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domingo, 22 de junio de 2008

Restaurante Peruano que encanta paladar de Californianos

Peru to You
Nazca brings the diverse tastes of Peru to San Jose
By Stett Holbrook

DOWNTOWN San Jose's staid restaurant scene just got a lot more interesting with the opening of Nazca Peruvian Cuisine. First-time restaurateurs Martha and Jose Bohorquez spent eight months remodeling before opening in March. They added a sleek open kitchen and remodeled the dining room in dusky tones of red and brown.
The Bohorquezes love Peruvian food but tired of driving to San Francisco to get it. So they decided to open their own restaurant and traveled to Peru to recruit a consulting chef to design the menu and train the staff. The chef, Altaea De Bernardi, shuttles between Lima, Peru and San Jose to oversee the restaurant, while another Limeño, Amparo Zuniga, handles the day-to-day duties in the kitchen.

Nazca bills itself as a modern Peruvian restaurant. It offers a well-rounded menu of Peruvian standards as well as several fusion dishes that push the boundaries of a cuisine already steeped in numerous culinary traditions. While not all dishes hit their target, it is still a refreshing change to the same old steakhouses and chain restaurants that seem to dominate downtown San Jose.
Of all South American cuisines, Peru's is the most diverse, drawing on influences from China, Japan, Italy, Spain and its own indigenous populations. Add Peru's distinct culinary styles from the coast, the Andes and interior jungles and you get a wonderfully rich and complex cuisine. In fact, the world owes Peru a debt. Potatoes, chiles, corn and tomatoes all originated in Peru.
Ceviche, lime-marinated seafood, is probably Peru's best-known dish, and it's quite good here. Ceviche de pescado ($15.50) is available with the fresh fish of the day, and on all my visits the lucky fish was halibut. The diced, mild fish is the perfect vehicle to carry the bright, refreshing flavors of lime, aji chiles, cilantro and red onion.
The dish provides a lot of fish for one person so this might be one to share as an appetizer. Come to think of it, all of Nazca's portions are quite large, so consider sharing, a strategy that will help cut the cost of what can be an expensive lunch or dinner.

Tiradito is essentially sashimi, a traditional Peruvian dish that reveals its Japanese influences. Tiradito Nikkei ($15.50) combines thinly sliced raw halibut with what's described as an oyster and coconut milk vinaigrette but is really a thick glaze that was severely overapplied. I liked the salty, sweet flavor but could have done with just a squiggle of sauce instead of a bucketful. The most delicious dish I tried on the extensive menu was the tacu tacu de camarones ($15). It's amazing that what amounts to a crispy cake of puréed rice and beans can reach such heights of savory deliciousness. Add shrimp braised in a chupe sauce, a tomato-based seafood bisque, and it's even better.
Another dish that's far better than it sounds is mini causitas revoltosas, little, artfully arranged stacks of mashed-potato cakes topped with panko-crusted tuna tartare, crab meat, shrimp tempura and aji chiles.

Seafood dishes are particularly good at Nazca. Parihuela ($18.50) is Peru's version of bouillabaisse, a thick tomtatoey stew larded with clams, halibut scallops, squid, shrimp and a spiny langoustine. Conchas Philly ($13.25) is another winner—six bay scallops each served in a ceramic white spoon in a buttery miso sauce topped with crispy shards of phyllo dough.
I also liked the lenguado braseado ($21.95), deftly cooked pan-fried halibut ladled with a mushroom and tomato sauce and served over a dune of puréed corn. As good as the fish was, the kitchen relies too heavily on halibut. There are other fish in the sea.
Lomo saltado ($20.95) and aji de gallina ($14.50), two classics of Peruvian food, came up short. The first is a hearty dish of sautéed strips of filet mignon, red onions, bell peppers and french fries in a light soy sauce and garlic sauce. It's a huge plate of food and chomping through it became a chore halfway through. Aji de gallina combines pulled chicken in a monotonous creamy sauce made of aji chiles and walnuts.

For dessert, I was hoping for a taste of Peru's famous lucuna ice cream, a treat made with a unique Peruvian fruit, or alfajores, a layered cookie filled with dulce de leche. Instead there's a humdrum roster that include chocolate cake, apple- and banana-filled wontons, profiteroles and a mango sorbet/raspberry and meringue dessert. The pastry served with the profiteroles ($7.50) was heavy and muffinlike, and the sorbet dessert was coarse and crunchy. The fresh berries were good, though.

Service is knowledgeable and attentive, but there can be long waits between dishes, even when the restaurant is barely occupied. In spite of a few less-than-successful dishes, Nazca deserves to be much busier. I hope the kitchen and servers can keep up if and when the crowds come. Either way, most of the food is worth waiting for.

Nazca Peruvian Cuisine
Address: 167 W. San Fernando St., San Jose
Phone: 408.295.2828
Hours: Lunch 11am–3pm Mon–Fri, dinner 5–9pm Mon–Wed and 5–10pm Thu–Fri, Sat 11am–10pm
Cuisine: Peruvian
Price Range: $12.50–$28.75

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Nazca Peruvian Cuisine: Nazca Peruvian Cuisine would be wise to turn up the heat
S.J. RESTAURANT IS A NICE ADDITION TO SOUTH BAY MIX
By Aleta Watson
Mercury News
Article Launched: 06/29/2008 01:35:55 AM PDT


One of the delights of dining in the South Bay is the chance to explore the flavors of so many cultures. We may not boast a critical mass of top tier restaurants, but we're rich in eateries serving the native foods of immigrants from around the world.

Until recently, however, one cuisine that wasn't easy to find was Peruvian - a lively, likable blend of Latin, European, Asian and African influences. Martha and Jose Bohorquez fixed that when they opened Nazca Peruvian Cuisine in downtown San Jose in late March.

This is no hole-in-the-wall. The new 92-seat restaurant is a bright spot on West San Fernando Street, just down the block from Pizz'a Chicago and around the corner from the Greyhound bus station. The space, formerly occupied by an Indian restaurant, was remodeled along contemporary lines with deep terra cotta walls, black ceilings and blown-glass pendant lamps. Bare wood tables are dressed with fresh flowers and black napkins.

The longtime San Jose residents, originally from Peru, brought in a consultant from their homeland to help design the kitchen and develop a modern menu based on traditional ingredients and dishes. Chef Amparo Zuniga, who trained at the Cordon Bleu Peru, presents her dishes with artistic style.

All the elements are in place for a satisfying meal. But Nazca often pulls its punches, downplaying the zesty spice that marks the most memorable Peruvian food. The much-loved ají amarillo chile, known for its searing heat, contributes little more than yellow color and mildly fruity undertones to most dishes here.
"We believe that's perhaps what customers might like in San Jose," says Jose Bohorquez, a metallurgical engineer turned restaurateur. "Myself, I like perhaps a little more spice."

So do I. Without a touch of sprightly heat, otherwise vibrant dishes become as dull as the ají de gallina ($11.95) - a concoction reminiscent of creamed chicken over potatoes - that I ate for lunch one day. Bohorquez might consider dialing the chile up a point or two.

Still, the appetizers and seafood dishes are quite nice, particularly the ceviche mixto ($16) with fish, calamari, shrimp, scallops, octopus and a lively shot of lime juice. Tiradito en crema de ají amarillo ($15.50), a large plate of sashimi-thin slices of halibut swimming in a creamy sauce, set my palate atingle and demonstrated the charms of a little chile kick. Both the ceviche and tiradito were served with a pile of outsize, starchy Peruvian corn kernels that offered contrasts of texture and flavor. Pescado Nazca ($17.95), grilled filet of halibut dressed with onion and peppers, was moist and flaky.

Don't miss the mini causitas revoltosas ($13.50) on the tapas and appetizers portion of the menu. The trio of little mashed-potato cylinders, layered with avocado and crowned with flavorful toppings, were the highlight of my dinner. Best of all was the crunchy, fried cake topped with a tuna tartare that had been tossed with garlic, capers and cilantro.

I also liked tacu tacu, a seasoned mash of beans and rice, pan-fried until crisp on the edges. It made a tasty bed for five big shrimp in a tomato-based chupe sauce in the tacu tacu de camarones ($17.50). Yet the lomo saltado ($20.95), a classic Peruvian stir-fry, fell short. Cubes of filet mignon were tough and overcooked, ruining what could have been a pleasing toss of meat, tomatoes, peppers, red onions and - yes - french fries in a meaty, soy-laced sauce. (Remember, the potato originated in the Andes.) As in most Nazca dishes, the serving was large, filled out with an immense scoop of rice cooked in chicken stock.

Service was pleasant although only sporadically attentive on my visits - despite the fact that the dining room was almost empty on both occasions. Entrees were crowded onto the table while we were still enjoying the ceviche at lunch. Water glasses stood empty for long stretches at dinner.

The moderately priced wine list includes several Peruvian vintages, including a soft, dry tempranillo ($10/glass) and an unassuming pinot blanc ($10/glass), both from Picasso winery. The bargain is a fruity red sangria ($6/glass).

Desserts lean toward Europe: apples and bananas in phyllo dough ($7.95), a warm chocolate cake ($8.25), and rather tough profiteroles with ice cream and a thick chocolate sauce ($7.50). Most appealing was the crocante de meringue ($8.25), a sort of a Napoleon, with passion fruit cream nested between flat sheets of meringue in the place of puff pastry.

Nazca shows promise, but it needs to credit South Bay diners for adventurous palates: Give us more of the vibrant flavors for which Peruvian cuisine is famous.


Nazca Peruvian Cuisine


167 W. San Fernando, near San Pedro, San Jose (408) 295-2828.


** 1/2

The Dish: Peruvian cuisine comes to downtown San Jose in an attractive restaurant with upscale ambitions. Although the ceviches and seafood dishes are nice, some flavors are muted.

Price range: Lunch $9.50-$16.95. Dinner appetizers $5.50-$17.95, entrees $15.50-$24.50. Corkage fee: $10.

Details: Beer and wine.

Pluses: Impressive mini causitas revoltosas, tasty tacu tacu de camarones

Minuses: Dull ají de gallina, tough lomo saltado.

Hours: Lunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Mondays-Fridays. Dinner 5-9 p.m. Mondays-Wednesdays, till 10 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays.

Restaurants are rated on a four-star scale: four stars (excellent), three stars (good), two stars (fair) and one star (poor). Reviews are conducted anonymously. The Mercury News pays for all meals.



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To read more restaurant reviews, go to www.mercurynews.com/aletawatson. Contact Aleta Watson at awatson@mercurynews.com or (408) 920-5032.