You can’t miss this new Berwyn restaurant driving down Cermak on a weekend night. Cars are lined up to drop people off and cruising around looking for parking anywhere in the next half mile. A colleague went and raved about it, but a) we could never find parking, and b)she doesn’t like cilantro so what does she know from Mexican food?
Tonight there was a parking space.
It’s a big place, probably seating 175 in the bar and the two dining rooms, plus who knows how many more in the upstairs banquet room(s?). We were in the big dining room, which was maybe a third filled on a Thursday night. The smaller dining room, separated from ours by large columns, was also where the stage was. There was a singer, slightly flat, and then a routine by a couple of clowns, and then three co-eds trying out their karaoke skills.
All the entertainment is in Spanish only (or was tonight). The menu is in Spanish first and then, mostly, translated into English. The wait staff and even the bus boys appear to all be bilingual—a plus for the monolingual English speakers among us. We were the only non-Hispanics there.
They feature tableside preparations. A woman with a mortar and pestle comes to your table and makes your salsa to order (and yes, my colleague gets it without cilantro). If you order guacamole, she’ll make that too. They also suggest crepes for dessert, again made at your table. Like
Mi Tierra they feature parrilladas for two or four, with the seafood version running $16 a person. More interesting menu items include
codorniches a la parrilla "two grilled quail”, and “
Birria de cabrito al horno "the traditional baked baby goat marinated with out own special sauce served over a maguey leaf.” In addition to the crepes, and the usual assortment of cakes, the dessert menu includes “
flan de elote” and “
gel", a creamy gelatin with fruit.
Though both the goat, at $14, and the quail, at $10, tempted me, I stayed even cheaper by getting the four tamal plate for $8. Bill got 3
al pastor tacos for the same price, with the result that even after several refills of Bill’s Coke, our tab was under $20. The tamales were excellent, with lots of well-cooked pork inside and about a cup of
crema on my plate to dress them with. Bill said his tacos were among the best he’d eaten and they were delicious.
First impression? Mi Tierra for the slightly more sophisticated crowd and with better food. The prices are darn close to what you’d pay in a linoleum floored taqueria. I’ll be interested in others’ opinions, but, in the meantime, it’s our new Berwyn favorite—at least when we can find a parking place.
La Quinto de los Reyes
6431 W. Cermak
Berwyn
708 484 5373
(also in DeKalb)