Damien Sullivan's Reviews of Bloomington Restaurants
24 Jan 2010
Notes on some of the restaurants in Bloomington Indiana.
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Recent or up to date notes
- Turkuaz, 3rd and Lincoln. Turkish. Everything
I've had has been tasty. Usually I get pides, "bread boats". Small pide is
about $6 and not that small, big is $9?, and both come wit red lentil soup and
a three-salad of sorts. Garlic (also tomato and oregano) pide
+ a meat like zehsu is pretty good. Zehsu (spicy beef) is good. Turkish
coffee for $2. Open 10am-11pm, closed Monday. Very good bahklava and coffee
cake.
- Runcible Spoon, 6th between Dunn and Grant. Coffeehouse with
food, more gourmet-ish than cheap sandwiches. Very popular for weekend
breakfast thought I don't think they're very special at that. Good veggie
plate and desserts, potato sides, other stuff. May do gluten-free. Good
coffee, and people buy beans from them. Website
- Amol India, 4th between Grant and Dunn. Indian. New, where
Bombay House used to be. Lamb Rogan Josh and chicken korma were good, as was
a naan with fruit and nuts in it.
- Taste of India, 4th west of Grant. Been decent, no specific
notes. Has south Indian food. Website
- Siam House, corner of 4th and Dunn. Thai. I've liked everything
there recently, including the $9 lunch buffet, and their chicken dishes are a
mix of white and dark meat, which is unusual and something I like. Website I've had a curry,
chicken mussamum, pad thai, garlic stir fry.
- Basil Leaf, 4th and Grant. Asian fusion with Thai focus.
noon-3:30 Fri/Sat; dinner times more expansive. Excellent gyoza. Pho wasn't
very exciting, though decently tasty.
- Mandalay, 4th between Grant and Dunn. Burmese and other SE
Asian. $8.99 lunch vs. $10-ish entrees. Closed Monday. Pho was okay.
- Samira, 6th and Walnut. Afghan. $9.05 after-tax weekday lunch
buffet. Everything I sampled was good. Their fried chicken is among the best
I've had outside my family's kitchens. The meatballs were good. The
vegetarian stuff I don't remember much (there was okra) was good. The salad
had actual greens, not iceberg lettuce. The standard Mideast cucumber-tomato
salad was great. The baklava was really great. The free bread was good. The
free thingies (tiny spinach quiche?) were okay. There's a lunch menu as well,
for those who don't want buffet, but I haven't looked at it.
- Rumba cafe, Kirkwood, west of Rogers. Latin America, allegedly
trying to be traditional dishes, though from all over: Cuban sandwiches,
something Puerto Rican, things that look South America. I had carnita (pork)
with rice and beans, fried yucca, and chipotle mayonnaise (mostly to dip the
yucca in, I think.) All good, and for $10. Website
- Z&C, Kirkwood, west of Dunn. Japanese fast food, as it were,
order up front and pay, they cook it, and bring it over. Very small, don't
count on it for a dinner party. Open late for the bars. I mostly have the
chicken udon special, which is good -- udon soup (with white and dark meat,
yay) and your choice of a limited range of sushis (6 maki) and I always get
eel. $10 for that. Menu options are scattered: there's the paper menu, stuff
on a board, and things on a back wall like seaweed salad and miso.
- Japanee, 8th and Walnut, SE. Japanese. 8 piece sashimi + gyoza was not
filling. Miso was good, free salad not so much, seaweed salad good. White
tuna sashimi was good, red snapper bland, tuna and salmon okay. $18, not sure
it was worth it. Atmosphere: dim red lights, random music, silent big screen
TV, strange bathroom fixtures. Closed 2-5. [23 Oct 06:
Christine doesn't like it. Lunch bento A is $4.99, salad, miso, chicken
teriyaki, 4 Cali rolls, 2 gyoza, rice. Good gyoza. Chicken was less
saturated with teriyaki than I'm used to but rolling it around repeatedly made
it tasty. Quite filling over all.] [2008 update: Christine likes the bentos.
Gyozas are still awesome, among the best I've had.]
- Sushi Bar, 10th and Bypass (west side of Bypass.) Japanese.
Good gyoza, decent sushi.
- Samira, 6th and Walnut. Afghan. $9.05 after-tax weekday lunch
buffet. Everything I sampled was good. Their fried chicken is among the best
I've had outside my family's kitchens. The meatballs were good. The
vegetarian stuff I don't remember much (there was okra) was good. The salad
had actual greens, not iceberg lettuce. The standard Mideast cucumber-tomato
salad was great. The baklava was really great. The free bread was good. The
free thingies (tiny spinach quiche?) were okay. There's a lunch menu as well,
for those who don't want buffet, but I haven't looked at it.
Older notes
- Le Petit Cafe, 6th and Madison, by the Encore Cafe. Only been there for
Sunday brunch, $10.95, chef's choice of food, $1.95 coffee. Appetizers
were really good bread + butter + tangerine jam, "French toast" which seemed
kind of like ours but softer, maybe because it was saturated in syrup, a
really nice soup with beans and which might have been cream based, and a
little pastry, like a wonton, supposedly with lox in it though I mostly
noticed cheesy white sauce with some solid bits which were presumably the
salmon. "Salmon rangoon." Entrees were some quiche, I think I heard
"pumpkin", which was fairly good, garlic chicken, and a huge pile of pork,
both sausages and chunks of white meat. Turned out that none of the other
three people really like pork so I've got meat for my next 3 meals in my
fridge right now. I thought it was good though by then I didn't want a whole
lot of sausage. Dessert was disappointing, some peach cream thingy. Maybe
not as disappointing as the "lox", not *bad*, just I didn't want much by then.
Coffee by itself was okay, coffee with cream was really good, an odd texture
for me -- I suspect using real heavy cream or something. Maybe I was using a
lot. [Buffet lunch on Thursday: $6.25. Menu lunch on Friday, same price.
11:30-1:30] Bloomingpedia
- Shanti, Lincoln and Kirkwood. Indian. Tasty dishes include chicken
tandoori (standard red-baked dish), butter chicken (rich cashew-based sauce),
chicken keera (cumin-based; lunch only?) Chicken biryani at "medium to hot"
had good chicken, but the rice was more about pain than flavor, until diluted
with bread or more rice. Keerma (meat) samosa and garlic naan to go not that
exciting. Dinner entree prices are about $12, lunch (Tues-Fri, 11:30-2) $6.
Closed from 2-5, and Mondays. (2007 Jan 2: $13 chicken biryani, with
complimentary yogurt salad and rice pudding dessert. Good and I took half the
biryani home, spending $16 total.)
- Anatolia, 4th near Grant. Turkish. I had a shish kebab (lamb) entree,
which came with a choice of soup (red lentil for me, there's also white bean)
and bread and a salad. Good bread. I prefer Turkuaz's soup. I had "yogurt
and sauce" as well, which adds a dollar to the kebab, and the sauce is,
surprisingly, some sort of marinara or pizza-like sauce. Someone's adana
kebab seemed to have more meat, though I'm fearsomely stuffed and can't
complain. Meat chunks and sauce over a bed of bread, rice and salad on the
side. Good. Great bakhlava, too.
- La Dolce Vita Puccini's, 4th between Grant and Dunn. Italian. Nice
bolognese and I'm picky about red sauce; I'm less thrilled by the Gorgonzola
and pestos. Free bread and large portions, so the $16 I tend to spend covers
two meals. (2007 February)
- Ashenda's Abasha, shares space with Puccini's. Ethiopian. I think only
open 5-9, maybe -10 on weekends. My review here.
Post-tip entrees about $17; yebeg wat and kategna good. (2008 Jul 14)
- Peach Garden, 1st and College. Favorite of my advisor, but I
came to think he got special service it was blander without him.
- Chow Bar, 3rd and Indiana. Chinese. Haven't had entrees in a while, but
I liked it. Has some authentic seeming appetizers, e.g. invoving pig stomach
or such. Lunch buffet is decent and $6.50; I gravitate to sesame chicken and
a tofu dish, and the fried rice can be good by itself. They had a seafood
dish with lots of little octopuses, which seems cool, though I didn't like the
dish. Not a cephalopod fan. Has bubble tea. Potstickers were eh, pork and
garlic not bad, satay good.
- Samira, 6th and Walnut. Afghan. $9.05 after-tax weekday lunch
buffet. Everything I sampled was good. Their fried chicken is among the best
I've had outside my family's kitchens. The meatballs were good. The
vegetarian stuff I don't remember much (there was okra) was good. The salad
had actual greens, not iceberg lettuce. The standard Mideast cucumber-tomato
salad was great. The baklava was really great. The free bread was good. The
free thingies (tiny spinach quiche?) were okay. There's a lunch menu as well,
for those who don't want buffet, but I haven't looked at it.
- Lucky Express, 3rd and Lincoln. Chinese fast food. My main note is of
Spicy Honey Shrimp, the closest I've gotten to a childhood Mongolian dish
called Princess Prawns, featuring deep-fried prawns in a spicy honey sauce.
- Dragon Express, 3rd and Jordan. Chinese fast food. I was never
that taken with it, music students report unfortuate incidents after eating
it.
- Snow Lion, Grant between 4th and Kirkwood. Tibetan (the funny named
dishes) plus lots of Chinese and Cajun(!) and others. For a long time I
wasn't impressed by it (but got taken there a lot), with lots of dishes
seeming bland or watery. However, a month ago (Feb 06) I was part of a huge
party and enjoyed almost all the dishes. New cook? The free salads are still
iceberg + mayonnaise, though. Sesame noodles: good. Sha shogo, beef with
potatoes and rice: enh; not a good flavor distribution. [2007 Nov 8: back to
the watery sauces, in a #3 poultry and a shrimp curry.] [2010 Jan 21: $6.50
lunch beef and bean thread, decent but not great, took half home. Medium was
fairly spicey.]
- Little Tibet, 4th between Grant and Dunn (part of Ethnic Restaurant
Ground Zero.) Tibetan and others, but unlike Snow Lion they have separate
sections of the menu. I'd tended to prefer it to Snow Lion, though I have no
recent recommendations. Closed Tuesdays.
- El Nortenyo, Walnut between 6th and 7th. Mexican. Probably my favorite
Mexican in town but I haven't been there often. I recently (Mar 06) had their
lunch fajitas which were quite good, though I forgot to pay attention to the
guacamole quality specifically. I was quite stuffed too, next time I'd
pre-emptively split my food into a takehome part.
- Mikado, College Mall somewhere south of 2nd. Japanese. Went there a few
years ago (May 2004), had one of the $20ish combos, left satisfied and
surprisingly stuffed.
- Asuka, Eastland Plaza (3rd and College Mall). Japanese. Last summer
(05) they had all you can eat sushi for $16. I ate a lot of their eel. [2006
Oct 23: I went a couple of times this summer; all you can eat was up to $20.
Rolls were disappointing, except for shrimp tempura rolls; nigiri are good,
including an egg one. I've also had chicken hibachi which was pretty tasty, a
big pile of chicken chunks in teriyaki-like style with some rice and
vegetables. Miso is excellent, salad comes with weird orangey sauce.
- Esan Thai, Lincoln north of Kirkwood (behind Shanti). Thai. Has a
weekday lunch menu, $8-9. The Pad Ka Prow, stir fried vegetables + chicken +
rice + spices was good; medium spiciness made me blow my nose but wasn't
painful.
- Mother Bear's, 3rd, east of Jordan. Pizza + stuff. Excellent pizza;
when I came here I was told Avers and Mother Bear's were the top two, but I
think MB is probably better, though I've had more Avers (not out of my
wallet.) My favored designed Avers pizza was garlic + italian sausage + extra
sauce, and other people at COG-X liked it too since if I was late I wouldn't
get any. At Mother Bear's I don't need to ask for extra sauce, there's
plenty, and probably of higher quality. Good range of cheese and gourmet
sausage choices as well, plus red peppers. The spaghetti and meatball dinner
wasn't so good, though: overcooked pasta, accompanying salad with goldfish
crackers. The meatballs and sauce were decent. [2006 Apr 22: Tonight I got to
compare Marco's pepperoni and Mother Bear's Divine Swine, covered in Magical
Animal products. No comparison really, MB provides a much better pizza.]
- The sub sandwich restaurant in the IMU food court. Good
sandwiches but my main note is that they offer roasted red bell pepper slices
as a topping! I like red bell peppers. Green, not so much -- I like my fruit
ripe.
- Soma, across from Snow Lion. Coffeehouse, no food, lots of smoothies.
Lots of people, can get too loud for me, both in people and rock-type music.
Hot chocolate was quite disappointing; I think tasting liquid-chocolate
quality drinks has spoiled me for powdered ones.
- Laughing Planet, above Soma. Burritos, mostly. Lots of people love
them, I've been disappointed. Maybe they're better at the vegetarian ones
than the chicken ones I get.
- Neannie's Cafe, 6th and Madison, other side of Encore Cafe. Open early,
closes at 4pm -- Ladyman's Cafe niche, I guess. Looked a lot fancier in food,
though; should check it out. [23 Oct 06: I did once, in the spring; had a
prosciutto sandwich, maybe a bit dry.]
- Qdoba, 4th and Indiana. Tex-Mex; a Chipotle competitor. Guacamole is
Bland Green Paste With Stuff In. The steak and chicken tacos are nice though,
the meat chunks are juicy and tender, and they use the same meats for
everything. Burrito was oversized and hard to eat. Chicken nachos were
excellent.
- Trojan Horse, Walnut and Kirkwood. Grill? Serve burgers, gyros,
expensive steak plates, fish tacos. I had the fish tacos last week and they
were good. Price range is interesting, from $5 sandwiches to $16 vegetarian
plates. Portions small; new pork tacos were dry.
- Taco Bell, 7th and Walnut. Caroline got their cinnamon twists,
which reminded me of Indonesia shrimp chips ("It's styrofoam! Made out of
shrimp!") 3 out of 3 of us said "not good" though it was hard to stop eating.
Back to me.