I’d like to nominate Mariscos El Veneno as a 2014 GNR. Mariscos El Veneno is one of my favorite restaurants to recommend to other Chicagoans. Everyone seems to recognize that seedy stretch of Ashland “south of the three [now two] Pasaditas.” And the conversation always goes the same way:
“Oh, you mean El Barco. I’ve been there before years ago. It’s okay.”
“No, the place across the street. The other place for Mexican seafood. It has a smurf blue facade and is always crowded. You’ll know it when you see it.”
Mariscos El Veneno is one of those singular neighborhood places that draws everyone in. On any given night, you can expect to eat elbow to elbow with construction workers tucking into platters of steaming langostinos, Mexican extended families passing trays of oysters and fried huachinango, and NPR-types supplementing halved crabs with bottle after bottle of wine. Whether or not you’re celebrating some special occasion, the atmosphere is loud, convivial, and focused on the food. It’s the type of place where you plan ahead to wear your “eatin’ shirt,” because you will get messy, and you won’t even care.
Everyone has their Veneno favorites, but the ideal dinner for me begins with the complimentary marlin ceviche, which arrives on the table even before the menu. Placed on a saltine (not the tostada it comes on) and topped with salsa Huichol and a squeeze of lime (and maybe some of the fiery house-made habanero salsa if I feel brave), this bite is one of my favorite bites in Chicago, at least partly because it evokes fond memories of wandering through the beach towns of Nayarit, Mexico. Mariscos El Veneno is just another shining example of how fortunate we are to have such a broad range of Mexican cuisine represented in Chicago.
Other must-haves: langostinos ordered by the tray or half-tray, the perfectly tender “pulpo especial,” piles of crabs swimming in buttery red sauce, and the “veneno salad” – a refreshing cold seafood salad piled high with marlin ceviche, octopus, scallop, shrimp, oysters, and more, that perfectly balances the heavy richness of the rest of the meal. And, of course, extra garlic bread to soak up all of the leftover sauces.
Mariscos El Veneno is one of my absolute favorite places to throw down with a big group of friends. But you don’t have to take my word for it. Others on this board have sung its praises:
YourPalWill wrote:IMO, it has GNR written all over it.
Da Beef wrote:I've been a big fan of El Barco forever and Mexican has always been my favorite food. Count me in as a bigger fan of Veneno and its Nayarit (one of Mexico's 31 states) style of cooking.
gastro gnome wrote:Holy Toledo, OH was that octopus good. Pungent garlic, chile heat and tender, not tough whole arms of octopus . . . The prawns were a little on the dry side, but when you bathed them in the mouth-tingling sauce, they were a real winner. And any meal involving red-stained hands and carapace sucking already has a lot going for it.
JeffB wrote:The chapuzon de mariscos involves one of the most delicious, heart-stoppingly buttery sauces anywhere (and the long-cooked shellfish actually work in this prep), the shrimp aguaschiles are a robust doppelganger of TAC's raw shrimp (high praise), and the massive dungeness crab in Nayarit sauce has to be one of the best crustacean deals in town.
turkob wrote:Mariscos el Veneno is exactly the type of gem that you can't believe you've never tried before.
jimswside wrote:yeah.. im hooked on this spot. Cancelled a reservation for Sumi Robata for Saturday night and was glad I did. That $40 crab plate has to be one of the better deals in the city. and gets my vote for the #1 crab dish(feast) around.
Jefe wrote:Fortunately I noticed the micheladas in the room, so we asked and were greeted with chalices of spicy brew that we tipped our beers into. The best I've had in Chicago and free to boot, as much as I loved the food, this was enough to make me a happy camper. It seemed as though the whole neighborhood was partying in there that night, a more inclusive vibe I challenge you to find at a restaurant on a Saturday night!
Mike G wrote:Popped in here for lunch yesterday and had a meal that can be divided neatly into the "not bad" and the "bad.”
Main thread:
http://www.lthforum.com/bb/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=20273Mariscos El Veneno
1024 N Ashland Ave
773-252-7200
BYOB
The meal isn't over when I'm full; the meal is over when I hate myself. - Louis C.K.