The Adventures of Citrus Boy


Izakaya opening in SF

Posted in Restaurants by Matt on the August 2, 2006

The Chronicle’s Inside Scoop reports:

[Vintage 415 has] signed a lease to take over the Yoshida-Ya space at 2909 Webster St. (at Union), just minutes from Mamacita. With the new restaurant, Mamacita chef Josi, who before that was a sous chef at Slanted Door (One Ferry Building), will revisit pan-Asian food with an izakaya — a Japanese-style beer hall that serves food.

They intend to separate the space into a lounge-like spot on the bottom with a sushi bar, snacks and street food with izakaya-style bench seating and tables. The upstairs will have more traditional table service with entrees.

“It will be Asian street food, but not fusion,” says Josi. “We want the dishes to be true to their cultural origins.”

I’m not sure how traditional “Asian street food” will fare in Cow Hollow, but here’s hoping. I’m looking forward to having an izakaya alternative to Hana Zen (fun, but inconsistent) and Tanto (excellent, but in San Jose).

via SFGate

New Restaurant Favorites

Posted in Restaurants by Matt on the January 23, 2006

After a streak of disappointing restaurant experiences in the Castro and Noe Valley last year (I’ve heard this area described as San Francisco’s “culinary wasteland”), I am pleased to report the discovery of two excellent new restaurants in the neighborhood. This means I can finally get a satisfying meal within walking distance! I can’t underscore this enough: this is huge.

DOSA
South Indian
995 Valencia St @ 21st St
(415) 642-3672

I have the perfect excuse not to like DOSA: they lost my reservation! Even for a new restaurant, this was quite an unpleasant surprise.

Hearing that it was a popular place, I had reserved a table for our group of five a few days in advance by email, and promptly received a confirmation. Yet somehow this information didn’t make it to the hostess, who was completely unaware that the email conversation had taken place. Our party waited out in the cold while the she did her best to bump us to the top of the wait list. To her credit, she managed to seat us only a half hour past our original reservation time, despite the huge Saturday night crowd.

As it turned out, our meal at DOSA was well worth the wait. The restaurant itself is warm and inviting, and the South Indian food they served was top notch. Here’s what we ordered:

  • Idli Vada Sambar
    DOSA’s sambar packs plenty of heat, and this was a great way to start the meal.
  • Chennai Chicken
    Small pieces of chicken, lightly fried (similar to pakora) and incredibly spiced. Hands down my favorite dish of the evening.
  • Masala dosa and paper masala dosa
    The best dosa I’ve eaten (admittedly, this is only my third or fourth time). Spicy? Yes. Yummy? Definitely.
  • Paneer & peas uttapam
    First time I’ve had uttapam. Excellent. Served with great chutneys and spicy sambar.
  • Tamil lamb curry
    Another standout. Great flavor and extremely tender. This is what I’ll be ordering on my next visit.
  • Kulfi and coconut sorbet
    Even the desserts were great. I love this place.

Kiji
Sushi
1007 Guerrero St @ 22st St
(415) 282-0400

I think Kiji has surpassed Tsunami as my favorite sushi restaurant. Tsunami might be more “hip”, but Kiji wins on quality.

On a Thursday night Kiji was packed, and we had to wait about 10 minutes for a table. Inside is a great chill-out atmosphere: black tables, chairs and place settings lit by a warm red glow with some great Latin jazz and samba music playing. Dim but not too dark, and not too noisy either. Service was excellent and the staff speak Japanese (always a good sign).

Most importantly, everything we ordered was delicious:

  • Grilled Chilean sea bass marinated in miso and sake
    A tad salty perhaps, but still satisfying. The accompanying salad and miso soup were surprisingly fresh and yummy.
  • hon-maguro (Blue-fin tuna) and aji (Spanish mackerel)
    Easily some of best I’ve had of either fish. Melt-in-your-mouth goodness, and great rice to boot.
  • Eddie cucumber roll
    Tuna, avocado, sprouts, shiso and tobiko wrapped in cucumber with spicy sauce. The shiso was a bit strong, but wow this was a great roll.
  • Guerrero roll
    Yellowtail, avocado, eel and tobiko. I’m having a hard time deciding which roll was my favorite.
  • Gyoza
    Incredibly juicy, lots of pork and fresh veggies. Best gyoza ever? Or pretty darn close.
  • Green tea ice cream with red beans
    I’m normally not a fan of the green tea ice cream, but this was spectacular. Creamy, and without the bitter tea flavor. The fresh red beans on top made for a perfect sweet/savory balance. Yum.

Did I mention Kiji is within walking distance? This is going to do some serious damage to my credit card statement.

Dine About Town 2006

Posted in Restaurants by Matt on the January 5, 2006

I’m surprised this is the first time I’ve heard of this promotion. For the month of January, Visa teams up with dozens of San Francisco restaurants to offer special fixed-price menus for Visa card holders.

Sounds like a great excuse to try some new restaurants and revisit some old favorites. Here’s what I have on my list:

In some cases the menus are available online, which is great. Take a look at the RNM menu, for example:

First Course
French Onion Soup

Second Course
Panchetta wrapped pork tenderloin on a creamy potato with port whole grains demi sauce

Third Course
Dark chocolate mousse with raspberry sauce

Yum!