Lost but Found

For ethnic food enthusiasts, there’s no greater thrill than finding a very small, very hidden eatery — and no greater compliment than to call it a “hole in the wall.” Sushi Deli takes the compliment almost too far. Located on the bottom floor of a nondescript office building, this is…

True Kosher Cuisine

Truly tasty kosher food is not easy to find in Miami, especially not at reasonable prices — that is, prices not inflated by all the necessary religious rituals and restrictions. So five-month-old Kemia is a rare treat, a place that serves kosher in the North African/Mediterranean style, and serves it…

Gaucho with a Sweet Tooth

Chocolate Fine Argentinian Cuisine is a cheery and colorful spot, its mellow yellow walls and alcoves covered with vivid paintings, the tables topped with crisp white linens, the wait staff dressed in bright orange T-shirts. A dark wooden wine rack toward the far end of the room is amply stocked…

Hidden Treasure

Lila’s Bistro, though only a weekday lunch place, is a find. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy to find. It’s not. Not even if some food-savvy friend has been kind enough to provide you with a copy of the menu, which includes these directions: “Inside pink courtyard across from Bank…

He Said, She Said, They Dined

He said: I hate little frou-frou plates of stuff, with a drizzle of this and a spit of that all around it. I like a big hunk of meat. With a bone! She said: B-o-r-i-n-g. Honestly I do not believe women are from Venus and men are from Mars. Yet…

Labors of Love

Every once in a while diners will come across a restaurant that makes them feel happy the minute they walk in the door. Crabby’s is such a place. A lot of the cheerfulness derives from the homey look: warm knotty-pine paneling reminiscent of a rec room from a more innocent,…

Dreaming in Puerto Rican

I had figured my wife would be thrilled at the prospect of dining at Benny’s Seafood Restaurant. After all, a reliable source recommended it to me as a “real Puerto Rican joint,” and my wife is a real Puerto Rican gal. As it turned out, her reaction to the idea…

Chewing on Picasso

You can buy a Felix Perdomo painting for $5800. Or at Orange Café, a self-described art café that opened earlier this year in the Design District, you can get a Picasso for $6.45. And the latter comes with crinkle potato chips. Unlike the Perdomo, a large, olive-green canvas depicting a…

Hotel Dining Checks Out

The history of hotel dining in twentieth-century America was dominated by a period we’ll call the Reign of Duck l’Orange. During this time, which covered many decades, you couldn’t walk into a well-regarded hotel restaurant without encountering this glazed bird, along with steak tartare, trout amandine, and other Continental classics…

The King of Sandwiches

A chivito is an Uruguayan sandwich that could give a Philadelphia cheese steak a run for its money — that is, if you’re talking about potential to become a fast-food classic. And if you’re talking about size, a chivito could leave a Philly in the dust, along with the rest…

A Tale of Two Menus

While it’s true that Chinese food isn’t as favored in this country as it was before the Asian invasion of Thai and Japanese eateries, it remains a staggeringly popular dinner choice. According to a recent article in the New York Times, there are nearly 36,000 Chinese restaurants in America, which…

Memories of Orange Umbrellas

According to the late comedian Rodney Dangerfield, there was only one piece of advice his mother gave him as a kid: “Never eat a frankfurter from the man on the corner with the orange umbrella. Those hot dogs are made of snakes.” Many of us who grew up in the…

At Last a True Trattoria

It’s similar to the regular chicken,” a server at Casa Toscana explained, describing a nightly special of sage-stuffed roast chicken breast with porcini cream sauce and gorgonzola. “But with more attitude.” Attitude, at least in a restaurant, is not usually a good thing. And did an already rich sauce flavored…

Missed Mark

Some years ago, while living in Boulder, Colorado, I took my parents out for dinner in a former mining town called Gold Hill. After a harrowing car ride up a steep, twisting, barely illuminated mountain road, we arrived at the tiny community. There was no restaurant in sight, but an…

Tea for You

Coffee usually does the trick. But some days it takes a shot of Formosan Gunpowder to get a person going. Since last November it’s been possible to supply oneself even more easily than buying an AK-47 by visiting Lea’s — which is a tea shop, not a gun shop. The…

Gone To the Dogs

Just because something is fast food doesn’t mean it has to be bad food. What’s invariably bad is food that has no individuality, no regional identity, no pride behind it — in other words, when it’s safe, standardized food that aims for the bottom line. In fact even chain-restaurant food…

In the Heart of the City

Dining establishments tend to be busiest at night, more relaxed and inexpensive during lunch. La Loggia Ristorante & Lounge is the opposite, which can be attributed to its location across from the county courthouse in downtown Miami. If you enter the restaurant around noon, a buzz will tickle your ears…

American Classics Reconsidered

Few things are scarier, early in the morning, than glancing blearily over one’s coffee cup and seeing a plate of big sunny-side-up fried eggs staring back at you, all bright-eyed and chipper. Somewhere between 11:00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m., though, such breakfast food somehow seems like a fabulously comforting idea…

Crazy for Crêpes

A truly authentic ethnic restaurant can be like an acid flashback — a good one, that is: A diluted but still evocative sensory return to a foreign country you once visited. When the visuals and sounds, as well as the smells and tastes, are vivid enough, it’s almost a mini…

Rooftop Tapas

While “appetizer” is generally used as a synonym for “hors d’oeuvres,” it really isn’t synonymous. The French term means “outside of the work;” originally it was an architectural term for outbuildings. So at a meal, it’s any other bit of food except the main dish, whether the hors d’oeuvre stimulates…

Very Ritzy Comfort Food

Arranged on a white plate, the slender four-ounce medallion of American Kobe beef tenderloin and the dwarfish five-ounce standing rectangle of American Kobe meat loaf, with an insubstantial squirt of white potato purée in between, looked to me like a domed sports stadium and an office building side by side,…

Creatively Ambitious to a Fault

There is no plant on earth that promises a broader plethora of purportedly restorative properties than sage, which comes from the Latin “salvia,” meaning “to cure.” As far back as Greek and Roman times this pebbled, silvery green leaf has been used to treat snake bites, sweating, anxiety, infections, epilepsy,…