
WHEN JAVIER CANTERAS envisioned his first restaurant, he pitched a Spanish sandwich shop called Bocadillo. On CNBC. To celebrity restaurateur and human resting bitch face Joe Bastianich. He won $150,000.
As Canteras told Eater Portland, after staging in a few top Spanish restaurants and consulting with Bastianich, he pivoted when it came time to open his NE Alberta eatery Urdaneta. Named after his motherโs surname, itโs a mix of rustic Basque traditions and modern techniques, which Canteras has honed during his $95-a-head pop-ups.
Itโs buzzy and intimate, has the requisite Edison light bulbs and a fun-to-watch open kitchen. The plates are very small and very pricey; two people will need at least five plates and wonโt make it out for under $100 with drinks. Thatโd be fine if this Spanish food were executed at the heights of similarly expensive tapas spots like Chesa. Instead, most of Canterasโ dishes seem made for the TV camerasโlots of flashy plating and buzzwords, but not much in the way of harmony.
To be sure, Canteras is an up-and-coming name in town, and when his ideas and ingredients meld, itโs a gorgeous result. A plate of two perfectly seared scallopsโand I mean the โsuper crispy on the outside, tender and rich on the insideโ kind of perfectโwith foie gras glaze, avocado aioli, sweet fermented peach, and salty fried cauliflower ($22), is one Iโd pop in for anytime Iโm in the neighborhood. A rare culotte steak with a leek marmalade, tart romesco, and a creamy Spanish cheese foam ($15) was decadent and innovative.
Yet thereโs also much editing that needs to go into this place…
