Dining out
Mary Furr
The highest compliment you can pay Don Jose’s Mexican Restaurant on
Adams and Magnolia in Huntington Beach, is that it hasn’t changed much in
spirit since it was opened in 1969 by the Morjoseph family. Present
manager, son Michael Morjoseph, says he and his sister Marie were
practically raised there and head chef Gregory Leadesmana began as a
kitchen helper.
But there have been some changes. The place was enlarged in 1986 -- a
dining room has been added on one side -- and the cantina now has a huge
TV and light bamboo, but the bright hustle and bustle of the
short-skirted, fluffy-bloused servers is there as well as familiar
selections from the menu.
Our favorite appetizer is “poppers” ($4.50) -- big jalapeno peppers
stuffed with creamy Jack cheese, rolled in a crisp coating and deep
fried. Six to an order and hot from the kitchen, one bite frees the
melting cheese, which drips into your mouth. Wonderful!
Don Jose’s is a good place at lunch for quick service. One of its
dramatic and popular dishes is the carnitas tostado ($7.25). It’s a
flaring crisp tostado shell layered with refried beans, tender chunks of
pork, lettuce, jack and cheddar cheese with pico de gallo and guacamole.
It’s so good you end off by breaking off the edges of the shell to
nibble.
I like the variety of the Mexican pizza ($7.25, half order $5.50). A
crisp flour tortilla that covers the plate is topped with shredded
chicken or beef, green chiles and guacamole -- the chunky kind --
seasoned with lime and finely chopped onions, and drizzled with two kinds
of cheese.
Soup or salad begins the dinners -- both soups, the tortilla and the
albondigas, are so good it’s hard to decide. The tortilla has a hearty
chicken stock with fresh vegetables topped with melting, stringy cheddar
and Jack with chips stuck around the sides of the cup (a la carte $2.25).
The traditional albondigas has four golf-ball-sized meat and rice
balls in a vegetable broth of carrot, tomatoes, green peppers and celery.
A big a la carte bowl of either makes a satisfying lunch.
A specialty at dinner is the carne asada ($10.95). The charbroiled,
firm steak that covers a third of the hot platter is about a quarter-inch
thick with a mild brush of garlic, and is served with guacamole, rice and
beans.
Another dinner specialty is shrimp scampi ($9.95), medium-sized shrimp
sauteed with mushrooms, bell peppers and covered with lots of onions in a
white wine and garlic butter sauce served with mixed vegetables and
fruit. The sauce is good with the aroma of wine but the shrimp are not as
tender or plump as desired.
Desserts range from a simple flan custard ($2.25) with an intense
burnt sugar syrup, or that contradiction in terms, deep dried ice cream
($3) -- a scoop of vanilla rolled in crushed flakes and deep fried to a
crisp golden brown. But the real whopper is Muddnana ($3.75), a tall
slice of chocolate ice cream with a delicious crust of nuts and chocolate
bits topped by whipped cream scrolled in chocolate syrup.
Don Jose’s has grown as a good restaurant should, keeping the best and
improving the rest. It doesn’t disappoint.
FYI
Don Jose
Where: 9093 E. Adams
Hours: 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday.
Misc.:Sunday brunch is 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ($7.50)
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