Allentown PA: Hook Seafood Grille (October 2015)


My spouse and I dined at Hook Seafood & Grille on a Saturday evening in early October 2015 with two family members. Hook occupies the space previously used by the Cosmopolitan restaurant, which closed in March 2015 (Hook opened in July 2015). The restaurant is open for lunch on weekdays, Sunday brunch, and dinner Tuesdays through Saturdays (closed Sundays and Mondays). They accept reservations by telephone and using the Open Table reservation system. Parking is available in the ArtsWalk lot next door (signs read “permit parking only”, but restaurant staff directed us to park there. (Hook does not offer valet parking as its predecessor Cosmopolitan did.)

The main street-level dining room features a slightly nautical theme, but retains the original Cosmopolitan footprint with its high ceilings and large windows in the dining room, which are now accented with striped curtain valances, and coordinating pillows are found on some booth seats. The iconic Hess’s chandelier still hangs in the restaurant, and the lighted “wall” waterfall from the Cosmopolitan also remains. Oddly and inexplicably, the restaurant had some issues with power/electricity on the night that we dined, with lighting being turned on and off intermittently in different sections of the main dining room. Restrooms are still located on the second floor, which is accessible both by an elevator and by the grand staircase. Additional dining is located on the second floor, but it went unused on the evening that we dined.

Our group of four shared the calamari as an appetizer, and we also enjoyed the complimentary bread basket provided by the restaurant. For our entrees, we ordered fish and chips and lobster roll as two lower-priced options (both in the $15+ range), along with two true entrees of a broiled combination seafood platter (with scallops, shrimp, cod, and a crabcake) and a fish dish. Dessert far outshined the rest of the meal in terms of creativity and presentation; called “peanut butter and jelly”, it had three or four components (tiny “sandwich” that looked more like a filled macaron, grape gelee squares, a tiny glass of “milk” (panna cotta), all accented by concord grapes.

Service was not good on the night that we visited; however, our server was one who previously provided decent service to us at the Cosmopolitan, so perhaps it was just an off night.
We will probably give Hook another try for lunch sometime; hopefully our next experience will be more successful than our last.





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