SueF and I dined last night at the new restaurant E + O in the revamped Randhurst mall.
I'm pleased with the quality of shops and restaurants they've put in, mostly going for a step above the least common denominator (Pei Wei instead of Panda Express, Panera and Jersey Mike's although there's also the ubiquitous Subway), but E + O is a surprising leap above the more pedestrian fare of the other restaurants in the core entertainment area of the mall (Billy Goat, Blackfinn, Eggsperience Cafe, Tony Sacco's Coal Oven Pizza).
According to
The Eater Chicago the place is run by former chefs at
Sunda including Aeron Lancero, and designed by someone from Sepia. I have not been to Sunda, so I can't compare, but they share some menu items. What they've created, though, is a very eclectic menu ranging from Japanese to Mediterranean, American to Southeast Asian. If they can lay off the sugar a bit, they've probably got a hit on their hands.
While perusing the menus we were given the chef's "offering" of the night, a pickled watermelon rind with some mesclun lettuces. Nice balance of sweet and tart, although the outer rinds were a bit tough (I'm not that familiar with pickled watermelon rind, so perhaps it's supposed to be that way).
The menu has snacks, small plates, soups, salads, several divisions of entree including grill, and "raw... and not so raw" which includes sushi, tartare, poke and similar items (I was curious about the seared steak tartare -- isn't that just a burger?). Having just had sushi recently, we stayed away from that end of the menu, but tried to hit several other areas. A couple next to us had the "real crab" California roll, and for $8 it appeared to be a very good deal in a decent-sized roll, as I've paid that much for krab.
The Caramelized Onion Bisque was delicious, with a corn crema and crisp onions on the top... but quickly grew cloying. It's waaaay too sweet with no heat or sour to balance it. A dose of sherry vinegar would be a start, but I'm not sure it can be fixed easily (hmmm... maybe spicy corn-nut croutons?). (Price forgotten)
Patatas Fritas is really Papas Bravas with another name: red pepper aioli for fried small potatoes dusted with paprika were spot-on. A little spice, lots of crunch. $6
Duck and Daikon Hash was the hit of the evening: not really a hash at all but more of a salad of crispy roast duck bits, frisee, and cubes of a chewy daikon-pork-shrimp cake with a vinaigrette that was still a little on the sweet side -- without the soup it probably would have been fine, but we were getting sweetened out at this point. $12.
The only entree we ordered was the Pork Loin, which was two nice-sized tender boneless chops for $16 (I think, or was it $18). It was labeled as having an "al pastor marinade" but it could use a kick of chile, onion and pineapple. Accompanied with a couple seared shishito peppers and a creamed corn polenta (again with the sweet), it was very good, but could still use a little work.
After all that sweet, I discouraged dessert, but Sue ordered the Churritos anyway. Nice little doughnut bites with a chocolate dipping sauce, and really, not too sweet at all.
It's very possible that we ordered from the Willy Wonka side of the menu -- I want to give the place another try, definitely. Service was attentive, if a little rushed: they were relatively empty when we got there, as it was a Wednesday night and they've just opened last week, but having all the courses we ordered on the table at once was a bit awkward. I did let the manager know we thought it was a bit too much sweet, and we were thanked for the feedback.
I'm hoping this place does well, and manages to bring Randhurst out of the mall-food image it has had.
(I still need a replacement patty melt in the area, though)
e + o
125 Randhurst Village Drive
Mount Prospect IL 60056
eofoodanddrink.com
847-398-3636
[Note: As of 21-Feb-2013, the website is obviously preliminary, there's only one page, no menu, and almost all the text is currently pictures (can't copy and paste the address)]
Last edited by
JoelF on April 29th, 2019, 1:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang