HomeDiningRestaurants › A Bite of Boa at Caffe Boa
 
 
 

Caffe Boa has long been a favorite dining destination for the Tempe crowd. Now, the 17-year-old restaurant has a stylish baby sibling, Caffe Boa Bistro, making delicious waves in East Mesa.

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Since 1994, a favorite stop along Mill Avenue for college students looking for a great date spot and foodies wanting top-tier eats has been Caffe Boa. The restaurant was opened by Jay and Christine Wisniewski and offers a menu of fresh and seasonal fare and a wine list that’ll wow any connoisseur (more than 50 varieties by the glass are available).     
In late 2009, former Digestif chef Payton Curry came on board as Caffe Boa’s culinary mastermind. Now, Curry is the man of the kitchen at the Tempe outpost as well as the new Caffe Boa Bistro, which opened in Mesa’s ritzy Las Sendas neighborhood earlier this year. At the East Valley spot, Chef Curry is usually the first person a guest will see upon entering as he operates the wood-burning oven in the exhibition-style kitchen.       
Where Caffe Boa is welcoming, warm and like an extension of your own home, the bistro is stylish and contemporary, with its back-lit bar, giant glass-enclosed wine cellar and New York-style along-the-wall seating. However, both feasting spots have stellar fall-friendly patios for alfresco dining and pleasant touches that guests can appreciate, like delightfully scented springs of rosemary that are tied to the cloth napkins with twine. Both locations also dish up a similar menu of incredibly tasty and thoughtful plates. (Both Boas offer most of the same dishes, though Chef Curry is willing to whip up just about anything you’re craving—on or off the menu.)
For starters, the fries, the Washington mussels and the pulled-to-order mozzarella are wonderfully warming and delicious. The fries, which are served with a spicy aioli, a mustard that highlights honey from McClendon Farms, and a secret sauce (which Chef Curry calls his “Big Mac sauce”), are crispy and downright addicting. It’s also impossible to get enough of the mussels, which are freshened up with campari tomatoes, tarragon and lime zest; a mussel-opposed dining companion couldn’t stop cracking open the flavorful shells. And the warm mozzarella had us believing that the cheese course shouldn’t have to wait until after dinner to see the light of day. The amazing mozzarella doesn’t even need the accompanying basil, peperonata and crostini to dress it up.
As scrumptious as those starters are, the table favorite was the shrimp adriatico. The sauce of white wine, garlic, parsley and crushed tomatoes could be one of the Valley’s most divine tomato soups, but the addition of shrimp and grilled flatbread makes it even more mouthwatering. (Ask for more flatbread; there’s no way you’ll want to waste even a drop of tangy, sweet tomato sauce).