We went! It is curious and interesting. Two full menu pages of imported tinned seafood served straight in the tin; plus two pages of composed dishes featuring fresh seafood, house cured seafood, and tinned seafood.
We ordered composed dishes: uni toast, galician stew, razor clams, hake rillette, baccalao dumplings, roasted romanesco.
While there is some cleverness and some tastiness, with 1 exception (rillette, which was excellent) the dishes were just unbalanced - not enough brightness, not enough texture. The uni was drowned out by soft brioche and (unpleasantly cold) cauliflower puree. The galician stew was one note and uniform texture. The razor clams were fine but served atop seriously mushy canned white asparagus. The baccalao flavor was muted to begin with, and then served in a rich egg yolk cream. It is a funny concept: a pricey, fancy place centering canned food - and there just needs to be greenery and citrus and crunch to liven things up.
Notably, there is only 1 vegetable dish on the entire menu (no sides of veg, no salads), and it was cooked to almost mush and in a very oily preparation. The menu desperately needs a bright, acidic, crunchy salad, but the individual dishes also need balance.
Our tab with these dishes, which is 5 starters and 1 main, and 4 drinks, was $225 pre tip, so not cheap either.
The place was pretty busy, and the decor is over the top, so it is kind of an experience.