gastro gnome wrote:I made it in for the first time yesterday with a friend. For some reason, despite being walkable to my place and highly recommended, I hadn't made my way over yet. Maybe I was hesitant about the outdoor seating during less suitable weather, but on a perfect summer day, there was no excuse.
We both got slushies: watermelon for my friend and limeade for me. I enjoyed both, but preferred the limeade as it had a little more tartness. This would be killer on an even hotter day.
I ordered the tacos dorados special and my friend the qusa'ropa. I thought the qusa'ropa was great. We opted for the garlic rice (which was very tasty) and tostones which were excellent. This just had a great punch and depth of flavor.
The dorado tacos (known to me as taquitos) were served crispy and the broth was piping hot. I found the broth fine, but tasted a bit heavily of bouillon type seasoning. Overall, I thought the dish could have used a little more acid and benefitted from the green spicy sauce.
I cannot overstate two things: 1) the moment you walk in to the courtyard, it smells amazing and 2) Omar is as friendly and passionate as I had heard. There were a whole host of things on the menu I was looking to try, so I am looking forward to returning soon - even if I was a little less than thrilled with my individual order. I'm that confident that other things will be delicious.
justjoan wrote:I tried to bring a friend to omarcito yesterday. she was very excited to try the fish sandwich on her first visit. When we got there we found it was closed and they were setting up for a private event. We were also told that they were going to be on vacation till the 11th. Before posting this I double checked their website and there's no information about either closing so I sent Omar a respectful email reminding him that if you were going to have a website that one should keep it updated. It shows respect for your customers and their time. So FYI Omarcito, is closed until 11 September.
boudreaulicious wrote:justjoan wrote:I tried to bring a friend to omarcito yesterday. she was very excited to try the fish sandwich on her first visit. When we got there we found it was closed and they were setting up for a private event. We were also told that they were going to be on vacation till the 11th. Before posting this I double checked their website and there's no information about either closing so I sent Omar a respectful email reminding him that if you were going to have a website that one should keep it updated. It shows respect for your customers and their time. So FYI Omarcito, is closed until 11 September.
It was posted last week and is the most recent post on both their FB and Instagram pages. Websites aren’t always easy to update for things like that—many businesses don't/can’t use them that way. Social media is much, much easier.
justjoan wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:justjoan wrote:I tried to bring a friend to omarcito yesterday. she was very excited to try the fish sandwich on her first visit. When we got there we found it was closed and they were setting up for a private event. We were also told that they were going to be on vacation till the 11th. Before posting this I double checked their website and there's no information about either closing so I sent Omar a respectful email reminding him that if you were going to have a website that one should keep it updated. It shows respect for your customers and their time. So FYI Omarcito, is closed until 11 September.
It was posted last week and is the most recent post on both their FB and Instagram pages. Websites aren’t always easy to update for things like that—many businesses don't/can’t use them that way. Social media is much, much easier.
thanks for that info, Jen. But my response to that is if a Business has a website, Their responsibility to their customers is to keep it accurate. why have it otherwise? not everybody uses social media. take down your website if you are not going to keep it updated....
I agree with this. There's a duty not to mislead. The best way to get around this is to put a disclaimer on the website directing people to your social media pages as being far more reliable and up-to-date, saying you occasionally close for private events, etc. If updating your website is a burden, warn people before they can rely on it.justjoan wrote:thanks for that info, Jen. But my response to that is if a Business has a website, Their responsibility to their customers is to keep it accurate. why have it otherwise? not everybody uses social media. take down your website if you are not going to keep it updated....
boudreaulicious wrote:Do people really go to the website before eating out at neighborhood restaurants for anything other than a menu check? Even the person who posted the original complaint about this only went to the website AFTER she showed up and they were closed.
This is not a national chain—it’s highly unlikely that they've done much with the website since they created it. And it’s a pretty low blow to accuse them of deliberately misleading people because they’re not using a website for daily updates.
If you choose to ignore social media, that’s on you—seems like it could be said that it’s on the customer to use the medium on which this type of info is most commonly shared—not the other way around. But either way, unless you are going to restaurant websites to check if they’re open every time you go out to eat, this is all pretty silly.
Jefe wrote:And now more than half of this thread about one of my favorite new restaurants is an argument about websites and social media...
cilantro wrote:I can post a very brief food update until then. First, it's been mentioned that the food takes a while to come out, which I can confirm. At least on summery weekends, I'd budget 1.5-2 hours to get your order, based on our visit.
The food was very good! Since jibaritos have been mentioned, I would advise against getting one with ropa vieja -- although the tostones were expertly fried, as you can see upthread (the jibaritos are built on those as opposed to lengthwise sliced plantains, so you get two separate sandwiches instead), the saucy filling very quickly reduced the sandwich to a soggy mess. The ropa vieja's good, but get it on bread or over rice.