Rawsha Mediterranean Cuisine

Rawsha Mediterranean Cuisine (https://rawshamediterraneancuisine.com/) is the first Iraqi restaurant I know of to open in Orlando, and definitely the first one I’ve ever tried.  It is a very casual restaurant in a strip plaza at 8956 Turkey Lake Road, Orlando, FL 32819, easily accessible from Sand Lake Road, especially if you take I-4 and get off on Exit 74.  There are plenty of tables, but no booths.  You take a seat and a server will take your order, so there is no lining up at a register to place your order and pay up front.

This is their chicken shawarma, ready to be sliced off this huge rotating vertical spit:

And this is their rotating beef shawarma.  More on that later, I promise.

They have their whole mise en place setup for assembling wraps and platters with carrots, cucumbers, tomatoes, onions, pickles, pickled red cabbage, pickled turnips, olives, and more.

I ordered this hala platter for my wife, figuring she would get two or more meals out of it, but I planned to taste the meats too, for the sake of journalism.  It included an Iraqi kebab made of beef and lamb (on the left), a chicken kofte (in the middle; almost like a grilled meatloaf made of ground chicken with savory herbs and spices), and a lamb chop (on the right), grilled to medium.  These platters come with two choices of sides: rice, fries, hummus, baba ghanouj, or fatoush.  You can see we went with rice as one of the options.  I was glad that my wife enjoyed all three meats, but the lamb chop seemed to be her favorite.  I didn’t try it, but I can vouch for the Iraqi kebab and chicken kofte being really, really delicious. I enjoyed the char-grilled tomato, onion, and jalapeno later, and I ate the orange-looking flatbread at the top, brushed with their special red sauce and lightly grilled.

Baba ghanouj, that Middle Eastern dip of roasted eggplant and tahini paste, is one of my wife’s favorite things to eat in the world.  Normally it takes on a smoky flavor from the eggplant roasting, but Rawsha’s version of baba ghanouj was light on the smoke and heavy on the tahini.  Not bad, just different.

I also ordered fatoush, a delicious salad made with lettuce, tomato, red onions, cucumbers, crispy bits of fried flatbread, and I think I tasted parley and mint in there too.  The dressing was very light, and may have included pomegranate molasses.  I liked this more than my wife did.

This was the beef arabi, something else I expected we would split, but she wasn’t into it.  It was a flatbread wrap with beef, red onions, and herbs, crisped up on the flattop grill and sliced into pretty slices, almost like how a sushi roll is served.  It wasn’t crispy by the time I got it home, so this is one better enjoyed on premises.

The beef arabi came with a side of a delicious creamy garlic sauce (toom), as well as cole slaw, slices of crunchy, fresh cucumber and carrot, pickles, and pickled turnips.  I thought the garlic sauce helped the beef arabi tremendously, but something more acidic inside or on top would have helped it too, like a hot sauce.  Luckily, I have a house full of hot sauces.   

These fries were limp and cold by the time I got home, which was reasonably foreseeable.  I jazzed them up with some spicy Filipino banana ketchup, though.

The main reason I wanted to try Rawsha was to try their “crispy shawarma” that they demonstrated making in an Instagram video.  It looked so good in the video, especially with all the ingredients.  Even though I arrived right at 11 AM when the restaurant opened, they told me it would be 20 to 30 minutes for the shawarma to be ready.  That was fine with me.  I drove across town meaning to try that one specific thing, and for a change, I had nowhere to rush off to, so I killed time on my phone.  It ended up taking a full hour, but whatever, these things happen (and often to me).

I’m sure the shawarma would have been in its ideal state eaten hot and fresh at the restaurant, but it took so long, and the rest of my takeout order was ready and had been sitting around for a while, so I had them wrap it up to go as well.  At least it looked good, having been brushed with the aforementioned special red sauce and crisped up on all its outer surfaces on the grill.  It did lose some of its crispiness on the way home, which was inevitable, but I couldn’t wait any longer.

It tasted fine, but it didn’t have any of the cool stuff inside that they included in their video: no pickles, tomatoes, tahini, or pomegranate molasses.  It was just the beef sliced off the spit, and that was it.  I think those other flavors, especially the acidic flavors and crunchy textures, would have balanced it out much better.  Was it worth the wait?  Maybe not, but I hope if you go to try it, you won’t deal with a wait like that.  I would totally try it again if I could enjoy it crispy and fresh in the restaurant.  Otherwise, the next time I’m craving beef shawarma, I think I will return to The Cairo Express instead.  And since I visited Rawsha, I found a place that serves the best chicken shawarma I’ve ever had in my life, which I will review soon enough.  But I would still return to Rawsha, especially for that Iraqi kebab, chicken kofte, and fatoush salad.

So that’s my first experience at Rawsha, raw(sha) and unfiltered.  When you try it yourself (which you should), dining in would be the preferable option,  as it usually is.  Maybe coming later in the day is a safer bet if you don’t have a cushion of time to kill.  When you taste this Iraqi food, you might find yourself singing “Oh baby, I like it RAWSHA!”

West Tampa Sandwich Shop (Tampa)

West Tampa Sandwich Shop (https://www.westtampasandwichshoprestaurant.com/) is a casual and humble Cuban restaurant on Armenia Avenue in Tampa, not too far from historic Ybor City.  I was passing through Tampa a few months back, so I decided to stop there for a late lunch instead of going to my old favorite Alessi Bakery.  Unfortunately, I arrived at 2:40 PM and didn’t realize the restaurant closes at 3:00.  I never want to be “that guy” who shows up right before a place closes and demands to still be served, but they told me it would be okay.  As a result, I wolfed down my meal and didn’t enjoy it as much as I would have if I was unrushed, but that’s my fault for bad timing, not theirs.

The first thing they brought out to me was an order of sweet, sticky, lightly caramelized maduros (ripe plantains), which are one of my lifelong favorite foods.  It was a sweltering day, and I had soaked through my clothes just driving around, so I treated myself to a rare and refreshing Jupiña pineapple soda, created in Cuba in 1905 and available at most Cuban restaurants I’ve been to throughout Florida (and also at Publix and Key Foods/Bravo supermarkets).   

I am always excited to find Cuban frita burgers on any menu.  These are a standard in Miami, and the gold standard is available at Little Havana’s iconic Cuban diner El Rey De Las Fritas.  (Cuban pizzeria Polo Norte makes one too.)  Here in Orlando, I only know one place that serves a frita burger, Black Bean Deli, and they have an almost “elevated,” gourmet take on it.  (I love their version!)  I couldn’t resist trying the frita burger at West Tampa Sandwich shop, and it was interesting to notice the little differences.  

Most frita burger patties are a blend of ground beef and chorizo sausage, and sometimes ground pork is included as well.  West Tampa Sandwich Shop uses a blend of all three.  They are topped with freshly fried, julienned potato sticks, which are so crispy and salty.  Unlike the other places I’ve had fritas, this place used the pre-made kind that usually come in a yellow cylindrical can (think of a Pringles can).  The other fritas I’ve had were topped with cheese, onions, and a red sauce that looks like ketchup, smells like ketchup, but brother, it ain’t ketchup.  Instead of those toppings, West Tampa went with mayonnaise, shredded lettuce, and sliced tomatoes.  I liked these additions but missed the melty cheese, onions, and red sauce.  I would have even welcomed ketchup, but like I said, I was rushing through this meal like I was trying to win a prize for finishing fast.   Note that the regular white hamburger bun was pressed flat on the plancha, until it was crispy, like how they serve Cuban sandwiches.  El Rey De Las Fritas in Miami and Black Bean Deli in Orlando don’t serve their fritas this way either, but I am always fascinated by regional differences, especially with Cuban food in Tampa versus Miami.

I also ordered a Cuban sandwich to take a few bites while it was still hot, then asked for a bag to wrap it up to go, so these patient people could get on with their afternoons.  This Cubano included standard thin-sliced sweet ham, roast pork, Swiss cheese, yellow mustard, pickles, and the Tampa-specific addition of Genoa salami (from when Cubans and Italians worked together in the cigar factories of Ybor City).  They also added mayo, shredded lettuce, and tomatoes, which I don’t think those are Tampa-specific ingredients like the salami, since I’ve had more traditional Cubanos without lettuce and tomato at Alessi Bakery, La Segunda Centra Bakery, and the legendary Columbia Restaurant, all Ybor City icons.   Oh yeah, one more thing — this was actually their honey Cuban, so I think they squirted honey onto the outside surface of the Cuban bread when it was pressed, giving it a very slightly sticky feel.  This “honey Cuban” was served to President Obama when he visited West Tampa Sandwich Shop, and I figured if it was good enough for him, I might as well try it that way too.  The honey didn’t add a lot of sweetness, but it was definitely sticky to hold.  Maybe the sweet honey flavor got lost in the mix, since this version of a Cubano already had a lot going on.

I still give the edge for superior Cuban sandwiches to Sanguich in Miami and South Florida mainstay Vicky Bakery here in Orlando, but I am always delighted to get Genoa salami in my Tampa Cubanos (and you will never get that in South Florida or Orlando).

West Tampa Sandwich shop is decidedly unflashy, inside and out.  The food I tried was delicious, and I know it is well-loved and respected by Cuban food aficionados.  I don’t know when or if I’ll ever make it back, but if I do, I would make it a point to arrive earlier and take in a more leisurely meal.  They even serve breakfast, and they have a full menu of Cuban entrees, not just sandwiches.  It was too hot for a heavy dish of meat, rice, and beans, plus, like I said, I was forced to eat and run due to terrible Tampa traffic and my own poor timing.  I definitely won’t do that again!

Sideward Brewing

Sideward Brewing (https://sidewardbrewing.com/) is a brewery-restaurant on the corner of Bumby Avenue and Robinson Street in Orlando’s Milk District.  It shares a building with Stasio’s Italian Deli and Market, one of my favorite places to eat in the entire city, and the two casual eateries share an insanely tight and crowded parking lot as well.

My dozens of readers may remember that my wife and I don’t drink, but I’ve been wanting to try the food at Sideward Brewing for years.  Everything is scratch-made in house, and I have cool, trusted friends who are regulars who rave about it.  They also brew and can their own house-made root beer, and that was the final nudge we needed to make it over there on a recent Sunday in the late afternoon, before it closed at 6 PM.  Sunday is the optimal day to go there, since Stasio’s is closed, and the parking lot won’t be as hectic and dangerous as it usually is.  Seriously, I’d rather brave the Trader Joe’s/Shake Shack parking lot in Winter Park than the Stasio’s/Sideward parking lot on a Saturday.

Sideward has indoor and outdoor tables, and they all have wooden chairs.  The outdoor area is covered, and the tables are four-tops, nicely spaced out.  The indoor tables are long, with eight seats at each.  We sat indoors, the only two people at our long table.  It is a family-friendly place, and plenty of people brought little kids and dogs that were all quiet and well-behaved.  You order your food and beer at the counter, and they have a cooler full of canned beers to go.  They even have a house merlot, for anyone who prefers wine to beer.

We each started with a house-made Riff & Milo root beer, which is named after two dogs who I’m sure are the best boys.  The cans are $5 each, but they are 16 ounces, the equivalent of a pint.  I didn’t think twice about paying that price for getting to try a pint of a whole new root beer, to say nothing of supporting a local establishment.  The ingredients included cane sugar, brown sugar, honey, vanilla, and natural and artificial flavors.  We both thought there was a strong wintergreen taste to this root beer, so I wouldn’t be surprised if wintergreen extract is one of those flavors.

I’m sure their beers are tasty and the highest quality as well.

My wife loves boiled peanuts (which I call “bald peanuts” to fit in in the South), and I can’t think of any other restaurants in Orlando that serve them.  She got a nice-sized serving of steaming hot “traditional” bald peanuts, but you can also request them with Korean BBQ, buffalo, sweet heat, Nashville spice, or spicy jalapeno seasoning.  She hates anything spicy, so traditional was the safest way to go.

I appreciated that they included two cups — one for the bald peanuts and one for discarded shells.

We both love a good soft pretzel, so we shared an order of two soft pretzels, which were fluffy with lightly crispy, crackly exteriors and a light dusting of crunchy salt crystals, and so, so buttery.  They were like the Auntie Anne’s pretzels I love, that I only treat myself to when I’m at an airport and my flight is delayed, but better.  In fact, I would argue that this is the best pretzel in the Orlando area.  Yes, even better than the big one at Hollerbach’s German Restaurant in Sanford.  I said what I said!  Take my word for it: there are definitely two in there.  The second one is underneath the top one.

The pretzels were served with a grainy sweet mustard called Punks mustard (I’m assuming it was made with Sideward’s Punks in the Waiting Room lager), warm and gooey beer cheese (excellent), and wonderful pimento cheese topped with some thin-sliced pickled peppers.  I loved both cheese dips, but these pretzels are so good that they don’t even need any accoutrements.

A muffuletta is one of my favorite sandwiches, and I was excited to try Sideward’s version.  A muffuletta is a classic New Orleans Italian sandwich that originated at the Central Grocery on Decatur Street in the French Quarter.  I’ve been lucky enough to have the real deal there a few times, but I haven’t been back to New Orleans since 2001.  Sideward’s muff isn’t served on the same huge, round loaf of French bread topped with sesame seeds, but the salami, mortadella, capicola, provolone cheese, and olive tapenade came on fluffy focaccia bread.  While some places serve a hot muff, I prefer mine chilled, as Central Grocery does theirs.  Luckily, Sideward’s muff is tangy, salty, and cool.   By the way, the olive salad is usually a combination of olives (green, black, sometimes kalamata), pickled giardiniera vegetables, onions, carrots, celery, and hot peppers chopped up and mixed with herbs and olive oil.  You can buy the Central Grocery’s own olive salad expensively, but it is easy to make your own, especially if you start out with a jar of giardiniera.  I love it on multiple kinds of sandwiches.

My wife ordered a caprese sandwich that she was kind enough to share with me.  It was delicious!  As good as the muff, if not better.  It included house-made pesto, fresh mozzarella, roasted grape tomatoes, roasted red peppers, and balsamic-dressed arugula on a ciabatta roll that looked and tasted very fresh, with a crackly exterior crust.  Usually I’m disappointed in ciabatta compared to focaccia, a nice crusty semolina roll, or even a soft hoagie roll.  Many of them are difficult to tear with your teeth due to a hard and chewy outer crust, but this might have been the nicest ciabatta I’ve ever had.  My wife absolutely does not share my sandwich obsession, but she appreciates a good caprese salad or sandwich (especially when I pick out the tomatoes for her, as I did here).  She was really gung-ho about this one, and I was so glad she was in a sharing mood.  It was perfect in every way!

I got cool, creamy, refreshing Gram’s potato-egg salad as a side, and it did not disappoint.  I am convinced that hard-boiled eggs make any potato salad better. 

Sideward serves a beautiful-looking breakfast burrito on Sundays from the time it opens at 11 AM, but we were too late for that.  It didn’t matter, since we had plenty to choose from and enjoyed everything.

I’ve been wanting to return to Sideward Brewing for another meal, but haven’t had a chance, and I really wanted to get this review out there.  I keep thinking about those pretzels and how comforting they would be in this unseasonably chilly weather, especially with all those accoutrements.  I highly recommend them, along with the root beer and both sandwiches we tried.  Yes, even sharing a wall and a (stressful) parking lot with Stasio’s, home of my favorite sandwich in all of Orlando (the namesake Stasio Italian sub), I would still consider Sideward’s muffuletta and caprese to be destination-worthy sandwiches.  And if you like beer, I always hear it is one of the best breweries in Orlando.  Check it out!  And if you’ve already checked it out, what is your regular food order, and what beers do you recommend?

Cafe De Wan

Cafe De Wan (https://www.instagram.com/cafedewan_/) is a brand-new Turkish restaurant that just opened a few weeks ago in Casselberry.  My wife and I love Turkish food, and we are still sad about Beyti Mediterranean Grill closing during the pandemic, only a year or so after it opened in our neighborhood.  We really like Sourdough Bread House, another Turkish cafe in Casselberry, but Cafe De Wan is even closer, with more savory dishes on its menu.  But like Sourdough Bread House, just five minutes north on Semoran Boulevard, Cafe De Wan serves an awe-inspiring Turkish breakfast feast.

We started with a spinach and onion borek (left), a flaky pastry filled with seasoned, sauteed (what else?) spinach and onions.  On the right is a “Turkish pastry” that was very dense and barely sweet.  These arrived at our table sliced up.  They were sold separately (not part of the Turkish breakfast), but we were happy to have them, due to so many spreads and dips that were about to arrive. 

The Turkish breakfast “plate” (which actually includes many plates) comes with a pot of steaming hot black tea.  I am not a big tea drinker, but this was delicious, especially after adding a few sugar cubes and waiting for it to cool.  I surprised myself by how much I enjoyed this tea.

Well, here we go!  We first received a wooden platter with walnuts, almonds, golden raisins, grapes, orange slices, very nice green and black olives (both kinds had pits), English cucumbers, grape tomatoes, and mixed greens topped with three different kinds of cheese.  The top dishes were fig jam, creamy tahini with pekmez, or grape molasses, swirled into it (not date syrup, as I originally thought), and what I thought was ajvar, a thick dip of roasted red peppers blended with garlic and olive oil, topped with a walnut.  (Ajvar wasn’t listed elsewhere on the menu, but I’ve had it in jars a few times, and this was more like ajvar than any version of ezme, a spicy Turkish salsa, that I’ve ever tried.)  I devoured the fig jam and ajvar, and my wife was crazy for the tahini with pekmez.  A reader informed me that the combination is like Turkish peanut butter and jelly, which makes all the sense in the world.  Thank you, Ipek! At the bottom, there was Nutella, that chocolatey hazelnut spread that is beloved around the world, and thick honey with decadent clotted cream in it.

The Turkish breakfast plate came with two pieces of this fantastic Turkish bread, which we both liked more than the Turkish pastry above.  It was so fluffy!

This plate was menemen, a dish of scrambled eggs mixed with sauteed peppers and tomatoes and topped with a bit of cheese.  I devoured the menemen since my wife didn’t want anything to do with it, so that worked out. 

The Turkish breakfast plate came with yet another plate with a plain egg, fried over easy with a runny yolk.  She ate that egg, and I did not get a picture of it, but I’m sure you are envisioning it in your head right now.  This was so much food for $25, but we weren’t even done!

Just like I have go-to dishes that I will order anywhere (Italian subs, onion rings, chili, macaroni salad), my wife is like that with baba ghanoush, the Middle Eastern dip of roasted eggplant blended with tahini, olive oil, and garlic.  We were disappointed by another new restaurant’s baba ghanoush recently, one that tasted like straight-up tahini, lacking that smoky flavor that comes from roasting the eggplants, so we were hoping for the best with Cafe De Wan’s version.  It was stupendous, and the smoky flavor came through first and foremost.  That’s another cured black olive on top.   

The baba ghanoush came with yet another type of bread for dipping, this time pretty standard (store-bought?) soft pita bread wedges.  I left most of the baba ghanoush for my wife, the true aficionado, but I used the pita for dipping in everything else on the table.

This was the lahmacun combo, one of my favorite dishes at any Turkish restaurant, which I order everywhere and have even made from scratch at home.  It looks like a pizza without cheese, but it is a flatbread topped with seasoned ground lamb, onions, tomatoes, peppers, herbs, and spices, baked until crispy.  Instead of cutting it into slices, you essentially put a salad on top of it (usually sliced tomatoes, onions, and flat-leaf parsley — not cilantro!), squeeze on some lemon juice, and roll it up to eat like a wrap.  It is so good, and this was one of the better lahmacuns I’ve tried anywhere.  It was definitely the crispiest and thinnest!

This was the “dip sauce” that came with the lahmacun combo.  It was kind of like toum, a creamy, garlicky dip with the consistency of hummus.  It was great, especially with so many things to dip into it!

In addition to the pot of tea that came with the Turkish breakfast plate(s), my wife ordered a drink called the Crimson Bloom, a combination of hibiscus, cranberry, and clove.  She always likes jamaica (hibiscus) aguas frescas at Mexican restaurants, so this was a big hit with her.  It also sounds like a superhero, or possibly a villain.  The white drink is homemade ayran, a yogurt drink similar to Indian lassi, but this was tangy and sour, rather than sweet like lassi.  I would not have ordered it, but it came with the lahmacun combo, which was a pleasant surprise.  I wasn’t really into it, but my wife enjoyed it, so that worked out well.  Next time (and there absolutely will be a next time), I’ll try Cafe De Wan’s mint lemonade.  It is the same price as the ayran ($3.99), so I wonder if they would consider substituting it in the future.  I would definitely get that lahmacun combo again!

It is my pleasure to welcome Cafe De Wan to our neighborhood.  It doesn’t offer all the savory Turkish entrees you would find on the menu at Istanbul Grill or Bosphorous, but it has more of a cafe atmosphere, for lighter meals.  That luxurious Turkish breakfast plate (which deserves to be called a feast or a smorgasbord, considering how many individual plates are involved) is a perfect thing for two people on a date to share, and they offer it all day, not just during breakfast hours.  Yes, I asked.  I am familiar with the concept of “girl dinner” — eating little bits of this and that, and that’s how I eat many of my meals at home, usually standing up in my kitchen so I’m not away from work for too long.  If you like “girl dinner,” you’ll go gaga for the Turkish breakfast plate.  My only concern (and it is a small one) is that they didn’t have any of the small plastic ramekin-style containers with lids to take home small amounts of different things, but that’s okay.  They had larger containers, and we made do.

Believe me, my wife and I got at least four full meals out of everything we ordered, and you may have already noticed that I eat a lot.  (I’m going to try to eat less and eat healthier in 2026, though, so wish me luck!  I’m gonna need it.)  Please give Cafe De Wan a try, because it deserves our support.  Unique restaurants like this don’t always thrive or even survive in Casselberry, and I really enjoyed it, so please help them become a dining destination!