T-Spot is obviously supposed to be a slightly naughty play on words, though for me it conjured up a less appetizing image from the history of my profession (advertising):
Some copywriter for Camel Cigarettes wrote:THE T-ZONE TEST WILL TELL YOU.
The "T-Zone" - T for taste and T for throat - is your own laboratory for any cigarette. For only your taste and your throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you... and how it agrees with your throat. On the basis of the experience of many, many millions of smokers, we believe Camels will suit your "T-Zone to a "T."
Well, tonight I found myself with a raw fish laboratory in my stomach as I decided to check out T-Spot Sushi, a tea and sympathy, er, sushi place on the newly hot stretch of Lincoln that includes
Mrs. Murphy and Sons Irish Bistro and Sola.
T-Spot has a small sushi bar, a cozy little room which says 90s hipster coffeehouse, and a row of tea-leaf dispensers along one wall. I started off with a rooibos, an herbal tea, and this maki:
This was called, apparently under the mistaken belief that it belonged at the nightclub across the street, "Latin Heat." The improbable name aside (less improbable when I learned that Leo, the Latino fellow in front of me who made it, was the restaurant's main chef and its inventor), it was a surprisingly well-balanced roll made of spicy something or other, a slice of jalapeno, cilantro, some white and red tuna on top, and scallions, drizzled with a little lime.
After I took a picture of it, to the general amusement of the staff, they offered me a chance to take pictures of other peoples' food as it went out. Here's another roll, the "Chicago Fire":
Now we're definitely in the realm of gussied-up trendy rolls here, but within that genre, T-Spot seems to show more restraint than most-- just compare this dragon, artful and in actually edible-sized pieces, with the cartoon silliness of
this unwieldy oversized one from Midori. More to the point, as I said, the Latin Heat kept its flavors under control and complimentary to one another, not allowing any one flavor to overpower the rest with gloppy spicy mayo-ness or the like. Certainly one of the two or three best rolls I've had in recent memory, mainly because it isn't a squirtin' glob of mayo or a super-sweet eel-sauce-candied maki.
I also ordered a platter of various sashimi pieces and was pleased with them overall:
This was not cheap, mainly because the two slices of otoro at the far right were not cheap, but it was fairly priced and the pieces were quite large. The otoro was quite good, if not as melt-in-your-mouth good as similar tuna at Katsu; the regular tuna was just okay, but the salmon and the hamachi were excellent. Overall I'd say the quality of the fish exceeded my expectations for a little neighborhood sushi spot, and the prices were fair for it.
Chatting with Leo and various others in the restaurant, I learned they've been open about 7 weeks and actually had pretty decent weekends, probably due to the crowds Sola is attracting and, occasionally, forcing to look elsewhere for seating. Just this week they went to offering lunch as well (Mrs. Murphy now has lunch too; is there that much lunch business in this neighborhood?) Overall, for a place that at first glance screams hipster vibe rather than authentic Japanese-ness, T-Spot Sushi offers pretty high quality and a friendly welcome-- not least because it's the only sushi place where I've ever seen them bring a lighted birthday cake out to a customer. (I assume the party brought the cake in with them.) All in all, I think I have a new lunch spot for sushi.
T-Spot Sushi
3925 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago
Tel: (773) 549-4500