A huge 3/4-pound slab of delicious haddock about made a memorable fried-fish sandwich.

Kayrouz Cafe does food and safety right

By Robin Garr
LouisvilleHotBytes.com

Show me a fourth generation family restaurant that traces its heritage back through several locations to the 1920s, and I’ll show you a restaurant that’s doing things right. That would be Kayrouz Cafe, and it should come as no surprise that the current generation is handling Covid safety with style and grace too.

“Our entire kitchen and wait staff have been fully vaccinated,” a sheet on the front door assures customers. There’s ample outdoor dining, with a half-dozen patio tables offering a significant boost to the tiny eatery’s interior seating.

This is reassuring: "Our entire kitchen and wait staff have been fully vaccinated," a sheet on the front door assures customers; all who served us were properly masked, too.
This is reassuring: “Our entire kitchen and wait staff have been fully vaccinated,” a sheet on the front door assures customers; all who served us were properly masked, too.

The Kayrouz family has been making local diners happy with good, simple but delicious fare for a very long time, back to the original Kayrouz Cafe at Preston and Fehr (now Liberty) streets nearly a century ago. J.P. Kayrouz, the second family generation, operated in St. Matthews for 25 years or so until its building was demolished in 2003 to make way for Wilson & Muir bank.

A third generation opened the current location in 2006 in the tiny St. Matthews building where it still resides, now with a fourth family generation in charge. The food is still freshly made and delicious, the service careful and friendly, and quite a few popular dishes have remained on the menu through the generations.

Iced tea was strong and clear, and it came in a tall glass.
Iced tea was strong and clear, and it came in a tall glass.

The menu consists almost entirely of sandwiches (and burgers), soups and salads, and pricing has remained fair, with only reasonable inflationary hikes since my 2006 review. The avocado and mango salad, then $7.85, is just $10 now. The “nova” chicken breast sandwich with avocado, bacon and brie topped the sandwich list then at $8.95, and it’s still the high-end sandwich at $12.75 now.

Five burger choices – hand-pressed, cooked to order, and served on brioche bun – are priced from $13 (for the Kayrouz cheeseburger) to $22.95 (for the massive TJ Double, two half-pound patties with double cheese and bacon). A non-sandwich item, 10 hand-breaded and fried extra-select oysters, is $17.95.

Three meal-size appetizers are priced from $10 (for homemade hummus with pitas) to $12.75 (for a chicken quesadilla); house-made chili or cheddar broccoli soup are both $6.50 for a bowl. Three dinner salads are all $10; the café house salad is $6.

Dining under pretty turquoise umbrellas on an outdoor table was surprisingly comfortable, a sensation enhanced by Kayrouz’ use of heavy, quality silverware wrapped in large, heavy white-cloth napkins, and attractive dishes that remind me of Fiesta ware.

Kayrouz parmesan and pesto salad was delicious, and the kitchen helpfully split it between two plates without being asked.
Kayrouz parmesan and pesto salad was delicious, and the kitchen helpfully split it between two plates without being asked.

A memorable Parmesan and pesto salad ($10; $3.50 more if you add chicken) was thoughtfully designed and artfully assembled. Fresh mixed greens were tossed with chopped tomatoes, pine nuts, and grated strips of Parmigiano Reggiano, then topped with strips of unctuous caramelized onions and dressed with an aromatic dressing of fresh pesto and oil. In a nice extra touch, the server discerned that we intended to share the salad and had the kitchen serve it on separate plates.

We had planned on a cod sandwich but got there too late: The kitchen had run out. We went with haddock instead, which looked like a significant upcharge until I ran the numbers: Eight ounces of cod is $13.25; a huge slab of haddock – 11 to 14 ounces for a fillet – is $17.95. What a deal!

It truly was an impressive slab of fish, an entire fillet long enough to extend off both sides of a dinner plate, enough to make two sandwiches with the tasty seeded rye bread provided. (It’s pictured, with chips, at the top of the page.) The breading was hot and crisp, the white fish was flaky and mild. Haddock and cod are related and boast similar flavors; haddock has a reputation for being more flavorful but not as flaky, so you can pay your money and take your choice. We were happy. Homemade tartar sauce was excellent too, creamy with plenty of dill.

A veggie Reuben may sound like an oxymoron, but marinated portobello chunks filled in surprisingly well for corned beef in this veggie twist on the tradition.
A veggie Reuben may sound like an oxymoron, but marinated portobello chunks filled in surprisingly well for corned beef in this veggie twist on the tradition.

The menu offers both a regular Reuben ($12.50) and a veggie Reuben ($10.75). With its heritage in the Omaha stockyards and loaded with corned beef, the standard Reuben is such an iconic meat sandwich that the idea of a meatless model tickled my fancy. It was good, too, built like a standard Reuben with sauerkraut, swiss cheese, Thousand Island dressing, and crisp rye bread all contributing their characteristic flavors. It’s so good that you don’t mind the substitution of portobello mushroom chunks in tart-sweet marinade one bit.

Most of the sandwiches come with choice among a half-dozen sides. Homemade curly kettle chips, warm, salty and super-crisp, were good enough to wean us from the factory model. Regular French fries were top-notch too, long and hand-cut, fried with an extra-crisp, crunch exterior surrounding creamy, steaming potato.

The menu doesn’t list desserts, but the server told us that carrot cake is available, handmade by the chef’s grandmother and big enough to serve four. Maybe next time!

With strong, clear, iced tea ($2.50), an excellent lunch for two totalled $43.67, plus a $10 tip.

Kayrouz Cafe
3801 Willis Ave.
896-2630
kayrouzcafe.com
Facebook: bit.ly/KayrouzCafe

Noise Level: Outdoor dining here is mostly quiet, although the occasional roaring auto on Willis Avenue may briefly deafen you.

Accessibility: Watch those concrete parking stops – we saw a woman walking past nearly trip and fall – but overall the patio and the entrance appear accessible to wheelchair users.