Mirador
Ram Luna
Tel: (506) 230-3060 / 230-3489
Specialty: Costa Rican typical food
Chefs: Rogelio Carballo Centeno
Recommended Dish: Lomito Mirador, a beef tenderloin
accompanied by three savory sauces.
Prices: Dinner entrées range from U.S. $6 to $13,
including sales and service taxes (23%). Wednesday-night all-inclusive
Tierra Tica Costa Rican buffet with open bar, live
music, typical dancing and festivities costs $28 per person.
Location: In the mountains above Aserrí, south of
San José.
Directions for Taxi Driver: Del centro de Aserrí,
cuatro kilómetros sobre la carretera a Tabarca.
At
the Ram Luna Restaurant in the hills above Aserrí, the
food is authentic, the atmosphere is elegant and the view is breathtakingly
amazing. Guests will feel they have the stars at their feet as
they enjoy a deliciously authentic Costa Rican dinner above a
vast sea of lights twinkling in the valley below.
The
history of the popular Ram Luna Restaurant began in May of 1967,
when a young newlywed couple named Gilbert and Moraima Ramírez
moved into a small mountain cabin with a view and dreamt of building
a restaurant where the atmosphere was classy and the food delicious.
Today,
the Ram Luna has become all that and more. The elegant multilevel
building boasts a beautiful exterior view and a classy interior
where candles warm the comfortable ambience. The service is excellent
and the food is uniquely Costa Rican.
Appetizers
on the Ram Luna menu include traditional delicacies such as Fish
Ceviche, made with chunks of sea bass cooked in lemon
juice, or the Mushroom Fry, made with fresh Cartago-grown mushrooms
sautéed in butter with ham and covered with Béchamel
sauce.
Soups
include Seafood Chowder, with a broth of octopus, fish, shrimp
and clams; and the traditional Sopa Negra, a black
bean soup with boiled eggs and six different spices.
Rica
and pasta entrées include Arroz con Pollo (rice
with chicken), Arroz a la Marinera (rice with seafood),
and Fettuccine a la Crema, Fettuccine noodles with
Parmesan cheese, pepper and nutmeg mixed perfectly into a smooth
cream-and-butter sauce.
Fish
plates include the Breaded Corvina, Garlic-buttered Corvina and
the Filet Mirador, a boneless filet of corvina cooked
in a shrimp and heart-of-palm sauce.
Chicken
and beef dishes include Pollo a la Barbacoa, golden
brown chicken roasted with barbecue sauce and honey, Pollo
al Vino, a boneless breast cooked in wine sauce, Lomito
a la Pimienta, a 230-gram beef tenderloin cooked with green
pepper and spices, and the highly recommended Lomito El
Mirador, a tenderloin served with three savory sauces to
please all facets of ones palate.
For
dessert there is a sweet selection of tropical favorites such
as Coconut flan, fruit mousse, chocolate cake, coffee with ice
cream and Tres Leches, a sweet and creamy dessert
best described as a sweet, milk-soaked sponge cake.
The
restaurants extensive wine list includes fine bottles imported
from Italy, France, Spain, Germany, California and Chile. Select
from the lengthy list of options or enjoy a glass of one of the
house wines, from Spain: Vallformosa Vall Fort Crianza 95, Vallformosa
Viña Blanca or Vallformosa Viña Rosada.
Every
Wednesday night, the Ram Luna Restaurant becomes a joyful Costa
Rican street festival with delicious and authentic dishes arranged
into an extravagant and all-inclusive dinner buffet for a memorable
evening named Tierra Tica.
The
Tierra Tica buffet tables are replete with tasty typical
foods like rice and beans, marinated fish and guineo
(a banana cousin) ceviche, fried yuca
(a potato-like root), cheese empanadas (corn pockets),
Russian potato salad, barbecued chicken, meat tacos
and much, much more
In
addition to the open bar, there are non-alcoholic drinks at the
buffet table, such as fruit punch and horchata, a
sweet and creamy drink made with milk and rice with a touch of
cinnamon. Speaking of rice, theres Arroz con Leche
rice pudding for dessert, along with Cajetas (homemade
Costa Rican sweets) and a smorgasbord of sliced tropical fruits.
Not
only will you find a wide selection of delicious food and drink,
but a vast repertoire of Costa Rican festivities to match. The
marimba, a traditional percussion instrument resembling a giant
Xylophone played by up to four musicians, brings the sound of
Costa Rican festivals to your table as the dancers liven up the
room with colorful costumes and cheerful smiles.
Soon
the Cimarrona, a folk dance that cannot be absent
from any Costa Rican festival, makes its appearance: drums, trumpets
and the Payasos of Aserrí lend more festivity
to the party. The giant Payasos, traipse into the
dining room and select partners to join them on the dance floor.
Soon everyone is dancing, clapping and laughing.
No
Costa Rican festival is complete without the closing light show,
and so out to the patio everyone goes to watch the fireworks display.
Dancing Payasos and fully satisfied diners follow
the musicians outside as the Ram Luna is showered with displays
of exploding shooting stars in the night sky above.
The
lights of the Central Valley glow beneath the Ram Luna as the
glow of the fireworks fades and the Payasos bid good
night to their guests. It has been a memorable night.
The
Ram Luna Restaurant is open Tuesday through Friday from 5-11 p.m.,
and Saturdays and Sundays from noon to 11 p.m. It is closed on
Mondays. Reservations are required for the Wednesday night Tierra
Tica dinner buffet and party, which begins at 7 p.m.
We would like to share some of the comments
we have received from our clients.
We
can assist you in planning your trip in Costa Rica! Please contact
our travel
division on how to customize your vacation to meet your budget
and expectations. We replay with a suggested itinerary and cost
within 24 hours.
Toll-free
from the U.S.:
1-866-211-0533
Telephones:
(506) 280-4041
Fax:
(506) 253-6934
P.O.
Box 11071-1000
San José, Costa Rica
or
SJO 745
P.O. Box 025216
Miami, FL 33102-5216
We
would like to share some of the comments
we have received from our clients.
Contact
us by E-Mail
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