"Our famous freshly baked rolls (up to 1,000 per day) and dipping oil have brought generations of people back to Lui Lui again and again."
The reason we were all always willing to wait so long? Yup, those rolls. The "famous" Lui Lui rolls and dipping oil. The food at Lui Lui was always fine, but it was the rolls, served in unlimited amounts, hot and fresh out of the oven, with their signature seasoned oil dipping sauce, that brought us back time and time again. Oh those rolls.
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| Visit #1: Family Takeout Night. October 2020. |
The signature rolls & oil were still great, and I tried desserts for the first time (I never had room before!) that were good, but otherwise, this was mostly disappointing, to everyone, and pricey. Tiny salads, overcooked pizza, etc, etc.
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| Visit #2: Family Takeout Night. December 2020. |
The pizza this time was perfectly cooked. I loved my caesar. And mom's pasta stole the show! Desserts I picked this time were less stellar, but overall, wow. Again I say, what a difference a visit makes ....
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| Visit #3: Family Takeout Night. September 2021. |
Appetizers
There is one, very memorable, part of every Lui Lui meal for me. The bread and oil to dip into. It is given to every table once you sit down, the rolls are baked in the wood fired oven, and, well, we always just loved it. You can even purchase retail bottles of the oil. Its soooo good. I have memories of so many parties there, and at one, there was a girl who was stuffing her jacket pockets with rolls to bring home, so they'd keep bringing us more while we were there. Such memories. And no meal at Lui Lui's could be imagined without them (they do gluten-free ones now too apparently?)
Lui Lui also has a very large appetizer menu, fun things like crispy risotto balls, roasted ravioli, calamari, spinach & artichoke dip, etc, etc, but I'm pretty sure I've never tried anything from the appetizer menu. Maybe the bruschetta? But when the rolls and oil are that good ... you really just don't need anything else.
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| Visit #1: Rolls & Oil. |
I made sure to ask that plentiful rolls and oil were provided. I was told that given our order, we'd get 8, and could add 6 more for $1.50. I stuck with the 8, as there were only 3 of us, but did ask for an extra oil.
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| Visit #1: Rolls. |
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| Visit #1: Dipping Oil. |
And yes, the oil is still great, lovely amount of garlic, some herbs. Again a toss up between these and Ziggy's - both oils were great with the garlic and herbs.
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| Bottle of oil. $7.50. |
Soups & Salads
When I dine out, soups & salads are the part of the menu I normally blow right by, but, that would be the wrong move at Lui Lui. Their ceasar salad is #famous, for good reason, really. I adored it, I think the first caesar I ever had made with *real anchovy paste*, and high quality parmesan cheese. And once I discovered a "hack", I forget who, but someone else did this and recommended it, where you can add on a scoop of the marinated roma tomatoes that they use for the bruschetta ... oh, man. No meal at Lui Lui, much like the rolls, is complete without this salad. You can make it an entree with blackened grilled chicken, which I do have fond memories of doing from time to time too, back when I used to like chicken ...
Several of the salads are available in half or full size, appropriate for pairing with a main dish, and of course the caesar is one of those. If you go at lunch, your choice of soup or salad is also included with every meal, and that is the time of day I always visited as a teenager, frugal gals we were. They had a "Express" pasta I loved (Cavatappi Primavera, no longer on the menu), that I always subbed in a creamy rosa sauce for, the aforementioned caesar and rolls and oil ... and, it was bliss. So many great days spent on the outside patio with my high school friends (including for years later whenever we all visited home), with that lineup.
Entree salads abound as well, some quite innovative and tasty sounding, but, the caesar I was never able to get past. One of my friends adored the Insalata though, I remember her always getting it as her meal.
I never once had soup at Lui Lui, nor saw anyone else get it, but they have an Italian sausage and chicken chowder always on the menu, along with a soup of the day. I actually ordered one for takeout, as I wasn't feeling particularly great, and somehow chowder sounded good.
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| Visit #1: Full Insalata. $7.99. |
"Crisp lettuce, fresh green peppers, mushrooms, roasted black olives, tomatoes and red onions with our house Italian dressing and a sprinkle of mozzarella.'
My parents went for the classic Insalata, which I was quite familiar with, like I said, one friend growing up loved this, and it was certainly always on the table at every birthday party or gathering.
I didn't have any, but it looked different from my memories. Didn't it used to have huge shreds of lovely cheese? This cheese was laughably small bits.
My parents were saddened by the lack of actual greens in the full size, large salad ... very meager portion. Got a solid meh from them.
** for the ridiculous portion size too.
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| Visit #1: Caesar. Half. Toppings on side. $6.99. + Marinated Tomatoes. $2.50. |
"with fresh croutons and sharp cheese."
I of course went for the caesar, and asked to have the croutons on the side so they wouldn't get soggy, and ordered extra dressing (+$0.50) ... hoping it would live up to my memories, and be something I could use for a few days on my own salads. And of course I asked for my side of marinated roma tomatoes, explaining that I wanted the ones they use on the bruschetta, a big scoop to add on to my salad (but also on the side, so not soggy).
The portion of the salad was even more laughable than my parent's Insalata. Yes, it was a half size, the starter salad, but, um, their half size salad certainly used to be bigger than this. Seriously, the amount of romaine ... what??!!!
The lettuce was ... fine? Fresh enough? Romaine as it should be in a caesar salad.
The crouton portion was normal, but given the meager lettuce, um, ratio was a bit off. I do like the croutons though, they make them in house, from the same dough as the delicious rolls. Parmesan cheese was just shredded thin, I thought it used to be larger shreds? But at least these were still normal size shreds of cheese, unlike in my parent's salad.
For $6.99, but $2.50 for the addition of the tomatoes, um, value not there. Again, **.
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| Visit #2: Half Caesar + Anchovies + Marinated Tomatoes. Toppings on the side, add extra dressing. $6.99 + $0.99. |
This time I was charged only +$0.99 extra, for both the anchovies and marinated tomatoes, which should be the cost of the anchovies. I think they didn't know how to charge for tomatoes?
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| Visit #3: Half Caesar + Anchovies + Marinated Tomatoes. Toppings on the side, add extra dressing. $6.99 + $0.99 +$0.99 +$0.50. |
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| Caesar Dressing. |
The dressing of course is a key component.
It was ... fine. It did not have the real, legit, intense anchovy flavor I remembered, but was the thicker style I prefer, very unhealthy, and decent enough.
Solid ****.
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| Visit #1: Marinated Tomatoes. $2.50. |
The part I was second most excited for, of course, my marinated tomatoes! Back when I used to get this, they gave me a huge scoop, but, keeping in theme with the day, this was just a tiny little dressing container full. I also remember bigger chunks of tomato, but again, theme of day, smaller bits now.
The tomatoes however were still great, very flavorful, well marinated. I'm sure the bruschetta is great with this, but why have bruschetta, when you can feast on the rolls and oil (and add this even?), or add the flavorful tomatoes to your salad?
I'm glad I ordered this, but again, lol at the portion size. And seriously, $2.50 for this?
****.
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| Visit #1: Add Grilled Shrimp (8). $7.99. |
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| Visit #2: Side of 8 Grilled Shrimp. $7.99. |
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| Visit #3: Side of 8 Grilled Shrimp. $7.99. |
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| Visit #3: Asparagus Balsamic Tomato Salad. (Seasonal). $11.99. |
This was a pretty random order on my part, given that I hate goat cheese, and I'm "meh" on cucumber, but I loved the sound of the grilled asparagus and balsamic roasted tomatoes, a summer special.
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| Visit #1: Vegetable Chicken Chowder. Cup. $4.50. |
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| Visit #2: Soup of the Day: Chicken and Dumplings. Cup. $4.50. |
Pizza
Pizza is definitely not really my thing, but my family always does a pizza night, and thus, that is what they wanted, even though I really was hoping people would want pasta (and we could share!). Lui Lui is known for their wood burning oven, a huge centerpiece of the restaurant after all, so I had hope that it would be good. I think I probably had it from time to time growing up at parties, but, pasta was always my focus.
Lui Lui makes their own dough, offers a gluten-free version too, and all are cooked in the aforementioned 800* wood burning oven. They have a slew of specialty pizzas, including some fun ones like a caesar salad topped one ... or you can design your own. They also make calzones and flatbreads.
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| Visit #1: Large Margarita. $22.50. |
"Fresh tomato, basil, romano and asiago cheese, chopped garlic, olive oil and fresh mozzarella."
I would never pick a margarita pizza, but, alas, pizza was for my parents anyway, so, boring Margarita it was. They went for the large.
As I expected, it was not a legit margarita, featuring marinated chopped tomatoes (same as my salad add-on, same as bruschetta) and perhaps balls of fresh mozzarella, but lots of other cheese, and it was all very melted on. The crust was extremely crisp.
My parents weren't impressed with this either. I liked the tomatoes of course, but yeah, this is not good pizza. And rather pricey.
**.
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| Visit #2: Small 2 Topping Pizza, Green Pepper & Onion. $12.99. |
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| Visit #3: Large 2 Topping (Green Peppers and Onions). $20.59. |
Pasta
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| Visit #2: Baked Tortelloni Gratinate. $17.75. Add spinach, add mushrooms. + $0.99 each addition. |
"Cheese filled jumbo tortelloni tossed with grilled chicken, diced prosciutto and chopped marinated tomatoes in our asiago cream sauce, fresh basil garnish."
My mom decided to try pasta on our second visit, and, wow, she "wins". This was fantastic!! I really approve of her modifications as well. They kinda made the dish.
The asiago cream sauce was a great base, far more flavorful than their alfredo.
Marinated tomatoes added tons of flavor, there was a substantial amount of tasty prosciutto, and her added spinach and mushrooms just rounded it all out quite nicely.
The pasta was large cheese tortelloni, and the dish was baked so it had some cheese melted on top too, and the pasta was decently al dente. Not really my thing, but seemed good quality. I didn't try the chicken, but it looked to be tender slices of all white meat grilled chicken.
**** for me, just for the sauce, veggies, and prosciutto! I stole, um, a lot of this :)
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| Visit #3: Baked Tortelloni Gratinate Sub Cavatappi. $18.75 Add Shrimp ($7.99), Spinach ($0.99), Mushrooms ($0.99). |
"Cheese filled jumbo tortelloni tossed with grilled chicken, diced prosciutto and chopped marinated tomatoes in our asiago cream sauce, fresh basil garnish."
After the success of my mom's order of this last time, we were pretty excited to re-create it, and turn it even more into something we wanted. We added the spinach and mushrooms again, and this time added shrimp too (8 of them), and subbed in cavatappi for the tortelloni, since none of us really care for tortelloni. I was pretty excited for this, but ... it was nothing the same.
The sauce was thinner and more watery than I remembered, and seemed to have little flavor. There was very, very little mushroom added, and even less spinach. One bite of each. The shrimp were juicy and succulent, but not cleaned, poop trails all still quite visible. And no cheese on top.
I liked the idea of this dish still, and appreciated the shreds of prosciutto, but ... everything about this was a let down. The pasta was nicely cooked though, and I liked the corkscrew shape.
**+.
Kid's
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| Visit #1: Kid's Chicken Tenders / Garlic Broccoli. $7.50. |
Sauces
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| Visit #1: House Buffalo. |
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| Visit #1: BBQ. |
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| Visit #1: Alfredo. Side. $3.99. |
When I saw it available as a side (or, pint, quarter, etc in the "Retail" section of the takeout menu), I added it on, knowing I could dunk my roll in it if for some reason I disliked the oil, I could smother broccoli in it, and, I had some great cauliflower gnocchi and assorted raviolis from Trader Joe's in my freezer that would be awesome with it.
Dessert
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| Visit #1: Sicilian Chocolate Mousse. $5.99. |
First up, the chocolate mousse, which I tried just a tiny bite of (licking the lid, actually, as it was covered in mousse!), since I avoid chocolate at night. I was a bit sad that our order it did *not* include the chocolate chips, nor the whipped cream, that I ordered.
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| Visit #1: Creme Brûlée: Pumpkin (Seasonal). $6.49. |
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| Visit #2: Cannoli Chips & Dip. Caramel & Whipped Cream. $6.50. |
As for the chips, they were ... ok. Triangle shaped, kinda tasted like cannoli shell but not really ... dusted in powered sugar. I liked the idea of having the chips to dip in things, but these weren't particularly special.
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| Visit #2: Tiramisu. $6.50. |
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| Visit 3: Creme Brulee. $6.75. |












































































