at Chocolate Arts, cooked at Parkside and Lucy Mae Brown (both gone), ran Mis Trucos and Le Tab (also both gone), and cooked in Toronto at Ursa and in Montreal at Bronte (again, both gone). He’s also cooked at Chez Bruce in London, and Blue Hill at Stone Barns outside New York.

Le Tab, Barnholden said, was the Chinook word for “the table,” and lent to the idea of Vancouver’s mash-up of cultures. There he unleashed his creative mind with dishes like pureed pumpkin and celeriac masqueradi­ng in egg yolk and egg white trompe l’oeil. Dishes required solid techniques (including fermenting, curing, pickling, smoking), but proved challengin­g for a city that loves its predictabl­e chain restaurant­s. He closed Le Tab in February.

At Bows and Arrows, he and owners Drew Johnson and Nate Sabine (who started as coffee roasters in Victoria) are driven by quality ingredient­s, ethical sourcing, and good value.

“We have similar philosophi­es about sourcing, knowing where food comes from and its traceabili­ty,” says Barnholden.

When I went for dinner (they offer breakfast and lunch as well), it started with an order of housemade bread ($3), which can be problemati­c — when it’s good, I eat too much of it. Which I did.

A squash and apple tartine with cashew cheese over sourdough bread ($7) added even more bread to my meal. The dish is a vegan attractant, wholesome and delicious.

Smoked lamb ribs ($9 for three detached ribs) glistened with a peach glaze and puffed rice added a touch of crunch. Nicely done, considerin­g the kitchen lacks a ventilatio­n system and thus, no grilling or frying. There’s a smoker outdoors so the lamb inhaled smoke. I wanted to suck on the lamb bones like lollipops.

Lobster mushroom rice with soy egg yolk ($15) sent me on a lobster

hunt and I came up empty. Not surprising when it’s lobster mushrooms, not lobster and mushrooms in the dish.

The egg yolk is cured in soy sauce, which firms and enriches. The rice is cooked in kombu broth and the dish is sprinkled with crispy garlic, shallots and puffed wild rice. It wasn’t as fluffed and delicious as

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 ?? PHOTOS: MIA STAINSBY ?? Bows and Arrows on Fraser Street is open for coffee and lunch daily and for dinner from Wednesday to Saturday.
PHOTOS: MIA STAINSBY Bows and Arrows on Fraser Street is open for coffee and lunch daily and for dinner from Wednesday to Saturday.
 ?? PHOTOS: MIA STAINSBY ?? Squash and apple tartine with cashew cheese over sourdough bread is delicious.
PHOTOS: MIA STAINSBY Squash and apple tartine with cashew cheese over sourdough bread is delicious.

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