This weekend I had a very enjoyable meal at Casa De Samuel, the esteemed GNR recipient. The meal was notable for some non-food items. As usual, and even at 7 on a Saturday evening, the place was not very busy. Maybe 4 or 5 tables occupied, mostly 1-4 people, though we were a raucous party of 10. Did try the pitchers of Margaritas this time and was not terribly happy with that. Too sweet, not enough fresh/real juice flavor for me.
There was a Quinceañera party in the basement, so they were doing some business. There was a duet performing Mexican standards for the small crowd, doing it surprisingly well, if way too loudly for the sparse crowd. Most incongruous, CdS now offers valet parking, for the reasonable (of course) price of $5, at least on Saturday night.
The high point of the food was the Cornish Game Hen, which I had in an excellent red salsa. A little spicy, breaded bird with the normal sides of beans, rice and salad (lettuce and cucumbers in a very mild cream dressing with what looked to me like tiny chunks of ham, though other members of our party claimed theirs were tomato - got me, but either way the whole salad was pretty bland).
I really liked that bird and as I enthused to a fellow LTH'er about that the next day, he smartly replied, "Go to Al-Khyam and try theirs." So I did that very thing.
The Lebanese bird had many advantages over the Mexican, starting with the menu description that reads something like "Little Lebanese Babe Chicken Kornish marinated secret recipe..." Lest someone think I am mocking this, I am not. I recognize the kindred nature of this menu English - similar to how I butcher ordering in numerous other languages, including Spanish as it happens. It heartens me to see that this is both comprehensible and a little charming.
The marinated and grilled bird is also sure to be healthier than the breaded and fried bird at Casa de Samuel, and if I had to choose only one cooking method for the rest of my life, grilling might well be the one. But the Lebanese bird was chopped into a form of interchangeable chicken knuckles before cooking, the bird was a touch drier than the CdS rendition, and it did not have the heroic complement of a good salsa rojo.
In the end, I cannot say one is better than the other. What I can say is that if the Game Hens offered at Al-Khyam and Casa de Samuel are not the best dishes at each place, they come close and I plan to go back to both to continue my research soon. I would not want to reach a hasty and ill-considered conclusion on this issue.
d
Feeling (south) loopy