Dining Out
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Mary Furr
Huntington Beach had no place to go but up -- that is up Main Street
from the pier to Olive Avenue. First Inka Grill opened at Walnut Avenue
across from the post office, and then a little over a month ago came
Spiral, a great new sushi restaurant in the Spanish-style Almeria Plaza
building.
It’s a new concept for Huntington Beach with an East Coast “big city”
feel. It’s independently owned by a Chinese partnership from New York,
according to Anna Lempriere, on of the three managers.
Spiral has a high ceiling with a flowing silver spiral with tiny
lights over a minimalist decor and a color scheme of silver and gray. A
long banquette and a 20-stool sushi bar line the deep storefront. It’s a
sophisticated 21st century decor designed by architect Marcus Kemmerer of
RHA Architects.
From the a la carte menu on a recent visit I chose the grilled Thai
Chicken (lunch: $8.95, dinner: $14.95) in a tasty peanut sauce with
coconut rice and a wonderful salsa of ripe mango. The miso soup brought
by server Noosin had cubes of tofu and strands of dark seaweed in a clear
broth. A small blue china bowl contained mixed greens of spinach, oak and
red leaf with an excellent ginger dressing -- just zesty enough. Flavors
in everything here are blended, teasing new tastes from seasonal fresh
fruits and vegetables.
The herb-crusted king salmon (lunch, $9.95, dinner: $16) as prepared
by Chef Trevor Hailwood from New Zealand, is two inches of tender flesh
in a crisp, light coat that flakes in pale pink slivers -- a
well-prepared, melt-in-the-mouth entree. It’s served with spunky mixed
salad and a mound of white sticky rice.
The big white plates are pictures themselves. The tender soy-marinated
pan-seared filet mignon (dinner: $19) in a lee kem kee oyster sauce is
crossed with transparent onion strands with a salad bowl draped with
slender over-the-edge carrot threads. It resembles a splashy, modern
painting. The steak is firm but tender and laid atop a thick slice of bok
choy. The entrees are as beautifully presented as the striking decor.
Sushi chef Andy Wang sent over a complimentary grand opening sample of
his creations -- a red tuna slice and shrimp on squares of sticky rice
with dabs of hot wasabi and ginger pieces on the side.
A tempting dessert ($6) is spiralmisu, a hard dark chocolate tubelike
coating around two layers of cognac-soaked cake topped with a big scoop
of ice cream-like marscarpone Italian cheese all sprinkled with cocoa
powder. Simpler is an apple-almond tart -- a small almond crust with
apple slices and a scoop of marscapone, not too sweet but oh so
satisfying.
According to Lempriere, Spiral Sushi plans to add a 5 to 7 p.m. happy
hour in the next few weeks. They plan to keep the Spiral staff small and
well informed about the many unusual dishes.
With its cooked-to-order approach, Spiral Sushi is not the place for a
quick lunch or dinner. But if it’s exciting food you’re looking for, it
can be a step up the culinary ladder for Huntington Beach.
FYI
Spiral Sushi Restaurant
Where: Plaza Almeria, 301 Main St.
Hours: 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. lunch; 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. dailyPhone:
(714) 374-8885* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you
have comments or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
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