Restaurant Review: Dilly Cafe
Posted Friday, September 10, 2010Dilly Café, formerly known as Dilly Deli, is a popular restaurant in Mariemont, the local village known for its English Tudors, a general lack of utility poles and its proximity to the Frisch's Mainliner.
I may not have a degree in marketing, but I think changing "Dilly Deli" to "Dilly Café" was perhaps an ill-advised exercise in re-branding. Don't get me wrong: their newly designed website, whose fonts and star-graphic motif vaguely remind me of an earlier version of CaptureCincinnati.com, is smashing. Food porn is auto-rotated there in large, glistening, SLR camera-enhanced deliciousness.
Bow-chicka-bow-WOW!
But Dilly Deli was a cool, catchy name. It rolled off the tongue like Louis Lane or Captain Caveman or Peter Parker. As for "Dilly Café?" Yawn. It's like someone had advised the owners that "Dilly Deli" was too clever and distinctive --better to blend in with everybody else. I get the fact that it wants to be bigger than its meager deli roots --it yearns to be known as a "deli turned gourmet restaurant brimming with a charmingly relaxed elegance," but c'mon...everybody knows it as Dilly Deli!
Whatever mystical strategery was behind the decision, one can still find solace in the fact that the restaurant's name change hasn't hurt business: the place always seems to play to a packed house.
The afternoon of our latest visit was an exceptionally steamy one. We waited about five minutes for a seat --well worth it, given that the only other option was to eat outside on the patio and bask in the furnace-like, 95-degree air.
Immediately upon sitting down, I flashed our Groupon printout to the waitress. We had paid $15 for $30 worth of food. If we'd ordered when the dinner menu was available, it would have been an easy figure to reach, but the lunch menu made it slightly more challenging, despite Dilly Café's penchant for expensive menu items. The waitress suggested ordering desserts to help pad the bill, then simply box them up to take home for later. Our strategy was more compelling: we'd order a shitload of food, then gorge on it all in one sitting. Perfect.
The restaurant harbors a bustling, casual, slightly upscale ambiance, with a healthy mix of young, aspiringly-affluent families, intellectuals and, well, the rest of the people who were more like us. In one corner near the bar are shelves of various beers; in another area rest myriad bottles of wine.
We started off with cups of gazpacho. The traditionally cold soup was especially refreshing on such a hot day, not watery, with hunks of cucumber swimming in a mildly-spiced tomato broth, accompanied by a very tasty, crunchy crostini that we broke up and mixed into our cups.
Next came our Maryland-style crab cake appetizer. The two biscuit-sized cakes had a nice crunchy outside and a creamy, soft core. They were packed with slightly sweet, fresh crab flavor, accentuated by a Dijon mustard/mayonnaise dipping sauce.
My girlfriend ordered the grilled shrimp and asparagus salad entree. The salad has received recognition in CityBeat's "Best of Cincinnati" issue and it's easy to see why. Every bite of the salad seemed infused with a rich grilled flavor, even without a shrimp on the fork. It perfectly epitomized all that's good about a waning summer: prodigious grilling.
I chose the seared Ahi tuna sandwich with sweet potato fries. I would have preferred my sesame-encrusted tuna be cooked a little longer --it was near raw-- but it was very good. The sandwich was quite messy, with the herbed cheese, cilantro-lime vinaigrette, cucumbers, field greens and tomatoes all conspiring to produce milky streams of moisture that crept down my wrists. Serving it on a thick, hearty foccacia bread was an excellent tactical decision, given all the juices at work. The thinly-sliced sweet potato fries were hot and delicious.
Service was good and our water glasses were kept perpetually filled. A pretty good feat, given the hectic, constant turnover of customers.
Without the coupon, our overindulgent lunch would have cost around $50 including tip. With the Groupon, it came in at $20, tip included. Quite a deal. It's no wonder that Dilly Café's Groupon offer broke records: 2,389 people bought the coupon.
Despite its dubious new name, Dilly Café continues to laugh all the way to the bank, showcasing a menu of thoughtfully-conceived and prepared dishes amid a comfortable, mildly highbrow atmosphere. As their marketers say: "Eat, Drink, Shop, Relax." Just don't call it a deli.

The best TACO joint in the city. I go there as a treat to myself every Monday. TEX MEX TACOS are delicious culinary treats that look beautiful and taste great. I'm so impressed with this place that I never explore the other items on the menu. If you don't get your taco fix here, you're losing in life.
posted: Tue., Apr 27th, 2021 @ 2:37 PM
My Wife and myself dined at Ferrari’s on Saturday and the Food and service was great/ I had the Butternut Squash Ravioli with misc nuts and sauce and it was the best meal I’ve had there/ My wife had the Fish and Vegetables and was very happy/ I also got a couple of their pizza and olive loaves of bread/ The bread is always a hit at work.
posted: Mon., Nov 23rd, 2020 @ 1:14 PM
@Rick: Thanks for the suggestion! I'll have to remember to give them a try.
posted: Sat., Nov 21st, 2020 @ 9:06 AM
Try Joe's Pizza located at Airway and Smithville Rd. You might like it...That's one of favorite haunts. I definitely think it beats Cassano's.
posted: Fri., Nov 6th, 2020 @ 4:19 PM
Hands down the best Indian in the area. I have yet to find their yellow Punjabi dish anywhere. It is my favorite, and what keeps me coming back time after time. I think I have been here over 100 times. I love this place.
posted: Thu., May 28th, 2020 @ 12:03 PM
I found a gyro I keep thinking about
https://www.yelp.com/biz/tazikis-mediterranean-cafe-cincinnati
their lamb gyro is about 2-3 bucks higher in cost than a gyro elsewhere - B U T - it is made with whole pieces of lamb meat, not the lamb and beef loaf that all other Gyro joints in Cincinnati seem to do
it is a chain. A minus for me, and I suspect for you as well.
But its good.
really, really good
one caveat: skip the baklava as it is not made in-house
posted: Mon., Dec 9th, 2019 @ 12:43 PM
I'll take your word for it, then.....it is fairly close to work so it'll be an upcoming lunch
I also need to try out this little taco wagon near Quatmans in Norwood
posted: Mon., Sep 9th, 2019 @ 6:21 PM
Hi @TJ - We were pretty impressed with the quality of the items, which I think justifies some of the pricing. I really liked the house-made tortillas and their salsas. Chilero offered some extra little touches that were a pleasant surprise. :)
Just by way of comparison...that same week we'd tried the new Mazunte location downtown...and our experience at Chilero beat them out.
posted: Thu., Aug 29th, 2019 @ 10:18 PM
Great food and fantastic atmosphere
posted: Wed., Aug 28th, 2019 @ 8:29 PM
Seems very pricey for a mostly carryout/counter-service joint
posted: Wed., Aug 28th, 2019 @ 5:51 PM