Dined there Friday with Cathy2, Giovanna, and Maria Kijac (who is Ecuadorian). We ordered straight Latino, but we may have been the only ones who did, as most folks were ordering sushi (which looked good and was beautifully presented). The place was packed by 7:30, and everyone seemed to be having a good time.
The food was great, though the one waiter who was working the entire restaurant alone (and, I think, helping in the kitchen) was clearly struggling to keep up. He managed, and did so with cheerful charm, but it did stretch the evening out a bit -- though I will say, no one looked as if they were in a hurry.
We were greeted with a basked of warm plantain chips and a dipping sauce that Maria said was likely made with tamarillo (tree "tomato"). Very nice.
We shared three appetizers -- cheese-filled empanadas (feather-light but rich -- good, though not the best of the appetizers we sampled), llapingachos (a mashed potato, cheese, and onion patty that is ubiquitous in Ecuador -- absolutely sensational here -- a somewhat different version from the ones I had in Ecuador, but even in Ecuador, no two people made them the same -- but these were every bit as good as the best I had in Ecuador), and maduro con queso (baked, cheese filled plantains -- very nice).
We shared main courses as well. The pesecado encocado -- fish cooked in coconut sauce -- was outstanding -- really an exceptional dish -- perfectly cooked fish, rich, flavorful sauce -- just wonderful. Churrasco was a flavorful stewed meat served with french fries, tomato, onions, and two fried eggs. Very tasty. I'd definitely get it again. The Galapagos fried rice was good, though not the most fabulous of the three -- though that said, the shrimp (you have a choice of shrimp, pork, or beef) were wonderful. The rice was flavorful, mixed with peppers, onions, carrots, and the "house sauce." Quite nice, but just pales in comparison to the first two dishes.
Though we only had three appetizers and three main courses split among four people, we were full. There weren't leftovers, but we hardly had room for dessert -- but we forced ourselves to split something, in the name of research. The dessert -- bananas tempura -- combined the dual influences of the restaurant. This was really fabulous. The tempura batter was ethereally light and crisp, and the bananas were almost liquid inside. This was drizzled with a bit of chocolate syrup.
I'll be interested to learn from anyone who might venture to try their sushi if it's as good as the Latin American offerings. If it is, the place might continue to be as packed as it was Friday.