Purchase Tickets

Bing Crosby’s Restaurant & Piano Lounge

Bing Crosby’s Restaurant & Piano Lounge

location > 7007 Friars Road, Mission Valley
phone > 619-295-2464
chef > Mike Wilson

DER BINGLE, as Bob Hope called his buddy Bing Crosby, went to his eternal reward on October 14, 1977, after golfing a course in Spain. The crooner, actor, one-time Rancho Santa Fe resident and cofounder of the Del Mar Racetrack epitomized Hollywood stardom for decades. Today, his name can’t be very familiar to recent generations (except to young fans of old movies), but it’s been revived by a high-end restaurant enterprise that numbers three California outlets and includes widow Kathryn Crosby among backers.

Bing Crosby’s Restaurant & Piano Lounge opened in early September at Fashion Valley center, which in the last year or so has remade itself as San Diego’s haute bourgeoise riposte to South Coast Plaza, Melrose Avenue, Bond Street, Madison Avenue, Via Veneto and Rue du Faubourg St. Honore. If timing is everything, it’s not clear that 2008 is just the right year in which to shower deluxe fashion houses upon this city, but then, perhaps it’s true that some men never can have too many Hermès neckties.

Located near the mall’s main entrance (Cheesecake Factory hums across the drive), Bing Crosby’s is huge, impressive and almost overwhelming in its tributes to the star. The main dining room, an alcove and the bar (where a piano and drums occupy a low stage) seat up to 270, and there are more tables on a terrace that faces Bloomingdale’s. Restaurant publicity claims the interior is “a Hollywood-inspired setting that captures all the glory and glamour of the 1930s,” but it may be necessary to have been born circa 1910 to determine the truth of this. It is a handsome place, richly finished in a mixed palette of greens trimmed with dark wood. The look is very “country club,” if suggestive of a club at which Crosby was the sole member.

Anywhere one looks, Bing looks back from vast black-and-white photographs, many of them poses with such fellow stars as Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Louis Armstrong and a casting call’s worth of other luminaries. More shots catch him mid-swing on the golf course, and in the largest, which brings a unique celebrity focus to the dining room, he gazes amiably if somewhat intimidatingly from an especially sizable portrait.

What can be said about the music, except that if you love it, you really love it? Bing sings plenty, and whenever his re cordings take five, other hot songsters and Big Bands swing into play. At dinner, live piano soothes exhausted shoppers.

If you forget the titles of Crosby’s films, refer to the cocktail list, headlined by High Society (like most tipples, this basic vodka martini costs $12) and followed by martini variants named Road to Rio, Road to Bali and Road to Singapore (Road to Morocco is reserved for a tasty Happy Hour plate of hummus, feta cheese and more, $10).

If you’re a good-humored sort of person, a new restaurant can provide plenty of anecdotes about service. By and large, Bing Crosby’s staff seems devoted to smiling, although there was a busboy who, having served each guest one very thin slice of baguette, returned to ask, “Would you like more bread?” in a tone that implied you should say “No,” and quickly. A waitress proudly presented a bowl of soup, without having first provided a spoon. When the diner politely requested this utensil, she gazed in wonder and said, “Do you want a spoon?” in a way that kept the table chuckling through the meal. A glitch on a different occasion was considerably less amusing (a hostess decided that a cocktail table in the bar was good enough for a solo lunch guest, and discovered in certain terms that it was not), but by the final visit, management seemed to have service running much more smoothly.

Bing Crosby’s claims it serves “California country club cuisine,” which might frighten many members of this state’s private clubs. In fact, the food mostly is quite good. The noon menu rises to the shopping center location, where lunch is part of the experience, after all. The restaurant’s take on crab Louie ($22) differs from most Louies but can be regarded as superior. It stars a sizable mound of Dungeness crab salad, rich, creamy, flavorful and perfect, arranged over slivered greenery and prettily garnished.

When the soup of the day ($8) is minestrone, order it. Also lovely at lunch: the croque madame ($14), here beautifully interpreted as a square of toasted focaccia topped with a mountain of shaved Black Forest ham, some Gruyère, a gently fried egg and a tidal wave of sauce Mornay. With French fries and colorful, puckery homemade pickles on the side, it’s perfect. “The Lunch Trio” ($14), which combines a cup of soup, a nice green salad and a half-sandwich of choice (roast beef with crisp fried onions!), makes another perfect presentation.

The dinner menu often strives for major effects, and often at major prices. The theatrical chilled-seafood sampler (served for a minimum of two at $18 per person) trails billows of “smoke” generated by dry ice placed on a sizzling dish; the oysters, mussels, clams, prawns, lobster and so forth keep their cool on a bed of ice. Otherwise, consider a meaty starter of heirloom tomatoes, house-made mozzarella and basil ($10) or a well-garnished steak tartare ($12) that shares nicely if you’re not sure you’re a steak tartare sort of person.

Entrées include big steaks: a 20-ounce, bone-in rib-eye ($39) and “Bing Crosby’s Signature Dish,” a grilled filet mignon with truffled brown sauce, green vegetables and potato cannelloni ($39). If the house-made fettuccine with grilled prawns ($24) disappoints, choose such pleasing offerings as lamb presented three ways ($28) and pan-seared ahi with various light, refreshing garnishes ($28). Among the desserts ($9 each), the fresh, sugary doughnuts served with a molten chocolate dip are a sweetly cheerful novelty.

Bing Crosby’s Restaurant & Piano Lounge serves lunch and dinner daily at Fashion Valley center, 7007 Friars Road, San Diego. Reservations are accepted at 619-295-2464.



Comments posted here do not necessarily reflect the views of the byline author or San Diego Magazine. Keep your comments civil, stay on the topic and your posts will remain online. Comments that use foul language, ethnic slurs or sexually suggestive language will be deleted. Posters who continually harass others or disobey the rules will be banned permanently from commenting on this Web site.

Reader Comments:
Old to new | New to old
Dec 2, 2008 04:06 pm
 Posted by  Anonymous

I love this place! I think the food and service are excellent now that they've had a chance to settle in, and I am no stranger to San Diego's finer eating establishments. My husband and I enjoy the bands here and it it so convenient since we live right across the street. The bands (live music every night) are some of San Diego's finest entertainment like David Patrone, Sacha Boutros, Fuzzy, Sue Palmer, Nathan James. I love the downtown feel without the downtown hassle! A lot of swing dancers come by and infect the lounge with a really authentic "old-school" ambiance. I love it!

Jan 12, 2009 07:16 pm
 Posted by  McCormack

I was not impressed with their food.
The service was fantastic.
Their banana desert was great.
Their crab cakes were excellent and so were the salads.
They seated us exactly where we wanted to be with reservation a week in advance.
I would still rate it an "A'.

Jan 17, 2009 11:08 am
 Posted by  Anonymous

My husband and I tried the restaurant for lunch just after Christmas and were very disappointed. To start, we were seated right in front of the large flat screen TV when there were plenty of other options available. After a few mintues trying to tolerate this, we asked to move elsewhere.

The menu looked interesting enough but my Tropical Salad was full of odd flavors, none of which complimented each other. The grilled chicken on my salad was in fact grilled, but perhaps days earlier, and the canned oranges (isn't this orange season?!?) really brought the tastes down further.

My husband decided to order Bing's signature $39 steak, which may have been just what people liked in the 1930's, but did not please our palates, either.

Overall, the service was good, but that would not be a good enough reason for us to recommend this restaurant. We dine at many high-end restaurants and found this food to be pretty mediocre.

Feb 9, 2009 01:42 pm
 Posted by  Anonymous

This is definitely not the place to eat if you are an animal activist! There was beef, lamb, veal, wild boar, duck and foie gras to name a few. I will not be returning for a meal any time soon!

Add your comment:

Create an instant account, or please log in if you have an account. Anonymous comments are enabled.




Forgot your password?
Verification Question. (This is so we know you are a human and not a spam robot.)

What is 8 + 2 ? 

Newsletter

Subscribe to our email newsletters to get updates on local news, events and opportunities in San Diego. Please enter your email address below:

Email
I am interested in receiving email updates about:
(Choose one or more categories)
Bringing you the top 25 things to do in San Diego every month
Delectable dining and events in San Diego
Your guide to San Diego's philanthropic events and trends
Receive VIP invitations to some of San Diego's hottest parties!
Resources and information from the San Diego luxury wedding market