I'm pleased to report that Indie, 15-table spot with sushi and Thai on the menu, has opened in the former Lanna Thai storefront at 5951 N. Broadway.
For a few years after we moved to Edgewater, we would beg Jim and Bob Bee (then partners at Sai Cafe) to open a branch on Broadway in Edgewater so we could walk to sushi. They never bought into the idea, to our chagrin.
Then every time someone like Edgewater Community Council polled us residents about services, we always replied that a sushi bar would be very welcome. But years dragged by...
So I have high hopes for Indie. Now, I've only had one lunch there, but I can report that while the nigiri selection seems small and typical - perhaps that will improve as volume increases - the maki selection is varied and reasonably adventurous, and the Thai side of the menu is well-selected and, from what I can tell, well-executed.
I had the "Santana" maki - a futo-sized roll of tuna & scallion tempura with masago, some avocado, some more scallion, and a piquant sauce - and it was well-presented and very tasty. The rest of the maki menu had some old and new favorites - I'm looking forward to trying the dragon maki, among others - and there's a special section for hand-rolls (temaki). Not as cutting edge as someplace like Starfish, but this IS Edgewater, after all.
As usual, for my first time in a Thai restaurant, I had basil chicken (pad kra praow). Nice heat level, a generous portion, and served on an arty plate with a mold of rice. (They also sent me a crab rangoon on the house - I'm not much for crab rangoon but it seemed okay - so I walked out of the place kind of stuffed.)
The new owners spiffed up the interior, painting it white and placing a long banquette along the south wall with most of the new bare-wood tables against it. There's a four-stool sushi bar along the north wall where old-time Lanna Thai fans will remember the door to the other room used to be. Paper lanterns provide most of the light. Liquor is BYO - there's a Dominick's with a liquor section a few doors up B'way, a bar across the street, and a liquor store by the L on Thorndale.
Prices are a bit on the high side for Edgewater but shouldn't shock anyone who eats sushi - nigiris were mostly $4 - 6 or so for 2 pieces, the big makis started at $12, temakis ran $6+, and the Thai dishes were in the $5 - 9 range.
Could Indie truly be the sushi savior of East Edgewater? How about some other opinions?
BobHerm
Near West Side
"Okay, we've ordered lunch. Now let's decide where to go for dinner."