A Second Chance for Mazzat?
Back in December, we were excited to be among the first people to stumble upon Mazzat, a Middle Eastern “tapas” spot on Columbia St. that we discovered one day while out for a run. The only review so far was a bit on Yelp, so with visions of a great Brooklyn Record scoop, we made…

Back in December, we were excited to be among the first people to stumble upon Mazzat, a Middle Eastern “tapas” spot on Columbia St. that we discovered one day while out for a run. The only review so far was a bit on Yelp, so with visions of a great Brooklyn Record scoop, we made the always-windy trek from the Carroll St. stop up Sackett on a bitterly cold night, the chill eating through our thickest coat.
The meal was so not worth the effort that we didn’t even run a review. The pita came straight from a bag, not even warmed; the hummus was grainy and undersalted; the words “dog food” were thrown around in reference to the lamb dish (by someone else in our party, of course). The only consolation prizes—a tasty baba ghanouj and an unassailably crisp green salad—weren’t enough to bring us back for another try. But a recent Chowhound post has us reconsidering. User bklynkat calls the Alexandria grilled whole fish “freaking great,” and urges readers to “PLEASE request Gamal’s baklava. His mother’s Egyptian recipe called for a filling of pistachios with a homemade sugar syrup–no honey. The last time I had ‘very good’ baklava was in Turkey 2 years ago…Gamal’s ROCKED this. SO good.”
We might consider a repeat visit to give those two items a shot. Anyone else have opinions about Mazzat’s fare? (Or its strange sports-bar-esque atmosphere?)
Photo by lj lindhurst.
I like their baba ganoush for appetizer, Chicken Kabob for Entree.
Mazzat, sports-bar-esque?, dogfood? If you think that, I question your ability to review a restaurant. I have been a regular to this charming restaurant since the begining. I am always greeted by name and instantly feel the neighborhood’s essence and hospitality. The food is prepared the same way. How many restaurants these days start your meal with complementary toasted pita and tahini?
wasn’t bad, but again I also live close. great for a late night take away option.
The pitas where very disappointing I’ll have to say, whole wheat from the bag looking like it came right from Met.
Unassailably crisp?
Please, surrender the pretension and write in plain English.
Fountain Cafe and Waterfalls on Atlantic rock for arab food.
Agreed, Zaytoons is off the charts . . .
The food was average, okay if you live on the block, but not worth a big trip. However, Zaytoons on Smith Street is worth the walk. I love the chicken kabob platter with the baba.
I’ve eaten there a couple of times and the food has always been dynamite. But I live in the neighborhood so it’s not like I have to go out of my way to get there. I wouldn’t make a special journey for it. I have to say, it never struck me as having a sports bar vibe.
yah, unless you’ve seen a decent post history from “bklynkat” and thus know her(?) to be a reputable and reliable reviewer/poster, I would take that glowing review with a grain of salt. Or maybe a large chunk of salt.