I love this review of the halibut at Seviche:
"Halibut is pan-roasted so precisely that the outer crust is as sheer as naughty lingerie; it furnishes just enough surface tension to give you shivers when your fork breaks through it to reveal the delicate, snow-white flesh within. A bed of rice studded with macadamia nuts, a “cigar” stuffed with spicy crabmeat, and a sauce of red chiles and butter furnish the perfect frame..."
Here's more of the review:
http://louisville.metromix.com/webtools ... in/1504069Review: Seviche — A Latin Restaurant
The future lost? That’s opportunity cost.
Marty Rosen
Address:
1538 Bardstown Road, Louisville, KY, 40205
Phone:
(502) 473-8560
Hours:
5 p.m.-9 p.m. Sunday and Monday; 5 p.m.-10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday; 5 p.m.-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday
Review: Seviche — A Latin Restaurant
Opportunity cost. It never shows up on a restaurant tab. You won’t find it listed on your credit card statement. It doesn’t affect your pocketbook in any tangible way. But from an emotional and psychological standpoint, it’s the cruelest bill of all, because it robs you of what might have been.
Say you’re reading the menu at Seviche – A Latin Restaurant, Anthony Lamas’s five-year-old restaurant in the heart of the Highlands, and the pan-roasted halibut with red chili ginger butter catches your eye. Then you notice that today’s special is pan-seared ahi tuna with a green chimichurri sauce made of jalapenos and mints. At that moment, you are confronted with two glorious futures – but you’re forced to choose one and only one (unless, of course you have an infinitely insatiable appetite).
The future lost? That’s opportunity cost.
Every time I look at Seviche’s menu, I’m tormented by visions of lost futures. I want everything on the menu: all the ceviches, all the appetizers, all the entrees, all the desserts. The only solution I’ve found is to keep going back (which I’ve done often enough that it’s pretty much impossible for me to dine there anonymously).
One way to minimize your opportunity cost (and your dollar cost) is to visit on Sundays, when the ceviches (and bottles of wine) are half price..."
Are Seviches and wine still half price on Sundays?