I hadn't been to Otom before (though I had been to Moto a year and a half ago) and so I wasn't quite sure what to expect. Overall I really enjoyed the meal and the company - this was my first LTH attended event.
First, I too really enjoyed the pork belly, but I *always* like pork belly. The "beans" made from pork and served along-side the belly slab were an interesting and playful twist on pork & beans.
The highlights of the meal for me, however, were the shrimp first course, the carrot and edamame pie slice served as a part of the TV dinner, and then the dessert course.
The shrimp, black beans, fried/puffed rice, chili puree and jalapeño noodle dish was just fantastic in my opinion. Playful, but not in a way that distracted from the flavors of the dish. The jalapeño noodle (I believe that they said it was jalapeño and shrimp-based, perhaps all bound with Activa?) had great flavor, texture, and really pulled the other elements in for me.
The pie slice (double-crust pie with a savory edamame and carrot filling, served with piped dollop of salted whip cream/butter) was something that I could go for a slice of right now - I'd eat it over and over. Something about the crust (and I'm normally not a pie crust fanatic), the warm savory filling, and the cold salty cream just did it for me. Downright delicious. I wasn't a huge fan of the cauliflower mash with coffee gravy that was also served in that course, but I'm not a big cauliflower guy, so that might explain it - perhaps the cauliflower and coffee combo was just too odd for me. I did think that the coffee gravy worked quite well on that course's main element, the chicken-fried bean steak.
And then finally the dessert - a multi-element dish with bananas in caramel sauce, sweetened marscapone, "chocolate chip cookies" (graham cracker tuiles, with slightly-crunchy cake-batter "chips"), and 'nilla wafer ice cream. The dish had a lot of elements, but really started to come together for me (though I don't quite know where the bananas fit in). The interesting thing about this dish to me was that everything was a familiar flavor and a familiar form, but not matched up. The "cookies" looked like cookies, but tasted like graham crackers and crunchy brownie top crinkle (the best way I can describe how the "chocolate chips" tasted to me), the ice cream took the proper form of ice cream, but tasted just like 'nilla wafer cookies (so you get the distinct flavor of cookie, but not from the thing on the plate that looks like a cookie).
All in all, it was a fantastic meal. When it was at its high points, I felt like it delivered on what I perceive as the intent of Nash's cuisine - playful concepts that challenge your notions of what things are or will taste like when they hit the table, and yet still taste great. In the end, if it doesn't taste great, cute food concepts just don't cut muster - at Otom last night I felt like most of the items met this standard.
I'd like to thank the folks at Otom for a fun event and a great meal - I had a blast and will definitely be back.
-Dan