For dinner last night, my sister and I ventured to Kansaku, the new Japanese restaurant in downtown Evanston. According to
Metromix (I don't think the restaurant has its own website yet), Kansaku is "the second upscale sushi spot to arrive in Evanston." Which was the first upscale sushi spot? I wouldn't use that characterization for
Koi or
Kuni's...What place am I forgetting?
I had a very difficult time deciding what to eat (I didn't have access to a menu before last night) because I don't care at all for crab or cream cheese in maki--the two most common ingredients in Kansaku's special and signature rolls. As for the entrees, I was somewhat disturbed by the fact that their various teriyaki dishes (chicken, salmon, etc) are served with mashed potatoes instead of rice. Mashed potatoes are one of my dietary staples, but I grew up in a meat and rice Filipino household. Given the cold and rainy weather last night, I wanted something comforting and familiar--not chicken teriyaki with mashed potatoes.
My sister and I ended up ordering conservatively. For our appetizer, we had the "green mussels dynamite," which the menu described as "oven baked green mussels and crab topped with house spicy sauce." I felt like we ate warmed mussels of a generic variety covered with a crab-cream cheese mixture, shredded cheese and a dab of Tobasco sauce.
For entrees, I chose their "assorted sushi" plate and my sister chose three standard rolls--rainbow, shrimp tempura and philadelphia. I liked that the accompanying miso soup was served in small white ceramic bowls. I feel like I sometimes forget my own strength when I pick up with two hands the black plastic bowls used at so many other Japanese restaurants. The white ceramic bowl at Kansaku was just a little heavier and made the process of eating my miso more solid. One final note about dishware: I also appreciated the ceramic soy sauce dishes. I don't think they were customized to an Alinea-esque degree, but the simple tilted design seemed refreshingly appropriate for soy sauce dipping and wasabi mixing.
I don't have much to say about the food of the entrees. My fish, seven pieces of nigiri and a tuna roll, were fresh and plump. It's been too long since I've been to Kuni's to compare the quality, and I've only ever had small amounts of maki at Koi. If I want to eat nigiri in Evanston, I would return to Kansaku. I also liked that there was a bigger than average pile of ginger that came with my meal last night.
I only tasted one piece of my sister's shrimp tempura maki, which I found to be very audibly crunchy but slightly tough to chew. I prize delicacy in tempura, and though the portion of shrimp in the maki piece was more than adequate, there was no delicacy there. I don't think it was a kind-of-flour problem--I think it was an overcooking problem.
As my sister said in the middle of our meal last night, "You know what this place needs?" She answered herself: "More customers." We were there for about an hour, and only one other table was occupied.
The next time I have a craving for nigiri in Evanston, I'll probe Kansaku's supposedly extensive sake list. I'm also curious to try their equivalent of gyu maki--which they describe as thin slices of filet mignon wrapped in asparagus with a teriyaki sauce. I'm cynical that Kansaku's could rival
Mirai's, but I'm willing to try it if someone doesn't dissuade me before then.
Kansaku
1514 Sherman Ave.
Evanston 60201
847-864-4386