We went last night with another couple on what was Cuna’s fourth night in business. All of us had favorable impressions.
First of all, I can contribute some evidence to help resolve the question: Is Kendal Duque (formerly head chef at Sepia) really the on-premises, hands-on head chef at Cuna, or is his merely an “advisory” “menu-creation” role? He was there. He was working in the kitchen, and then, on our way out, he was taking a break by the bar and looking out over the room. I complimented him.
Rewinding to our arrival: Since we were coming directly from a matinee in the Theatre Building up the street, we were the first (and for a while, only) customers in the restaurant upon its 5:00 opening. So you’d expect that the service would be prompt and attentive, but we’ve all been in similar situations in which that wasn’t the case, so I didn’t take it for granted, especially in a brand new place. It was. Drinks arrived quickly (the martinis are very generous, served in stemless martini-glasses) and were good. Eating-wise, we opened by sharing the flat bread with wild mushrooms and roasted garlic, which we enjoyed; both main ingredients projected their flavors. One of our friends and I shared a calamari and chorizo salad, which was delicious; the squid was tender, and the sausage complemented it well. (I’ve never had this coupling before, which struck me as imaginative.) My entrée (the menu doesn’t use words like “entrée,” going instead with the “small bites, big bites” thing—whatever) was the skate wing with bacony collard greens and cranberry-pine nut sauce. Again, delicious, with all ingredients working well with each other.
Prices are very reasonable. Even within the “big bites” part of the menu, prices are no higher than $16. No other part of the menu sticks it to you in an “ah ha, that’s where they get you” way, either. I didn’t notice how much our drinks cost, but judging from the check at the end of the evening, they didn’t contribute an unreasonable amount to the total, especially for the quality and size of the pour.
It’s a large room with a combination of regular tables, hi-tops, and (excuse my impressionistic and inadequate knowledge) sort of “Moroccan”-looking banquettes with low tables in front of them. Exposed brick walls. There is one stylistic faux pas, at least in our opinion—the large flat-screens mounted on the wall. They weren’t turned on, but it wasn’t promising that they were there. I’m not against TVs in restaurants and bars. In fact, I’m for them, if it’s the right kind of restaurant or bar. So that’s not why we thought they were weird. We thought they were weird because they seem such a mismatch for the type of restaurant Cuna seems otherwise to aspire to be, and which based on our visit it is earning the right to be--a restaurant in which people will pay attention to the food, not the game. In Cuna’s context, the TVs give off a “we don’t really know who we are, so we’re trying to be everything” vibe, which I fear sends a confusing signal that will muddy the public's perception of Cuna; people tend to gravitate to places that project a clear sense of identity, wherever that happens to be on the spectrum. Maybe Duque and his partner will think better of it and do away with the TVs before too long. Or maybe I’ll prove all wet and the flat screens will turn out to be key to the restaurant’s success. The food marries unusual flavors together, after all, so maybe the place itself is going for the same kind of "you don't expect this with that" thing; maybe what they have in mind as a mission statement is "imagine a place where you can fine-dine, and watch the Super Bowl too! How great would that be!?!" The menu prices say that the place wants to be a casual, neighborhoody destination, so maybe I’m simply being thrown by the fact that the food is better than that.
Cuna
1113 W. Belmont
Chicago, IL
312 224 8588
Last edited by
riddlemay on December 22nd, 2009, 12:33 pm, edited 2 times in total.