The cafe is very much a neighborhood place. It features live music some nights, and the musicians aren't names -- they're usually local Eagle Rockers.
For the most part, the menu could be from a French restaurant 30 years ago: escargots, onion soup, pork Vallé d'Auge. The onion soup has a slightly sweet beef broth and a lot of cheese. The soup of the day will be based on pureed vegetables; one night it was a subtle velouté flavored with zucchini and mushrooms.
As for the escargots, they're quite tender and flavorful, with plenty of garlic butter. The trés moderne pâté (there's a turkey version as well as pork) is flavored with parsley -- and it's served hot, like some kind of light, crumbly meatloaf, with baby greens on the side.
The Caesar salad is a middle-of-the-road version, although the dressing is rather thick with ground Parmesan. The goat cheese salad is greens garnished with hot, nearly melting goat cheese on baguette rounds: a real mouth-filler. The prettiest salad, and the most refreshing, is crab meat with peeled red and pink grapefruit sections.
Entrées come with a sort of potato gratin, a cake of zucchini bound with egg, a hash of sweet peppers and half a baked tomato. They tend to be tasteful and low key.
In fact, Café Beaujolais ought to be the ideal restaurant for people who like to complain about dishes being "drowned" in sauce, because the quantity of sauce can usually be measured in teaspoons. With the rack of lamb (four dainty grilled chops), you get a little pool of meaty brown sauce espagnole. The pork chop Vallé d'Auge comes in just a bit of apple-scented cream sauce. The suprême de poulet au basilic is a chicken breast fried brown with mushrooms and basil wedged under the first joint of a wing. It's served with a smidgen of Port sauce and some chopped tomatoes.
There's no sauce on the steak grillé, but it makes a bold display: It's a round steak pounded until it's as broad as a dinner plate but only about an eighth of an inch thick. Tender and just medium rare, though with ostentatious grill marks, it fans out like a giant butterfly on a plate piled high with French fries and a few bits of diced tomato.
The most interesting fish I've had was a special of escolar, which played off its rich flesh with a fennel-scented cream sauce. The other fish dishes seemed to take this simplicity thing a little too far. Although the fish was always perfectly cooked, I didn't get much from the cream sauce on the salmon, and there was scarcely any of the advertised balsamic vinegar on the pavéof rare albacore.
After this, it's surprising to find so much chocolate sauce swirling around the pear tart, but nobody ever seems to complain about drowning in chocolate sauce. In fact, the desserts may be the best part of the meal -- a devastating dark chocolate mousse, a tarte au citron that is really more like a squat cylinder of luscious lemon curd on a cookie, occasional special pastries from the bakery.
You can also eat up the street at the bakery, although the menu there is limited to soups, salads, sandwiches and pastries. Apart from croque-monsieur, they're pretty much like American sandwiches plus a little basil. Take the turkey breast: It has a sweet, clean taste abetted by the freshness of the baguette bread.
You might consider two reasons for choosing the bakery over the cafe: (1) It's open all day. (2) Breads and pastries to go.
Specialties: pâté, escargots, rack of lamb, pear tart, lemon tart with fresh meringue.
-- Charles Perry
Times Staff Writer
Times Staff Writer


