Saturday, April 27, 2024 Apr 27, 2024
82° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Publications

Review: Bliss Raw Cafe and Elixir Bar

You don’t have to be a vegetarian to love Bliss Raw Cafe, where they transform nuts, bananas, avocado, and the like into “pizza,” “sushi,” or “cream pie.”
|
Image
photography by Kevin Hunter Marple

For hardcore vegetarians, the high point of 2009 has to be the arrival of Bliss Raw Cafe and Elixir Bar, Dallas’ raw-food restaurant. Raw foodism is the most extreme subset of vegetarianism, in which food is never subjected to high heat. Proponents say it’s healthier and gives you more energy. Of course, a salad is raw food. But what they do at Bliss is more complicated—transforming nuts, bananas, avocado, and the like into “pizza,” “sushi,” or “cream pie.”

The handiwork is nifty, and the food can be satisfying. A pizza “crust” was made from grains, then topped with pesto, red onion, red bell pepper, and sprouts—as full of color and texture as any pizza—and just as filling. Some of the best dishes didn’t try to mock others. One terrific salad wisely used kale, that rough-and-tough green, chopped into ribbons and tossed in a tasty sesame dressing that seemed to tenderize it. Desserts were excellent, from a creamy cheesecake made with puréed nuts to a citrusy Key lime tart.

If you judge by the young, beatific staff, this stuff is working; the place has a kind of hippie-collective vibe. What it does not have is alcohol or a parking lot or someone to answer the phone. They encourage you to take DART to Park Lane (or park in the DART lot) and walk the block over. That’s the kind of place Bliss is.

Get contact information for Bliss.

Related Articles

Image
Local News

In a Friday Shakeup, 97.1 The Freak Changes Formats and Fires Radio Legend Mike Rhyner

Two reports indicate the demise of The Freak and it's free-flow talk format, and one of its most legendary voices confirmed he had been fired Friday.
Image
Local News

Habitat For Humanity’s New CEO Is a Big Reason Why the Bond Included Housing Dollars

Ashley Brundage is leaving her longtime post at United Way to try and build more houses in more places. Let's hear how she's thinking about her new job.
Advertisement