Tommy's Las Olas / Fort Lauderdale
By JUDITH STOCKS
Special Correspondent for South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Important: This article was last updated on February 22, 2008. Please call ahead to confirm hours, prices, dates and other information.
|
We're at Tommy's Las Olas, opened 10 months ago by Tommy Panetta and Purvin Pujara. It's polished, likable and warm-spirited — boosted by very good food and service. Live entertainment (Wednesday-Saturday) ranges from background piano music to a vocalist and a small band on Friday and Saturdays — keeping in line with the supper club theme.
Whispers of Asian, Italian, steakhouse fare and current trends landscape the menu through a full page of appetizers followed by steaks, chops, seafood and chicken, supplemented with specials. The starting point is $18, hiking to $40 for a 10-ounce filet mignon or rack of lamb, with market-priced Florida Lobster tails.
Soft-roasted garlic cloves, piquant green olives and roasted red peppers make an amuse-bouche while pondering first courses. Soup or salad along with potatoes or rice and veggies are included with entrees — and I'm not talking the usual soup and salad snooze. We rhapsodized over each spoonful of mushroom soup rich with cream and finely pureed mushrooms, but executive chef John Angle has just as nice a way with salads and house-made dressings. A rewarding Caesar carries full-flavored creaminess clinging to crisp romaine, and a house salad of baby greens showered with walnuts and blue cheese hits new heights with Angle's fruity fresh pear vinaigrette.
Considering the ambience, the last thing I expected was chicken wings, but they're here — $9 for mild, medium or hot with blue cheese or ranch. In a place like this, I go for shrimp and lobster dip, beef carpaccio, prosciutto and melon, oysters Rockefeller or smoked salmon with capers ($11-$12). Or, a lovely portobello mushroom capped with flaky puff pastry, highlighted by fresh mozzarella, roasted red peppers and candylike balsamic drizzle ($11). Cilantro-spiked Thai barbecue-style fried calamari arrives lightly breaded in a barely spicy lightly applied sauce ($10), and the same 10 spot buys six luscious Asian-style ribs (the meat pops right off the bone), with refreshing Oriental slaw of julienne carrots and bell peppers steeped in rice vinegar.
I'm happy anytime I spend an evening with a veal chop — particularly a 12-ounce, perfectly cooked one marinated in garlic and lemon, served with a ragout of shiitakes, portobellos, oyster and domestic button mushrooms ($42). And, $22 treats you to five jumbo shrimp, coconut crusted or grilled, in sassy chili sauce with refreshing mango salsa as a counterpoint, while $36 delivers a nice hunk of Chilean sea bass braised in a delicate broth of tomatoes, caramelized onions and fennel.
I haven't found really good apple strudel since Fort Lauderdale's Nada's Dubrovnik Restaurant closed years ago. Until now. The one made here is sugar-crusted, warmed in the oven, not a microwave, producing phyllo layers as crisp as paper, plumped with firm apples and golden raisins. It's competition for excellent citrus-scented Italian ricotta cheesecake, and a divine dark chocolate layer cake — all priced at $7. Just a few more reasons to let the fine-tuned performance of Tommy's lead you into temptation.
Please call to confirm hours, prices, menu items and facilities. For review consideration, fax a current menu that includes the name and address of restaurant to 954-356-4386 or send to Sun-Sentinel, 200 E. Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301-2293.
■■■½
Cuisine: American
1103 E. Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale
954-712-8933
tommyslasolas.com
Cost: moderate to expensive
Credit cards: AE, MC, V
Hours: lunch Monday-Saturday, dinner nightly
Reservations: recommended
Bar: full service
Sound level: moderate to noisy
Smoking: outdoors
Children's facilities: no
Wheelchair accessible: yes
