This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Business & Tech

Sushi Sure to Please

Umami Umami's sushi rolls are worth the extra money.

The Japanese word “umami” means “delicious savory taste.” In my imagination, I can see owners and their daughter, sweetly vivacious manager Cindy Kim, sitting together during the early planning stages of creating their new Japanese restaurant and choosing this most desirable name for it. By doubling the name, they clearly hoped that it would bring a double measure of good taste and good luck.  

Umami Umami opened in April in the long-closed Dresher Inn.

And by choosing to make sushi the major focus of the menu, given the public's current resounding love of it, they are already a large step up in achieving their hoped for namesake. Indeed, more than 80 percent of the menu is devoted to the now familiar forms of sushi: sushi appetizers, nigiri sushi, sashimi, traditional maki rolls, and a great variety of “house special” maki rolls, sushi samplers and combinations. 

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

After my recent dinner visit, I would say stay with Umami's sushi offerings. At least I was much more impressed and satisfied with our sushi choices than with the hot entree we had. But, having only shared one hot large dinner plate, this judgment may be unfair and unbalanced.

We had ordered a “kitchen hibachi” entree with beef ($21). I anticipated being served a couple of medium-size pieces of juicy filet steaks, char-grilled over an open-flame hibachi. (Perhaps I should have questioned our server more carefully before ordering it).  Instead, I was disappointed to receive instead a pile of bite-size chunks of pan-fried or wok-tossed pieces of undistinguished beef. 

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

My lovely dining companion and I both agreed it needed something and added some soy sauce from our sushi dishes. It was served with a very good Japanese fried rice of small light grains with egg, carrot, green bean, corn, and peas, and a tasty side of assorted veggies.

But I'm getting ahead of myself. After being seated in the upstairs main dining room (the sushi bar and a few tables are on the ground level), and expressing an interest in sake, Japan's fermented rice alcoholic beverage, Kim suggested we try their sake sampling flight ($11), which included three 3-ounce servings in a beautiful serving tree of tapered cobalt blue glasses. The three were Momokawa's pearl sake (complex), ruby (light), and raspberry (fruity sweet), which we delightedly sipped throughout our dinner.  (Momokawa also makes an Asian pear sake, a little less sweet than the raspberry, which I like very much.)

Having picked a sampler trio of sake, we thought an equally good idea would be to try the Umami sushi sampler special of the day ($22). Before long, a large, rectangular white porcelain plate was placed before us bearing three mouth-watering house special maki rolls. In the center was the “tower,” a literal tower of spicy salmon and spicy tuna, atop a layer of snow crab meat and a layer of avocado, festooned with masago and tobiko (red and black fish roe). Alongside, the “tower” was a zesty “ninja” roll of spicy tuna, cucumber, oshinko (pickle), jalapeno and spicy sauce. Best of all was the “red dragon” roll, tempura shrimp and avocado inside, and spicy tuna, crab, scallion, and bonito flakes outside - a real winner!

If ordered separately, these house special rolls would cost about $17 each, so even though as part of the Umami sampler they were four-piece rolls instead of six or eight pieces, the combination was actually a good buy moneywise. The pricing of the house special rolls, sushi lover's specials, and many of the entrees seemed slightly higher than average, but in general worth the extra $3 or $4.

We also had a seaweed salad (5), which was a bright green, very fresh and refreshing.

For an outstanding Japanese dessert, try the chilled confection known as “moshi.” At Umami, have the three-piece moshi combination of green tea and red bean ice cream, and mango sorbet, each encased in a soft rice noodle cocoon.

The menu is 98 percent Japanese cuisine, but the owners had to at least include two signature standbys of their native Korean cuisine: bimbim bap and bulgogi dishes.

Overall Rating: mmm  (out of 5 m’s), friendly management and service a standout.

Location: 1708 Limekiln Pike (Rt. 152), Dresher

Phone: 215.542.6993 Website: www.umamidresher.com                           

Cuisine: Japanese, and a few Korean favorites

Hours: Lunch Monday – Saturday 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; Dinner daily 4:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Prices: Appetizers, soups, salads $5 - $15; Sushi rolls $5 - $18; Nigiri sushi, sashimi $6 - $25; large plates $12 - $28

Ambiance: Spare of décor, clean, no noise.

Reservations: Accepted, but not a must yet.                       

Credit Cards: Accepted

Alcoholic Beverages: Beer, wine, sake (BYO Mondays)

Wheelchair Access: Yes 

To contact Mitch Davis, you can e-mail him. 

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?