Report:
Pretty crowded at 6pm on a very rainy friday. All the seats at the bar were full, and there were 3 or 4 tables (out of 8 ) occupied besides ours. Nice decor, good service.
Now to the food:
house cured olives - pretty good. Not much variation in the type of olive, but a fine assortment of olives, cornichons, pickled garlic, pickled onions, pickled peppers. ($3)
white asparagus with a paprika aioli? and something else. beth liked this a lot, I was mixed on it, largely because the asparagus was a bit watery. ($5)
patatas bravas. Not quite what I'm used to in patatas bravas, but the variant was nice. paprika aioli and a nice tomato base sandwiching perfectly roasted red and purple potatoes. ($4)
scallops wrapped in jamon serrano, with lemon aioli. I thought these were very nicely done. the scallops were big and meaty and flavorful and the serrano was lightly crispy. ($10)
chorizo with melon. this was bilbao chorizo cut into small discs, about 1/4" thick, served with chunks of honeydew and canteloupe. I'm a huge fan of bilbao chorizo compared to standard spanish chorizo found in every other tapas joint in town. It's juicier, to me, more flavorful. This was a really nice dish, and I'd come back just for this one. very, very simple. ($8 )
prime ribeye with saffron rice and three sauces. these were nice-sized cubes (probably 7-8oz total) of really tasty prime ribeye, skewered with some peppers and perfectly grilled. the sauces were the same paprika cream, a "mojo" sauce, and the cabrales sauce mentioned by kl5 above. The cabrales was VERY blue-cheesy, and quite good. Another very well done dish. The chef is from one of the loop/river north steakhouses, which I think explains a lot. There's an entree version on the menu, with patatas bravas as well, for $28. ($10)
For only being open 10 days, they seem to be running pretty smoothly. As noted above, the service was friendly and mostly efficient, although I think our waiter forgot about us for 20 minutes or so. The food wasn't earth shattering, and it's not going to convince anyone that Chicago's tapas scene is better than, say, the New York/New Jersey area. But it's good.
We'll be back, but we're probably going to do a circuit of some of the other tapas joints in town, first.