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Review: The Original El Taco

Monday, January 5th, 2009
A selection of tacos at the Original El Taco

THE THE: A selection of tacos at the Original El Taco

“Consulting chef” is a slightly confusing term. Generally, it means that the chef in question has designed the menu and perhaps spent some time training the kitchen staff on how to execute his dishes. It rarely means that the consulting chef is actually spending any time in the kitchen during service. But the question is, if a good chef consults, can we expect the food to be on par with what that chef would deliver in his own restaurant?

Shaun Doty, arguably one of the city’s best chefs, is making a cottage industry out of consulting at other people’s restaurants. Last year he put his name on the menu at Midtown’s now defunct Spotted Dog. I stopped in there one afternoon and had a somewhat sad version of Doty’s East Village-style chicken livers, which resembled the original in concept but not execution. He is currently acting as consulting chef at the Original El Taco, Fifth Group’s new Tex-Mex restaurant in Virginia Highland (although the restaurant’s website lists him as Executive Chef), and there’s talk of other consulting gigs in the works.

The Original El Taco (roughly translated to “The Original The Taco”) has been an instant hit — there’s a wait for tables almost any time of the night on any night of the week. The crowds bring a party atmosphere, ramped up with large, well-made margaritas. There’s also a colorful mural painted by SCAD students that depicts, among other things, somebody who looks an awful lot like Hitler carrying a giant taco on his back.

You can see Doty’s touch on the menu of tacos, “Mexican pizzas” and Tex-Mex entrees: a pork belly taco here, a fried egg atop a stack of tortillas and chili there. But can you taste his influence? (more…)

Exotic, bold, rich and flavorful prose

Monday, February 18th, 2008

Do you like hyperbole? Then you will adore this elegantly expressed news from a PR agency:

Flavors of the Mediterranean will flow through historic Inman Park with a bevy of exotic, bold hues and rich, flavorful authentic cuisine with the opening of ZAYA. The modern Mediterranean restaurant will grace the streets of Virginia-Highland in February 2008. ZAYA’s exquisite cuisine ranges from baba ghanuj, kabobs and baklava to various homemade specialties you won’t find anywhere else in Atlanta.

Dig the adjective-laden menu:

The award-winning menu includes robust, earthy cuisine infused with zesty lemon and garlic. An extensive selection of meat, vegetarian and seafood dishes range from chicken and beef schwarma, smoked lamb ribs and byblos pasta to an array of signature appetizers such as Baba Ghanuj eggplant dip, Sambousek meat pies and Mujadarah lentil stew. For the more traditional food lovers, classic chicken or beef kabobs, savory salmon filet or shrimp on a skewer can be enjoyed. The flavorful side dishes, Basmati rice pilaf and hummus dip will be offered to dress up those traditional plates.

The new restaurant’s location is 240 N. Highland Ave.

You can still dine at Dish for a few weeks

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Dish (870 N. Highland Ave., 404-897-3463), contrary to yesterday’s post, is not closed yet. Owner/chef Sheri Davis will close the eight-year-old restaurant at the end of this month. If you’ve never visited this restaurant, make a reservation now. It’s one of the most creative and atmospheric in the city. I hate to see another chef-run restaurant close.

Five years old and still gay

Friday, October 12th, 2007

The Big Gay Supper Club will hold its fifth anniversary dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, at (the recently remodeled) Floataway Cafe. Cost for the four-course meal is $35.

The club was founded by Rande Head and Matt Ruppert, longtime friends who wanted to provide Atlanta gay men and lesbians an opportunity to socialize outside the bars. Says their website:

The Big Gay Supper Club is a social dining club that meets every month in Atlanta’s best restaurants. Our mission is to provide the Atlanta gay community with a more civilized and elegant activity that gay men and women can enjoy outside the club and bar scene.

Every month, between one and two-hundred gay men and women join us for a four-course meal at a restaurant in Midtown or Downtown. The price per head remains fixed at $35, excluding alcohol, tax, and gratuity. The tables in these restaurants are usually arranged in long rows so as to encourage a communal style of dining and interaction. Joining us each night is our resident mistress of ceremonies, our drag entertainer, Jason Jupiter, who delivers a brief skit to break the ice and commence the evening.

Our guests find different reasons for attending the BGSC each month. For some, it’s an alternative to the club and bar scene, an escape from the social monotony. Others use our events as a way to finally try a restaurant they’ve been meaning to try, or revisit one of their favorite restaurants on our itinerary. Some guests come because they’d like to meet new people and establish friendships or even more intimate relationships. Still others find the BGSC to be the perfect way to network in the gay community. Whatever the reason, the Big Gay Supper Club has catered to thousands of gay Atlantans in over 40 restaurants, and we continue to grow.

Past venues we’ve visted [sic] have included Sotto Sotto, the Food Studio, Agave, BED, City Grill, Nakato, Taverna Plaka, Joel, Wisteria, Toast, Spice, Cherry, Sala, and Two Urban Licks.

To make reservations for the Floataway meal, visit the club’s website here.