Alcazar
17239 Ventura Blvd.
Encino, CA
818-789-0991
Lovers of Lebanese food can rejoice. The chef at Alcazar, a
spacious new Encino restaurant complete with patio, Levantine murals and
tables with faux granite tops, used to run the kitchen at the famous,
now-closed Al Amir.
Mezze are the hot and cold appetizers that are the heart of a Lebanese
feast, and few will disappoint you here. The menu lists nearly three
dozen of them, including tender lamb's tongue (
lisanat) and terrific
chicken livers (
sawdat djaj) sautéed in pomegranate sauce. The chef's
version of hummus rivals any around.
Kibbeh nayyeh, which is raw steak beaten to a smooth paste with onions
and bulgur wheat, is perhaps more to the American taste if you add olive
oil and some of the garlic paste that the waiters bring with the house
pita bread.
Sfihas are little square pies with the edges pinched together over a
ground lamb filling, leaving a little hole in the middle. These might
have been delicious, but they tasted as if they'd been reheated in a
microwave. But the lamb fries -- the sheep version of Rocky Mountain
oysters -- were great in their lemony sauce redolent of garlic and parsley.
The best salad is
tabbouleh, here with the proper proportion of
ingredients: chopped parsley, then fresh mint, tomatoes and onions, with
a little cracked bulgur wheat, lemon juice and olive oil. When one of my
guests attempted to season it with black pepper, our waiter cautioned
him, "In my country, we never do that."
Among the absurdly substantial main dishes, one of the most delicious
is
samakeh harra: broiled filet of red snapper topped with a pale pink
sauce of
tahineh, ground walnuts, garlic, cilantro and a tiny bit of red
pepper.
The kebabs are just fine as well, though not much different from those
you can get up and down the Boulevard. "Deboned chicken" is a nicely
marinated Cornish game hen, the shish kebab and lula kebab are fresh and
tender, and the lamb chops (
kastaleta) have a nice gamey flavor.
By the way, with a kebab consider having some
labneh bi-toum: a
delicious thick yogurt cream flavored with mint and garlic.
If you aren't completely satiated, you should be, but leaving room for
dessert is a clever idea.
Ashta bi'asal is a thick clotted cream topped
with honey, crushed pistachioes and slivered almonds. The rice pudding
called moghli is nearly perfect if you don't mind the taste of rose
water. The baklava is small pieces with a minimum of syrup, the way they
like it in Lebanon. It's manna from heaven with a cup of Turkish coffee.
-- Max Jacobson, Special to The Times
Hours: Daily, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Venue Details