Must be a good week for interesting new spots in nnnaperville. Okay, done with that schtick.
Today I was the fourth customer at Naf Naf Grill (they say they have a web site here
http://www.nafnafgrill.com/, but nothing is there at this moment). Just stopped as I was driving by and it turned out they had just opened for the first time.
It is an old Taco Bell, redecorated in reds and yellows and made quite pleasant. The cuisine is Middle Eastern, as befits a Yemeni raised in Israel. The entire endeavor cries for comparison with Cedar Grill, and so I must.
Cedar Grill was created by taking a cheesy independent hot dog stand in Downers Grove, spending as little as possible on it and serving excellent Lebanese food in such an unassuming manner that one can readily say the food far exceeds the ambiance (a generous word to use in the context). The owner is a quiet and surly person who when questioned by a customer about whether the change given was correct, rather than offer the $1 in question as a courtesy, harangued the customer at length about the questionable honesty of that type of person (a waitress from the local Omega, if you are curious as to who he was slandering). The staff, aside from the owner and the head cook are all Mexican, and continue the slightly seedy and belligerent theme.
A lovable place, in the way your cranky, sloppy old Uncle Alfred is lovable. Anyway, the food is good and if you like gruff, they got gruff.
Naf Naf has much loftier goals.While the menu contains many offerings in common with Cedar Grill, and the restaurant is located in an old fast food joint, they actually spent money on outfitting the place. New tables, I believe all new tile, the paint job, and a lot of new kitchen equipment. The kitchen staff has sharp chef uniforms (seems like overkill in a Middle Eastern fast food spot, but it certainly does send the message that this is not your sloppy uncle's place). And while this was the first day and they were making a special effort, I can't imagine the staff of Cedar Grill ever being so friendly, presentable, engaging, and even downright cute in some cases (there was also a lot of staff in the kitchen).
I ordered the Yemenite Chicken soup - a rich broth, dotted with fat, flavored with curry or something very like it, and full of carrots and celery bits, as well as some chunks of chicken breast. Not a great soup, but a good soup deserving to be on my lunchtime soup circuit. And it was served with what may be Naf Naf's crowning glory - two pieces of pita baked in store. A point of pride here (from the menu "We don't just bake it, we make it."), that Cedar Grill would mock ("you say you bake your own pita!??!! You paid for an oven and electricity to make some pita that ends up costing you more even without those costs??!! Why?" I imagine Uncle Alfred asking). The pita was like a warm pillow.
I also ordered a Chicken Shawarma sandwich. This was twice as big as Cedar Grill's for about 1 1/2 times the cost. And it is full of hummus, salad bits, tahini with a nice hot sauce on the side. I am not necessarily a tahini fan, but the tahini and fresh pita would be a great meal on their own. I like the shawerma a little more from Cedar Grill, though Naf Naf's chicken is very good, too. Both sandwiches are great. I would lean toward Cedar Grill because the gritty presentation is more comfortable than the luxuriousness of that Naf Naf sandwich, but that is a choice of style, not deliciousness.
Since it was the first day, they also asked me to sample the stuffed grape leaves (nice) and baklava (nothing special).
I overheard a discussion about homemade french fries, so I will need to go back and check those out. In addition to those menu items. Falafel, BabaGhanoush, Kababs (Kifta, Chicken thigh or breast and beef) and a chicken breast schnitzel round out the mains. Split pea soup, basmati rice and peas (peas pulao anyone?) Turkish Coffee and Nana Tea complete the menu.
I have tipped my hand on this one - yes, I do prefer crusty Uncle Alfred to a stylish cousin who, though very easy on the eye, makes me feel like an unmade bed. But I will happily violate this principle in pursuit of fresh baked pita and Middle Eastern fare that, at least on the first day, has some aspirations. Better ingredients and a little ambition can make a difference.
I will go back.
Naf Naf Grill
1095 East Ogden
Naperville
630-904-7200
d
Feeling (south) loopy