Went to Costa's in Greektown on Tues. with out of town friends. We were ordering pretty lightly, so we didn't test the kitchen very deeply.)
Overall, a very pleasant experience in all categories.
We were 4 plus a toddler and the waiter first brought us to a 4-top, but the host then came by and immediately suggested we move to a large round table by the window which was perfect. The window fucnctioned as a giant TV screen for the toddler, leaving the adults to chat peaceably. We were also right next to a fake fireplace with an extended mantle that made a perfect little nook for exploring, safely removed from other diners and foot traffic.
On to the food.
Apps. were roasted beets and grilled zucchini with skordalia. Stuffed calamari, saganaki.
The veggies and skordalia were just fine. As they should be but no surprises.
The squid was very nice indeed. Served on greens and with very fragrant garlic sauce. The squid itself was pleasantly, but not overly, chewy.
I'm not all that experienced in saganaki, so I don't really have a benchmark. I expected the flaming to result in a somewhat melted, gooey plateful of cheese to then slather on bread. In fact, after the fire died down, the remaining square of cheese was largely unaltered. Very salty, somewhat chalky and firm. It was quite nice on the bread, but not what I expected. (What sort of cheese is used? I don't know and didn't ask.)
A small "greek" salad was ordered and my friend was disappointed in the absence of anchovies. (I believe the components were accurately described on the menu, but he had ordered without checking closely, just assuming that a greek salad would have them.) A discussion ensued on whether so many people were averse to anchovies, that they had simply given up and taken them off without changing the name of the salad.
Fried calamari were ordered and were a nice but unexceptional version of this ubiquitous dish. Nice golden rings. Not greasy. Accompanied by a light tomato sauce. (I did miss the fact that there only rings, no tentacles. This also suggests the possibility of a frozen product being used. Though perhaps they chop up the tentacles and use them for stuffing in other dishes or something.)
My wife had the roasted veg. plate. Very flavorful if cooked a bit more than we expect in this country with everything just barely grilled and still crispy as the norm.
I had the special garlic chicken. A half bird - a bit more bone to flesh ratio than I consider ideal - but excellently done. Not a crisp skin, but a very, very flavorful one. Very mellow, aromatic garlic haze surrounding the plate, no sharp, unsynthesized raw garlic notes. The meat was all extremely moist. The breast was not dry at all.
The accompanying mashed potatos were divine. Moist but not soupy. Salty and garlicky and plentiful. I would have been happy to see something green accompany the plate, but had I thought about it, I could have ordered something. We were more in social mode than chow mode.
Desserts were standard issue. A choc. mousse cake for the child which satisfied him, but looked completely run-of-the-mill. I tried the galaktabouriko and it was pleasant.
Had a regular coffee which was fine. Better than in many restaurants that don't feature good coffee.
I tried a Marathon beer for the first time. A pleasant lager style, but not special, it seemed to me. Washed down the meal.
Tab for the above was $86 pre-tip. (Though this doesn't really tell very much as we ordered so lightly and ecclectically.)
I would happily go back and explore the menu a bit deeper.
"Strange how potent cheap music is."