Saturday, March 27, 2010

La Tasca (Clarendon location)

I went here with a large group. We ordered the least expensive group plan (I was late and did not do the ordering.) The food was rather good. Some cheese bread was pretty good. The fried eggplant was great. Some meatballs in red sauce were pretty good, but nothing special. The desserts were quite good as well. The sangria was acceptable, but I've certainly had better. Overall, the food was decent and it wasn't too expensive for a large party. We were up on the 3rd floor, which was quite noisy, but had cool decor.

Cheesetique

2411 Mt. Vernon - also see update HERE

This is a cheese store with a small restaurant & wine bar in back.

On a Thursday, there was long wait for a table or spot at the bar for only two people. Fortunately, we spent the time looking at the cheese and buying some.

We ordered 3 cheeses with the Orange Fig Spread as an optional "Accompaniment". We had one soft cheese, one salty, and one fruity. They were pretty good, but not great. I prefer them being stronger. After that we got some flatbread or crostini or something. It was covered in cheese and it was pretty good. The wines - I had two white wines were solid, but not great. (Sauvignon Blanc Ponga ‘09 White Burgundy Vigneron RĂ©unis ‘07 France).
Price wasn't too bad as cheese platters tend to be expensive.
Overall, it was a nice place, something a bit different and intimate, but not a top favorite - although I was pretty impressed by the cheese on sale, so I'll go back for that.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Sei

444 7th St. NW.

Original review:
About a week ago I dined at Sei, a sushi restaurant recommended by both a former coworker and the Washingtonian, which listed Sei at #68 in its top 100 restaurants.

My experience was quite good. In fact, I am willing to proclaim Sei my favorite DC sushi restaurant. Sei has several unique and creative offerings in both their sushi and their drinks. The execution of these creations is also quite good. Meanwhile, the price is not exorbitant with most rolls close to if not at $10. My date and I had 5 rolls and we didn't finish them, so you should be able to satisfy your sushi craving for about $40 of rolls. The drinks are pricier and have a temptingly long list of expensive wines and cocktails. The cocktails are worth trying, even if many of them are heavy with cucumber.

The decor is nice, upscale, and dark. Sei is a larger restaurant, but breaks the spaces into subsections to create a smaller feel. The downside is the noise. We had a window seat and even though it was probably on the edge of the noise, it was still noisy and difficult to hear our server.

Anyway, the specific dishes I had were:
Triple Tuna Roll: not unique, but a very good rendition
S.O.S. Roll: very fruity with strawberry & oranges and such. Good, but hard to tell it was sushi.
Fish & Chips Roll: Very good.
Snow White Roll: Eel and roasted apple, very good.
Smokey Eel Nagati: good, but nothing special.

Between us we had two drinks, the Silver Samurai and the Liquid Wasabi. Both were quite good, with the Samurai a refreshing cucumber based drink that seemed more appropriate for summer and the Wasabi having a lovely kick. I'd recommend the Wasabi.

For more sushi places see my Sushi post

Update: I dined at Sei again recently and I again came away impressed. The Snow White and the Fish & Chips rolls were excellent again, as was the other roll we tried, but the name is escaping me at the moment. I believe it was a less original roll though. My drink, some kind of blueberry concoction, was very, very good.


Update: Yet another trip to Sei, and again a good time. The restaurant was practically empty around 6pm on a Saturday, but had filled up by the time we finished dining. I definitely enjoyed the lower noise levels and less burdened servers. The selections this time were:
Surf N. Turf Roll, Albacore Roll, Snow White Roll, and Fish & Chips Roll.
I had not had the Surf N. Turf and Albacore before, but both were quite good, especially the Surf N. Turf, which, if I remember right, was lobster and kobi beef. The drinks (Japanese Mojito and Zen Collins) were quite good as always at Sei.

Eat First

I stopped for lunch at Eat First, another one of the many H Street Chinatown Chinese places. I ordered General Tsao's Chicken, which is not really the best dish to judge an authentic Chinese restaurant on, but nonetheless, it was decent to solid, but not special. The main selling point was that it was very inexpensive, just $4.50 or something like that, with other lunch options as low as $3.25. The portion size was ample with plenty of rice and free tea. The atmosphere and decor were pretty typical of a cheap Chinese place. Service was quick. I've had better Chinese on this block, but if you want a cheap lunch, Eat First isn't a bad option.