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Even longer longer than the wait to be seated was the amount of time it took to decide what to order: pretty much everything looks outstanding. We decided on a few dishes, figuring we could always add more. But the one thing that really bugged me is that in the small-plates dining format, one dish should not have to sing
acapella in wait for something else to come out and accompany it. Some stellar grilled baby octopus arrived first, but five simple cephalopods on a plate seemed a little stark. They were immaculate, to be sure, their bulbous heads tender, but inflected with the beachy char that incinerated their delicate tendrils to a crispy end. All the "Charcoal Grilled Goodies" are served with a bright lime, chile and garlic dipping sauce that would taste good on pretty much everything except maybe chocolate mousse. But they were lonely, and it took forever for more of our orders to arrive, which was a serious demerit in my
soup spoons. I also had to wonder why more things don't use duck broth, although the flavor was decidedly richer and deeper than ubiquitous chicken broth. Caramelized tangerine added a toasty, sweet tang to its umami-richness.
dish, easily shareable by two if not more, which might be deceptive from its price tag of six dollars. Alternatively, broiled bay scallops in a chuu chee sauce screamed out for plain white rice, its creamy, coconut-thickened curry tamping the intensity of its fire, but once it came forth, it came on like a
bulldozer. Spicy water spinach isn't the best counter for its forceful heat, but we hardly needed to order rice with the abudance of comestables already on the table.... except for that strangely enough, we weren't really unthinkably full. In fact, as the scallops arrived, my companion (not such a fan of their spiciness) decided he still had room for another dish, and we couldn't resist the crispy skate, given its designation as a Traditional Celebratory Food. Uncles Boon's does feel like a celebration. Although it took so long for the skate to arrive that the rest of our vittles finally hit their destination, and we were hardly hungry enough to even make a dent in the ruthlesslessly funky concoction. The wild ginger sauce, bean sprouts and herbs were overshadowed by pungent fermented cabbage and a tangle of miniscule, potent baby mackerels, with their crooked little inch-long bodies and macabre, jaw-dominated heads, although they were conveniently cordoned off to the side in order to be able to nudge them into forkfuls to taste (for which mine needed little). Slithery rice noodles buoyed the fish above the brashly seasoned broth.
As for dessert, on the other hand, the warm, bruleed tapioca pudding IS something I could imagine consuming daily- or at least frequently. I'm not sure I've ever had a warm tapioca, and this treatment with its candied brown-sugar crust contrasted an earthy, porridge-y flavor, enhanced by a smattering of fresh, ruby pomegranate seeds. A slightly less sweet version would be a respectable breakfast, and we had stayed so long it was about to become that. Boon's is a fooderati's hotspot, but it retains a homey coziness above all that buzz: literally, a boon on all fronts.
7 Spring Street
tel. 1(646) 370-6650