So, tonight we ate at Carlos as part of Opentable's "Appetite Stimulus Plan" promotion. It was excellent!
In case you haven't heard about the Appetite Stimulus promotion, this week (Monday through Friday) over 75 restaurants in the Chicago area are offering a 3-course lunch for $24 and/or a 3-course dinner for $35. We decided to go to Carlos as part of the promotion. I had not been there in years, and my dining companion had never been there. So away we went.
Don't forget, Carlos is still one of the very few restaurants in the Chicago area (eight, by my count), and the only one in the suburbs, for which jackets are required for gentlemen.
We entered the dining room and were greeted and led to our table. The dining room is a lovely blend of the classic and modern, with a traditional room décor of dark wood and velvet, with various contemporary accents such as the lighting fixtures (one of which looked like a Dale Chihuly work). Very classy.
Even before we ordered, we were served an amuse bouche consisting of several stalks of miniature asparagus wrapped with some sort of cheese layer, topped with various bits that I could not identify, and on top was a thin layer of fried lotus root (which I call a "lotus chip"). Very good indeed.
We looked at the special Appetite Stimulus Menu as well as their regular menu. The Appetite Stimulus is the best deal, but they have another promotion running through the end of this month that offers value almost as good, so if you don't make it there by this Friday, you still have time to eat at Carlos for a fraction of the price. More on that in a moment. First, the Appetite Stimulus Menu:
1. Choice of (a) Lobster Bisque, or (b) Mixed Green Salad with Goat Cheese and Balsamic Vinaigrette
2. Choice of (a) Wild King Salmon Papillote with Julienne Vegetables, Fine Herbs and Sauce Americana, or (b) Sliced Beef Tenderloin with Grilled Vegetables, Shallot-Roquefort Whipped Potatoes and a Cabernet-Rosemary Reduction
3. Symphony of Desserts
The Appetite Stimulus Menu also has promotional prices on two wines for $8.50 for a 5-ounce glass and $32 a bottle, which is WAY below their normal prices on the wine list. One was a 2006 Hacienda Chardonnay, the other a 2005 Hacienda Merlot. My companion had a glass of the latter.
The other promotion they're running this month is a celebration of their 27th anniversary. For each course, in addition to the usual items at their customary 2008 prices, they are also offering one or two items from their original menu when they opened in 1981, at their prices at that time. That's the other promotion that offers value that's almost as good, since the starters and salad are around $8, and mains around $24. (By comparison, the normal 2008 prices are roughly $15-20 for appetizers and $40-50 for entrees.) All of the items on the Appetite Stimulus Menu are also part of their 1981 promotional items. You can see the regular menu (including the 1981 promotion) on their website at
http://www.carlos-restaurant.com. They also had several specials of the day not shown on either menu.
Two of the appetizers on the regular menu caught our eye, so we decided to have a four-course dinner (not counting the amuse bouche), starting with those two appetizers ordered a la carte, and then the Appetite Stimulus Menu, with one of each of the choices on that menu.
One of the appetizers we ordered was part of the 1981 promotion, the Wild Burgundy Escargots in Brioche á Téte with a Roquefort Pernod Cream Sauce for $9.50. It was excellent! It's worth noting that the sauce didn't really look or taste all that much like Roquefort, Pernod, or cream; it was more like a very rich brown reduction, very tasty but without those distinguishing flavors. The other appetizer we ordered was the only item we ordered at 2008 prices, the “Hot and Cold Foie Gras”, which is Pan-Seared Hudson Valley Foie Gras, along with a Medallion of La Belle Farms Cold Foie Gras for $23.50. These were served very cleverly, with the hot foie gras on top of a thick cube-shaped glass platform, under which sat the cold foie gras. I think the additional ingredients served with the foie gras are different from those specified on the website menu, but I do not remember exactly what they were (sorry!). There was a thin layer of something breadlike slightly sweet below the hot foie gras, and there were red shreds of some kind of sweet fruit, and a dab of a slightly sweet sauce. The cold foie gras was served with a gelee of some sort and frisee greens. They were both superb, my personal award winner for "best in show".
Next up were the soup and salad from the Appetite Stimulus Menu. A really great lobster bisque is made by boiling and reducing lobster shells, and it turns brown in cooking. That's what this was. Great lobster flavor, very rich, topped with a few shreds of toasted (?) veggies and a few dots of herb oil. The salad was good too (although perhaps the least unusual dish of the meal); I like the way they used strips of cucumber to form a cylinder in which the greens were presented.
The mains were excellent also. The beef was cooked perfectly to the requested medium-rare, and tender as could be. The salmon was also excellent. The real attraction of the salmon was the sauce, which turned out to be a rich lobster sauce, a reduction similar to the bisque but this time with nice little chunks of lobster in it.
We did ask them to show us the selection of desserts in case we wanted anything other than what came on the Appetite Stimulus Menu, and they brought over the two dessert trays displaying the selection. We each had the dessert that came on the AS Menu. It was a plate with three VERY small desserts on it: a raspberry-chocolate marquis in the shape of a pyramid, which was like a chocolate truffle topped with a raspberry; a layered chocolate-banana mousse cake; and a chocolate cup with a scoop of vanilla ice cream in it. All of these were very good, and although they were small, they were just the right touch at the end of a relatively rich meal. The presentation was also very nice; they drizzled chocolate onto the plate to form the outline of a branch with four leaves on it, and they filled each leaf with a tiny bit of a different kind of sauce: crème anglaise (vanilla), mango, apple, and raspberry.
The service was exactly what you expect at a top-notch restaurant. The main server, a young fellow (I don't think he mentioned his name, and the receipt says "1 Carlos" but I can assure you he was not old enough to be Carlos Nieto) was friendly and humorous, always outgoing, and made sure to check with us shortly after the runners brought each course. Before taking our drink order, he was quick to mention the wine special on the AS Menu so that we were aware of it. Other servers and staff were all friendly and efficient, staying on top of things flawlessly so that you never even think about any service issues.
With all of the above-mentioned items (including the glass of wine), a $4 iced tea, and $10 sales tax, the bill came to $126 before tip, which is quite the bargain for a four-course meal at Carlos. I did give a very generous tip, under the assumption that an appropriate tip would be one based on what the meal might normally cost, not what it actually cost with the AS Menu promotion.
The Appetite Stimulus Menu promotion runs through this Friday, and the 1981 items run through the end of the month. They have various other promotions too, including BYO Mondays. They are open for lunch Monday through Friday December 10-24.
After 27 years, Carlos remains one of the best restaurants in the Chicago area, and this dinner was an excellent example.