Chiming in with another enjoyable Marrakech experience.
Four of us hit it last night, and, in keeping with others' experiences, were the only folks in the joint at 7:30 (a couple walked in about 20 minutes after we arrived, and were the sole other diners during our 2.0 hours there).
We decided on the back room and after ogling the silver shoes and incongruently displayed leather jacket for a minute or two, the friendly/zenish owner came out of the kitchen and told us to sit anywhere - he was the only staff that we saw all night, and I think it's perfectly plausible that he was actually cooking the food himself (or at least acting sous), based on his long disappearances to the kitchen throughout the night. Should have asked. In any event, his jack of all trades approach didn't disturb the pacing of the meal for us (easier to pull off, I guess, with two tables/six customers).
We ordered Taktaouka (peppers and tomatoes), Zaalouk (eggplant), Hommus, Falafel and the Harrira as appetizers (only Moroccan Salad was unavailable) and as a general matter really enjoyed them. Absolutely loved the Taktaouka and Zaalouk - each hot and sour and delicious on the just toasted pita points. Hommus was helped by the heaping application of olive oil which thinned it out in a good way, and the falafel, as described upthread, were freshly made, and terrifically light. My only complaints were with the Harrira, which I thought had a chef boyardee quality about it (no one else complained though) and the harissa, which had no heat and not a ton of flavor - sort of a bland salsa. Good harissa would have helped the falafel reach even higher levels. These appetizers were very cheap and a very managable size. Fun to try several and still be hungry for mains.
I had the Summer Breeze, mostly based on the name - the Fez Tagine ended up being better - and the shank was delicious if the veg (peas and okra - a new combination for me) was a bit of a disappointment. Loved the buttery rice, but was envious of the cinnamony prune sauce accompanying the fez shank. Man, that was a really good dish - everyone thought so. Others had chicken preparations - one over cous cous with veggies and the other the "atlas" prep, I believe - each plate bouyed by a slightly crispy leg/thigh segment that was juicy and very good (although ultimately not a match for the fez shank or my summer breeze shank). Needless to say, at about $10 each, they were all excellent values.
In all, a very nice place to have in our neighborhood. BYO, although I don't typically search it out, obviously helps to keep costs down as well ($3 per bottle corkage). We got out of there for $90 for four, and that was with a 25% tip (which in retrospect was probably light considering the amount of water the owner was carrying). Thanks for the scouting, Santander.