RL Omakase Dinner

お任せ

Omakase allows you to focus entirely on your guests and be fully present “in the moment”. It is a menu-free experience, in which the chef chooses what you eat based on the seasonal availability of the fish, vegetables and other ingredients that are at their highest quality of the year.

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

6:30PM Reception - 7:30PM Seated Dinner

Open to the Public - Jacket Required for Men - Open Bar (sake, wine, spirits) - Gratuity Included

Limited to 10 Guests


Nine Course Omakase

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Madai

Lemon | Mint | Sesame | Shio

Akami

Shiitake | Wasabi | Mustard

Chu Toro

Key Lime | Saikyo Miso | Ponzu

O Toro

Miso Butter | Osetra Caviar | Aoi Nori

Kamasu

Su Miso | Trout Roe | Sesa

Shima Aji

Ume Boshi | Cucumber | Ponzu

Kanpachi

Tosa Zu Gelee | Chive | Ginger

Hottate

Radish | Ginger | Chive

Atsuyaki Tamago

Japanese Potato | Madai | Yuzu | Honey

SAMPLE MENU

 

Chef Ruben Pantaleon

Ruben is a dedicated chef who specializes in Japanese cuisine. With over ten years of experience, he has become an advocate of Japanese dining.


Purchase Tickets

These nonrefundable tickets are transferable.

Click on the icon below to purchase tickets.

 


PARKING AT THE ROOSEVELT LIBRARY

The Roosevelt Library has about 50 complimentary self-parking spaces available to guests. Street parking is often available. Vehicles are not to be left in the Roosevelt Library parking lot overnight. The Roosevelt Library will not be liable for theft or damages to vehicles or the contents of vehicles.


MAP TO THE ROOSEVELT LIBRARY

 

HISTORY OF THE ROOSEVELT LIBRARY

The First Carnegie Library of San Antonio opened in 1903. The original building at 210 W. Market Street was constructed with funding donated by Andrew Carnegie, on property donated by Caroline Kampann. On September 9, 1921, a storm event created from the remnants of a hurricane moved through Central Texas and produced over seven inches of rainfall in downtown San Antonio and the near west side of the city. The flooding forced the temporary closure of the Carnegie Library. It was razed in 1929 and the new main library was completed in August 1930 on the original site. The name changed from Carnegie Library to San Antonio Public Library.

In 1929 the Roosevelt Park Branch Library, San Antonio’s South side library, opened and in 1968 it closed. The building is located across from the Roosevelt Park which marks the beginning of the Mission Reach Ecosystem Restoration and Recreation Project, an eight mile stretch of the San Antonio River that has received designation as a UNESCO World Heritage site. Designed in the Spanish Colonial Revival style, the building’s architect was John Marriott who also designed the Carnegie Library in Delaware, Ohio. Leland Stone purchased the building in 2013. The building is the home of the Roosevelt Library Social Club.