RJ Mexican Cuisine

1701 N. Market St.
Dallas, TX 75202
Phone: 214-744-1420



By LAWSON TAITTE / The Dallas Morning News

In the very heart of the West End is an ambitious new place that takes us back to the
time, some 20 years ago, when the area was first getting gentrified. Several
restaurants of some culinary ambition opened back then, but over the years the
trend has been toward franchises and watering holes.

Let's hope that the folks who make it to the West End these days and wander into RJ
Mexican Cuisine get past the more ordinary (and less expensive) things on the menu
and find the really good stuff, of which there is plenty.

The ambience is certainly an attraction: not your neighborhood Tex-Mex place but
upscale without pretension. The terra-cotta walls are adorned with wooden fixtures
that look like they came from a real hacienda, with some palm trees for color
contrast. The big windows offer views of downtown skyscrapers and West End street
life.

The unusually large waitstaff is exceptionally welcoming and knowledgeable, too, but
never intrusive. The service isn't always ideally polished, though. On one occasion
the server left bread plates that had been used to share appetizers on the table
throughout the meal.

This isn't one of those places like Ciudad that works hard to be faithful to something
authentically Mexican. RJ rather resembles the early Southwestern cuisine spots.
There's an obvious debt to both true Mexican food and Tex-Mex, with some ranch,
barbecue and more general New American influences as well.

Chef Ronald Von Hatten has come up with some deliciously innovative things on
almost every part of the menu, from appetizers and soups to plates that sound like
(but sometimes don't taste like) Tex-Mex standards, as well as fish and steak
specialties.

Starters can be very elaborate, such as the ahi tuna. Hot-pink slabs of barely seared
tuna enfold a mound of mango salsa. The edifice sits on a bed of marinated
cucumber slices. Smaller mounds of a special guacamole (really an avocado mousse
and painfully spicy despite the innocent pale green color) lie next to the big one.

If that dish seems basically New American with a Southwestern twist, what about the
gorditas de carne deshebrada? You seldom encounter gorditas outside down-home
establishments catering to Mexican immigrants. This sophisticated version encases
shreds of meat in discs of crisped masa dough with superb, if heavy, results.

Zancas estofadas, which our attentive waiter on one visit recommended as his
favorite dish on the menu, turned out to be a fat, meaty pork rib braised, then glazed
in the oven. The waiter touted the barbecue version rather than the one in mole
sauce, and its rich sweetness contrasted nicely with the delicate shreds of deep-fried
onion rings that accompanied the dish.

The zancas taste like something you might find at Fort Worth's Reata, but the house
version of ceviche classico is more like the genuine thing you'd encounter in
Acapulco: strips of pristine white fish and pieces of shrimp firmed up in their lime
marinade, jazzed up but not overwhelmed by tomato and herbs, cushioned in
enough greens that you can check off your salad requirements for the day.

If those aren't enough options for a starter, the menu includes plenty of more
conventional things such as various quesadillas, a full range of salads and some
very interesting soups. The gazpacho, only $2.99 for a cup, tastes as fresh as a
spring garden. We weren't as impressed by the creamy squash-flower soup at the
same price.

RJ offers just as many fascinating choices for a main course. Even among the
"traditional" entrees, the sophistication is pretty impressive. Chiles rellenos come
stuffed with chicken and mushrooms, a very tasty variation on the usual version. The
tacos of pork and queso fresco , with the fresh tortillas crisped on a griddle, contain
a real Mexican picadillo (shredded pork studded with raisins and almonds) that is the
more usual stuffing for rellenos. The tart cabbage slaw that sides the tacos is
delicious but packs a peppery wallop.

Chef's specials tend to be more New American (and cost more). Some specials are
more special than others, distinguished by a mark on the menu. One is the oddly
named pescado "encornflecado" en salsa verde . Yup, the flaky, delicate fish has a
crust crisped up by good old American cornflakes. The fiery tomatillo sauce on top,
though, means that this isn't your grandma's version of pan-fried fish. Costillo del
campo is a bigger, meatier beef version of the braised rib in the appetizer, one of the
best treatments of short rib we've ever tasted, tender and rich and juicy to the bone.

Among the specials sampled, only the tenderloin RV style seems a little ordinary, a
couple of nice hunks of fillet cooked to order but with a sauce that bears little trace of
the advertised horseradish and cilantro. The accompanying asparagus en croute,
skinny spears whose stalks are wrapped in dough, then grilled, are the most
interesting things on the plate.

Some of the main dishes come with very garlicky mashed potatoes. Others feature
pyramid-shaped mounds of a very subtle Spanish rice.

A couple of elements here don't live up to the rest, particularly an array of desserts
that sound better than they taste. Oh, the flan is creamy enough, and the cajeta
apple tart tastes of real fruit. But they don't leave you feeling as excited.

The selection of wines takes second place to the array of tequilas and beer, too. But
maybe that's not a big fault in a restaurant where the incendiary power of chiles can
sneak up on you in almost any dish if you're not careful.

Food –  
Service –
Atmosphere –  

Published in The Dallas Morning News: 07.29.05
Darnell Renee / Special to DMN
The tamales de puerco en chile rojo are
filled with slow-simmered shredded pork
and wrapped in banana leaves.
Restaurant Info

OVERALL
   

CROSS STREETS
Ross Avenue

HOURS
Sun-Thu 11 am-10 pm
Fri-Sat 11 am-11 pm

PAYMENT INFO

All Major Credit Cards


LINKS
Web site

SPECIAL FEATURES
Full Bar



WHAT'S NEARBY
Find other attractions that are
nearby. Select type of attraction:

Restaurants
Movie Theaters
Bars & Clubs
Hotels/Motels