Had a quick dinner this evening. Was flying solo, so not a broad swath of dishes to report on. Came in early (5pm) and there was only one other table occupied. A third party came in while I ate.
My server was very friendly without hovering or any oppressive cuteness in her approach. She was also very efficient, clearing things as I was finished, refilling water, offering a refill on tea without being asked, etc. (I didn't see any busing support, so I gather the servers are on their own in that regard.)
Had felafel as appetizer and would mostly concur with the OP. They were fried to order, not at all greasy, with a very solid, uniform crunch on the outside, not properly fluffy on the inside. I got a bit of cumin/coriander flavor. No cayenne, really. I also noticed that they had an unusual uniform shape, as if they were fried in a mold. Perhaps all felafel are, I don't know. But rather than being simple spheres, like ping-pong balls, they sort of had straight sides and then crested into a rounder top, like a mini-muffin or cupcake. No idea what this might mean, but it struck me.
Had the beef/lamb shawerma sandwich. Very generous portion. Very good flavor. LOTS of burned crispy bits; nearly every piece of meat had a dark crunchy facet. Yum.
Was at first disappointed that "mint tea" turned out to be a Lipton bag in a glass with some whole mint leaves floating beside it. And yet, those leaves sufficiently transformed the drink so that (along with a bit of honey, which my server offered without being asked), it made for quite a nice drink. And as mentioned above, she gave me a second round, (fresh bag!) no charge, also without being asked.
Also had a side of fries, and these were excellent. Crispy, skin-on, fresh from the fryer, nicely salted and sumac dusted. They were served with a small ramekin of sauce which went unnamed on the menu. When I asked the server she said that the kitchen is very guarded about ingredients and would only tell her it was a "curry sauce." She related an anecdote to support her explanation: A guest asked what the meat was marinated in. Kitchen said, "Lots of spices." Patron asked if they would name a couple. Kitchen replied: "Salt and pepper." So, "curry" was all I could get out of them, but it was a nice dip. The sauce did run out before the fries, but overall it was a nice portion for $2.50. The whole meal was a good value (about $12 total), and stellar value for the neighborhood, being sandwiched between Caminito (Argentine grill), and Mangia Roma, both of whose main dishes alone sit around the $20 point. For dining near Steppenwolf in a budget, I can't think how you could do better.
Last edited by
mrbarolo on September 5th, 2011, 10:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Strange how potent cheap music is."