KATHY MADER -- DINING
Newport Beach has got a new fish restaurant, aptly named The Newport
Fish Company, down in Lido Village where the old Warehouse Restaurant and
the lesser-known and less successful Buzz used to reside.
The new place definitely has hints of the old restaurant, but it is a
lot fresher, has a lot more light inside and infinitely more style. If
you remember the Warehouse was sort of a dark and dismal affair.
The old freight elevator is still there, the excellent view of the bay
is still there -- there’s really not a bad seat in the house. Location is
definitely the thing, and they now have an extra large patio with lots of
seating and heat lamps o’ plenty.
The Fish Company is what I would call casual and a good place to bring
your family, yet very nicely redecorated with royal blue leather and
burnt caramel-colored wood -- a nice combination. Gone are the trendy
drink crowds (they may be back) and in their place are families, large
parties, romantic couples and a gifted guitar soloist who had people
happy to listen.
There are several televisions, but these don’t interfere with your
dining experience at all and actually served to enhance my husband
Brian’s in that he could eat comfortably knowing the Angels were beating
the Yankees.
This is really a huge piece of real estate, and to prove it the
18-foot great white shark over the bar looks like a big fish in a big
pond -- a big fish with huge teeth.
The menu provides something for everyone, even fish haters. Shark
haters too. You can get even by ordering thresher shark when in season.
The menu prices range from $7 to about $20. I did notice that the
pricing was a little quirky though, in that a bucket of steamers -- clams
in a white wine and garlic sauce -- was only $6.95 and an artichoke was
$8.95. What?
The appetizers, always my favorite, read very well with crab-stuffed
mushrooms, buffalo wings, fried calamari and the like. We started with
shrimp skins, which are potato skins with cheese, bacon and bits of bay
shrimp.
Wait a moment and let me jump on my soap box. Here’s the thing, and
take heed all local restaurants: No restaurant by the bay should ever
serve “bay shrimp” for two reasons -- No. 1, those of us who live by the
bay know exactly what comes out of the bay, and No. 2., the ocean is so
close, go get your shrimp from there! It’s a lot like getting canned
garlic in Gilroy, grape jelly in Napa or freeze-dried boxed spuds in
Idaho. Enough said.
True to their name, the Fish Company offers a global variety of fish,
including Atlantic salmon ($14.95), red snapper ($16.95), macadamia
nut-crusted mahi mahi ($19.95), California yellow fin ahi ($18.95) and
Chilean sea bass ($18.95). Yes, you traditionalists, you can get the surf
and turf, live Maine lobsters and Alaskan king crab legs, all of which
are priced daily.
The Fish Company also serves a pretty good New England clam chowder,
very rich and buttery, and a Manhattan seafood chowder, which I haven’t
tried yet.
Brian ordered the Alaskan halibut ($17.95) in a citrus butter sauce
with mashed potatoes and seasonal vegetables. It was a very good piece of
fish and cooked well. I ordered the Cajun shrimp and roasted red pepper
pizza ($12.95) and was disappointed to find those pesky and microscopic
“bay shrimp” scattered on top. The pizza had good flavor, but I don’t
think I need to reintroduce my feelings about “bay shrimp” again.
After watching a few of the signature sandwiches go by, I really
wished I had ordered one of those. I will next time. These babies were
piled high, but not as high as the pile of fries that accompanied them.
Sandwiches include a BLT ($7.95), jerk chicken sandwich, grilled ahi tuna
melt and the “ultimate Fish Company burger” ($7.95). These all looked
good in the passing.
The dessert menu and our waiter, Steve (a really nice, hard-working
guy), made up for my discontent. We debated between the Key lime pie and
the peach cobbler, which was the winner in all respects.
The menu is large and varied. The restaurant is big and beautiful, and
I think once a few of the bugs, mainly the “bay shrimp” are worked out,
this will be a fun family place to go and enjoy Newport Beach and its
fish.
* KATHY MADER’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday.
FYI
What: The Newport Fish Company
Where: 3450 Via Oporto, Newport Beach
When: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Saturday and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday
How much: Moderate to moderately expensive
Phone: (949) 673-4700
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