by Jenise » Fri Jun 24, 2011 7:08 pm
Back in the 90's Bob and I used to fly down to Seattle from Anchorage for medical services not available back home, and we'd time our flight to go straight to Wild Ginger from the airport for lunch. On the first day, we'd order Riesling and have crab fresh from the tank in a fantastic curry sauce, plus a few other things seafood. On the second day, we'd order a California zin of the type hard to buy in California, like Rafanelli or Williams Selyam, and a few of the meat curries. It was like two different restaurants, but all wonderful. Perfect every time. I've never been so enamored of a restaurant before or since such that I would attend it so exclusively.
Yesterday we had lunch there. Bob's chinese chicken salad was tasty but unremarkable, lacking visual character--it was just dumped on a plate, no garnish. I ordered a main course bowl of seafood Laksa, a 'spicy curried Maylasian bouilliabaise" promised to be "fish, scallops and mussels over rice noodles". There was a smaller alternative but the once course was all I wanted--I love mussels and only get to eat them when I'm out, since Bob is allergic--so I went big. I pictured a big, modern steep sided bowl full of an opaque yellow broth turned orange on the surface from red chiles, kind of like a pho but different. What I got was a standard low, squat, thick-walled cafeteria cereal bowl, about five-six inches wide and two inches high. It contained an opaque yellow soup without a speck of chile. There were two tiny scallops, one clam, no mussels, and a few bite-sized pieces of fish. All good and properly cooked, but don't put mussels/plural on the menu if you're going to serve but clam/singular. The noodles were not rice but standard white wheat spaghetti noodles, and there were probably all of five half strands in there. In fact I had trouble finding them at first--I expected a little cache on the bottom as with a pho, but no. Tastewise it was just okay, not compelling but not bad--it just didn't live up the name 'Laksa' or the description on the menu. All in all, pretty odd substitutions: rice noodles and mussels are neither rare nor expensive.
This is probably the fifth or sixth time I've eaten there since moving to Washington eight years ago, and unfortunately we haven't had a single meal that reminded us of why we used to love it so slavishly. Oh sure, we've had a good dish here and there, but too many disappointments and my Laksa yesterday pretty much sums up the way it's outdating itself. The food seems 'institutionalized', and there's no sign of Tom Douglas' early brilliance.
So why did we eat there? Believe me, we had all kinds of other plans, but there weren't any other fine dining establishments downtown open for lunch! We had plans for sushi over on Eastlake but our resto of choice didn't open til 5:00 like just about every other place except chain places and those around the Pike Street Market that cater more to tourists than locals. We looked for an hour before giving up--all we found was coffee, burgers, sandwiches, Thai food, and pizza, where we wanted to sit down and be served a good, healthy meal in a nice-looking room.
So anyway, if you know of places (other than Salumi, which I adore) in Seattle where creative, chef-driven food is served mid-day, I'd love to hear about it!
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov