Tamari
Reviewed by baldur
at June 5, 06:36 PM
What a great place! I had the crunchy roll and my wife had noodles and tempura. The tempura was fabulous. The price there is very resonable we had 2 course meal with tea and the bill was $33 and it's was a very good meal. I love this place and I go there regularly.
Tamari
Reviewed by kagome
at April 14, 08:08 PM
Nice atmosphere, not too crowded on a Saturday night but not empty enough to be depressing, pleasant but not overbearing service, and yummy food! The shumai were only lightly fried and nicely shrimpy, the boiled Chinese spinach was not overcooked, and the tako (octopus) tempura was deliciously fried and mayonnaise-y. The green-tea mochi are also good. Portion sizes are great--you can end up perfectly satisfied whether you're really hungry or just in the mood for a snack.
Tamari
Reviewed by Sharpster7
at March 21, 03:43 PM
I stumbled into here once after hocking all my old crappy clothes to Beacons Closet. I went with my X so naturally we had to get drunk. 8 rounds of sake later we decided sushi was in order and it was not bad at all. Our waitress was new so she was still sweet and had not yet turned into the cold-hearted coke-addled bitch park slope has grown to be accostumed to in the wait-service dept. B
Tamari
Reviewed by ben
at November 21, 01:58 PM
I took my friends here for dinner the day I moved to Park Slope. Starving and sweaty, we stumbled into Tamari and were pleased to find that it was sake happy hour. Many drinks and some good food later, I made my way home, collapsed in my new apartment and took a nap. Tamari welcomed me to the neighborhood and made a very good first impression. I've been a loyal customer ever since.
Tamari
Reviewed by embla
at September 7, 07:54 PM
I walked by this place a thousand times and never gave it any notice, assuming it was just one of the dozens of mediocre sushi restaurants on this strip. A shame, because all this time I've been missing out on a cozy and convivial sake bar serving a menu of Japanese small plates (it describes itself as a Japanese tapas bar). The dishes are mostly between 4 and 7 dollars, and portions were large enough to permit sharing; 3 of us ordered 6 dishes and were happy and sated. The Age Dashi Tofu ($4.50) was a particular favorite of the table, and an excellent example of its kind, with crisp-fried chunks of tender tofu in a fantastic sauce that was ultimately slurped like tea by one of our party (the beer and sake contributed to this). The nice thing about this sort of place is that you can either have a meal's worth of food or a small snack while boozing.