Wedding Season!
The whole family was back in El Paso to cap off the 2017 Wedding Season. One great thing about being home is that there is no shortage of babysitters for the little guy. I love spending time with Danny but it is nice to get out on a date every once and again.
The whole family was back in El Paso to cap off the 2017 Wedding Season. One great thing about being home is that there is no shortage of babysitters for the little guy. I love spending time with Danny but it is nice to get out on a date every once and again.
I started looking for Reubens online in El Paso and it was
not easy to find one. Lots of the pubs and bars you would hope would have one
simply didn’t. So what did I do? I asked my mom. She told me about D’Lox, a great place where
she meets her friends for lunch and she knew first hand that they had a
Reuben. The only difficult part was
trying to understand her over the phone saying D’Lox.
Spicy Reuben
“Shaved corn beef & sauerkraut on grilled rye. Served with imported
Swiss spicy Reuben sauce.”
Appearance – (4.0/5.0)
Lots of fries and there is a Reuben down there somewhere.
These are what I like to call Country Club fries. The El Paso Country Club has
these and I can remember eating them in the club house as a kid. They have that
extra egg batter on them and are super good.
You can see there is lots going on once you get down to the
Reuben, visible sauce, good cross
section of meat, and non-uniform cut sauerkraut. There is only one toothpick
and at least it is easy to spot. The bottom half is stabilized by the top half
and the toothpick is holding the top together. It seems to be functional but I
would just like to think the sauce is enough of a binding agent/adhesive to
keep everything together.
Quality of
Ingredients – (4.4/5.0)
I was very pleased with the quality of everything on the
table, even the lime wedges they brought me for my water. The sauerkraut tasted
fresh and was not bitter or too acidic. I don’t think anyone sells Spicy Reuben
sauce so I assume they make it in-house.
It wasn’t spicy but still awesome in its own right and seemed to be
homemade. The little pepperoncini pepper
had a good snap too. I don’t think anyone makes those so it is a good test to
see how much they are willing to spend on pantry items.
Price – (3.8/5.0)
$12.00! I know this is the Westside of El Paso but it is
still El Paso. $12.00 for anything in El Paso that does not have a T-bone in it
is expensive. The portion is generous
and it includes lots of fries but it is still steep.
Je Ne Sais Quoi
– (3.8/5.0)
This is the place in El Paso for ladies who lunch. The décor
is warm but I thought the music was just a bit too loud. As much as I don’t like toothpicks in my
food, at least this one really calls your attention to it. It is adorned with a
pickle wrapped around a pepper. If that
doesn’t say El Paso deli, I don’t know what does.
I was let down just a bit by the lack of spice. If something
is advertised as spicy on the border you expect them to deliver. This place is relatively new and definitely
not around when I was growing up. I like that El Paso keeps growing and adding
cool new places.
Taste – (8.9/10.0)
I could tell from the first bite that this was going to be a
great Reuben. The only thing that kills me is the soggy buttery bread. This is turning
into a theme on this blog. My theory is restauranteurs are trying to mask the
flavor of the rye bread to market the Reuben to the masses. I don’t understand
it. I found a stray Caraway seed and it was great all by itself. The rye flavor
is there but you lose some of it with the butter.
Now the butter can be good to add just a bit of flavor and
give the bread a nice color on the grill but that is it. The butter should be a
condiment or garnish, not an ingredient. This is not a grill cheese where the
butter is pretty much the reason you eat the sandwich.
The shaved corned beef was just tender enough where you
could pull it apart but still had enough body to give it great flavor. If you
pull up to a Texas meat market, walk away with a huge brisket, and don’t plan
on turning it into barbeque, you better have a good plan. I would say the folks
at D’Lox did the brisket proud.
Finally, the non-spicy sauce really brought everything
together. Sometimes the fat kid inside of me just wants to devour something
when it is good. I really have to pace myself, put down the sandwich, take a
drink of water, make eye contact with my wife, try to pick out something from
the last thing she said and ask a follow-up, then throw in a “is that right?”.
You get the idea. This was a good one and I had to remind myself to go slow and
enjoy it.
Overall – (24.9/30.0)
Would I order it again? Yes, if I was coming for a weekday
lunch AND I would ask the chef to go easy on the butter. I don’t know if I would order it again if I
came for a weekend brunch though. It would be hard to pass up the crab benedict
or even the chilaquiles.
Reubens might be hard to find in ELP but they are great when
you do.
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