Mike G wrote:Cool, great find. 32 tables seems a lot, was it very busy (or were you too early to really tell)?
JimInLoganSquare wrote:In a lot of ways, Fonda del Mar reminds me of Dorado
David Hammond wrote:JiLS,
I'm particularly intrigued by the lamb chops in mole negro. I was thinking the other night that one usually finds moles (in Chicago at least) on chicken or pork, the lighter white meats. In Susana Trilling's Seasons of My Heart (A Culinary Journey through Oaxaca, Mexico), the usual mole media is chicken, though she sometimes uses turkey and even hominy, but of the 11 moles recipes she presents, only one includes beef as part of a larger stew that also includes pork. No lamb or goat or other stronger meats are mole-ized. I have found a few recipes for lamb mole, but usually the preference seems to be for red or coloradito, not the negro as at Fonda del Mar (e.g., http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes ... 30,00.html).
Which is a round-about way of asking: how do you think the mole negro meshed with the lamb chop?
Hammond
G Wiv wrote:Is Fonda del Mar BYOB, similar to Dorado?
David Hammond wrote:Which is a round-about way of asking: how do you think the mole negro meshed with the lamb chop?
JimInLoganSquare wrote:And Metromix (and AOL, and NPR) found it first, anyway. I'm happy to give credit where it is due.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:Did anyone try the Chef's tasting? I think a little more imagination was shown on the tilapia included in my Chef's tasting, for example, than Gary experienced. It's also a real bargain at $30.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:Did anyone get some photos Saturday night? If so, please post. I have to think the food looks better on a real plate than in the foil take-out dishes on my kitchen countertop.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:I guess I understand the "bait and switch" argument (pun intended) raised by Peter, as the place does scream "seafood house" both through its decor and its designation and name.
what's with the knotty pine tables? They made me feel a little like I was being measured for a cheap coffin
pdaane wrote:The veracruz was made with, what else, tilapia...
GWiv wrote:Huachinango made with (according to the menu) Red Snapper, not tilapia
Snark wrote:why are some dishes in styrofoam and/or tin containers and the soups nad other dishes in actual ceramic bowls???
JimInLoganSquare wrote:Snark wrote:why are some dishes in styrofoam and/or tin containers and the soups nad other dishes in actual ceramic bowls???
Note for purposes of full disclosure that I did some amount of photo styling with the ceviche, including propping up a tortilla chip in back and balancing a lime slice in front. Should I start publishing "Serving Suggestion" disclaimers on my posts?
JimInLoganSquare wrote:Did anyone get some photos Saturday night? If so, please post.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:
I guess I understand the "bait and switch" argument (pun intended) raised by Peter, as the place does scream "seafood house" both through its decor and its designation and name. But hey, don't pick on the tilapia! Even if it's a pedestrian fish, I happen to like tilapia, and the prep I got on Friday was very good. And I also think we need to keep in mind that living in the Midwest, as we do, anybody serving seafood at the low, low prices offered by Fonda del Mar shouldn't be expected to be serving 4-star fish. That being said, I have to admit that throwing a plain, fried tilapia on a plate with no adornment is pretty lame, no matter how well fried or reasonably priced. Hopefully, as they get their legs under them, they'll have more time and energy to devote to creative presentations of whatever they do have on offer. In any event, there are any number of food outlets that I and other posters on this board go to for something that is NOT their purported core competency -- case in point, Harry's Hot Dogs, my source for grits and Kuma's Corner, a bar serving bar food that also serves the best biscuits I've had north of Terre Haute. So, let's for now just put in our collective instituational knowledge that FdM is "that seafood place with the amazing lamb in mole negro." Or not.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:The menu does say snapper, although maybe they got a bargain on tilapia by the gross on Saturday; Peter, what do you know that we don't???
eatchicago wrote:David Hammond wrote:JiLS,
I'm particularly intrigued by the lamb chops in mole negro. I was thinking the other night that one usually finds moles (in Chicago at least) on chicken or pork, the lighter white meats. In Susana Trilling's Seasons of My Heart (A Culinary Journey through Oaxaca, Mexico), the usual mole media is chicken, though she sometimes uses turkey and even hominy, but of the 11 moles recipes she presents, only one includes beef as part of a larger stew that also includes pork. No lamb or goat or other stronger meats are mole-ized. I have found a few recipes for lamb mole, but usually the preference seems to be for red or coloradito, not the negro as at Fonda del Mar (e.g., http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes ... 30,00.html).
Which is a round-about way of asking: how do you think the mole negro meshed with the lamb chop?
Hammond
Bayless seems to be a fan of lamb in mole negro. I've had an excellent version at Topo that meshed perfectly, and I've seen him prepare it on his show.
I look forward to trying the FdM version. Thanks JiLS.
Best,
Michael
David Hammond wrote:Rodrigo felt that you wanted a somewhat bland meat to showcase the complexity of the mole.
All that said, I'm looking forward to having some of Fonda del Mar's lamb mole tonight.
Hammond