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Ali Baba Grill
Dont judge this restaurant by its hummus. Wait for the entrees.
By Jason Sheehan
Published: January 17, 2008
About twenty minutes into our first meal at Ali Baba Grill, I leaned across the table and whispered to Laura, "What's the big deal? I just don't get it."
For years, we'd heard glowing endorsements of this little Middle Eastern restaurant in a Golden strip mall from people who refuse to eat their baillila, hummus or muhamara anywhere else; had gotten recommendations from friends and trusted fellow travelers who drive here from Aurora or Centennial two or three times a week. And the parts of Ali Baba's walls that weren't covered with art of Persian and Syrian influence were full of awards and mash notes from just about anyone who's figured out how to work with a fork in one hand and a pen in the other.
"This," I said, giving a flicking, dismissive gesture to everything on our table, all the stuff that we'd been pushing around, trying to make it look like the food had been eaten and enjoyed when, in fact, it had been neither. "This is not good at all."
We were approaching the midpoint of the meal and had already poked disconsolately at the house's free pita and hummus (overdosed with dusty paprika and missing that cutting edge of something — lemon juice, sumac powder, powerful olive oil — capable of razoring through the humping blandness of chickpea purée); an order of cheese sambusek with feta, egg, lemon juice and dry herbs wrapped in wonton skins and fried that was wrong in more ways than I could count (but beginning with the fact that they'd been made with wonton skins rather than pastry dough, and ending with the wonton skins having been improperly sealed so that all the filling had leaked out into the oil, leaving us with a plate of nothing but puffed and crispy wonton skins filled with feta-scented air); a couple of salads, uncomposed and ugly; and a big bowl of French fries, ordered because, as any dedicated gastronaut can tell you, French fries are always better in Asian and Middle Eastern restaurants.
Why? Because some of the more authentic Middle Eastern restaurants use beef tallow in their fryers, resulting in fries that taste the way McDonald's fries used to, back before the Clown switched up his grease to the family of fats that remain solid at room temperature. Also, Middle Eastern (and Asian) restaurant cooks tend to keep their fryers cranked to flash temperature, tuning them high into the red, and since they don't rely on the fryers as heavily as cooks in more traditional restaurants do, they maintain that high temperature better. Low heat causes limp fries; high temp creates crispy. Simple line-dog math. And Ali Baba's fries were decent, even if they were just the bagged, frozen Sysco variety.
But the fries weren't enough to placate me. I was disappointed and a little pissed off, and as I tried to distract myself, fingering all the little tchotchkes and quote-unquote authentic Middle Eastern decor items scattered around the bi-level dining room, I happened to reach my hand into what appeared to be a lovely, antique brass coffeepot and pulled out a receipt from Cost Plus World Market.
A perfect metaphor. I showed the slip of paper to Laura, laughed a little, then quickly stuffed it back where I'd found it when I saw our waiter trudging up the half-flight of stairs, bringing on the mains. And with those everything changed.
Simple chicken kabobs, deeply marinated in strong olive oil, herbs and lemon, seared hot and marked with an expert quadrillage, spaced out on the stick with blistered slips of onion and bell pepper. More kabobs of beef, each tender chunk speared through the middle and touched with something sweet that tasted of honey and brown sugar. Grilled lamb chops, rubbed with garlic, salt and black pepper, redolent of saffron. A thick lamb curry that had been cooked so long and slow that the lamb almost melted on my tongue. With each new bite, we suddenly understood why people become so addicted to this place. This, finally, was good.
Ali Baba is a Lebanese restaurant, a Persian restaurant, a Mediterranean restaurant with hints of Syrian and Saudi Arabian modernity and haute cuisine hiding in the strangest places. It is owned by two veterans of the international scene. Chef Fiyahd Aoutabachi was born in Syria, spent a decade cooking in Saudi Arabia and finally came to Denver to open La Zeez on Colorado Boulevard. When he sold La Zeez, he took one of his guys with him: Mahmoud Dukmak, a pro with a long Colorado resumé and front-of-the-house roots that stretch back to Lebanon and Syria. The partners opened Ali Baba back in 2000, and since then have shopped for their ingredients every morning, have prepped and presented their dishes fresh every day. In essence, Ali Baba is a Middle Eastern restaurant run in the green-market style: daily shopping, daily prep, and always a fresh start tomorrow.
If you order right and in opposition to common restaurant sense, all of this comes through.
But on our first visit, Laura and I ordered wrong. Which meant we sat there, pushing around our appetizers and wondering what all the fuss was about until the meats started arriving, until the really excellent followed the really rather bad.
How do you order right? I wish the answer were as simple as saying, "Order the simple stuff, forget the complicated," or the reverse, "Order the authentic, the difficult to pronounce, and ignore the rest." But at Ali Baba, it's not that easy. This place has a learning curve, requires a commitment of trust and time while, through a period of trial and error, you find the things that are done better here, done different here, done only here.











I have had great meals at Ali Baba Grill.
Too bad the reviewer did not, but I would not let it stop you from enjoying this restaurant!
Comment by Gary McKay — January 17, 2008 @ 08:42PM
I make it a habbit to eat often at Ali Babba Grill, the food is simply fantastic, one of the better restaurants in the Denver metro area, and certainly the best Middle Eastern Restaurant in Colorado. The Pita Bread and Humus are free with any meal and are delicious. My guess is that the author of the article is used to the Americanized version, and is not prepared for authentic middle Eastern food. OPn one hand he talks about one of the appetizers, quail as being delicious, then turns around and dismisses this by calling it tiny and flat. I guess I've never heard of a big quail, but it simply one of the best appetizers in the restaurant. I urge anyone who would like to enjoy really good authentic middle Eastern food to head for the Ali Baba Grill, you'll find none better in the metro area, and perhaps the state of Colorado.
Comment by Don Doerr — January 18, 2008 @ 11:02AM
Im very disappointed to read this review on Ali Baba Grill. I live in Golden and eat there frequently and I can tell you from expierence that this is one of the best middle eastern restaurants I have ever ate at. I travel for my job and eat all over the country, and nothing compares. I believe the writer is not a real restaurant evaluater. And for that matter, not a real writer. His discriptions were not very detailed. I would still visit this restaurant because I know good food. Also there was something said about the decor coming from cost plus due to a reciept. Did you read the reciept?? I was there the day the decor was all delivared from Syria in a 40 foot truck so Im forsure all the goods are imported. Once again, the writer was wrong. The wait staff also is very good.
Comment by Nicole Buhrman — January 24, 2008 @ 06:02PM
Jason Sheehan was right on the money. My husband and I have gone through similar experiences at Ali Baba for about 3 years. Friends go on and on and on about how great it is, but when we get there it's pretty blah. I always end up making something that would tast better from Falafel King in Boulder. But then, said friends have a party and cater through AB's and it is the best!! We go back, searching for the same experience and it's the same super-blah hummas and pita, with the occasional good entre. On the plus side: the baklava is always heavenly, and servers and customers have always been very kind and accomodating to our sometimes overly loud and rambunctious kids. After reading Sheehan's excellent review,I will know what to order the next time I go. Thanks Jason!!
Comment by Betsy Abbott — January 30, 2008 @ 07:09PM
you should eat at ali baba in highlands ranch, its better. and the cook is amazing. and that dreamy waiter is so amazing too... and our hummus is better. so is the cheese sambusek, i eat that every time the cook goes to the bathroom, but if he catches me i get yelled at and i get a look like i just got cought taking money from the register and put it in my pocket, you see; its because here at alibaba higlansransh we make moo moo the foo neatly pull the corners up and crease the edges you know like how the make your crab rangoon at uhh idk where but you get the picture. its all good here, people even rave about our simple house salad with italian from sams club... oh btw nothing ever comes from wo5ld market and winds up into alibaba...from our hands at least. it really irks me that you talk shit about our hummus... i just simply do not know what you... and only you dont like about our hummus, maybe its because its not akin to the stuff you get at your local whole foods. i admit that in my opinion the hummus in golden isnt as good as ours but its still no where near any sort of negative adjective. the lentil soup occasionally gets over salted and for that were sorry, but if you get a chance to get it again you will probably lick the bowl clean. i dont know about golden cuz they wont let me work there but if you come into my store in HIGLANDS RANCH ON COLORADO AND VENNEFORD ... then i will tell you if you ask me "so whats good here"...("its all good yo")
Comment by mishosho — March 23, 2008 @ 06:31PM