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Lounge has been born.
Featuring a menu of nothing but desserts--high-fat, sugar-laden, often
carb-intensive treats--the eastside restaurant is rising in popularity. I first visited the East
Speedway Boulevard restaurant one weeknight with Hugh Dougherty. We decided
to drown our post-deadline anxieties in a river of coffee and cake. We walked in and waited to
be seated--unlike other café-type places, Something Sweet offers table
service. We were offered our pick of the open tables, and we chose one next
to the Speedway-facing window. Our pleasant server gave us the menus and took
our coffee orders before giving us time to ponder the various offerings. A number of cakes,
cheesecakes, tortes and pies make up the menu in its entirety. If you're
looking for a sandwich or even a light salad, forget it; it isn't happening.
I decided to try one of my all-time dessert faves, German chocolate cake
($4.25) along with a latte (a somewhat pricey $3.95), and Hugh ordered the
chocolate toffee mousse with Kahlua ($4.75). The atmosphere, in the space
that housed the Bagelry for a long time, is open, well-lit and comfortable.
There are no booths, but there are a lot of tables--each covered with a
plastic earth-tones tablecloth--along with black or red metal-rimmed chairs, mirroring
the colors of the walls. Low curtains cover the bottom halves of the windows
facing Speedway, and the black-painted ceiling is open, with track lighting
and a number of ceiling fans hanging down. Along the north wall are
bookcases, loaded with books that anyone can take as part of a book exchange,
as well as board games to play in the restaurant. Finally, near the door are
a handful of computers with free Internet access. Wireless Internet is also
offered for laptop users. On this visit, several tables of high school kids
took advantage of the technology, while a family at a table concentrated on
the joys of dessert. When our desserts were
delivered, I was instantly jealous that Hugh had ordered something better
than I had. My German chocolate cake was OK--I've had worse, and I've had
better. It wasn't as moist and chocolatey as I would have liked, but there
was nothing in particular wrong with it. (The delicious latte helped make
things better.) Meanwhile, Hugh's mousse pie looked and tasted fantastic. The
mousse was light--not at all pudding-like--and rich, yet not too sweet. I
took a bite and agreed with his assessment. All in all, Hugh and I
enjoyed ourselves. I was impressed with the uniqueness of the place; the
number of places in Tucson that offer all-ages late-night hours and good
service with a focus on dessert are few and far between; throw in the
Internet access and the book exchange, and Something Sweet stands out. AFTER THIS VISIT, I decided
to contact the owners of Something Sweet, Beckey Hammon and Robin Barbara, to
talk to them about the place. I wanted to see how things are going at the
restaurant. I wondered how Tucson--with its decidedly in-bed-by-10 business
climate--was responding to the venture. "Everybody said we
should get our heads examined," Hammon says, regarding their friends'
response to the idea. "Doing something different was the key to
success." It's too early to classify
Something Sweet, located next to Live Theatre Workshop, as a success--five
months after the doors opened, the business is not quite yet in the black.
But Hammon and Barbara, who are experienced small-business owners thanks to Computer
Medic, their computer shop, say things are going according to their business
plan. The plan has both long- and short-range goals. In the short range:
opening for breakfast (offering pastries, bagels, juices and the like), which
started this week. In the long range: opening two other locations of
Something Sweet in Tucson. In order to offer the
diverse range of desserts they have, only a handful of desserts--including
some cookies, fruit pies, an apple crisp and a red velvet cake--are made
in-house. Most of the rest come from Sweet Streets, a Pennsylvania-based
bakery which quick-freezes the confections to keep them as moist and tasty as
possible. The coffee comes from a Scottsdale-based business called Coffee
Reserve; Barbara says the coffee comes from shade-grown, fair-wage
beans. And as for the whole diet craze
... well, Hammon and Barbara don't seem worried (although Hammon says they're
working with a local baker to get a low-carb cheesecake, of all things, on
the menu). They
think the uniqueness of their restaurant, and the quality products, will help
them succeed. "There isn't anything like this in Tucson," Hammon
says, "There isn't anywhere else to go after a show, or the movies or
shopping, where you can just sit with your friends and talk," she says.
"...The more people know about us, the more the word has spread." |

