What's Hot
MOST READ
  • Lizz Winstead bites back The political pundit and creator of The Daily Show discusses the feminist elite, slut-shaming, and the difference between essay and memoir | 5/8/2013
  • Orlando City Soccer's goal rush The Brit, the Brazilian and their (not so?) crazy scheme to make Orlando soccer capital of the Southeast | 5/8/2013
  • Attorney John Morgan backs marijuana legalization Local celeb-attorney is new chair of statewide marijuana advocacy organization United for Care | 4/24/2013
  • Fringe Fest 2013 shows Some choices for geeks, gamers, those who prefer to fly solo, kids, oldsters and more | 5/15/2013
  • Not to be upstaged The Free Outdoor Stage on the lawn at Fringe is not what you might expect | 5/15/2013
  • Food & Drink - Reader' Picks Best Caribbean 1st Bahama Breeze, multiple locations, bahamabreeze.com 2nd Mama Millie's, 12273 University Blvd., 407-382-3570, mamamillies.com | 7/18/2012
  • Savage Love I have a mentally disabled cousin who I haven't figured out how to help. He’s lived for more than 40 years in the same nursing home in a small, conservative... | 5/15/2013
What's Going On

Calendar

Search thousands of events in our database.

Restaurants

Search hundreds of restaurants in our database.

Nightlife

Search hundreds of clubs in our database.

Orlando Daily Deals powered by ReferLocal

Print Email

DINING

Pasha Taverna and Lounge

Take your time indulging in spot-on Moroccan meals

Photo: Aldrin Capulong, License: N/A

Aldrin Capulong


Pasha Taverna and Lounge

4104 Millenia Blvd.
407-730-3222
pashaorlando.com
$$

I was a little surprised to see Simo Soaf – the welcoming proprietor of MetroWest’s Kabbab House – greet us at the doors to Pasha, the new Moroccan restaurant and hookah lounge fronting the Mall at Millenia. Soaf, I learned, sold Kabbab House a few months back to become a player on the competitive Conroy Road strip where places like Sushi Katana and Greens & Grille battle it out with a host of upscale chains for a piece of the proverbial pie. My thoughts, naturally, turned to the exquisite chicken kebabs served at his former establishment, and whether similar gustatory pleasures would await me here.

As we were led through the large, seductively decorated dining room, Soaf mentioned that the six-person team in his kitchen is headed by executive chef Hassan Joseph Baba – a Moroccan who earned his chops working 14 years for Epcot Catering before helping open Park Terrace Bistro in New York (now closed) and helming the kitchen at Winter Park’s Circa 1926 – so hope, unlike our sense of hearing, certainly wasn’t lost. While the decor had elements of a Marrakesh casbah, the thumping Euro-Arab techno made it feel like a Casablanca discotheque. Thankfully, the volume was lowered somewhat so that sustaining a conversation wasn’t a complete impossibility.

In between sips of the finest Moroccan mint tea ($4.89) we’ve enjoyed anywhere in the city, we noted the few functional and aesthetic elements that differed from Soaf’s MetroWest couscouserie – a full bar running the length of the restaurant, for one, and in an area resembling a Bedouin bayt, a beautiful photomural of the Agdal Gardens and Atlas Mountains. The latter was a real focus-grabber until I was served a piping hot bowl of peppery harira soup ($3.99). The nourishing broth of tomatoes, chickpeas and lentils was highlighted by morsels of fatty beef (an ingredient noticeably absent in the version served at Kabbab House). Wiping my mouth with paper, not cloth, napkins was the sole unpleasantry in this otherwise thoroughly pleasing experience. The tiropita ($5.99) could’ve done with a bit more phyllo, but I was just happy to see the cheese pie – a rare sight even among Greek restaurants in the area – on the menu. No matter, cinnamon-and-sugar-dusted chicken pastilla ($6.99) afforded me my fill o’ phyllo; that is, until dessert, when I indulged in a martini glass of rosewater cream layered with shaved almonds and strips of phyllo in a treat called “Pasha delight” ($5.99).

Prior to that oh-so-sweet ending, we reveled in the lamb tagine ($13.99) – a glistening sesame-flecked shank sitting in a rich gravy sweetened by Moroccan prunes. Eggs would’ve been a nice touch, not that I’m complaining. More from the meat front: The royal kebab ($19.99) featured a tableside de-skewering of adana (ground chicken), chicken breast, kofta (seasoned ground beef) and shish (rib-eye cubes). With the exception of the surprisingly bland kofta (which required repeated dabs of spicy harissa), all were eye-rollingly good – a motion that carried through to the Athenian chocolate mousse ($3.99).

Pasha exudes a sense of occasion, and many patrons take the opportunity to dress accordingly. Belly dancing, live music and cocktails give good reason to linger, and the service was spot-on – there when needed, unseen when not. All in all, Pasha will have all your senses growling, “Here’s lookin’ at you, kid.”

We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
comments powered by Disqus