LEO's Eats with Robin Garr

NA Exchange got a new name when it moved down the New Albany hill: Now it's The Exchange Pub + Kitchen. It got a new look, which is actually an old look, as it makes creative use of a historic building in New Albany's rapidly gentrifying downtown. But it didn't get new food, insists Chef Rick Adams, who swears that the menu he forged at the previous location -- including his signature shrimp and grits -- hasn't changed a bit.
You would have a hard time making some of the Exchange's regular customers believe that, though. Adams says one gentleman in particular is adamant that the "new" shrimp and grits is much better than the "old."
"I haven't changed a thing," the chef says, "but he's sure it tastes better now."
What's up with that? Maybe it's like this: When most of us first learned to eat with chopsticks, we realized Chinese food tasted much better that way.
When you enjoy a beautiful rose with your sweetie on an al fresco terrace in Provence, the wine tastes much better than the same cheap bottle does at home on the kitchen table. And fried fish rarely tastes as good as it does at a Lenten fish fry.
In short, excellent dining isn't just about the food: Stir in an inviting surrounding, add a touch of romance, a dash of nostalgia and a whiff of childhood comfort food, and even simple fare gets better.
I call this the Restaurant Theory of Relativity: E = MC2, or Eats equals Mood times Cooking squared. After a pleasant dinner in the attractive surroundings of the Exchange's new quarters the other night, I can testify that the theory fully applies.
The original NA Exchange, which opened just about two years ago, was pretty much a pearl hidden in a gnarly oyster: Legitimate "gastropub" cuisine was coming out of the kitchen, particularly after Adams' arrival last year. Its setting, though, was hardly memorable, an anonymous unit in the maze of suburban strip centers along Grant Line Road.
The new spot shares an old building with Feast BBQ, which opened last year. It was built in 1882 as the Sunny Side Saloon and Restaurant, according to the folks at Feast. Our server at the Exchange said its section was once the watering hole's stable. Now it's dominated by lofty walls of old red brick, a fine wooden bar with a massive bar back, and a Brobdingnagian ceiling fan 16 feet across made by Lexington's Big Ass Fans. I am not kidding about this.
Read the full review on LouisvilleHotBytes,
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/theor ... change-pub
And in LEO Weekly:
http://leoweekly.com/dining/theory-rela ... change-pub
The Exchange Pub + Kitchen
118 W. Main St.
New Albany
(812) 948-6501
http://facebook.com/exchangepubkitchen
Rating: 88