Restaurant Review: Omani

Details: Located at 160-42 Willets Point Blvd., Whitestone, NY 11357. Official site is http://www.omaniwilletspointblvd.com/

Came here for lunch one day. It’s a small deli with a table and a few bar stools for seating. They serve lunch boxes with salad and rice. They also have the other normal deli stuff like sandwiches.

I ordered the beef sandwich on a hero. The sandwich came with onion. green pepper, mayo, cheese, and beef fried together on the flat top with some kind of Korean tasting sauce. It was pretty good and only cost me $6.00.

If you’re in the area and are looking for lunch, I recommend you try this place. The only issue I had was that it took like twenty minutes to make the sandwich. I don’t know why it took so long since it was mostly empty when I was there.

Score: 6/10

Restaurant Review: Atoboy

Details: Located at 43 East 28th St., New York, NY 10016. Official site is http://atoboynyc.com/#atoboynyc

Atoboy is a new restaurant that’s opened this year. It is part of a new wave of “New Korean” food. Similar to the “New Nordic,” the practical meaning of this phrase is Korean food, but elevated to the traditional standards of Western/French fine dining. Jungsik is the poster child of New Korean, being one of only a handful of two Michelin starred restaurants in New York City and the only one focusing on Korean food. It’s no wonder why everything I’ve ever read about Atoboy boasts about how the head chef is the former Chef de Cuisine of Jungsik.

There is only way one to order at this restaurant. For $36.00 (at the time that I went, not including tax and tip), you order three dishes, one dish from one of three sections. The menu is on their website so I won’t go into it, but the first two sections seem to be appetizers with the last section consisting of meat dishes. The idea seems to be of doing bon chan (Korean appetizers), but to make each appetizer into its own, full on dish.

I came with three friends so we decided to share and try to try as many dishes as we could. We ordered the eggplant (dungeness crab, tomato, and lemon), the tofu (soybean, king oyster mushroom, mustard), the cobia (Korean pear, Perilla, Sesame seed), the Littleneck clam (avocado, rice cracker, Gochugaru), the asparagus (spicy cod roe, shallot, egg yolk,), egg (sea urchin, watercress, quinoa), corn (taleggio, bacon, Doenjang), squid, (pork, shrimp, salsa verde), chicken (spicy peanut butter, garlic), pork jowl (barley, ssamjang, romaine), NY strip (arugula, poblano, wild sesame oil), and the brisket (fois gras, ginger garlic). We also had the seasonal rice (had seaweed mixed in) for an extra two dollars.

The eggplant, tofu, cobia, asparagus were forgettable and not really all that great. The Littleneck clam was great and came with the tasty green, foamy sauce.  The egg was actually a steamed egg with sea urchin mixed in, which was amazing. I’m a sucker for steamed egg. The corn was essentially a corn n’ cheese, like a mac n’ cheese with corn instead of macaroni. It was good. The squid was okay. They wrapped the squid around a pork filling. The chicken was a fried chicken, and it was fine. I’m glad we were sharing because I don’t know if I could’ve eaten a whole plate of that chicken. The pork jowl was good. The NY strip was extremely tender and I enjoyed it very much. The brisket was all right, but the foie gras sauce it was drenched in was kind of overwhelming. The seasonal rice was okay, but probably was about the same as the regular rice. Not going to think about it too much since it was just two dollars more.

Overall, I think it was a great meal, especially considering the price. If you want a taste of Jungsik without paying their prices, Atoboy is a nice introduction I think.

The interior was all right, lots of concrete. There is this trend among new restaurants to have very little indication that it is a restaurant on the outside while having an impressively large inside. I kind of like it. Makes you feel like you’re walking into something exclusive, for people in the know.

The service was very attentive, maybe too attentive. I think the staff was given explicit instructions to never let the water in your glass to be less than half full because they were constantly refilling our water. I guess that’s fine.

Score: 7/10 I’d definitely recommend it. There aren’t too many places for Korean food mixed with a little Western fine dining so if you want to get a taste of that, this place is definitely it. The price is also really impressive considering the quality of the food and helps keep the restaurant casual despite the head chef’s high end background.

Restaurant Review: Korilla BBQ

Details: Located at 55th and Broadway, New York, NY 10019, among other locations. Official site is http://korillabbq.com/

I’ve been to the Korilla food truck a number of times now so I figure I should write a review. The Korilla food truck is pretty much the same concept as Chipotle and Indikitch, except with Korean flavors. I’ve been to the food truck a number of times, but I’ve never been to the brick and mortar location near St. Marks.

The food truck gives you two options: bowl or burrito. Like Chipotle, it’s the same ingredients, just different forms. You then choose your meat (bulgogi, pork, chicken, or tofu), rice (kim chee rice or sticky rice), cheese or pico de gallo, and a small assortment of pickled vegetables. You also get to choose a sauce. The truck moves around the city and you can track it on their twitter page (https://twitter.com/korillabbq). The price comes in at around $10, which is about Chipotle and Indikitch prices.

It’s pretty good eating and convenient for those of us working in the city. There is slightly less food here than at Chipotle or Indikitch, but it’s nice to get some Korean flavors in an area of the city with few Korean restaurants. Definitely convenient for those working in the city and tired of the restaurants in the surrounding area of your office. While I would avoid eating this on my days off, it is a nice thing to have for lunch on a work day.

If you want a recommendation on what to get, I usually get the spicy pork with kim chee rice, with everything, and with Korilla sauce (a kind of Chipotle mayonnaise). I don’t normally like spicy food, but this wasn’t too spicy.

Score: 6.8/10

Restaurant Review: Hanbat

Details: Located at 53 W 35th St, New York, NY 10001. Official site is http://hanbatnyc.com/

Hanbat is a traditional Korean restaurant near Koreatown.

I came with some friends. We ordered the Jap Chae (mixed dish of vegetables, noodles, and pork), Bul Go Ki (sliced thing beef), Nakiji Bokum (sauteed small octopus and vegetables in spicy sauce). It was all right.

Score: 4/10 Nothing special. Nothing extraordinary. Your standard Korean fare… just a little less tasty. If you want Korean food, I strongly advise going somewhere else. Especially considering that there are so many better Korean restaurants in Koreatown.