Sushi Sasa lunch.
I know I should hesitate to judge a restaurant on lunch alone but if I go somewhere for lunch and you want me to return for dinner, it better be good.
Sushi Sasa has come with some great recommendations from other reviewers on this thread so Kazumi and I decided to give it a try. We both agree, lunch was very disappointing. Service was fine. Our disappointment was purely with the food. Granted, we have a very Japanese perspective on things, but this was just not up to snuff.
Kazumi had the moriawase lunch (nigiri) special. I had the gyu-donburi. We also ordered some toro and saba nigiri. Our lunch came with a choice of soup or salad. My salad was very nice. I liked the citrusy, mayo-based dressing a lot and the greens were fresh. Kazumi had miso-shiru. It had almost no floating ingredients and there was almost no trace of dashi. The flavor was bland. The next thing we noticed was the sushi rice was cold -- really cold. Sushi rice should be room temperature to lukewarm and freshly made. Was this last nights leftovers? Unacceptable. The fish, with the exception of the toro which was fine, was dry -- really dry. The ebi was so overcooked I had a hard time chewing it. It was a piece of rubber that I had to rip off the tail. Also, the sushi fish had no wasabi on its underside. We figure this is just catering to an American audience who either loves or hates wasabi. But sushi should have a touch of wasabi on the underside of the fish. Having no wasabi should be the option, not the other way around. In any case, if they don't put wasabi on the fish, they should give us the option to have it. Just providing wasabi on the side is not authentic. My gyu-don was tasty enough but it was drowning in sauce. I like the gyu-don at Izakaya Den a lot more. The saving grace was the toro, but that too suffered from the old and cold rice. Actually, the spicy tuna roll was ok, though the rice was also too cold.
Before tax and tip, lunch (no alcohol, no dessert) was $57. Really, you can get better sushi in a convenience store in Japan for less than $10 -- $15 in a department store basement. If dinner is supposed to be competitive with Sushi Den or Izakaya Den, there had better be a hudge step up. But frankly, having had the lunch, we are reluctant to spend $250 on dinner for two at Sushi Sasa when we can go to one of the Dens and get consistently great food.
I boiled my thermometer, and sure enough, this spot, which purported to be two thousand feet higher than the locality of the hotel, turned out to be nine thousand feet LOWER. Thus the fact was clearly demonstrated that, ABOVE A CERTAIN POINT, THE HIGHER A POINT SEEMS TO BE, THE LOWER IT ACTUALLY IS. Our ascent itself was a great achievement, but this contribution to science was an inconceivably greater matter.
--MT--
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