KATHY MADER -- Dining Review
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I feel well rested, refreshed, revived and well fed. No, not from my
mini-hiatus from writing about food, but from the mini-get-a-way I just
experienced over at Tommy Bahama’s in Newport Beach. Yes, the very same
Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe responsible for Monday’s golf tournament.
The very same Tommy Bahama’s “where life is one long weekend.” And that
is just what I needed.
Let’s get it said right away. Tommy Bahama’s also boasts an “Emporium”
loaded not only with fancy resort clothes in many colors and fabrics, but
with some of the very same tropical knickknacks used to create the
vacation atmosphere in the restaurant, so you can bring it home and get
the very same feeling in your living room. The genius here is that in
this life of instant gratification, it is possible to satisfy two
addictions at once.
Just stepping into the conjoining lobby of the store and restaurant
transports you to that feeling of being on vacation. Familiar strains of
Jimmy Buffet emanating from steel drums, whirring ceiling fans,
Hawaiian-printed bar stools, dark rattan chairs, elegant orchids on the
tables and the smells of Tommy’s “world famous coconut shrimp” take care
of all senses not convinced you have actually left town.
But this is no tiki hut, this is a class act vacation with nary a bug
in sight. The restaurant has an excellent patio, relatively bug-free as
well, that doesn’t miss a tropical beat with its small waterfall, big
umbrellas and various palms; the ideal place to spend a sultry evening
celebrating a birthday party, or just enjoying a relaxing drink.
The drink menu reads like a remembrance of your favorite vacation, be
it Key West with the Hemingway -- an Absolut Currant, lime and cranberry
drink -- or the Bahama Blast and the Banana Colada. Mai tais always take
me straight to Maui, and believe you me, I made a real effort to get
there.
These Mai tais have the sleek, plastic, blue dolphin stirrer that has
inspired my friend Rich and myself to attempt a blue dolphin collection
on more than one occasion. Don’t mock me. I saw a lint collection at the
fair once. I can’t promise where these drinks will take you, but make
sure it is the cab and not the Bungalow Brews that give you the last ride
of the night.
But let me get back to that aforementioned jumbo, deep-fried,
coconut-encrusted shrimp set atop papaya-mango chutney. As far as I am
concerned, they could never serve enough of these crispy delicacies to
satisfy me and, at $12 a crack, I may never get there. But you know I
will keep trying.
In addition to these, you must order Dr. Mambo’s Plantain Combo,
crispy banana-like plantain chips dusted with cinnamon and sugar and
served with black bean salsa and sour cream ($6); a sweet and spicy treat
whose memory can tantalize you in the middle of the night. An addiction
if there ever was one.
Suffice it to say that salads really aren’t my thing, but I know you
people are out there. Tommy Bahama’s South Seas Spinach Salad ($11) was
one of the top three salads I have had in my life. High praise when
ambivalence is the reigning emotion, but the loads of fresh spinach with
chunks of mild goat cheese in a warm bacon and balsamic vinaigrette made
it hard to ignore. I would go back just for this.
Brian ordered the Bungalow Salad ($6) with mixed baby greens, Roma
tomatoes, carrots and scallions tossed in a citrus vinaigrette, which was
good, but a very jealous second to the spinach salad.
Brian was jealous yet again when our entrees came. He requested the
Wha’Jamaican Pork ($18), char-grilled medallions of hot spiced pork
tenderloin served in a pineapple rum sauce, which was very good, but not
as good as the Sanibel Stuffed Chicken ($19), a large breast of chicken
stuffed with alouette cheese and pan-fried in a roasted red pepper cream
sauce, all served with honey-roasted onion mashed potatoes. I thought I’d
died and went to Fiji.
Tommy’s menu -- we are on a first name basis now -- offers many more
interesting entrees using the whole gamut of available tropical flavors,
including a Caribbean version of paella that blends the traditional
seafood of this Latin dish with chicken and chorizo. With names such as
Tahitian Tacos, Martinique Mahi, Forbidden Island Scallops and Salmon St.
Croix, and aromas of mangoes, ginger and coconut, you can’t help but
relax, which just happens to be the mantra here.
The dessert choices are just as interesting and creative with the Key
Lime Pie and the Barbados Brownie, a coconut chocolate fudge brownie
served with fresh banana, as the highlights.
When the bill came, I suffered those back-to-reality blues. Tommy
Bahama’s, like any good vacation, is not cheap. But save your change for
this getaway, and enjoy every minute.
* KATHY MADER’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday.
FYI
WHAT: Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe
WHERE: 854 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to midnight
Friday and Saturday
CALL: (949) 760-8686
HOW MUCH: Moderately expensive to expensive
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