I was immediately won over by the quirky cool of Cowfish's atmosphere. Custom graphic artwork mixing east and west, a meditating Elvis, and a giant fish tank creation by the underwater engineers on the t.v. show Tanked, hit home the quirky vibe. I especially love the learn to speak English and Japanese audio guide playing in the bathrooms that translates American "country" colloquialisms into "proper" English and Japanese. Hilarious!
The menu proved to be equally unique, featuring both a gourmet burger menu, a creative sushi menu, and...wait for it...burgerushi. Yes, burgerushi, Cowfish's own remix of sushi rolls made with burger ingredients like ground beef and tomatoes. In a similarly innovative fashion Cowfish offers sandwich ingredients that have been packed between "buns" made of deep fried spring rolls. Clearly this is menu with entrees you're unlikely to find anywhere else.
Riggs R&R Crabcake Roll |
Close up of "Taste Explosion" Burgerushi Roll |
For those who can't decide what to order, an undoubtedly common problem, Cowfish has got you covered with a compartmentalized bento box featuring a mini version of the week's featured burger, fries, four pieces of sushi, and edamame.
I was excited to go back for a second visit with one of my meat and potatoes loving guy friends who practically breaks out into hives at the thought of raw fish. He humored me enough to tolerate the hour and 15 minute wait (on a Tuesday!) but he didn't take me up on the burgerushi. Instead he opted for the giant Sreamin' Korean spicy chicken sandwich crusted in sesame seeds, fried up and topped with kimchi and sriracha sauce. It was giant, but the spicy chicken breading, sriracha, and kimchi made for a flaming hot combo indeed. I ordered the Firecracker roll filled with shrimp tempura and kani, coated with tempura flakes, topped with fresh yellowtail and salmon and finished with spicy cream sauce, tobiko and scallions. I never order just one roll of sushi as an entree, but at $15 bucks, I didn't have the option of ordering two. Thankfully the specialty rolls are not only delicious but also pretty gargantuan. It helped that we ordered the Togarashi Shrimp shrimp as an appetizer. I like that is came on a bed of spicy gingery dressed cabbage and greens that functioned as a yummy coleslaw. Mr. Meat and Potatoes still prefers Bone Fish Grill's Bang Bang Shrimp to the spicier sriracha laden Cowfish version.
My favorite elements of cowfish are undoubtedly the atmosphere and unique menu offerings. The food is delicious, but very pricey. If they had BOGO sushi I'd be there every other week, but unfortunately at around $20 for one roll and half an appetizer this is a special outing kind of place.
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