JAMBO CAFE – Santa Fe, New Mexico

The Fabulous Jambo Cafe in Santa Fe

Growing up in the 60s–the dark ages before the Internet was even a glimmer in Al Gore’s eyes and google–then spelled “googol”– represented an very large number (currently being approached by build back better spending)–even precocious children like me derived most of our knowledge of Africa from National Geographic magazines and Tarzan movies. We thought Africa was one large monolithic country comprised solely of stark, expansive deserts or lush, mysterious jungles. Africa’s indigenous people, we believed, had to compete for food with lions, tigers and hyenas, oh my. Though Africa was called “the Dark Continent,” it was truly our knowledge which was in the dark, obfuscated by stereotypes and misconceptions.

African Art Greets You at the Foyer

The 1966 debut of Star Trek helped eliminate some of those stereotypes with the introduction of communications officer Lieutenant Uhura, a stunning black woman from the United States of Africa who spoke Swahili. By the time Disney’s The Jungle Book premiered in 1967, I had learned enough about Africa to know that save for in zoos, you couldn’t find a tiger in the entire continent. In the intervening years since the naivete of my youth, I’ve also learned that Africa is comprised of 53 very distinct and autonomous nations and even more unique cultures. While jungles and desserts are indeed a significant part of the African landscape, so too are mountains that hug the clouds and grassy flatlands called savannas.

The Front Dining Room

The vast diversity of Africa extends to its cuisine, which–similar to American cuisines–takes on regional personalities reflective of an area’s culture, history and ingredients. Swahili cuisine, for example, is a lusty and vibrant confluence of local ingredients and spices ameliorated by the ideas and ingredients brought over by foreign settlers. One of the epicenters of Swahili cuisine is Lamu, a small Equatorial island off the coast of Kenya. Lamu is where chef Ahmed Obo began the unique journey that would ultimately lead him to Santa Fe where he would launch one of the most talked about restaurants in a city in which the conversation usually turns to great restaurants.

The Main Dining Room

Since its launch in August, 2009, perhaps no restaurant in Santa Fe has garnered as much acclaim as Jambo Cafe. In its inaugural year, Jambo Cafe earned “Best of Santa Fe” honors for “Best New Restaurant” and “Best Ethnic Restaurant” from the Santa Fe Reporter. Within six months of launching, Jambo’s intoxicating elixirs earned “Best Savory Soup” and “Best Soup” overall in Santa Fe’s Souper Bowl which benefits The Food Depot, Northern New Mexico’s food bank. One year later, Jambo repeated its “Best Soup” win and added “Best Vegetarian Soup.” The traveling trophy emblematic of Jambo’s super soup has a prominent place by the front window while framed certificates for each win festoon the walls.

Guess Who Visited Jambo...at Least Twice
Wherever He Goes, The Food Network’s Guy Fieri Leaves a Mark

Jambo” translates from Swahili to a shortened, more informal, “touristy” version of “hello.” All social interactions in Swahili are usually prefaced by a greeting, but not in the perfunctory manner of American greetings. Swahili greetings tend to be more respectful and formal than American greetings. It’s therefore quite surprising to be greeted in such an effusive and informal manner when you walk into Jambo Cafe. It’s a genuine friendliness, imparting a warmth that’s increasingly rare in stodgy Santa Fe. The friendliness extends from adjoining tables, some populated by retro-clad hipsters who seem to have found the home at Jambo they couldn’t find in one of the stuffy, high-end, high-brow Santa Fe restaurants. Conversations across neighboring tables make for a fun and interesting vibe.

Guy FIeri Has Visited Jambo for Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Twice

The ochre colored walls are adorned with framed photographs and paintings of Africa: the shaggy maned lion in all its glory, the elegant and elongated giraffe, elephants frolicking in the Serengeti Plain, native youth at play and more. Batiks hug the ceiling tiles. The restaurant, a tenant of a nondescript strip mall, is long and narrow with tables in personal space proximity to one another. Even though the restaurant expanded in 2012 and doubled its seating capacity, queues of diners waiting to be seated can exceed an hour over dinner. The personal space proximity makes it easier to get to know your neighbors, some of whom have an intimate knowledge of the menu and can tell you what’s good and what’s…well, everything is good and that’s a starting point.

A Giraffe So Tall, a Hole in the Ceiling Had to be Cut Out

While many of us would willingly admit a complete ignorance of African food, the menu’s African and Caribbean dishes might inspire a little deja vu and it’s not necessarily because you may have read or heard about just how great the food is. The starters–stuffed phyllo, hummus plate, coconut shrimp, jerk chicken wings and cinnamon-dusted plantains–(or variations thereof) appear on menus at other restaurants. The familiarity extends onto the salads, entrees and desserts, none of which sound especially exotic or altogether strange or different.

My Friend Bruce “Sr Plata” Meets Chef Obo

The difference between Jambo’s cuisine and that of other restaurants is in Jambo’s inspired melding of flavor and ingredient combinations–combinations which dance on your taste buds with seasonings and spices that eke out every bit of addictive deliciousness possible while perfuming the air with intoxicating aromas. There are few dishes and even fewer restaurants which truly surprise me with “knock your socks off” flavors. Jambo is among the few.

On 30 October 2013, Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives host Guy Fieri filmed a segment of the Food Network show called “Sammies and Stew at Jambo Cafe.  Fieri was amazed that a cosmopolitan city renowned for its fiery, chile-infused cuisine would even have an African restaurant.  His bewilderment was momentarily.  Once he helped Chef Obo prepare spice-rubbed mahi mahi cooked in banana leaves and a Caribbean goat stew made with vegetables, potatoes and curry sauce, he became a believer.  In 2022, Fieri returned for a “trip down memory lane” in a  Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives: Triple D Nation episode titled “Chick’In Out.”  Once again, he was blown away by the Chef’s incredible food.

Appetizers & Soups

Cinnamon-Dusted Plantains served with pineapple curry dipping sauce.

19 March 2011: Some diners consider appetizers foreplay for the taste buds, a preamble to the main course and a fairly reliable barometer of the restaurant’s culinary prowess. Great appetizers will whet your appetite for more. Phenomenal appetizers will leave you happy if your meal consisted of nothing more. That’s the way we felt about the cinnamon-dusted plantains served with a pineapple curry dipping sauce. The texture of the plantains is perfect–more firm than bananas and not as firm as potatoes, perhaps resultant from being sauteed. The cinnamon is akin to a blessing, sweet and gentle, while the pineapple curry dipping sauce is a perfect foil, a contrast that draws out other qualities in the plantains. The sauce is terrific, a melding of African curry and succulent, sweet pineapples. African curry is rich and complex, wholly different from Thai or Indian curries.

Coconut Peanut Chicken Kebabs with Curry Coleslaw

07 January 2012: One of Jambo’s most interesting appetizers naturally brings comparisons to a similar appetizer, one found a continent away in Southeast Asia. When we saw coconut peanut chicken kebabs on the starter menu, it brought to mind satay, the popular Thai and Malaysian starter. Similar to satay, Jambo’s coconut peanut chicken kebabs feature skewered strips of chicken served with a peanut sauce. While satay is marinated in Thai curry with the peanut sauce used in a complementary fashion, Jambo’s kebabs are covered in the coconut-peanut sauce, a savory sauce that tastes like a grown-up version of the sometimes cloying Thai peanut sauce. Served with the kebabs is a curry coleslaw, a terrific variation on conventional coleslaw. It’s an idea whose time has come.

Jerk Chicken Wings
Jerk Chicken Wings

03 January 2013: Jerk wings tend to fall into two camps: wings slathered with a Scotch Bonnet pepper based sauce so piquant it’s been used in Guantanamo as an instrument of “interrogation” and wings so insipid, they cause somnolence. At Jambo, the Jerk Chicken Wings are meaty wings infused with a beguiling Caribbean inspired spice mix in perfect proportion to a mild smokiness. Jambo’s chicken wings will tease your taste buds with piquancy and they’ll please your palate with flavor.

Coconut Shrimp with Lime-Mango Sauce

25 April 2015: Because fried shrimp harkens me back to the rare “fine-dining” experiences at The Sizzler during my unenlightened childhood, my preference has always been for boiled shrimp. My eyes typically grouse over any menu featuring fried shrimp, but to paraphrase Lloyd Bentsen’s classic debate zinger “Jambo is no Sizzler.” You’ve got to believe Chef Ahmed knows a thing or two about frying shrimp. Besides, wild tiger shrimp are a mild (less briny and “fishy) shrimp that pairs well with a variety of sauces. Jambo butterflies the jumbo shrimp, encrusts it in a crispy coconut batter and fries it to a golden sheen. The shrimp is paired with a lime-mango sauce which imparts a tanginess that complements the sweetness of the batter and the savory qualities of the shrimp. This is shrimp the way my eight year-old self wishes he’d had.

Butternut Squash-Fennel Soup

If the notion of a fennel butternut squash soup makes you deliriously weepy, Jambo has a version you’ve got to try. Typically the aromatic, licorice-like flavor of fennel is a nice counterbalance to the sweetness of butternut squash, but the fennel is just one of so many exotic touches on this soup that it’s a challenge to discern its presence. Seriously, you could probably have substituted dandelion for fennel and you wouldn’t be able to discern the dandelion. That’s how well all the spices and seasonings meld together. This soup is truly an amalgam of individual flavors coalescing into a singular, more delicious whole. It’s got the typical comforting soup qualities of creaminess and deliciousness, but it’s so wonderfully well-blended that the fennel seemed rather left out, not that we cared. Okay, now that I’ve beaten up that point, once we got past trying to discern the fennel, we luxuriated in just how great yet another Jambo soup is.

 Winner of the 2011 Souper Bowl in Santa Fe: curried black bean, sweet potato soup
Winner of the 2011 Souper Bowl in Santa Fe: curried black bean, sweet potato soup

19 March 2011: The soup of the day during our inaugural visit was the best of the best, Jambo’s 2011 Souper Bowl award winning curried black bean and sweet potato soup. In several years of serving as a judge at Albuquerque’s Souper Bowl competition, only a handful of soups even approach the complexity and depth of flavors of this intoxicating elixir. This is a soul-warming soup which will lift your spirits and re-kindle your love of soup. The curry provides an exquisitely spicy touch that marries oh so well with the sweet potatoes. The soup is served hot, the way soup should always be served.

Ginger Peanut Butternut Squash Soup

7 January 2012: If there’s one thing our visits to Jambo have taught us is that soup is a must with every meal. Even if its ninety-five degrees outdoors, these magical elixirs are so good they’d draw a smile from the Soup Nazi of Seinfeld fame. The soup of the day during our second visit was a ginger peanut butternut squash soup, the very best I’ve ever had. Too many chefs seem to accentuate or even heighten the sweetness of butternut squash, sometimes resulting in a dessert-sweet soup. At Jambo, the natural sweetness of the butternut squash is melded with the invigorating freshness of ginger and the savoriness of peanuts to create a sweet-savory-piquant soup you’ll want a vat of. The soup is served with wedges of pita. You’ll also find pita within the soup where it’s toasted and cut into delightful bite-size pieces.

Island Spice Coconut Peanut Chicken Stew: with basmati coconut rice.

7 January 2012: Sometimes the differences between a soup and a stew are barely discernible. By definition, a soup is any combination of meat, fruit, vegetables and/or fish cooked in liquid while a stew is a dish containing meat, vegetables and a thick soup-like broth made from a combination of the stewing liquid and the natural juices of the food being served. Jambo’s Island Spice Coconut Peanut Chicken Stew is most assuredly a stew though it has soup-like qualities and might remind you of Jambo’s wondrous soups. It’s a thick amalgam of perfectly spiced and sinfully rich ingredients as comforting and delicious as any soup or stew you’ll ever have. It’s served with perfectly prepared basmati rice.

Entrees

Combination Plate: Chicken curry, goat stew and coconut lentils with rice and roti.

19 March 2011: To maximize your adventure in flavor, you’ll want Jambo’s combination plate which is brimming with chicken curry, goat stew and coconut lentils with rice and roti. The curry, stew and lentils are trisected by coconut rice in the shape of the letter Y. The chicken curry and goat stew are studies in the efficacy of rich, complex sauces. The goat stew is an amalgam of potatoes and carrots in a sauce of equal pronouncements of sweet and piquant. The goat meat itself is plentiful, including tiny bones. The chicken curry, which includes sauteed spinach, is not nearly as intense as the curry, but maybe even more flavorful. Coconut lentils, an East African staple, will make a believer of any lentil loathers out there. The roti, a warm bread vaguely reminiscent of Indian naan, is perfectly made. We used it in much the way New Mexicans use tortillas to scoop up chile and beans. Interestingly, while the menu calls roti “African flat bread,” it’s also a staple of Malaysian restaurants.  

Another Combination Plate

31 March 2023: Perhaps the best thing about combination plates is their versatility and all those delicious possibilities.  With a seven item combination plate from which you can choose three items, there are 35 potential combinations you can enjoy (Math isn’t my strong suit).  Those seven items–chicken curry, goat stew, lamb stew, peanut chicken stew, tofu curry (vegan), chickpea Berber stew (vegan) or curried lentils (vegan) with rice and roti-might just make seven your lucky number.  My favorite of the three was the Ethiopian chickpea berbere stew (cooked in an Ethiopian spice blend with chickpeas, fingerling potatoes and collard greens.  Served with rice or roti).  Berbere, by the way, is a spice mixture that usually includes chili peppers, coriander, garlic, ginger.  That means this dish has a lot of personality–heat infused by flavor.  It’s intense heat without being overly piquant if that’s possible.  Moreover, it’s intensely delicious, an absolutely memorable dish.  The peanut chicken stew is–as expected–redolent with the aroma and flavor of peanuts.  Unlike Thai peanut sauce, however, this stew is savory. 

Grilled jerk organic chicken

19 March 2011: The accommodating staff has a “customer is always right” latitude in allowing substitutions. For example, my Kim wanted the grilled jerk organic chicken entree, but wanted the sides which come with the grilled marinated beef kabobs. The sides would be a pomegranate red onion sauce over a green bean and mixed green salad with saffron new potatoes. The pomegranate and red onion sauce is phenomenal, a melding of sweet, tart fruitiness and caramelized pickled red onions. It’s one of those rare salad dressings you might be tempted to lick off the plate to make sure you don’t miss any. The mixed greens are at the height of freshness. The jerk chicken is redolent with a sweet-spicy smokiness reflective of the assertive spiciness of jerk seasoning. A light crust seals in moistness and flavor. This is one of the very best jerk chicken plates I’ve ever had!

 Grilled Marinated Beef Kabobs: Served with pomegranate red onion sauce over saffron new potatoes and green beans.
One Skewer of Grilled Marinated Beef Kabobs and One Skewer of Coconut-Peanut Chicken Kebabs: Served with pomegranate red onion sauce over saffron new potatoes and green beans.

7 January 2012: The grilled marinated beef kabobs served with the aforementioned pomegranate red onion sauce over saffron new potatoes and green beans are par excellence, as good (albeit quite different) as kebabs you’ll find at most Middle Eastern restaurants. Two skewers of slightly bigger than bite-sized beef prepared at about medium well are served crisscrossed style over the other items on a beautifully appointed plate. The beef is tender and delicious and if you’re concerned about the sweet pomegranate sauce having a sweet and sour effect on the beef, you need not be. The pomegranate red onion sauce actually complements the beef very well. In fact, you might find yourself wondering how that sauce would go with your favorite steak.

Tuna
Sesame Encrusted Albacore Tuna

3 January 2014: Jambo is no slouch when it comes to seafood. The special of the day during a January, 2014 visit was a sesame encrusted albacore tuna over crab basmati rice and julienned vegetables topped with a spicy coconut peanut sauce. The creamy white flesh of albacore, a true “white meat tuna” is less oily than other types of tuna and has a delicate flakiness. It also has a slightly more “fishy” flavor than some tunas. Perhaps that’s why the spicy coconut-peanut sauce works so well. It doesn’t mask the natural flavors of the tuna; it accentuates them much in the way mint jelly complements lamb chops. The crab basmati rice is perfectly prepared with a delightful texture and ability to sop up the coconut-peanut sauce.

Curry Encrusted Pistachio Goat Cheese Salad

31 March 2023: “But I don’t like curry.”  Time after time, I’ve tried to make a convert of my Kim and her response is always the same.  When I suggested we order the curry encrusted pistachio goat cheese salad (over roasted vegetables and organic field greens drizzled with pomegranate vinaigrette) instead of an appetizer or two, she bristled but relented when she saw my pleading puppy dog eyes.  It didn’t take us long enough to determine this is one of the very best salads we’ve had in a long time, a salad so good Chef Obo would dominate City Different salad bowls the way he dominated souper bowls.  We probably should have crumbled up the two round mounds of goat cheese to distribute the curry infused deliciousness throughout the salad.  Instead, we devoured that glorious fromage first then more deliberately relished every other component.  The roasted vegetables were magnificent, a vegan’s delight.  Each was crisp, fresh and roasted to a deg  We typically ask for an additional portion of salad dressing, but the accompanying pomegranate vinaigrette penetrates the salad so thoroughly that another portion would have been overkill.  This is a salad dressing which should be bottled and sold.  It’s so good even turophiles who can never get enough blue cheese will love it.

Pomegranate BBQ Chicken Sandwich

31 March 2023: Eat This, Not That! compiled a list of the best chicken sandwich in every state.  You may be surprised to learn that New Mexico’s best chicken sandwich comes from Jambo Cafe.  Here’s what Eat This, Not That! had to say: “In a state defined by bold Tex-Mex flavors, you may assume that the best chicken sandwich plays on south-of-the-border flavors. You are in for a shock if you expect New Mexico’s best chicken sandwich to follow suit when you visit Jambo Cafe. The restaurant immediately hits you with the Caribbean and African flavors, and their chicken sandwich follows suit. For some exotic flavors, try their jerk chicken sandwich, with all the spiciness of the Bahamas.” Much as I love Jambo Cafe, how can you trust a publication that says New Mexico is defined by bold Tex-Mex flavors? Those are fighting words!  

We didn’t order the jerk chicken sandwich, but found one that could have (or maybe should have) earned “best chicken sandwich” honors. That sandwich is the Pomegranate BBQ Chicken Sandwich (marinated in spices and grilled to perfection.  Served in a pita and topped with pomegranate BBQ sauce.).  It’s an outstanding chicken sandwich.  Don’t let the innocuous name lure you into a false sense of tepidity.  This is a dynamite sandwich with fiery qualities that will titillate your taste buds and scald your tongue.  That heat comes from thinly sliced Scotch bonnet peppers in all their gory glory.  The chicken is sliced into larger than bite-sized chunks so perfectly grilled that you might forget you’re eating chicken.  Some of that is courtesy of the pomegranate BBQ sauce which amplifies the flavors of the grilled chicken.  That BBQ sauce is equal parts sweet, savory and tangy notes that just sing.  

It’s become almost passé for restaurant menu items to read like an impossibly good novel only for the highlight of those items to actually be reading the mouth-watering descriptions. Not so at Jambo. When the special-of-the-day is described as “papaya marinated moonfish served over butternut squash brown rice, sautéed garlic asparagus and topped with a smoked paprika coconut spice,” the eating is better than the reading. Moonfish, a widely underutilized and carefully harvested Hawaiian fish is–despite an oily flesh–very rich and flavorful. Chefs love its versatility, but none we’ve had is prepared in quite the way Jambo prepares it. You may want to bathe in the smoked paprika coconut sauce which blends seemingly disparate flavor profiles into a harmonious composite.

Jambo will make diners of all persuasions very happy. The menu is replete with vegetarian friendly dishes. Chef Obo is a proponent of the locavore movement, striving to procure locally grown organic food as much as possible. The cafe’s lamb is raised in Abiquiu, the organic feta cheese comes from Tucumcari and other ingredients such as organic mixed greens and free-range chicken are from local sources.

Desserts

Jamaican Rum Pecan Pie with Two Scoops of Ice Cream

31 March 2023:  Cocktail Wonk extols the virtues of Jamaican rum, indicating (among other things): Jamaican rum is particularly known for its strong aroma and flavor, emphasizing fruits like pineapple and overripe banana. Some people call its special aroma “funk” or “hogo.”   Neither my Kim nor I imbibe adult beverages so I can’t confirm those qualities.  I can, however, tell you that the Jamaican Rum Pecan Pie is one of the very best we’ve ever had.  As with all great alcohol-infused items prepared correctly, the rum amplifies the flavor of the pecans and tempers the sweet elements.  Jambo serves the pecan pie with two scoops of vanilla ice cream which pairs exceptionally well with pecan pie.

Banana Coconut Cream Pie

31 March 2023: In 2012, PBS polled its readers and found that 59 percent preferred pie, where only 41 percent preferred cake. Three years later, in 2015, a Buzzfeed poll revealed that 52 percent preferred pie and 48 percent preferred cake. That argument–cake or pie–is akin to deciding which of your children you love most.  When it comes to cake, pie, chocolate or cheese, we love them both and don’t particularly consider their caloric impact when enjoying them.  With Jambo’s banana coconut cream pie, all you can think about (in between swoons) is just how absolutely delicious this pie is.  It’s creamy, rich and beautiful.

19 March 2011: Apple, peach and blackberry cobblers are a staple of the deep South where cobbler is often served with barbecue, but rarely will you see mango cobbler a la mode with barbecue (or anything else). If Jambo’s rendition is any indication, mango should be a fixture on cobbler recipes. Its sweet juiciness is perfect atop and beneath a crumbly crust topped with two scoops of vanilla ice cream. In season, mangoes are even more juicy and sweet so this is a dessert that will be even better in the summer.

3 January 2013: Save for the baklava, the desserts at Jambo are made on the premises. It’s no surprise that desserts are very much worthy of the appetizers, soups and entrees. The desserts start off as familiar, but are given unique touches that make them even better. Take for example the restaurant’s flan. Flan, a baked custard often served with a caramel (or even better, cajeta) sauce is almost de rigueur in New Mexican restaurants. At Jambo, the flan is imbued with cardamom, a fragrant and delicious spice. Then there’s the Jamaican rum pecan pie with just enough Jamaican rum to be noticeable.

The popularity of Jambo means during peak times, you may have to wait to be seated, but the deliciousness of the food makes the wait worth it. It wouldn’t be hyperbole to call this tiny cafe one of the very best restaurants in Santa Fe, if not New Mexico.  By the way, on 4, 2023, you can also find Chef Obo preparing and serving his absolutely incredible cuisine.  Chef Obo purchased the venerable Bobcat Bite building and surrounding 1.7 acres off Old Las Vegas Highway where he will be serving breakfast and lunch.  The inaugural menu will include several items from Bobcat Bite along with familiarly seasoned Jambo items.  

JAMBO CAFE
2010 Cerrillos Road
Santa Fe, New Mexico
(505) 473-1269
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 31 March 2023
1st VISIT: 19 March 2011
# of VISITS: 5
RATING: 25
COST: $$
BEST BET: Cinnamon-Dusted Plantains, Curried Black Bean and Sweet Potato Soup, Grilled Organic Jerk Chicken, Combination Plate (Chicken curry, goat stew and coconut lentils with rice and roti) Mango Cobbler a la mode, Cardamom Flan, Jamaican Rum Pecan Pie, Sesame Encrusted Albacore Tuna, Butternut Squash-Fennel Soup, Coconut Shrimp, Moonfish, Pomegranate BBQ Chicken Sandwich, Curry Encrusted Pistachio Goat Cheese Salad

17 thoughts on “JAMBO CAFE – Santa Fe, New Mexico

  1. I wasn’t sure if you were once again attempting to educate your readers on this topic or employing your sharp wit to pull the wool over our eyes. So I Goo…er…looked it up on the interweb. The facts are allegedly these:

    In 1998, Sergey Brin and Larry Page registered their new company under the name Google, which was a misspelling of the word googol. Brin and Page explained that this name fit with their goal of building very large-scale search engines. To bring the point home, they named their corporate headquarters the Googleplex.

    If you or anyone else would like to further your knowledge of math, here is the whole story about the other goo, googol.

    https://www.techtarget.com/whatis/definition/googol-and-googolplex

    1. I had assumed it was pretty common knowledge that “googol” was a very large number. Maybe it was just more A Priori knowledge pounded into me by the good nuns at St. Anthony’s.

      1. Good on you, Gil! I came close to majoring in math in college and I never heard of it before. Those nuns were from outer space, I’m tellin’ ya.

  2. Minor suggestion, Gil: at the bottom of this excellent posting were three posts marked as “related” – but – all three eateries were/are closed.

    Might be best not to entice us with listings for restaurants no one can ever eat at again? 🙂

    again, np either way.

    1. Good feedback, T.J. Much as I’d like to accommodate, I didn’t build the web part that designates which restaurants are related to others. It’s way beyond my skillset to manipulate the code so that the algorithm excludes which have closed. sorry.

  3. Wow, awesome, great, superb…every other positive or compliment I can give.
    Yes, I went to Santa Fe for my first Jambo visit even though the Albuquerque location is less than 5 minutes from my house. My in laws were in town for a visit and wanted a break from traditional new mexican foods.
    The fried plantains, hummus, combination plate and the Kenyan spiced beef were all outstanding. I also very much enjoyed the coconut rice that was on the combination plate.
    I can’t wait to go back, and I’m happy I won’t have to drive an hour and a half round trip this time!
    Welcome to the neighborhood, Chef Obo. I’ll be the big guy ordering everything on the menu in one sitting.

    1. Yo Ryan….Given it sounds like you will be visiting sooner per living much closer than I and will be “ordering everything on the menu in one sitting.”, I’m looking forward to your review of what is listed on the variegated menu , in an “upfront” manner, as Cumin French Fries http://jambocafe.net/menu/ ! I recently had the Op to finally get the taste of Cumin and can now empathize with those who more readily discern it than I’m capable of otherwise easily doing.

  4. Gil, just thought I would let you know that I saw a new sign for Jambo Cafe this afternoon on Juan Tabo. It appears they may be taking over the building where Weck’s was between Constitution and Lomas. Just thought you might like to know. Perhaps an expansion?

    1. Chef Ahmed Obo is indeed expanding his restaurant empire. Duke City diners will love Jambo and its lively seasonings. This is one of the most exciting restaurant expansions to hit the Duke City in years.

      It should be noted that the Duke City already has two excellent African restaurants: Karibu Cafe and Talking Drums. Because “African” cuisine is such a broad, encompassing term, I recommend you read both reviews.

  5. My S.O. and I went to Jambo’s for lunch on a recent trip to Santa Fe. It’s FANTASTIC. Everything we had was a complex and wonderful mix of flavors. We could easily have made a meal of the stuffed phyllo and the black bean and sweet potato soup. But we wanted to taste other things as well so we also had the chicken and beef kebabs and the combination plate. Everything was great. Sadly they have no plans to open a branch in ABQ.

  6. What can I say, yes, all my NM Friends who Feast MUST come to Santa Fe, a little ways from downtown to this most AMAZING food I have had in a very long time, It was REALLY GOOD! On my break from the IT world, Sensei and I took a drive up to Santa Fe ( 1/2 the time from LAX to SF Valley by the way) where we started out with the Jerk Chicken Wings, a very nice not too spicey sauce, great those those wanting not HOT spiced food.

    Then it was on to the cup of curried black bean, sweet potato soup; I really wanted the butternut squash but that was on last night menu, and I really wasn’t sure about it from the name but, wow, it was REALLY GOOD, a little sweet (not too much) yet peppery, a MUST!

    Then I had the Kabobs, one Chicken and the other Beef, very very good; for I was torn whether to have the Goat Stew but I will next time because I want to take Senorena and thus there will be a next time. The Kabobs were in a great sauce that had potatoes and green beans, yes I got my Greens in.

    I finished it off with their homemade Flan (note I was very full by now, but oh well, how often do I get up here) made with cardamom which was thick and hearty. I love custard so it was a great ending.

    Oh, the really great ending was getting to meet the chef and owner Ahmed Obo, he was very nice and humble especially when asked about Guy Fieri coming to his restarant on his last tour of NM. He did not make a big deal of it but placed his success on word of mouth. He walked the tables and asked each person how their meals were with some hugs of those that new him, and I over heard many say they were sent my friends and family. Even the workers were great and they look forward to coming to work there because they are fed well, can it get any better…

    Thanks Sensei for joining me and Ahmed for making me terrific food. Ahmed, if you read this, I would love to hear more on how you learned to create in the kitchen…Again, a MUST GO!

  7. On July 9, 2011 I finally made it to the Jambo Cafe. After a little hesitation, I ordered the mango habenero gazpacho. What a revelation! The heat was lovely but never overwhelmed the other flavors. Sweet, hot, and cool, I could eat this soup all summer.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.