Junoon - Restaurant Reviewed
Junoon is a looker. It's also a very big gamble. Sure, it seem small (or at least smaller) compared to neighboring Eataly (which is right across the street), but it's lofty and so is the menu. Truth be told, you can't help but worry for them and pray the food's worth the high price tag. While many of the flavors and spices are from traditional Indian palette, the cooking is modern and refined. It's also phenomenal. The chef, Vikas Khanna, cooked at Salaam Bombay before taking over Junoon's kitchen. The menu features regional Indian dishes, using classic techniques, which include the tandoor oven, hot stones, cast iron, fire pit, and curry cooking. The result is bubbly, beautifully charred naan, housemade paneer spiced with garam masala (ground in-house) with cashew nuts and cream, and monkfish tikka with yogurt, chiles and mustard seed.
The cooking is slightly reminiscent of Floyd Cardoz' work at the newly and sadly shuttered Tabla. But while Cardoz' cooking is whimsical and often interpretative Indian food, Khannas seems more rooted in tradition with a focus on simplicity. If you're craving family-style portions with lots of gravy, you won't find it at Junoon. Instead, you get artfully plated lamb chops, spiced with pepper, green cardamom and ginger, a perfectly molded tower of mango chutney, or homemade lamb sausage with a snappy casing and moist, finely spiced interior. There's paneer drizzled with mint sauce, garam masala-crusted cauliflower and an outstanding rendition of saag, the Indian answer to creamed spinach, except this version is mixed with cauliflower, coriander, fenugreek and gobs of garlic. Oh, and the table agreed that the five-lentil daal was the best daal we'd ever had -- creamy and luxurious, and yet earthy and comforting.
Really, my only complaint was the halibut in a coconut curry, which was a tad overcooked, and the "seasonal chutneys," a trio of sesame, tamarind... and tomato? Since when are tomatoes in season in December? The sweet & sour tamarind and nutty sesame with fresh baked paratha easily made up for the tomato chutney.
So maybe Junoon wasn't such a big gamble. After all, every great chef needs a proper stage. With its rising star chef, Vikas Khannas, this just may just be the next best Indian restaurant.
Junoon
Address: 27 West 24th St., btwn 6th & Broadway
Phone: (212)490-2100





Leave a comment