I was a first-timer at La Oaxaqueña yesterday afternoon - the Milwaukee Ave. location. When trying a Mexican restaurant for the first time, I reserve Sunday afternoons because Sunday gets the biggest crowds (and, oftentimes the freshest ingredients/food).
When I arrived there wasn't a seat to be found, except for an empty table for 8 in the window. Reluctant to occupy such a large table by myself (I was dining solo yesterday) I waited for a smaller table to vacate. After 15-minutes one of the waitstaff told me to go ahead and sit at the large table.
The decor/ambiance struck me as more Mexican in feel than most Mexican restaurants I've visited, outside of Mexico. I had the feeling I was sitting down in someone's dining room in Mexico. The appearance is clean and orderly and the staff knew the menu and was attentive.
The complimentary/traditional
totopos with three salsas was disappointing. The
totopos had a stale "store bought" quality - thin and tasteless. I didn't particularly like the runny consistency of the salsas - I prefer salsas with a bit more body, that'll stick a bit to what you put them on and not immediately run off. The salsas were, however flavorful (but one needed a spoon to taste them).
For a starter I ordered the
Camarones Oaxaqueñas (or is the proper pronunciation "Camarones Oaxaqueños" - I get confused at times). The dish ($6. 95) might be ordered by someone looking for a light meal - 6 large butterflied shrimp sauteed with large pieces of onion, green pepper and I think cabbage (not certain) with a
queso blanco mixed in (I assumed it was a Oaxacan white cheese, but don't know for certain). It was a tasty appetizer that I enjoyed.
I liked the menu - it offers a nice balance between meat, chicken and seafood, not to mention the huge
torta's. For my entree I chose the
Mole Oaxaqueño - a large-portion ($9.50) half-chicken nicely smothered in "black" mole (actually, brown). I was disappointed that black mole was the only of the typical Oaxaca mole's offered. Chocolaty, but not overwhelmingly so - the mole had a nice consistency and I enjoyed it. The only mistake I made was not ordering additional mole on the side. The chicken was a meaty one and it was moist.
Good corn tortillas are important to me when eating chicken and mole and the
tortillas de maiz were a disappointment. The apparently store-bought (plastic bag packaged, no doubt) tortillas were almost flavorless and did not hold together well - they were shredding as I rolled them to eat. They weren't much use when I attempted to place the chicken/mole in them, but they were satisfactory when used to sop-up excess mole from the plate.
The chicken was accompanied by a large portion of Mexican/Spanish rice on the same platter. The rice was typical for this kind of meal, nothing special.
Since I had stuffed myself, I didn't try any of the desserts.
The restaurant offers a good selection of beers (and, surprisingly to me, an offering of canned
pulque). During the course of my meal I went through three bottles of beer -
Pacifico (from Mazatlan - $3 ea.).
During the course of the meal people came and went, there wasn't a time when I saw an empty table. At one point three women were standing at the door waiting to be seated and I motioned to the waitress to seat them at my table - after all, one person at a table for 8 is a bit wasteful.
As can be expected at a Mexican restaurant, Sunday is "family day" and children were present, but not a distraction. I knew I was in a "Mexican" restaurant (as if I were in a restaurant or home in Mexico) when the woman at a table in front of me lifted her blouse and breast fed her baby. Music from a CD or radio station played in the background, but not very loud, sufficient to set the mood.
One meal isn't sufficient for me to reach a firm opinion, but my reaction to the meal and observing the goings-on in the restaurant is that La Oaxaqueña offers food/service at levels above the norm for such restaurants in Chicago. I've spent time in Oaxaca and think the restaurant is more than sufficiently, authentically, "Oaxaqueño" for the palates of most Mexicans and non-Mexicans.
What appears to set this restaurant apart from so many others is the personal touch of the owner(s). A woman I assume is the owner was busily preparing food in the kitchen, attending to guests at the front door, and keeping her eye on everything. The waitstaff was "family-like" also. The food served appears to be more of the "home cooking" variety served in Mexico than one finds in most Mexican restaurants in Chicago. I'll be going back to try other offerings on the menu (maybe I'll bring my own tortillas next time!).