Regarding your two-hour time frame, if you're not dawdling over cocktails, you can eat the traditional three-course dinner in under two hours at almost any upscale restaurant in the city, with the exception of those only offering lengthy tasting menus (e.g. Alinea). If you have a specific time constraint (like for a performance), you can let the restaurant know ahead of time and any good place will pace the meal to get you done in time.
For whatever reason, there are certain restaurants that get overlooked, even while serving excellent food, and I suspect most folks haven't been to some of these. The first two can be considered new, while the other two are not well known and perhaps your group hasn't been there.
How about Sixteen, in the Trump Hotel? It meets all of your criteria. It's not overly noisy, but... the tables are spaced fairly far apart, but the acoustics (with the glass wall and high ceiling) are such that, while it's not loud like Paul Kahan's restaurants, it's louder than it should be. But I wouldn't call it excessively loud. The cuisine from Chef Frank Brunacci is interesting (although frankly it didn't blow me away). And it's every bit as upscale as L2O.
Another place worth considering based on your criteria is Cafe des Architectes, in the glass facade of the Sofitel. I've been there several times and the food from Chef Martial Noguier and Pastry Chef Suzanne Imaz has consistently been some of the best I've had anywhere in the city. Although CdA has been there a while, Chef Noguier has only been working his magic for a little over a year (he was in charge at one sixtyblue before that), so it's probably new to them.
Another place not often discussed is Vivere, the ground-floor restaurant in the Italian Village complex. It's upscale and they do a big pre-theater business so they can easily get you done in three hours. The cuisine is Italian although when I ate there a couple of months ago, I chose several dishes that were more along the lines of contemporary American, including a cream of carrot-ginger soup and a roast duck breast that was divine and as tender as the wagyu beef at Alinea (I think they must have cooked it sous vide, given the uniform doneness throughout the meat).
Yet another place quietly serving good food is Aria, in the Fairmont. Their cuisine is pan-Asian although again, they have dishes that are American, such as the smoked prime rib I had there last year. Aria has been there for a while but I bet you no one's been there, either.
All four of these places meet all of your criteria.
Last edited by
nsxtasy on April 12th, 2010, 4:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.