Griffin and I tried T-Spot near the Lincoln/Damen/Irving Park intersection Sat night.
This is another sushi place that I was afraid would be too hip for us, but it actually turned out to feel like a neighborhood spot. The atmosphere was dark and the decor leaned toward modern/glass/black, although there was one comfy seating area with upholstured chairs on the left side as you enter that softened the room. The wide screen TV above the sushi chefs added a Blade Runner overtone.
They had a specials card that listed a couple high-end rolls and the chef's plates. Then the waiter told us about a crab cake appetizer that I ordered on the spot as soon as I heard it. In addition, we ordered the special "hot spot" roll, a spicy yellow tail roll and a spider roll. They were out of Uni so we ordered a piece of super white tuna (that probably makes no sense, super white tuna is perhaps the anti-Uni, but we were looking for something not represented in the hot spot roll which already had everything but the kitchen sink)
The crab cakes were very good. Fried in panko, nice crab flavor and a good amount of meat to filler. Served with grilled asparagus and the orange spicy mayo. Four silver dollar size cakes and 6-8 spears of asparagus for $16. A great starter.
The hot spot roll was a real gem -- the roll was topped with mixture of shrimp and crab, covered with a slice of eel, a slice of jalapeno and then topped with the red roe shown on the chicago roll. Inside there were shitake mushrooms and a slice of something with the texture of tofu/egg. Maybe there was supposed to be tuna in there too? Not sure, but there were crunchy bits of something somewhere.
The result: no single fish, taste or texture was identifiable. The roll was greater than the sum of its parts. Great balance, great mouth and flavor experience.
The roll came cut in 8 good size pieces around a flaming bowl of something (the hot in "hot spot'). We asked if we were supposed to do something with the flaming center, and the waiter said no -- its just for effect.
However, just being near the flaming bowl may have warmed the roll slightly (and brought out oils) which can be a very good thing with fresh fish (and a not so good thing with not fresh fish). In this case the presentation worked.
At $17 this was an expensive roll, but it was a truly wonderful flavor combo.
In all our dishes, the fish was very fresh. The super white tuna was sweet and meaty. Both the spicy yellowtail and the spider roll were fine (not superlative, not bad).
Our friend had the sushi plate (6 pieces and a roll) said all of his fish was very fresh as well ($20).
We were all still a little hungry after our order, so as a compromise we got a final smoked salmon roll for "dessert" to split 3 ways. Cream cheese in sushi is not usually my cup of tea, but the salmon was excellent and had a strong smoky profile that allowed the cream cheese to complement it.
All in all, a fine meal -- the regular rolls are $5-7 which is pretty good pricing. The signature rolls are much more expensive ($16-20). Dinner for 3 was 100 including tip. That's a little pricey, especially without sake or miso, but I can't fault the quality of the fish.
We didn't attempt to BYOB due to reports of unreasonable corkage fees, and instead just decided to continue on to Resi's for a stein of Optimator after the meal.
T Spot Sushi
3925 N. Lincoln
http://www.tspotsushiandteabar.com/