Ozumo cues up fresh take on grilling
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Greer Wylder
Restaurateur Jeremy Umland says his life changed 26 years ago when a
friend mentioned she was moving to Japan. On the spot, he decided to
do the same, beginning the greatest adventure of his life.
The 6-foot-2, blond-haired, blue-eyed Umland left the Bronx and
says he became the first American to play baseball at a Japanese
university.
What started as a one-year sojourn turned into a 15-year stay.
After college, Umland’s pitching ability got him drafted by the Seibu
Lions of the Japanese Pacific League.
Umland’s years as an expatriate also trained him well for his
current venture: Ozumo, Newport’s newest upscale Japanese restaurant
at Fashion Island. Only a month old, it features a Japanese robata
grill, sushi bar and sake lounge.
In 2001, Umland opened the first Ozumo in San Francisco’s
Embarcadero district, earning high praise in a competitive culinary
scene.
Irvine Co. execs admired Ozumo and asked Umland to open a second
restaurant at Fashion Island. Plans are also underway to open a third
restaurant at an undisclosed casino in Las Vegas.
Umland’s fluency in Japanese took three years, but his love of
Japanese cuisine happened overnight.
“The food was phenomenal,” Umland said.
He had his first introduction to sushi, which was more of a
rarity, in 1979, and discovered robata, or Japanese grill cooking,
and the pleasures of sake.
“Living in a big seaport, we had the freshest fish, and even then,
I thought, wow! Wouldn’t it be great to have a robata grill in the
U.S.?” Umland said.
“Every American loves a barbecue.”
Umland said robata is an undiscovered treasure of Japanese
cuisine. The robata cooks at a higher heat than conventional grills.
Imported pre-charred sumi (Japanese oak) sticks replace pre-fab
charcoal briquettes. The robata sears meats and fish quicker, sealing
in the juices while enhancing inherent flavors.
Now 45, Umland also learned to appreciate premium sakes and
quickly found out that the boxed sakes served warm, familiar to
Americans, are just low-grade sakes.
“You don’t waste the subtleties and flavors of sake by heating
them,” Umland said.
“Fine sakes are served chilled.”
At Ozumo, 19 of Japan’s top sake-producing prefectures are
represented. The sakes are organized into varieties, depending on the
way rice is milled and the brewing methods. The sake menu features
Junmai (pure rice wine), Ginjo (at least 40% of rice polished away),
Daiginjo (at least 50% of rice polished away), Namazake
(unpasteurized sake) and sweet varieties.
The sake lounge serves premium sakes by the glass, sake samplers,
wines, teas and specialty “sumo” cocktails, including a Tokyo glow
($10) with Ketel One Citroen vodka, lemon juice and mandarin liquor
in a sugar-rimmed glass; and an Ozeki ($8), a Sake Mai Tai with fresh
lime and orange juice with a splash of orgeat (sweet almond) syrup.
At lunch, a bento box with an Ozumo roll and spicy tuna roll; and
tofu pudding or green tea ice cream is just $11. Other sushi bar
lunches range from $9 to $15. All robata lunch specials include a
rice bowl or Japanese green salad with sesame dressing; miso soup;
and tofu pudding or green tea ice cream ($8 to $12). Choices include
Atlantic salmon with Yuzu-citrus seasoning and mirin-miso reduction
($9); tender beef with teriyaki blend ($12); and free-range chicken
with seven-spice teriyaki sauce ($9).
The dinner menu offers choices in zensai (cold appetizers and hot
appetizers), from $13 for half a dozen Kumamoto oysters served with
jalapeno yuzu vinaigrette to $17 for grilled freshwater eel and
Sonoma foie gras with a Grand Marnier reduction or a tartare of
Spanish big-eye tuna with avocado cream and tofu, served with gyoza
chips and endive for dipping.
Salads range in price from $9 for an aoba salad with watercress,
endive, baby Romaine, mizuna and cucumbers tossed in a miso-Caesar
dressing, to $15 for a soft shell crab tempura with butter lettuce,
julienne of apple and a spicy garlic miso dressing.
Prices on sashimi, Nigiri sushi and sushi rolls range from $5 for
two pieces of tobiko (flying fish roe) or tako (octopus) to $19 for
10 pieces of amebi (sweet prawn).
Robata grill items range from $14 for Mori-san, grilled bamboo
shoots, white asparagus, Japanese eggplant, zucchini and snap peas;
to $38 for Ippin, a hand-cut, Kobe-style beef fillet with a daikon
radish ponzu dipping sauce and served with a simmering pot of dashi
and saikyo miso broth.
This contemporary Japanese restaurant stands apart from
competitors, with its selection of robata grill items, sake
selections and attentive service.
* BEST BITES runs every Friday. Greer Wylder can be reached at
[email protected]; at 1375 Sunflower Ave., Costa Mesa, CA 92626;
or by fax at (714) 966-4679.
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