Emmaus: 187 Rue Principale (May 2016)

My spouse and I dined at 187 Rue Principale for dinner on a Saturday evening in mid-May 2016. We booked our table using the Open Table reservation system, although the restaurant also accepts reservations via telephone. The restaurant is open daily for breakfast and lunch, and for dinner on Tuesdays through Saturdays. The restaurant has a private parking lot in the rear, or you can find parking spaces on the street in front of the establishment (those public street parking spots impose a 2 hour time limit).

187 Rue Principale (which in French means 187 Main Street, their location) opened in late 2014 and is located in Emmaus in a portion of the former Main Street (furniture) Gallery space. The sign above the front door does not really indicate that it offers dining, other than the tables set on the front flagstone patio. The space looks small from the outside, but it offers dining in two areas inside. The main dining room features a small bar (with a granite surface fronted by red leather bar stools), wrought-iron railings, a window that offers a glimpse into the kitchen, and myriad tables, many of which share a red leather banquette against one wall. Walk up a few steps to the second dining area, which features another long banquette against one wall. High ceilings, exposed ductwork, hardwood floors, leather chairs, and white tablecloths complete the look, along with some folksy flourishes featuring roosters.

The restaurant serves French cuisine with a molecular gastronomy flair. Each dish is complex, and the chef uses local ingredients whenever possible. The chef, Dustin Selvaggio, has worked at the Glasbern, Edge, and the (now closed) Farmhouse. We started with the chef’s amuse bouche, which was a sphere of hibiscus and lavender that popped/exploded in your mouth when you chewed it. As an appetizer, we shared the pork belly, followed by the restaurant’s version of a salad Lyonnaise (greens with a 65-degree egg, cauliflower, duck crackling crumbles. The restaurant served a delicious and clearly house-made sourdough bread between our salad course and our main course; while this is the French tradition for placement in the meal, we would have enjoyed the bread more thoroughly if they had served it earlier during our meal (because it was really unique and delicious!). Appetizers were pricey – most in the $20 range, but some could cost as much as $37 for the Hudson Valley foie gras! (We occasionally see Hudson Valley foie on local restaurant menus, but we never ever see it offered at that price!) We anticipated ordering the rabbit tasting and the beef cheeks, but disappointingly, although the restaurant listed those dishes on their online menu, they were not offered on the night that we dined. Instead, for entrees, we ordered the coq au vin (two pieces of Frenched breast and drumette, served with two preparations of leeks as well as carrots and mushrooms with a wine sauce on the side; this dish was delicious but did not remind us of a traditional coq au vin at all) and the duck breast (which was served medium, without the server inquiring about our desired doneness even though we would have deferred to the chef, along with a tiny rhubarb/cherry tart, spaghetti squash, and mashed yams). The dessert menu offers very few (non-crepe) desserts, along with several varieties of sweet crepes. We chose the chocolate cake, mainly because our waiter informed us that there was only one serving left, so we thought that it must be good! (We were the first table to be seated for dinner service, so the fact that they were nearly out of the chocolate cake was surprising; was this not a restaurant where they could just bake some more chocolate cake?) Note that the menu posted online offered more entrée selections than what were actually offered on the night that we dined (perhaps 10 online versus only 6 or so at the restaurant), so be flexible and do not arrive with the idea that you must try a particular dish.

We tried to dine at this restaurant when it first opened in November of 2014, but we encountered some issues and left before dining. We had not realized that the restaurant was BYOB when it first opened while it was awaiting its liquor license, and we had hoped to enjoy a cocktail with our lunch. Our second issue on our initial visit was that although we were the only patrons in the restaurant, the host seated us in the upper-level dining area, without a view of the beautiful bar and kitchen. Lastly, we had expected to order from the more elaborate dinner menu, but only the brunch menu was available. (The brunch menu features both sweet and savory crepes and tartines [which are similar to an open-faced sandwich], which was not what we had wanted to eat that day.) Our second attempt to dine at 187 Rue Principale was much more successful!

Our server Denis explained the intricacies and the components of each dish. He affected an appropriately French condescending attitude, particularly at the end of our meal when he insulted us by acting as if we were complete morons because we inquired as to how to leave a gratuity. (We reviewed the bill on the provided iPad and used our finger to sign before we realized that there was no opportunity to tip.) There are many ways that he could have nicely informed us that service was included. (Moreover, we are not IN France, and the other French restaurants in the Lehigh Valley [Maxim’s 22, Sarandas, The Café, the Bay Leaf] do not include the gratuity in the check. In addition, what if the service is truly tremendous, and you want to add a little something extra? That is not possible unless you do so with cash.) In reading about this restaurant online after our visit, we thought the owner said it best when she said, “If you want to leave a tip, come back or tell a friend.” That would have been a lovely response for our server Denis to provide; as it was, his pretentious attitude ruined what was an otherwise lovely meal.