Kebab Hut Boadilla - Menu

Avenida Siglo XXI, 12, 28660 (Madrid), Espana, Boadilla del Monte, Spain

🛍 Kebab, Turco, Mexicano

5 💬 428 Reviews

Address: Avenida Siglo XXI, 12, 28660 (Madrid), Espana, Boadilla del Monte, Spain

City: Boadilla del Monte

Menu Dishes: 35

Reviews: 428

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Categories

  • Kebab Savor our delicious kebabs, expertly grilled and bursting with flavor. Choose from a variety of meats and vibrant spices, served with fresh sides. Perfect for a satisfying and flavorful meal.
  • Turco
  • Mexicano Authentic Mexican flavors await you with sizzling fajitas, savory tacos, zesty enchiladas, and fresh guacamole, all crafted with rich, traditional spices and served with vibrant sides. Enjoy a fiesta on your plate!

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Alilian

Alilian

Avenida Siglo Xxi, 28660, Boadilla del Monte, Spain

Menu • Pizza • Fusión • Español • Vegetariano


"The menu is short by the area standards and includes a number of starters, fish and meat entrees. There was no “menú del día” and the waiter didn’t offer anything in particular, so we ordered a tomato and tuna salad (ensalada de tomate con ventresca) as starter to share. A small, non-descript potato salad tapa (ensaladilla rusa), courtesy of the house, arrived immediately. The tomato salad was different, though. I’m no fan of kumato, but this salad was excellent. Likely the best I’ve had in ages. Not sure what the secret sauce is here but contributing factors surely include thin belly flakes (rather than the solid blocks preferred by cooks showing off their product rather than their skills), superb olive oil and, most notably, a healthy dose of tomato pulp to ensure not a single ventresca bite feels dry. My main entrée was “cahopo”, a sort of cordon bleu from Asturias, which I had ordered out of curiosity and impulse. It looked singularly out of place given there wasn’t any other obviously Asturian choice on the menu and Alilian felt a little stiff-necked for a dish that is typically judged by weight rather than quality. Its presentation kind of proved the cook felt the need to dress the humble cachopo in some haughtier fashion: fine-grain breading, French potatoes as a side dish stuffed in a tin can, an oversized plate with a smear of reddish sauce all around its meter-long circumference. Despite the looks, the cachopo proved a great choice; tender and juicy, flushed with strong, oozy cheese, intense and yet not overloaded with oily bread. The over-indulgence notwithstanding, I accepted sharing a cheesecake for dessert. The waiter warned us the cheese was particularly strong and he was right. I love strong cheeses, but somehow the mature, moldy flavors of whatever cheese it was they used to bake this particular cake overpowered the sweetness and fruitiness I´ve come to expect from a cheesecake. In any case and overall, a very pleasant experience. And yet, in retrospect I got the feeling the place still lacks identity, something to be famous for, a reason to go back. It turns out the restaurant is affiliated with a Ribera del Duero winery. So maybe that distinction is in the wines, and dishes are selected based on how they pair with specific types or vintages. Too bad if that is the case, for I do not drink wine."