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The Fish doesn't serve fugusashi, but blowfish images run rampant throughout. Behind the sushi bar, spiny blowfish cast in deep pink swim between stalks of finger coral also cast in pink on a backdrop with black lacquer sheen.
Yet the most dangerous thing at The Fish isn't the fish. It's the service. It's slow and costly. Drinks get lost. Orders are mistranslated, such as those on the tastings menu, a roster of fresh delicacies offered as pieces of sushi ($5) or as full-blown sashimi compositions ($25). We asked for sushi. We got the full-blown.
Yet full-blown can be stunning. Mirugai, thin slices of giant clam, is assembled in a gaping clamshell with thick shavings of pickled ginger and ruffles of Asian mint, all resting in a bowl of crushed ice. A huge bamboo leaf juts from behind the clam jaw hinge like some primitive spearhead plunged in surf sand. Curled lip-like pieces of clam—slightly cool and sticky to the touch, faintly resilient against teeth, barely brushing the nose with its marine scent—look like vulva vignettes. Its flavor is near bland, not unlike folds of fugusashi; the delicate flavor is harassed by the preponderance of aggressively shaved ginger. Let the bowl of tangy ponzu sauce charge this lack of vigor if it's too faint to arouse your taste buds.
Japanese mackerel sashimi is even more dawning wonder. A platter stretches with irregularly placed curls of flesh, flashes of silver strobing from skin. Slightly warm, the curls rest in tiny puddles of onion oil. A salad of onion and grated ginger tacks down one end. A fish skeleton, head and tail intact on a comb of spine and sharp ribs, curls at the other, watching its flesh being pinched away by chopsticks.
Almost nothing from The Fish's sushi bar is as remotely gripping as these things. Flying fish roe—fluffy yellow BBs wrapped in nori—is adequate. Tuna, hamachi, octopus and uni hold their own. A gimmicky thing called the Bubba Gump roll has shrimp that go crunch.
Yet The Fish isn't deadly serious about sushi anyway. No hot towels are dispensed as you are seated. Servers seem unsure of what the stuff is. I order two pieces of uni sushi, stressing that we didn't want sashimi. Two orders of uni roll are brought to the table instead.
Enter the sex. In addition to garish reds, the restaurant is dressed in sultry blacks—napkins, trim, wood blinds, etc. Men wear tight-fitted black shirts tucked in crisp slacks or designer jeans, hair slicked back or mussed into random curls. Women wear spike-heeled boots or stilettos and dresses and tops with plunging V necklines to keep the cleavage from asphyxiating. Their hair is pulled tight and tied or stylishly draped. Martinis in chick-drink pastels are endlessly deployed. This is polished sex appeal—no torn jeans or slept-in shirttails.
Duran Duran and The Pretenders play at lunch, which offers a menu composed of tight little meal packets—steamed rice, miso soup or salad and tempura vegetables framing its protein focal points such as the chicken teriyaki, which is dry and cool with a stiff, unctuous glaze.
Beef rolls, sheets of dry, coarse rib eye swaddling wedges of avocado, are like eating green foam wrapped in sackcloth. Sautéed scallops, crowned with rings of jalapeño, carry no hints of caramelizing from intense heat. In the mouth they jiggle and writhe like uncooked fat. They desperately beg to be left alone. We complied. Best of lunch is the miso silver cod, great flecks of fish that flake off into buttery fins raced with miso sake.