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Fresh ingredient flavor focus is about Thyme

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If you’ve ever eaten Indian, Creole or Cajun cuisines, then you’ve probably had the experience of not noticing individual ingredients. Those cuisines attune you to flavor combinations, not to the individual parts.

Thyme Craft Kitchen in Peru is at the other end of the culinary spectrum.

Most of Thyme’s menu items bear a capsule description of where the meat or produce was procured. Wyanet Locker butcher shop appears with meat dishes, for example, while vegetable-heavy dishes are linked to farms in Leesburg, Indiana, and Fairbury and Atlanta, both in Illinois. Notably, a kitchen helper (no chef’s whites) popped outside to snip fresh herbs from a planter at the edge of the patio.

Ingredients matter here. I ordered an Italian dish while my dinner companion went Mediterranean, and chose a more exotic “shakshouka,” an Israeli dish of eggs, tomato, goat cheese and vegetables.

The evident goal here is to get diners to taste and savor those farm-fresh ingredients, which are necessarily paired with milder flavors and textures to make the chef’s preferences stand out. I ordered gnocchi (Italian potato dumplings) tossed with locally procured sage sausage, red pepper and asparagus. Against the neutral dumplings, the farm-to-table meat and veggies left a strong response on my palate.

This is most certainly by design. Cooking with farm-fresh ingredients is such a culinary priority here that one feels as if other service aspects are secondary.

A peek inside the dining room showed a minimalist sensibility. The relaxed aesthetic is echoed in the table décor and place settings. My dinner companion and I both ordered tomato and red pepper bisque and these arrived in mismatched bowls. The dinner entrees also arrived on plates of disparate shape and design.

The outdoor dining area is a mix of indoor laminated tables, unvarnished picnic benches and wrought iron patio tables. The message is clear: You’re here for the food.

None of which is to say they scrimp on value. Two soups, two soft-drinks and two rather exotic entrees came to $47 before the gratuity.

Thyme offers curbside pickup, delivery and both patio and indoor dining.

If freshness matters – and it should – come to Thyme, but expect an ever-shifting menu dictated more by availability of ingredients than by which way public tastes are trending. And don’t expect to be overwhelmed by ancillary issues such as table settings, décor and overall ambience. That’s not what Thyme is about.

• The Mystery Diner is an employee at Shaw Media. The diner’s identity is not revealed to restaurant staff before or during the meal. The Mystery Diner visits a restaurant and then reports on the experience. If the Mystery Diner cannot recommend the establishment, we will not publish a story.