So I did attend the preview dinner at Saigon Sisters last night... had an 8pm reservation and they sat us right away. The space is fairly small, with maybe 30-40 seats. There is a wood banquette that runs along the two walls with windows, lined with 2-tops. There were a few more tables in the middle of the room as well. And a counter behind the hostess with seating for 6-7 more. Kind of an industrial feel, but warmed up by the liberal use of walnut wood on the banquette, tables and wall above counter seating area.
My wife and I were each presented with a different three-course menu. Each listed to appetizers, three entrees and then the same two desserts. My menu had a papaya salad and pho as the appetizers, longneck clams, beef wrapped in some sort of leaves & shrimp over noodles and a short rib dish. My wife's menu includes a shrimp spring roll and bahn bao for apps, and I can't remember the entrees other than the lobster fritters on sugar cane sticks she ordered. I think maybe one was a lamb dish?
The spring rolls and pho were both dishes I was familiar with from their French Market stall. Neither is particularly memorable. I kind of wish I'd gotten the papaya salad instead, but I'm not a big "salad" person, my wife isn't a big papaya fan and she wanted to taste their pho.
For the entrees, I had the leaf wrapped beef & shrimp over noodles. The meat and shrimp were well cooked and flavorful, but the noodles were a bit bland. They could really use some sort of broth to give some moisture and flavor. My wife got the lobster fritters, which were fluffy fried balls of lobster and rice, I believe. Each came on a sugar cane stick. There was a dipping sauce of lime, ginger and cilantro with them and a salad of pickled veggies on the plate.
For desert, my wife ordered the che I had the trio of ice creams (from Ruth & Phil's) -- black sesame, vietnamese coffee and white chocolate/coconut. In hearing descriptions when other tables got their desert, they were sampling lots of different ice cream flavors. The black sesame was refreshing and not too bold flavorwise. I don't normally care for cold coffee flavor, but I actually did like the vietnamese coffee ice cream. The coconut/white chocolate was maybe a tad sweet for my taste and I'm not a particular fan of either flavor to begin with, but my wife loved it.
At the end of the evening, they presented a bill to show what the meal would have cost -- it seemed a high at $59 before tip. The pho was the same $8 they charge at the Market, but 1/2 the size. The spring rolls were 6. The lobster fritters (there were 3) were $15. The beef/shrimp noodles were $12. Deserts were $6 each, I think.
Overall, my take on the Saigon Sisters restaurant is the same as I think about the French Market stall. It's OK if you have a taste for Asian/Vietnamese and you happen to be in the immediate area, but it's nothing special and it's overpriced. I'd much rather go to Tank or someplace else on Argyle for good, affordable Vietnamese food, and if I wanted something a little nicer than the typical Argyle location, the food is better, the space nicer and the prices cheaper at Hai Yen on Clark in Lincoln Park.
Last edited by
blipsman on October 17th, 2010, 2:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.