Restaurant Review: Mu Ramen

Details: Located at 1209 Jackson Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101.Official site is http://ramennyc.wixsite.com/popup

Warning: this place only takes cash. They have an ATM on the premises for this purpose. They also don’t take reservations.

Had the hankering again for ramen so I looked up Mu Ramen. I think this place is run by a couple and that they both work in the restaurant. The wife handles the front of the house while the husband handles the back.

First thing you notice is the space. It’s got one room with at most about twenty seats. There is a bar with around five seats and a long table in the middle which seats the rest of the patrons. It’s got a kind of communal feeling, so be prepared to be in other people’s faces.

I ordered the Shoyu ramen (clear duck based ramen with shoyu, spinach, menma, and nevi). It was extremely oily, but tasty. The primary thing about the food here is that it is on the more expensive side compared to other ramen places. They have a bunch of interesting looking side dishes that I did not partake in. Again, it’s pricey and when I go to a ramen place, I want ramen. I don’t care to pay an unknown amount for a bowl of sushi or fifteen dollars for two chicken wings, even if you put a little foie gras in them. If I wanted sushi I’d go to a sushi place and if I wanted foie gras I’d go to a french restaurant.

Service was very friendly.

Score: 5.6/10 Okay place, but I wouldn’t recommend this place for ramen. If you feel like throwing money away and getting sushi, ramen, and foie gras stuffed chicken wings, then you should come here. If you wanted a bowl of ramen that you felt was worth the price in comparison to other, comparable ramen places, then go somewhere else.

Restaurant Review: Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya

Details: Located at 187 Orchard St, New York, NY 10002. Official site is http://www.blueribbonrestaurants.com/restaurants/blue-ribbon-sushi-izakaya/

Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya is a Japanese restaurant on Orchard St., near Houston. We came here for dinner.

The space is immense. I think it’s the entire second floor of a hotel, but I could be wrong. It’s a great space and there are many tables in two main rooms. There are also those stools set along those long tables (as shown in the picture above), but I don’t think they’re as comfortable as the booths.

The staff was friendly and very helpful.

Music wasn’t too loud.

The food was really good. We ordered the Sea Scallops with Miso butter (two scallops on a skewer, the Uni sushi (comes with two pieces), the Sushi Deluxe, the Sauteed Bok Choi (Chinese broccoli), the Oxtail and Bone Marrow fried rice, the skirt steak (Tsukiji style), and the Squid, Squid Ink and Uni fried rice.

The sea scallops were amazing. I could have eaten twenty of those. The uni sushi was great quality. The sushi deluxe was the same predictable sushi deluxe you’d get anywhere else. The Chinese broccoli was too salty. The steak was good and came with some delicious mushrooms.

The Oxtail fried rice… man the oxtail fried rice was good. That was by far the best thing we had that night. It was buttery and fatty and so good that it was probably terrible for your health. The squid ink fried rice was okay. It had a surprisingly large amount of squid in it and came topped with uni. Can’t complain about more uni.

Overall, dinner came out to around $150, including tax and tip. The sea scallops on a skewer came out to around $6 per scallop. Keep in mind you can order half orders of many things, so you can try out more things on the menu without ordering gorilla sized portions for each.

Score: 7.5/10 There are a few really tasty, unique things on this menu and the quality of sushi was pretty good. Space was comfortable. Worth a visit, especially for a half-sized order of the oxtail and bone marrow fried rice.

Restaurant Review: Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare

 

Details: Located at 200 Schermerhorn St, Brooklyn, NY 11201. The food is a combination of French, American, and Asian influences.

After reading an article on how incredibly racist Cesar Ramirez at Chef’s table is toward Chinese people, I thought to offer testimony as to my experience at the restaurant.

For those unfamiliar, Chef’s Table is (at the time I wrote this) one of only a handful of three-starred Michelin restaurants in the United States (there are around ten in the country), one of seven of such restaurants in New York City, and the only one in Brooklyn. The Michelin star is currently the gold standard in restaurant reviews and three stars is the most anyone can get.

Of note is the set up. The restaurant only seats around eighteen people with nine people per serving (Momofuku Ko has a similar set up, but has since lost its three star rating). Reservations are taken at least thirty days in advance (and only on Mondays) unless there are vacancies. The reservation system is somewhat standard for restaurants of this type and cost. Speaking of costs, everything is paid before the meal with total costs being around 300 US dollars (at the time of my meal).

The food is a combination of French haute and Japanese, a fusion. Dishes range from roast squab and truffles to sea urchin and Wagyu beef. They only serve dinner ( and only a couple of servings per  night). Dinner consists of fifteen to twenty relatively small dishes meant to showcase the Chef’s ability. The menu changes periodically depending on what chef Ramirez wants to do.

Now for my experience.

Arrival was fine and the staff was nice. The setting is intimate as you can see the kitchen and all food being prepared. What was disheartening was the rule against note taking and pictures. Afterwards, chef Ramirez would tell us that pictures were banned because of an unfavorable article written about him using a picture. I read somewhere else that note taking was to prevent people stealing his recipes. It sort of felt like being in kindergarten.

The food was very good, and may be the best meal I’ve ever had. Everything was delicious, but a few dishes were especially noteworthy.

The imported uni on toasted brioche with truffle sauce and a slice of truffle on top is something I will never forget. It was my favorite thing on the menu. I could have eaten twenty of those. Maybe more.

The chawanmushi with foie gras was interesting. The soup was almost entirely clarified butter.

The truffle cream risotto was the most comforting dish I’ve ever had.

The shiso sorbet was refreshing.

The wagyu beef… tasted like a very tasty sponge. With citrus.

In regards to who our fellow eaters were, seven out of the nine people on my side of the table were of Asian descent, likely Chinese. Two seemed to be fellow chef friends. Two others were regulars who were on their fifth visit to Chef’s Table. If Chef Ramirez hates the Chinese, he certainly didn’t show it then. He was reserved, but courteous.

Even more surprising, treatment of another class of individual was also  fairly respectful: VEGETARIANS. From what I observed, their food was also delicious (Chef’s Table accommodates vegetarians; don’t know about complete vegans) and they were treated no different from other customers.

Score: 8.8/10 Great meal, but I doubt I will ever return. There are other Michelin starred restaurants to visit.

Edit: Here’s a fast and dirty list of dishes, not in any order. It was written down from memory.

Uni with black truffle on brioche, chawanmushi with foie gras and seafood, oyster with truffle (mushroom gravy), Shiso ice cream, wagyu with daikon, turbo with green pea, koti kashi (rice) with black truffle, two sashimi dishes, two cooked dishes, caviar with cauliflower, lobster (not so good), soba tea ice cream, spiced iced cream with sugar globe, petite fours, and squab.