MrsF and I went to Addis Abeba in Evanston last night, and were favorably impressed.
I've eaten in that storefront years ago when it was New Japan in the mid 80's. I have no idea how many restaurants it's been since, but the Japanese screens are still on the windows.
We went with one Meat combo, one Veg-Meat combo, giving the two of us three veggie and three carnie entrees to split (plus two salad portions -- lots of garlic and lemon juice on pretty ordinary salad ingredients):
- Yeater kik Alitcha: Yellow split peas in garlic and ginger
- Inquotdai: Mushrooms and yellow split peas. Rather unimpressive, with few mushrooms, and not distinctly different from YKA above.
- Mitin Shiro: decribed as "Roasted, powdered chick peas simmered in spiced butter with cinnamon and cloves, served in spicy wot", it resembled a thick mole -- nutty and rich with brown spices. It'd make a great party dip with pita chips. One of the best items of the night
- Doro tibs: Chicken stir-fried with onions and peppers. nicely spicy, and very flavorful. Another hit
- Yebeg Alitcha: Lamb slow cooked with onion, garlic and turmeric. Very tasty
- Yesiga wot: spicy beef stew, but not really much spicier than the alitcha
Service was attentive and friendlly. Compared to Ras Dashen, there's some pros and cons: Everything (at least of what we ordered) at AA was boneless, which is a lot easier to deal with in a dinner with no plates. RD had a bigger tray for initial serving, meaning not everything got mixed together quite as much (although I think the portion sizes were similar). RD also had a very nice fresh cheese on their menu whch MrsF was hoping to find at AA.
I'd go back to either one.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang