| Restaurant Review |
By Hiroko Fukazawa & Steve Trautlein
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Tokyo Rotisserie Chicken DC
Enjoy some fowl play at this
newly opened Kanda eatery
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| Kohji Shiiki |
If you want to put a scare into your vegetarian friends, take them to Tokyo Rotisserie Chicken DC. After walking through the door, they’ll be greeted by the sight of splayed chickens roasting in a glass-covered oven and an aroma of meat that’s sure to offend them—or, just maybe, convince them to change their ways.
Make no mistake: this restaurant is an omnivore’s delight. Pork platters, meat stews and buffalo wings all appear on the menu, and potato skins come slathered with cheese and bacon. DC does offer a few salads, but they seem like an afterthought.
The specialty of the house is chicken cooked on a spit and then stewed in a Dutch oven (tip: call ahead and the staff will get yours started before you arrive). The result is, in a word, fantastic. Served with a medley of vegetables and wading in its own juices, the dish has a flavor and tenderness that less-intensive cooking methods can’t match.
DC’s menu claims, somewhat optimistically, that a whole chicken is suitable for three or four people, but big eaters will want to split theirs with a friend. Or keep it all for themselves. Customers can choose between Japanese and Brazilian birds (kind of like at the hostess bars just up the road in Ginza), with the domestic chicken, unsurprisingly, costing more than the import (¥3,750 to ¥2,960). Half-size portions are available for ¥1,880 and ¥1,480.
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Courtesy of Tokyo Rotisserie Chicken DC |
For some diners, the sight of chickens going round and round in the rotisserie oven is entertainment enough. For others, a magician wanders around the restaurant and performs tableside. During our visit, the performer gamely tried out his act in English, wowing us with card and coin tricks while keeping up a good-natured, though surprisingly in-your-face, banter
DC’s interior struck us as halfway between a restaurant and an izakaya, with a black-and-white color scheme for the walls and tabletops. Combined with the cube-like layout, the space made us feel like we were in the middle of a monochromic Rubik’s cube. Surrounding the rotisserie grill in the center of the room are shelves with bottles of Japanese liquor, Western-style paintings in gilt frames, balloons in the shape of rabbits(!), and a big-screen TV blaring moldy oldies from Queen and the Village People.
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Thanks to its location just steps from Kanda station, DC attracts an after-work crowd. At a neighboring table sat three salarymen sharing chicken and a bottle of wine, and a steady stream of like-minded customers arrived as the night wore on. Though one or two couples were in attendance, DC is not really a date spot. Instead, it’s a comfortable and cozy eatery with excellent food and attentive staff.
And no vegetarians.
Social Bldg 2F, 3-19-10 Uchi-Kanda, Chiyoda-ku. Tel: 03-5289-8237. Open Mon-Sat & hols 11am-midnight, closed Sun. Menu in Japanese. Nearest stn: Kanda, Kitaguchi exit (JR), or exit 1 (Ginza line).
If you’ve always wanted to visit New Zealand but couldn’t afford it, do the next best thing: visit New Zealand Travel Café, which is located underneath the Outback Steakhouse near Roppongi Crossing. Five minutes in this casual eatery and you’ll think you are in the Land of the Long White Cloud. Guidebooks and picture albums adorn the shelves, while giant TV screens show travelogues of New Zealand’s spectacular vistas, Air New Zealand promotional videos and, of course, the world-class All Blacks rugby squad. Even the menu is interspersed with photos of New Zealand’s gardens, parks and flower festivals. As befitting a café, the food is tasty and reasonably priced, whether you just feel like a drink or are hungry enough for a full meal. Try the New Zealand beer (Steinlager, Speight’s or Tui) and such Kiwi wines as Matua, Hawke’s Bay, Preston’s, Cloudy Bay, Spy Valley and Morton Estate. If it is just a snack you want, there is assorted cheese with Manuka honey, beef jerky, fish and chips, smoked salmon and mussels steamed in white wine. For bigger appetites, there is the classic Kiwi burger—100 percent New Zealand beef with tomato, lettuce, onions and, for a nice change, beetroot. Pizzas, steak, spaghetti and “lumb” (we’ll forgive the menu’s spelling) round out the dinner fare. Prices range from ¥900 for the burger to ¥1,680 for the steak. Finish off your meal with some cheesecake, chocolate brownie or an ice cream float—the honey macchiato float is a popular choice.
Roppongi Rocomon Bldg, 6-1-3 Roppongi, Minato-ku. Tel: 03-5785-2061. Open Mon-Tues 10am-11pm, Wed-Thurs 10am-3am, Fri 10am-5am, Sat 11am-3am, Sun & hols 11am-11pm. www.travelcafe.co.jp CB
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