I have had severe allergies over our Christmas and New Years vacation and that left me miserable for a good 3 weeks. I saw my Doctor and was on the mend. I also had my booster shot appointment on Thursday Jan 20th at Orland Park, Illinois. Thursday January 20th just seemed to be an ideal day to get dinner outside and kick of our "Adventures of a Hungry Couple". A day before the booster appointment, I looked for Indian Cuisine near my vaccination clinic and I was surprised to find very few that were within a few miles. Kama Bistro was about 15 miles away and it has been on my list of places to try since quite long. I knew of it, but, had never been before. I reserved it on opentable.com. Visali and I went there after my booster.
We arrived around 7:30 pm and found parking by the BNSF train station parking for La Grange Road, a few steps away from the restaurant which is well located on main street. It has a nice glass facia with warm, comfortable lighting inside. They asked for our vaccination status and had us seated at a nice booth. I was expectant and happy to be there. The menu looked good. The menu was not the longest or deepest, but it looked good. The menu seemed to promise "Hey, what I have is worth it. Go ahead and try.". The server arrived quickly and I ordered a mango lassi while Visali ordered a Love - Rooibos hot tea. My mango lassi was good. It was not overly sugary and it felt refreshing. Visali liked her tea - it was aromatic and soothing to her.
For the main course, we chatted again with the server and landed on Kama-Kaze Vindaloo (medium spicy) and Paneer Black Pepper Bhujnee. Interestingly, the menu had an "Add-On" section containing a few other of my favorites. I ordered Eggplant Bharta from that add-on menu. For breads, I got Paratha and Pudina Paratha. When the food arrived, it looked and smelled great. The Vindaloo was not too hot and the Black Pepper Bhujnee was - peppery. Parathas were fresh and perfectly cooked. My Eggplant Bharta started out good as well. About half way into the main course is when we started talking earnestly about the food. So far, it was all "ra, ra, go, go", but as the belly started filling up, we started becoming a little more selective and started feeling new tastes and textures. Lets just say that the food was better and the ingredients felt fresher than any other Indian Cuisine restaurant I have been to. Beyond that, there was a nagging feeling that the chef was simply too generous with cream and oils. The Vindaloo, the Bhujnee and the Eggplant each could have been laid on a strainer to drain some of the cooking oil, better yet, the chef could have started with a little less oil. I have never enjoyed vindaloo because it is a one track dish - just red hot chili pepper (in this case Bhut Jholokia). The black pepper in the Black Pepper Bhujnee was too coarse for my taste. The eggplant was not fire roasted enough and hence was too mushy and I did not taste any herbs in it. This is a common problem with Indian Cuisine in United States. It is almost as though all chefs have extrapolated the "chunks" and "mush" construction of the Chicken Tikka Masala on to every other dish even if those dishes were originally meant to have a crispy texture of main individual ingredients. At one point, to demonstrate the oil, I picked up a spoonful of Eggplant Bharta and gently twisted my wrist for the spoon to drain a stream of oil back into the dish that I picked it up from. I sincerely felt sorry for myself because I had come deliciously close to calling this one of the best restaurants I had eaten at.
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