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2015-05-24
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What are the chances, I mean seriously! We're living in a city with over seven million inhabitants and more than 79,000 restaurants. So what were the chances of inadvertently sitting next to our dining companions from the previous week's dinner catch up? Well, if you're talking about one of the hottest restaurants around, one so desirable, that it's almost impossible to get a table, I'd have thought pretty non existent. Apparently not!Yardbird is a tiny little yakitori place that SC had visited
Well, if you're talking about one of the hottest restaurants around, one so desirable, that it's almost impossible to get a table, I'd have thought pretty non existent. Apparently not!
Yardbird is a tiny little yakitori place that SC had visited a few weeks back, while I'd been travelling OS for work. She'd been so impressed with the place, she'd pretty much not stopped talking about it, so of course we needed to get along so I could write about it. With a no reservations policy, you need to take your chances with Yardbird, and we'd had a couple of false starts before we eventually scored a table.
If you've not been to a yakitori restaurant before, they pretty much only serve the many different parts of a chicken, including the heart, liver, oyster, neck, skin etc. Usually cooked over a traditional binchotan charcoal grill, Yardbird is perhaps the best example of the modern izikaya-style restaurant I'd come across. Not surprising though, given that Yardbird is from the crew that run funky little Sunday's Grocery and uber cool bar/restaurant Ronin.
Anyway, after we'd spent some more time catching up, we set about constructing a meal from the seriously great looking menu. The Yardbird menu is split out into 'smaller' entree sized share plates, the yakitori menu, which included just about every part of the chicken you could imagine (and some you'd rather forget about) and some 'bigger' bites. We ran down the list and ordered a fair bit from the yakitori and a little from the rest.
Of course we ordered a small side of edamame, sprinkled with sea salt, a staple when venturing to any Japanese restaurant. There's not much to say about edamame, apart from the fact that the delicious little soy beans are totally addictive.
I was still a little blown away that we'd so randomly encountered our sometimes dining buddies and even more so that they were sitting right next to us at a the bar. It was pretty cool though and added an extra dimension to our meal.
And that's the thing about Yardbird, it's the type of place that you want to tell people about, then go and share a meal with them. Easier said than done though, the first couple of times we tried to go together, we were told there was a ninety minute wait, and that was only twenty minutes after opening. If you hate queues and wait times like we do, then you can carefully plan and get there on opening, or if you're really lucky, you can have a drink inside and wait your turn.
Either way, get there and check it out, you won't be disappointed
@FoodMeUpScotty
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