“Thank you so much for supporting us this past Saturday at your venue. All the women had only positive things to say about your food, service & space. I can’t thank you enough for making this one of the most successful scholarship luncheon’s to date!
I look forward to future events!”
- Diana F., Arbutus, MD
“Their light-fare is extremely reasonable and includes the most delicious large, all lump meat crab cakes…”
- Elizabeth W.
“The service was impeccable and courteous. I will plan all our family events at Patrick’s!”
-John A.
“I just wanted to thank you for a wonderful time…I would recommend Patrick’s anytime.”
-Gail R., Timonium, MD
“Many, many thanks for the warmth all of our guests received at Patrick’s. Your staff is always pleasant and hospitable, so accommodating. The Chef (Carole) prepared the most delicious entrees, far beyond our expectations…my favorite being the fresh salmon.”
-Evelyn & Terry, Hunt Valley, MD
“We had such a wonderful anniversary dinner at your restaurant. The crab cake, Prime Rib, chicken Marsala received raves!”
-Dick & Eudell, Lutherville, MD
“Your servers were attentive, professional and most kind. All my guests were impressed – many from out of the area want to come back.”
-Ernestine S., Towson, MD
“The room & tables were beautiful! Our guest was very impressed.”
-Louise B.
“Three of us had crab cakes and they were the best we’ve ever tasted – wow! My husband had the Sour beef which he loved.”
-Courtney
“All my family and close friends thought the food, preparation and presentation was outstanding. The service was impeccable and courteous. I will plan all our family events at Patrick’s.”
-John A.
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Baltimore
Magazine
February 2008 Issue
Patrick's of Cockeysville : Off
The Eaten Path
There was a certain amount of déjà vu as
I walked into Patrick’s of Cockeysville on a recent visit. The familiar
shamrocks are still on the door, and the traditional décor hasn’t
changed much since I was last there nine years ago. But behind the scenes, there
are big differences.
Carole M. Brosso, a Culinary Institute
of America grad, is in the kitchen now, and she and her mother, Mary Lou Brosso,
have owned the restaurant since April 2006. The mother-daughter duo is adding
an imprint in subtle ways.
Many of the restaurant’s
signature seafood and beef dishes are still on the menu, probably a comfort to
regular customers at this neighborhood spot in a suburban strip-shopping center.
There is also a nod to former chef Tomas Sanz, a Tio Pepe alum who died two years
ago, with Spanish themed weekends every other month and menu items like shrimp
in garlic sauce and pine-nut rolls. Diners also will find pub grub in the lively
bar area—at least, it was rockin’ the night we were there with an
older clientele. Read
More>
Click
here to read the full Baltimore Magazine - Off the Eaten Path article.
_____________________________________________________________________________
(Colby Ware/Special to the Sun)
The more things change, the
more they stay the same. Patrick’s of Cockeysville has many of the same
characteristics it did when I reviewed it 11 years ago; but the new owners, Mary
Lou and Carole Brosso (new as of last year) have tweaked the menu in small ways.
As was true before the Brossos took over, classic Maryland
seafood dishes are still the star, while the house specialty is
a very good
sangria and the Spanish pine nut roll rivals Tio Pepe’s (not surprisingly,
given that the executive chef was for years Tomas Sanz, formerly of Tio Pepe).
The daily specials are where Chef Carole shows what she can do. You’ll find
my review of Patrick’s in next Sunday’s Modern Life section.
-
Posted by Elizabeth Large on July 1, 2007 at 7:17 AM
_____________________________________________________________________________
Mary Lou Brosso and daughter Carole Brosso bought Patrick's of Cockeysville last
year.
(Sun photo by Colby Ware)
By Elizabeth Large
Sun Restaurant
Critic
Originally published on July 8, 2007
I
last ate at Patrick's of Cockeysville 11 years ago, but I still remember that
one of the Lite Fare dishes was sour beef and dumplings.
Amazingly enough,
it still is. Which says something about the rest of the menu. The more things
change, the more things stay the same at Patrick's.
This is -- how shall
I put it tactfully? -- a sedate restaurant. At least it was on the weeknight we
were there. The maitre d' told us he had made 55 orders of bananas Foster flambe
at table sides the Saturday night before, so clearly things are sometimes rocking
at Patrick's.
It was once an Irish restaurant and pub, as evidenced by
the shamrock on the door, but Patrick is long gone. The place was bought in 1995
by Bill Graul, who had owned the Golden Arm restaurant after Johnny Unitas. He
brought along Tomas Sanz as executive chef.
Sanz had been
a chef at Tio Pepe, and added many of Tio Pepe's signature dishes to Patrick's
menu, from the shrimp in garlic sauce to the pine nut roll cake. He had also owned
Thompson's Sea Girt House in the early '90s, and some of his seafood specialties
there are still on the Patrick's menu.
Last year, a year after
Sanz died, Patrick's was sold to Mary Lou Brosso and her daughter, Carole Brosso,
who had owned Buddies Pub & Jazz Club on North Charles Street. (Carole is
now Patrick's executive chef.) Their culinary heritage is Italian.
The
point of bringing up all this is that after all this change sour beef and dumplings
are still on the Lite Fare menu.
Portions are still enormous.
Order the crab skins, and you'll get four baked potato halves with very little
of the potato scooped out, topped with crab imperial and Monterey Jack cheese.
In what universe is this an appetizer?
The pleasant chicken liver pate
is served by the large ice cream scoopful, with grapes, grilled ciabatta and other
condiments on the side.
If the "combination filet mignon and crab
cake" is under entrees on the specials menu, it probably won't surprise you
that it costs $26.99. The tender filet mignon isn't enormous, but it's the amount
of meat I would normally eat by itself. The fat crab cake is made with large lumps
and has so little binding it needs the smooth hollandaise that comes on the side.
You'll still have room for the two vegetables that are included, perhaps succotash
and a large serving of creamy mashed potatoes.
What might surprise you
is that the combination entree comes with a hot fudge sundae.
The
Brossos seem to have kept as much of the old menu as they could, which makes sense.
Why alienate customers who have been coming there regularly for years?
But the specials menu seems to be where chef Brosso struts her stuff a bit, with
dishes like "explosive shrimp and Andouille sausage over bowtie pasta."
The jumbo shrimp are arranged in a "tower" of garlic bread stuck in
the pasta, and are so spicy that they will set your hair on fire; but if heat
and carbs are your thing, you'll like this dish.
I preferred the veal
francaise, fixed the old-fashioned way with a light egg batter and a white wine,
lemon and butter sauce. The kitchen had run out of coconut- breaded tilapia with
Caribbean pepper jelly, and maybe that was just as well. The substitution, grouper
with artichokes, tomatoes and fresh basil, was as substantial as we had come to
expect, and the fish was very fresh, cooked to perfection, and given some pizzazz
with its vegetable topping.
About the only out-and-out failure
among our dishes was the shrimp in garlic sauce. The sauce, so addictive at some
Spanish restaurants, was acid-tasting and too salty.
The best
of our appetizers were fried red tomatoes, not an easy feat to pull off. Even
though the thick slices were perfectly ripe, they didn't fall apart. Fried in
olive oil and arranged with grated Romano and fresh basil, they were the hit of
the evening.
No, wait, the hit would have to be the bananas
Foster, created at our table with butter, brown sugar, rum, banana liqueur and
fresh orange juice. They were prepared with such flamboyance and Latin charm that
I was reminded of another restaurant, Tio Pepe.
Food: ** 1/2
Service: *** 1/2
Atmosphere:
** 1/2