![Little Rascal: R Gang Eatery puts sassy comfort food on show](https://cdn.sdnews.com/wp-content/uploads/20220115194512/R-Gang-Burger-with-housemade-cheddar-chive-tator-tots.jpg)
By David Nelson
SDUN Restaurant Critic
The youngest of these, Rich Sweeney, was chef at the Gaslamp Quarter’s swank Confidential when tapped for the competition, and he returned from his weeks in front of the cameras not as the last chef standing, but with the desire to open his own restaurant. At the age of 29, the sizeable, neatly bearded and just about perpetually cheerful chef has opened his own place, R Gang Eatery, in the Fifth Avenue site that for 25 years housed Busalacchi’s. It comes naturally to him, he says, since his dad was a restaurant manager, and his mom, Lucy Stara, also worked in the business; she now patrols the premises at R Gang, making everybody more than welcome. Once he began working summers at restaurants in Provincetown, on Cape Cod, Sweeney says he was hooked by the business.
R Gang has its charms. On one recent visit, a waitress waiting at the door chirped, “Hi, sweetheart, how are you?” to an arriving guest, and had already shortened the greeting to “sweetie” by the time she seated him and his party on the comfortably revitalized terrace. This area views Fifth Avenue from behind a wall of glass and certainly boasts the restaurant’s prime seating. Sweeney undertook a relatively quick renovation of the former Busalacchi’s, and the place frankly looks good, although it’s the ambiance more than the décor that supplies most of the character. An example: a big sign on the terrace spells out “FUN” in a blaze of crimson letters. It’s not so much an order as a description of what to expect, and if you want to put on your party hat, this is the place to do it.
“Sometimes the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence roll through,” said Sweeney, adding, “It’s really fun. We’re a local spot, we want locals to come. If people from other parts of town make us a dining destination, fine. But I want the neighborhood.”
He lures locals with a so-called “retro-Americana” menu of comfort food that sometimes takes its inspiration from what mom (his, yours, anybody’s) served on weeknights, usually dressed up from the home version. The fact that he makes his very own tater tots is a little frightening at first but the waitress assured “they’re a slice of heaven,” and flavored with chives and Cheddar, the crisply fried dumplings of creamy mashed potatoes had a trio of guests loudly singing their praises ($6 as an appetizer, also served as a garnish with some dishes). Salisbury steak was introduced during World War I as both economical and healthy for invalids, and it can be pretty pallid. Sweeney replaces the traditional cubed steak with ground lamb, mixed with figs and fresh mint and served in a pan gravy enriched with Cabernet and wild mushrooms ($16). The garnishes of roasted corn and garlicky mashed potatoes only add to the pleasures of this sophisticated “home-style” creation.
Sweeney is not one to serve modest portions. He bakes an unusual, spicy version of monkey bread, a rich pull-apart loaf, and if you eat much of it before something like the burger, you probably won’t eat much of the burger. Under the “smaller bites” heading, there are Portobello mushroom fries (Sweeney can be quite clever) served with a house-made chipotle-heated ranch dressing ($6), honey-bourbon glazed pork tenderloin skewers served with a racy pecan-mint pesto ($7), and seared ahi tartare with a bevy of interesting garnishes ($7).
R Gang Eatery
3683 Fifth Ave.
Hillcrest
677-2845
rgangeatery.com
Closed Sundays and Mondays