MIAMI-DADE REVIEW
For authentic Spanish cuisine, Rincón Español is the place
Posted on Thu, Apr. 10, 2008
BY ENRIQUE FERNANDEZ
JOHN VANBEEKUM / MIAMI HERALD STAFF
Chef Nabor Carvalho and owner Benito Meneses display dishes at Rincón Español: clockwise from top, Dorado and Lubina, Chuleton de Avila, Cordero Sepulveda, Monkfish/Rape Alangostado.
Place: Rincón Español.
Address: 9511 S. Dixie Hwy., Pinecrest.
Rating:
*** (Very Good)
Contact: 305-740-5858
Hours: 11:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday and Sunday, 11:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Friday-Saturday.
Prices: Appetizers $5.50-$10, entrees $15-$30, dessert $4.40-$5.50.
FYI: Free parking. Reservations suggested. Wine and beer only, with totally Spanish wine list; corkage $20. AX, DN, DS, MC, VS.
You wouldn't expect to find authentic Spanish cuisine -- moderately priced, at that -- in a Pinecrest shopping center. But there it is on South Dixie Highway, Rincón Español (Spanish corner).
The décor is standard, old-school U.S. Spanish restaurant, but the menu is not your usual paella and zarzuela de mariscos, even if these items are there.
There is an oxtail dish and a chorizo paté, both from Mallorca; fried rabbit from Navarra; white beans with Catalan sausage; a rib steak from the Castillian city of Avila, home of mystics and fine beef.
Rincón opened quietly five years ago, and has developed a faithful clientele that had the place packed on a Tuesday night. Undaunted, the staff put a table together for my party where before there was none -- an improvisational courtesy that convinced me of the place's Spanish authenticity.
The chef may be Brazilian, but the oxtail recipe is one the owner's mother cooked for him in his hometown, Palma de Mallorca. The chuletón de Avila is not Spanish beef (alas, not legal), but much of the seafood is flown from Spain, and a dorada (royal sea bream) baked in salt is as good as what you get at the fish's namesake restaurant in Coral Gables, albeit served with less flair.
The croquetas tapas were more like the dense torpedoes of Cuban coffee shops than the soft béchamel fritters common to Spanish restaurants. The waitress insisted they were béchamel, and, to be fair, they were redolent of nutmeg. They were also surprisingly delicious.
Pulpo a la gallega did not come on the usual bed of sliced boiled potatoes, but it was tender and understatedly seasoned with olive oil and paprika. Potatoes with alioli were golden fried chunks, to be dipped in the zesty garlic mayo.
The chuletón de Avila was excellent and cooked as ordered; it easily serves two. At the opposite end of the steer is my favorite cut, oxtail, and their rabo a la mallorquina is one of the best I've had in a restaurant, falling off the bone and cooked in what owner Benito Meneses told me over the phone the next day was ``good wine.''
A platter of perfectly grilled little lamb chops was, like the steak, properly cooked, and one can have them plain or with a garlic garnish. Garlic galore, that Spanish tradition, topped the grilled Mediterranean sardines, with a crunchy skin and tender meat to be pulled off the bones.
I wanted to try the fried rabbit from Navarra, but it had flown out of the kitchen already -- not what I had expected of this dish at a suburban restaurant.
Dessert was a standard offering of crema catalana and a few flanes, including a tasty coconut version. There were also tortas (light cakes) imported from Spain.
Rincón Español carries a good selection of decently priced Spanish wines. A $54 Pago de los Capellanes from the very good year of 2001 was excellent, though I imagine the older reserva and still-older gran reserva would have truly blown me away, had I the bucks to fork out.
The restaurant has wine tastings, though these, like the place itself, are not advertised. Instead, at the request of regulars, Meneses will choose a winery, fashion a menu around its wares and invite a representative to introduce the wines.
Rincón is part of a new wave of local Spanish restaurants, some pitched high with service and prices to match, others, like this one, focusing on home cooking. What they have in common is an authenticity that had been slipping from the older spots. Like French and Italian restaurants before them, same old same-old will no longer do with Iberian cuisine. And we're glad.
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