Great service, top-tier food and drink on the menu at Subourbon Southern Kitchen & Spirits

Macaroni and cheese accompanies blackened redfish served with shrimp etouffee, cheesy grits and charred asparagus.
Macaroni and cheese accompanies blackened redfish served with shrimp etouffee, cheesy grits and charred asparagus.

Subourbon Southern Kitchen & Spirits — a suburban operation with a big bourbon selection in the Linworth area — proves that a restaurant with a dad-joke name can be a top-notch new eatery. That said, I hope Subourbon’s booze-pun naming approach doesn’t become trendy, lest I find myself reviewing eateries with titles like Village For-Rum and Gin-trified Neighborhood Tavern.

Name aside, Subourbon provides more proof that the budding restaurateurs who opened Alqueria Farmhouse Kitchen a few years ago in the University District — Jacob Hough and Patrick Marker, who honed their skills at Barcelona Restaurant and Bar — really know what they’re doing.

What they've done so far is create two zeitgeist-savvy, unpretentious fine-dining eateries whose mood and food strike an appealing balance between sophisticated and casual. At Subourbon, Hough and Marker have teamed up with chef Odine Hong, whose dressed-up Southern cooking at late, lamented Hen Quarter seamlessly aligns with Subourbon's upscale-downhome aesthetic.

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Subourbon eased its launch into the pub-like former Crafty Pint space by not changing much. Its small, buzzy windowed bar area leads to a moderate-sized dining room with rustic touches — bricks, dark tones, thick wooden tables — offset by brash artworks and decorations.

Chicken fried chicken covered with peppery gravy and served with green beans and mashed potatoes, plus a side of house barbecue chips 
topped with bleu and pimento cheeses.
Chicken fried chicken covered with peppery gravy and served with green beans and mashed potatoes, plus a side of house barbecue chips topped with bleu and pimento cheeses.

Two patios are offered: A small patch facing busy Dublin-Granville Road, and a preferable, roomy and enclosed side space, dubbed the “four-seasons” patio, with screened windows and a portable air-conditioner. Expect personable and professional service wherever you sit.

Bourbon is obviously a featured drink and several labels are available. Bourbons are also showcased in a strong little cocktail program.

Combining plum-infused Old Forester, Averna and (just detectable) Lillet Blanc, the easy-drinking Our Old Pal ($13) is well-named. Subourbon’s masterful take on the Vieux Carre ($14) — a New Orleans classic made here with Michter’s rye, Carpano Antica vermouth and Hennessy VS cognac — is a new favorite.

Not craving whiskey? The Artichoke Hold ($12) is a nifty tiki-esque drink with sweet and creamy notes and a refreshingly crisp and bitter finish.

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Those all would make fine partners with the popular pork belly burnt ends starter ($12). Unlike many pork belly dishes rife with gelatinous fat, this attractively plated creation starred large yet compact meat blocks cooked to firm and crisp. Their barbecue sauce-like glaze was contrasted by a lime-spiked, charred-pineapple salsa. Adding extra richness from an underlying aioli seems gratuitous, so blot the pork conservatively with it.

Bargain alert: The enormous catfish and okra appetizer ($11) was an entree-sized platter of fish nuggets sporting wonderfully crackly cornmeal jackets (hinting of celery seed) teamed with could-be-crisper, flour-battered okra. An addictive remoulade and fiery, tomato-based hot sauce were also on hand. Add a side of Subourbon’s huge and excellent mac and cheese ($8), and it’s dinner for two.

The green tomato club — which resembled a fancy grilled cheese more than a club sandwich — is the other side of the value coin ($16, with serious fries), but the dynamic combination of kicky pimento cheese, candied bacon and cornmeal-crusted tart tomatoes is inspired.

The repetition in the chicken fried chicken ($22) dinner’s name could imply: Its juicy chicken breast is twice as big as most others; its crunchy coating derives from a cooked-twice technique; it arrives with creamy and peppery gravy. Because it’s all that and a batch of honest mashed potatoes plus well-above-average green beans.

I liked the blackened redfish even better ($32). A hefty, zestily seasoned, sweet-tasting fillet — with crawfish etouffee as de facto gravy — was atop trimmed-and-grilled asparagus atop coarsely textured, delectable cheese grits. Although I wish the etouffee had more crawfish, this was a showstopper.

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Subourbon’s bone-in pork chop ($28) resembled a skillfully grilled steak. The juicy, smoky and delicious but untrimmed meat came with rich mushroom gravy, mashers and terrific collard greens.

Given Subourbon’s name, I was surprised its dense yet springy, sweet-potato-studded bread pudding ($9) wasn’t made tipsy with whiskey. But I wasn't surprised the caramel-sauced, scorched-marshmallow-iced dessert tasted even better than it looked.

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Subourbon Southern Kitchen & Spirits

Where: 2234 W. Dublin Granville Road, Northwest Side

Contact: 614-505-0773; www.subourboncolumbus.com

Hours: 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays; closed Sundays

Price range: $8 to $46

Ambience: upscale pub-style space, with excellent service, connected to a small front patio and a larger, preferred “four-seasons” side patio

Children's menu: yes

Reservations: yes

Accessible: yes

Liquor license: full bar

Quick click: This top-tier new restaurant specializing in comforting yet refined Southern food also showcases bourbon and offers impressive cocktails.

This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Subourbon serves fine Southern-style fare, impressive cocktails