Renowned chef Bradley Ogden’s much-anticipated Bradley’s Fine Diner, or BFD, is officially opening in Menlo Park the first week of November.
Mr. Ogden has transformed a massive 4,000-square-foot space at 1165 Merrill St., across from the Caltrain station, into his vision of a modern California “diner,” drawing on the now widespread farm-to-table sensibilities he helped pioneer throughout his career.
Early iterations of the menu, which he showed me on a visit to the restaurant a few weeks ago, include starters like wood-grilled artichoke with chanterelle and Dungeness crab salad; beef steak tartare with apple and caramelized onion mustard, quail egg and anchovy parsley toast; and Littleneck steamed clams with lemongrass, chilies, lime and spicy oyster sausage. (Now do you get why I put diner in quotes?)
Dinner options range from mushroom toast and popcorn shrimp to fish and chips, pot roast and an oak-grilled chuck burger. Don’t miss his famous butterscotch pudding or apple turnovers for dessert.
He said he’s checked out the Menlo Park farmers’ market and has been making connections with local farms to supply the restaurant.
“The whole concept is American diner plus organic (and) natural,” he said.
Armed with a full liquor license, BFD will also have a daily happy hour with artisan cocktails, beer, wine and discounted small bites.
Sure to be popular for brunch-starved Peninsulites is a large brunch menu with everything from pigs in a blanket and doughnuts to smoked salmon sliders, buttermilk pancakes, short rib hash and steak and eggs. Grab an “eye opener” to wash it all down: a Bradley’s bloody mary, BFD bellini or blended champagne and watermelon margarita. (There’s also plenty of coffee and fresh-pressed juice.)
“The whole idea of it is this new vision of what a diner should be from an American-California viewpoint,” Mr. Ogden said. “(It’s) an all-day sort of fun place just to hang out, to have a glass of wine or a beer.”
Mr. Ogden, a James Beard award-winning chef, worked as executive chef at San Francisco’s Campton Place Hotel in the early 1980s before opening his own The Lark Creek Inn in Larkspur in 1989. Numerous fine-dining restaurants throughout the Bay Area to follow would become part of his Lark Creek Restaurant Group. (He said he actually looked at the Merrill Street space in the 1990s, hoping to snag it, but had no luck.)
A restaurant he opened in Las Vegas in 2003 — Bradley Ogden at Caesar’s Palace — earned him the much-coveted James Beard award for Best New Restaurant in 2004.
He said the Menlo BFD actually has a feel similar to Lark Creek, which he described as “housey” and comfortable. Despite its large size, the plantation-style building does have that feel. Inside there is repurposed wood, exposed brick, bulb lights and deep booths.
Outside along Merrill, there’s the same wood-plank, wrap-around porch, which seats about 60 people.
Mr. Ogden got the space this time around through his partner, Atherton entrepreneur Chris Kelly, who recently purchased the building. Gambardella’s closed in December 2012; at the time, it looked like neighbors Crepes Cafe and Lisa’s Tea Treasures would remain, but both eventually closed.
When Crepes Cafe announced its closure in July, owner Janet Scopazzi posted a message on the cafe doors that said the building’s new landlords had “other plans” for the space, located at 1195 Merrill St. A longtime cafe employee told the Almanac that BFD would be taking over the entire building, which it has.
Mr. Ogden said Crepes Cafe “decided to leave,” leaving him a 2,000 square-foot space that he might turn into some sort of BFD spinoff, though he’s not sure what yet.
BFD is one of a few more casual concepts for the fine-dining chef. They’re all housed under the umbrella of Bradley Ogden Hospitality, a restaurant group and consulting company started by Mr. Ogden, his son (and chef) Bryan Ogden and industry veteran Tony Angotti.
Menlo Park is the second BFD location (following Houston) and Mr. Ogden promises there will be many more. After living in San Jose for the past few years, he’s relocated to the Peninsula, so he promises to be hands on at the new restaurant.
Bradley’s Fine Diner (BFD), 1165 Merill St., Menlo Park | 650-494-4342 | bradleysfinediner.com | Hours: Monday-Thursday, 11:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 11:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m.; and Sundays, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.


