Most Popular
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A Cold Case Frozen in Time
Until this cold case heats up, Sharon Skiba is lost in limbo.
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CU Hires Three Pulitzer Winners
Some of newspapering's best and brightest are trading journalism for academia — including three Pulitzer winners hired at CU.
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Shakeup in Denver Radio
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Sazza
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Arapahoe County DA Charges Death-Penalty Fees to the State
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A Cold Case Frozen in Time (10)
Until this cold case heats up, Sharon Skiba is lost in limbo.
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Con Artist Gives Funny Cause for Pregnant Pause (7)
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Big Trouble (8)
Gary Haney was living the high life until meth took him down.
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To the Max (5)
A publicity-hungry student shows how easy it is to become a media darling -- with a little help from CU.
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The Magnet Mafia Sticks to Street Art (5)
Matt Feeney and Harrison Nealey have a new way for artists to stick it to the city.
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Sazza
If you must go for gourmet pizza, go to Sazza.
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Crepes n Crepes
French food is no flash in the pan.
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Tibets Restaurant
If this chef is good enough for the Dalai Lama, hes good enough for you.
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Agave Grill
To enter Chad Clevengers world, go mouth by Southwest.
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Sparrow Flies the Coop
While Sparrow looks for a new home, Denver chefs head to New York City.
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Around town with artist Roberto Juarez
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Me and Mr. Jones
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Last Night...Xiu Xiu, Thao Nguyen, Slight Harp @ Hi-Dive
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Q&A With Eric Elbogen of Say Hi
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Look of the Day -- The Unfortunate Side Effects of Daylight Saving Time
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Crowded Cowboy Caucuses
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Delegating Denver #34 of 56: New Jersey
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Recent Articles By Jason Sheehan
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TV or Not TV
Another star turn for Ian Kleinman.
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Crepes n Crepes
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Feelin' Froggy
On a roll at French bakeries.
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Sazza
If you must go for gourmet pizza, go to Sazza.
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Pizza the Action
From SAME Cafe to Brunos, pie is infinite.
National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
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SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
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The Pitch
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Village Voice
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Agave Grill
To enter Chad Clevengers world, go mouth by Southwest.
By Jason Sheehan
Published: March 6, 2008
Mel Master, current owner of three restaurants in metro Denver, former owner of a half-dozen more in Denver and Manhattan, wine guy, ex-street musician, enthusiastic raconteur of all things boozy and delicious, and the guy I blame for loosing Bobby Flay on the world, is not in the house tonight. Jane, his wife and partner — beautiful, mouthy and British, a trained chef with a better resumé than most of her employees who made her bones back in the big-hat boys'-club days, wonderfully inappropriate company in just about any situation — is also not in attendance.
Laura and I have made sure. We've skulked like a couple of dopey second-story men by the brick-walled trench that separates the front door of Agave Grill from the massive parking lot, me smoking, she pacing, both of us peeking through the windows and scanning the floor, casing the joint for the Masters, listening for the tell-tale booms and peals of their combined laughter. I called before leaving the house, asked for Mel, for Jane, and was told by a hostess that neither were around and that she wasn't exactly sure where they were. The two of them travel a lot — Paris, London, California, Mexico, islands I've never heard of, where I like to imagine they have a secret fortress and second lives as evil, international supervillains or retired MI6 field operatives.
But still, they live relatively close to this strip mall, and their offices are just a couple of doors down, between Agave Grill and the Greenwood Village incarnation of Mel's, the restaurant they opened in Cherry Creek a dozen years ago and closed last year. Their son, Charlie, runs the floor at this Mel's, and all three of them are always running back and forth between their restaurants. We want to steer clear of the entire Master family for this final meal.
I crush out my smoke in the nearest ashtray and look over at Laura. For years, I've been suggesting that we work out a complicated series of secret hand signals so that we can communicate in silence like the guys in war movies do. For years, Laura has insisted that this is stupid and refuses to play along. So rather than doing the whole point-to-my-eyes, tug-on-my-ear, gesture-left-flank dance right there in the parking lot, I just walk over to her and ask, "So, uh, do you see 'em anywhere?"
"No."
"See Charlie at the bar?"
"No. Can we go eat now, James Bond?"
For the record, she did not mean that as a compliment.
This space was once home to Ocotillo, a Southwestern restaurant that never really quite caught fire. When it closed last year, the Masters picked it up, along with the former home of its sister restaurant, Ventura Grill. That became the California-inspired Montecito South, echoing the couple's new place on Sixth Avenue. And after a lightning turnaround — slapping on some paint, adding a few touches of continental decor and dumping the Southwestern theme in favor of an upscale steakhouse and bistro look — Ocotillo became Annabel's, named after Charlie's daughter. Executive chef Adam Mali oversaw the food at all three restaurants, while Chad Clevenger, the chef who'd presided over the closing of the original Mel's, went off to France to work as a private chef for some friends of Mel and Jane's.
But as it turned out, the Mel's era was not yet over. Within a few months, the Masters had turned both Montecitos into new versions of Mel's, Mali left for California, and Clevenger was called back, trading his c-de-c title for the big hat and black pants of the exec in charge of both the Mel's outposts and Annabel's. This worked for about five minutes — roughly the amount of time it took Mel and Jane to realize that with two now-similar restaurants set side by side, they were poaching their own customers, so they decided to turn Annabel's into the Mexican/New Mexican, nouveau-Southwestern Agave Grill.
It's a style that plays to Clevenger's strengths. Before coming to Denver and getting folded into the embrace of the Master clan, he'd cooked under Mark Miller at the deservedly famous Coyote Cafe in Santa Fe, so he came with the chops to steam a tamale and roast a chile. And he injected a nice dose of Southwestern flavor into the menu at the original Mel's, which had been solidly Euro-centric for over a decade. At Agave, Clevenger would have the freedom to experiment with deconstructionism, French technique, Old World flavors and a certain sense of arte moderne New World design. And he'd have help from Edgar Martinez, the chef de cuisine. While the Masters presided over Mel's, Agave would be Clevenger's place — a showcase for his particular skill set, for the unique intersection of his style.
But as you step into Agave, there's an undeniable sense of dislocation. It's a good-looking restaurant, but it feels like a European restaurant — the yellow stucco walls and exposed brickwork and smooth hardwood floor very faux-French bistro, the white tablecloths and stemware upping the ante to formidable levels of class. The swooping bar and servers in black-and-white house livery delivering Clevenger's chile rellenos and Mexican white-shrimp ceviche seem like temporary lodgers in someone else's house. And while I'm not about to insist that every Mexican restaurant dress its servers in sombreros, it will take more than a couple of woven rungs nailed to the wall to cure this disjointedness.











well, one small point--I get charred scallions, a handful, with every order of 1/4 chicken (or 1/2 or, for your appetite, and mine actually more often than not, a whole damn chicken) at Rico Pollo, whether Colfax, Alameda or South Federal. I doubt whoever's fire-grilling the pollos over at RP is classically trained though of course you never know.
So maybe in this case it's just a nod to the grilled chicken drive-thru joints of the southwest...and a damn sight more welcome than, say, an homage to the orange rice and refritos that also accompany said bird or its compadres throughout the region.
Comment by Joe Lumbo — March 5, 2008 @ 03:18PM