Albuquerque Journal

CLASSY CARRYOUT

St. James Tearoom provides a special take-home experience

- BY RICHARD S. DARGAN FOR THE JOURNAL

For many locals, a visit to St. James Tearoom is a treasured holiday tradition, a chance to escape the rush of Christmas and New Year’s and decompress for a couple of hours with friends and tea and artfully prepared bites.

So how does the experience rate when takeout is the only option? How much do you lose when you remove the plush, curtained booths, the costumed servers, the multilevel silver trays and the porcelain teapots?

To find out, I pulled up the website on a recent Saturday, put in an order and drove down to the tearoom on the southwest corner of Osuna and Edith. Founder Mary Alice Higbie and her son, Daniel, moved the operation to this secluded, tastefully landscaped spot after they outgrew their original location near Old Town.

Opening a restaurant is a long-shot propositio­n; launching a tearoom in sun-drenched, laid-back Albuquerqu­e is almost prepostero­us. But that’s what the Higbies did back in 1999, and they’ve made it work since then through creativity and attention to detail. They change the menu frequently to suit the seasons and roll out events such as a Harry Potterthem­ed service so that there’s always a reason to come back. To say they have a following is an understate­ment: If you wait until November to book a table for the holidays, you’ll be out of luck.

Dining-out restrictio­ns necessitat­ed by COVID-19 have challenged the Higbies, but instead of folding up shop, they’ve created a wellorgani­zed, convenient takeout system. You order online and then select from several scheduled pickup times. When you arrive at the tearoom, you’ll park in one of the numbered parking spaces and text them with your name and space number, and a server brings the goods out to you. I arrived right on time for my 4:30 pickup, sent a text and the server materializ­ed in about 20 seconds.

The four tea options — regular, gluten-free, vegan and nut-free — include three courses of food and three teas with all the accouterme­nts. There also are a few à la carte options, including six-packs of frozen beef Wellington ($23.95).

The outgoing menu, organized into two acts with an intermissi­on, is based on “The Nutcracker,” Peter Ilich Tchaikovsk­y’s 1892 ballet. Many of the items are named for characters in the ballet.

I ordered one regular tea ($45.52) and one gluten-free ($50.49) version. The savories, sweets and breads are packed in separate cardboard boxes along with three 1-ounce servings of tea in silver envelopes. You also get sugar (granulated and lumps), tea bags and a handy pamphlet titled “Your Guide to Teatime at Home” with instructio­ns for preparing the tea and reheating the food.

The highlight of the savory treats that made up Act 1 was Godfather Drosselmey­er’s Beef Wellington. St. James has perfected the art of beef Wellington, turning out succulent blocks of tenderloin wrapped in crisp but not greasy pastry shells. The meat cooked to medium-well when it was reheated for the recommende­d five minutes

in a 315-degree oven. Its heaviness was spelled by an excellent cucumber tea sandwich with roasted turkey, orange and cranberry cream cheese that tastes like a sandwich you’d make with Thanksgivi­ng leftovers. The savory menu is rounded out with creamed Brussels sprouts and mushrooms, a truffled potato and an exceptiona­l cheddar quiche, the creamy filling held in an exquisitel­y light, flaky crust.

The savories were backstoppe­d by a strong, rich Indian Assam black tea in which the leaves were formed into small pellets. The Intermissi­on portion of the meal consisted of soda bread and cream scones served with sugarplum-scented black tea. The bite-sized soda bread, freighted with chocolate chips and rolled in coarse sugar, can be eaten alone, but the cream scone pairs beautifull­y with a delicious cranberry curd and clotted cream. The sugarplum tea, a China black tea with plum bits and sparkling sugar crystals, was spicy and a little tart, making it a good match for the buttery breads.

Act 2 brings a colorful variety of sweets, from a rich chocolate truffle rolled in nuts to a tart, airy framboise custard. Two baked goods — a small gingerbrea­d cake with lemon glaze and two plump purple sugar cookies rolled in coarse sugar and sandwiched around a cream filling — showcase St. James’ skill at creating small bites appropriat­e for the season. All of it was terrific, and the accompanyi­ng Sleigh Bells Herbal Tea, chock-full of oranges, almonds, dried apples, cranberrie­s and sparkling sugar crystals, was like Christmas in a cup.

The regular and gluten-free selections were similar in both content and taste. If you don’t treat the experience like an eating competitio­n, you’ll have leftovers for the next day, and the tea should last even longer.

Craft and creativity make St. James Tearoom a special experience, even in takeout mode.

 ?? RICHARD S. DARGAN/FOR THE JOURNAL ?? Savory offerings at St. James include beef Wellington, creamed Brussels sprouts and mushrooms, truffled potato, cheddar quiche and a cucumber tea sandwich with roasted turkey, and orange and cranberry cream cheese.
RICHARD S. DARGAN/FOR THE JOURNAL Savory offerings at St. James include beef Wellington, creamed Brussels sprouts and mushrooms, truffled potato, cheddar quiche and a cucumber tea sandwich with roasted turkey, and orange and cranberry cream cheese.
 ??  ?? Sweets for two: framboise custard, gingerbrea­d cake with lemon glaze, sugarplum cookies and truffles.
Sweets for two: framboise custard, gingerbrea­d cake with lemon glaze, sugarplum cookies and truffles.
 ??  ?? St. James’ gluten-free versions of cream scones and soda bread are similar in quality to the regular versions.
St. James’ gluten-free versions of cream scones and soda bread are similar in quality to the regular versions.

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