I went twice in its first week and once more last weekend.
I debated with a friend about whether it is fair to write about a place that is so new. My answer was and always has been that if they are charging regular prices, I expect regular quality, even from the first day. That argument brought him around.
Even on my last visit, in their fifth week, they were still using a limited, temporary menu. Also, as of this writing, the website written on their business card wasn’t functional. But I’m not surprised, either.
As Max Munson, the genial owner said recently in The Prague Post, “I saw the location and liked it,” he says. “It was a case of fire, ready, aim.”
The interior is casual and basic. This is no fancy steak palace.
The background music was on shuffle and veered wildly from Jay Z to Billy Joel to Green Day to generic 80s pop.
The bar side of the restaurant looks a little better, but the seating was awkward and uncomfortable.
Along the wall was wooden banquette-style seating without padding. Not only that, but it was elevated enough that a tall man’s feet, such as my own, would not reach the floor.
There was nothing to rest them on. So they dangled. Even the tall stools lacked useful foot rests.
One of the most notable and laudable aspects of Jáma Steakhouse is its beer selection. Rather than the standard Pilsner Urquell, Budvar, or Staropramen, this place serves regional beers from the K Brewery Group.
So the first thing I did was order a .3 liter glass of the 12 degree Lobkowicz (28 CZK).
Normally, I’d get a half-liter (45 CZK), but I wanted to try as many of their five tapped beers as I could.
I’m a fan of the Lobko. My powers of beer description are not great, but I thought it quite similar to Pilsner Urquell, with its strong, Saaz (Žatec) hoppy bitterness.
After I placed my order, I was surprised to receive a “gift” from the chef. An amuse bouche, if you will.
It was a medium-sized potato pancake. I hate to criticize a gift, but it was dry, rubbery, and just too large and dense ahead of the heavy meal to come.
My first beer was gone, so I got a .3 liter glass of 11 degree Klášter Kvasnicový (24 CZK).
This beer tasted bland after the stronger, more assertive Lobkowicz, but I had it on another occasion and enjoyed its complex, yeasty character much more.
I got a starter of the fried, cheddar-filled jalapenos (110 CZK).
I was hoping for something made in-house. Instead, they were the same Makro-sourced frozen poppers that they have at Crazy Cow Steakhouse and many other places around town.
This Irish beef was one of the thinnest steaks I’d ever seen in a steakhouse. To compensate, it was also wide.
In short, it wasn’t pretty. However, the flavor was good. It picked up a smokiness from the grill. The beef was perfectly salted, fatty in a good way, and very tender.
The gravy was made with beef bullion mixed with sliced red chilies. It wasn’t creative cooking, by any means, but it tasted OK, and it was quite spicy. The fries had a ridged shape, and were seasoned, hot, and crispy.
This quirky steak had me wondering how they handled other dishes. On my next visit, I tried a .3 liter glass of the Klášterní tmavé 10 degree (22 CZK).
It had a mild caramel flavor.
Now, if you know me, you know I had to try their hamburger (165 CZK).
The price starts out OK, but to add bacon costs 45 CZK, and to add real cheddar costs another 45 CZK. So that’s a hefty 255 CZK total for a bacon cheeseburger and fries.
The patty was made with good quality ground beef, and was simply seasoned with salt.
It was like a big, fat, juicy backyard burger. That’s the good part.
But I was disappointed that it tasted as though it was cooked on a pan or griddle rather than a flame, which I greatly prefer. In their kitchen, they have both.
I asked for the burger medium-rare, but it came medium-well.
The bacon was too hard and crispy for me, and the tomatoes and onions were cut too thick for good placement on top. The steak fries were different from the first visit, but still good and crispy.
At the end of this meal, I had a .3 liter glass of their Schwarzenberg 10 degree (19 CZK).
I liked it more than the Klášter Kvasnicový.
Then, I waited four weeks and returned with V to see how they do some other steaks.
The sauce was essentially the same as the gravy chili sauce I had on the first visit, which had disappeared from the menu. It tasted like the same beef bullion, but if there was any Port wine in it, much less a reduced Port wine, I’d be amazed.
The “grilled” vegetables were just a miserable mushy mass of pan-fried red and white onions and peppers.
V did a little better with her New York strip loin (245 CZK).
The Irish beef tasted better my South American cut, partly because this one had a smoky flame-grilled flavor. Otherwise, it was surprisingly tough and hard to chew. It reminded me of Czech Roštěná steaks I’ve had.
The small dish of mushroom cream sauce, which V asked for on the side, did have the flavor of wild mushrooms in it. But it grew cold quickly in the dish. The fries were a disaster — oily, soggy, and limp.
My first solo visit cost me 487 CZK without tip. The second was 296 CZK. The third was 905 CZK. They weren’t cheap meals, but not bad for a casual steakhouse.
However, there were serious deficiencies in both the quality of the meat, its preparation, and the conception of the steaks and sauces.
Crazy Cow Steakhouse was far from perfect, but did a much better job with its steaks. Though Jáma Steakhouse did have a better burger.
The main edge Jáma Steakhouse has over the competition is its beers. But steaks should be main attraction at a steakhouse, not something that seems like an afterthought.
This feels like a restaurant started on the cheap, with starters out of a freezer bag, with a poor understanding of what makes a good steak, and with sauce recipes off the back of a bullion package.
So Max Munson and I agree. He opened his restaurant too soon; I think he didn’t spend enough time and attention on quality and creativity.
He’s always been positively responsive to criticism, so one can only hope he’ll patiently and methodically correct the many errors of Jáma Steakhouse.
Brewsta is the creator of Prague’s first English-language food and drink blog, “Czech Please.” He’s now posting a new adventure on Expats.cz once in two weeks.