Ouzo's Goes South

As it becomes a bistro, the former Greek place slides in more ways than one.

As the sun serenely sets into the cerulean Mediterranean sea, a familiar refrain can be heard around dinner tables throughout Greece: "Moussaka again?" Sadly the 10 million inhabitants of this country, along with their ancestors, have over many a millennia accumulated only 14 recipes. They are good recipes, mind you, popular throughout the world: avgolemono soup; brandy-fired saganaki; melizanosalata; taramosalata; tzatziki; spanakopita; souvlaki; dolmades; pastitsio (and sister moussaka); grilled fish or shellfish with lemon, garlic, olive oil, and herbs; roast lamb with potatoes, lemon, garlic, olive oil, and herbs; Greek salad, which over there is called horiatiki (village salad); plus another one that at the moment escapes my mind.

Joe Rocco

Ouzo's Mediterranean Bistro, like the rest of our local Greek eateries, showcases all of the above dishes. So did the original Ouzo's Greek Taverna, which opened on Normandy Circle in 2002. Husband-and-wife proprietors Liza and Gigi moved their restaurant to the west SoBe space two months ago. The décor isn't as taverna-ish as it once was; only a rounded-archway alcove and one blue wall radiate any Mediterranean warmth. Otherwise it's a neat and simple room with lots of windows and two TV screens — presumably for patrons bored with food and company.

Ouzo's has gone south in more ways than one. A basket mixed with soft, crisp, and semi-crisp pita triangles didn't quite match the menu description of "warm pita slices." Too bad, because fresh, heated bread would have enhanced a mixed dip platter encompassing hummus; grilled eggplant chopped with garlic and olive oil (melizanosalata); Greek yogurt puréed with garlic and cucumbers (tzatziki); and fish roe with lemon juice and olive oil (taramosalata). The lone lackluster component of the combo was tabbouleh: The mint-speckled cracked wheat was dry as sand.

Ouzo's "Greek Village" salad was prepared in advance and stored in the fridge, so everything was ice-cold in the frigid bowl. The medley was dominated by cucumber slices and wedges of red, pulpy tomatoes a few degrees short of frozen. A few strings of red onion and red pepper were tossed in, plus four or five kalamata olives huddled under two planks of feta cheese. A bottle of lemon-tinted olive oil was placed alongside the undressed assemblage.

The best of the appetizers were tender tentacles of grilled octopus with lemon juice and olive oil, as well as avgolemono soup, its velvety rice-and-chicken-stocked base eliciting a lovely lemony tang. Four cleanly fried balls of spinach flecked with feta cheese were well executed but lacked gusto, while pale ringlets of fried calamari were missing tentacles, hinting at frozen, presliced Sysco origins.

We were looking forward most to a starter of grilled sardines, but Ouzo's was out. Our substitute, "baked eggplant rolls" — two undercooked slices of the vegetable wrapped around a sparse sprinkling of feta — didn't impress.

The whole striped sea bass was fresh and assertively grilled. We also liked the braised lamb shank, succulent morsels of meat falling from the bone into garbanzo-dotted moist rice. Moussaka, though, tasted old; the lethargically seasoned beef came capped by a lukewarm custard of béchamel.

Entrées are à la carte, but I can't recommend either of the sides we tried: Couscous was dry as the tabbouleh, and "grilled baby vegetables" were a moisture-free medley.

Ouzo's name change from "Greek Taverna" to "Mediterranean Bistro" widens the repertoire to include bouillabaisse, paella, salmon with "sweet-and-spicy" mustard sauce, and baby-back ribs. The owners are evidently attempting to expand their base, but this strategy makes less sense given that Sardinia, arguably Miami's best Med eatery, is located just down the block.

Desserts include standard versions of baklava and galaktoboureko, the latter a thick milk custard cuddled between two layers of baked phyllo dough. "Cappuccino" came as a sludgy Greek coffee topped with beige foam; avoid it at all costs (in this case, $4).

While Ouzo's has headed south, its prices have traveled in the opposite direction. It still isn't expensive, but entrées that cost $16 at the Normandy spot now go for $20-plus (the branzino was $28). Start with a $10 app, plump your à la carte plate with a $6 side, accessorize with a beverage or dessert, and when the bill comes, it will likely dawn on you that the cuisine really should be better than this.

Greece's national cookbook contains a lot more than 14 recipes. With desserts, it's 16. No, seriously, there are countless other native foods, like kolokythoanthoi (zucchini flowers stuffed with cracked wheat and feta cheese), the chickpea soup revithia from Sifnos islands, and stifado, a mountain stew of meat braised with red wine, cinnamon, and cloves — to name but a few. Yet our Greek restaurateurs, like the proprietors of Miami's other ethnic establishments, don't seem to believe their diners can handle true regional cooking. They might want to reconsider: Although Ouzo's has thus far been drawing a moderate number of diners, authenticity-steeped Sardinia keeps packing them in like sardines.

 
  • Jane 12/17/2007 2:39:00 AM

    You are so wrong about Ouzo�s. Did someone ask you to review negatively about the place? The food is great and the owners are wonderful. Why did you do it? It makes me wonder��

  • Jane 12/17/2007 2:36:00 AM

    You are so wrong about Ouzo�s. Did someone asked you to review negatively about the place? The food is great and the owners are wonderful. Why did you do it? It makes me wonder��

  • Alexandra Bassil 12/12/2007 5:47:00 AM

    I've eaten at the new Ouzo's once and it was just as fantastic as all of my previous meals in their Normandy Isle location. As a Greek American native of Miami I can't agree with Lee this time. Must have been a bad night, yiassou.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:19:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:18:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:14:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:13:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:13:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Marjorie 12/11/2007 3:12:00 AM

    Your attitude in the review of Ouzo's was disappointing, especially compared with your usual open-minded attitude in your restaurant reviews. We really enjoy and usually agree with your reviews. We also appreciate your writing skills. Maybe you should try another visit, maybe on Wednesday when they get their fish deliveries. The sardines and fresh whole fish entrees are fabulous. The whole fish is enough for two, and ours was boned by the waiter and served at the table, a feat not usually seen these days in these parts. Lisa is a wonderful hostess/proprietor. One evening, after we had been served our baklava, she came by and after looking at it, she replaced it with a piece of honey cake that her mother had baked that day because she thought that would be better. By the way, we also like Sardinia very much too, but we think they are very different.

  • Christian 12/11/2007 12:20:00 AM

    A Wonderfully crafted hit job. Bravo NewTimes you have found your own Anne Coulter!

  • Christian 12/11/2007 12:12:00 AM

    A wonderfully crafted hit job. Bravo NewTimes you have found your own Anne Coulter!

  • Christian 12/11/2007 12:03:00 AM

    A wonderfully crafted hit job. Bravo NewTimes you have found your own Anne Coulter!

  • Christian 12/11/2007 12:02:00 AM

    A wonderfully crafted hit job. Bravo NewTimes you have found your own Anne Coulter!

  • Lucy 12/10/2007 10:17:00 PM

    Was this article about Sardinia or Ouzo's?...Why are you comparing?? Ouzo's is a cool, unpretentious place, that makes the customer the priority....No celebrity chefs or publicists...Just a place to eat, drink well and feel welcomed..Your article was very bias..It does make one wonder!!!

  • Lucy 12/10/2007 10:16:00 PM

    Was this article about Sardinia or Ouzo's?...Why are you comparing?? Ouzo's is a cool, unpretentious place, that makes the customer the priority....No celebrity chefs or publicists...Just a place to eat, drink well and feel welcomed..Your article was very bias..It does make one wonder!!!

  • Nicolas 12/09/2007 12:36:00 AM

    I thought your review on Ouzo's was ill will and malicious and strangely enough ended on a nice plug for Sardinia. It kind of makes you wonder...

 
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