DINING OUT -- Mary Furr
Like an old and faithful friend, the Shed, a 17-year-old restaurant owned
by Bill Gallegos and his wife, Phil, continues to serve breakfast, lunch
and dinner to faithful diners.
As the face of Huntington Beach changes, places like the Shed, on 5th
Street between Pacific Coast highway and Olive Avenue, are treasured.
The menu offers the famous hamburger ($6) selected by Independent readers
as the best, and dishes including oatmeal ($2.50), plus newer ones such
as the breakfast burrito ($4.75).
Caldo Gallegos ($7.50), is an original -- a spicy broth filled with
chunks of chicken, vegetables and shrimp topped with avocado slices
cheese and tortilla.
For a hauntingly flavored Cog au Vin ($11.95), a large platter is half
covered with chicken pieces (watch for bones), braised in wine, onions
and mushrooms. A colorful steamed vegetable medley of cauliflower,
carrots, zucchini and green beans is piled beside excellent rice pilaf.
The top-priced entree, Filet Mignon ($17.95), an inch-thick, 8-ounce
steak wrapped in bacon, is charbroiled, tender, prepared with care and is
as good as any steakhouse could offer.
All entrees include soup or salad. Soup, a good test of a kitchen, is
homemade like nearly everything at the Shed. The tomato tastes like the
very essence of ripe tomatoes and the seafood chowder is not too thick,
but is loaded with vegetables, baby shrimp, clams and snapper and, thank
goodness, a minimum of potato.
Recently the Gallegos have offered special “Dutch” dinners twice a month
on Wednesday evenings. Bill met Phil while he was employed in the
Netherlands, and friends have always enjoyed Phil’s Dutch dinners. The
set menu ($15.95) varies with appetizer, soup, salad, entree and dessert.
Last month there was Zuurkool Stamppot -- pork chop with mashed potatoes
and sauerkraut. Another Wednesday the salad was tomatensla, tomato with
smoked cheese and walnuts.
Though the Shed has been expanded, the original building was built three
quarters of a century ago. To celebrate the millennium, the Gallegos are
planning a party for their diners. “None of us will ever see the start of
another millennium,” says Bill.
So the Shed remains a warm and friendly place -- no booths, but tables
for two you can push together; no air conditioning, just windows to raise
for an ocean breeze, a staunch reminder of the Huntington Beach that was
and is becoming.
Mary Furr is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments or
suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
The Shed
Where: 210 5th St., Huntington Beach
Winter hours: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Tuesday.
Phone: 960-1317.
Dutch dinners and millennium celebration by reservation only.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.