






happy_stomach wrote:From tweets, I was aware that the kitchen was having some toast issues.
G Wiv wrote:happy_stomach wrote:From tweets, I was aware that the kitchen was having some toast issues.
This makes my head spin............
When I saw the bacon I though, oh man, Publican in my very near future. Disappointed to hear that gorgeous looking bacon was mismanaged.
Terrific pictures, interesting well thought out review.
happy_stomach wrote:A side note that probably deserves its own thread.... I'm also very curious to hear about what folks' thought about the live tweeting...Thoughts on this?
The ricotta, which our waiter told us was from Brooklyn (?), was light and lovely.
happy_stomach wrote:I look forward to hearing others' thoughts on brunch since I haven't seen much other than solid praise on Twitter.
happy_stomach wrote:A side note that probably deserves its own thread.... I'm also very curious to hear about what folks' thought about the live tweeting, by Chef and others, of the brunch.
Kennyz wrote:happy_stomach wrote:A side note that probably deserves its own thread.... I'm also very curious to hear about what folks' thought about the live tweeting...Thoughts on this?
Well, since you asked... What I think of it is...absolutely nothing. In fact, I had never heard of it before your post and, frankly, I hope to never hear of it again. A month or two ago, dansch tried to sell me on the virtues of tweeting, but I was a tough customer then, and I remain so. I also recently had a discussion with nr### (sorry Tom, if you're going to use such an obscure screen name, I'm not going to try to memorize it) about how I sometimes wish it were easier to enjoy a meal without overanalyzing it. Sometimes I'm jealous of the yelpers that can just sit back and say "Wow, that shit is the bomb!" without pondering the cooking technique or "flavor profile". Live tweeting of a meal seems to take over analysis to the extreme, and I'd fear that it would diminish enjoyment of the experience.
(edited typo)
fleurdesel wrote:The ricotta, which our waiter told us was from Brooklyn (?), was light and lovely.
I would guess it came from Salvatore Bklyn, which makes two types of whole-milk ricotta (plain and smoked). It's hard to find ricotta like theirs outside Italy.
http://www.salvatorebklyn.com/
aschie30 wrote:I'm not sure I understand -- was Kahan tweeting (or twittering?) while he was cooking the meal?! If so, perhaps if he put down the I-phone and just cooked the meal, it would have been more successful?
aschie30 wrote:At 140 characters or less, how detailed can someone be on Twitter? Restaurant comments on twitter seem useless at best if they can only range from "Brunch good/bad @ Publican," and a moderated review is something like, "Brunch @ Publican had its high/low points." Wouldn't think such comments would be that informative, either.
P.S. Don't think I want Kahan's tweets if they all read like his latest: "No matter how much I work out I still look fat. Wrestler neck . . ." Falls into the category of "too much information."
Kennyz wrote:happy_stomach wrote:A side note that probably deserves its own thread.... I'm also very curious to hear about what folks' thought about the live tweeting...Thoughts on this?
Well, since you asked... What I think of it is...absolutely nothing. In fact, I had never heard of it before your post and, frankly, I hope to never hear of it again. A month or two ago, dansch tried to sell me on the virtues of tweeting, but I was a tough customer then, and I remain so. I also recently had a discussion with nr### (sorry Tom, if you're going to use such an obscure screen name, I'm not going to try to memorize it) about how I sometimes wish it were easier to enjoy a meal without overanalyzing it. Sometimes I'm jealous of the yelpers that can just sit back and say "Wow, that shit is the bomb!" without pondering the cooking technique or "flavor profile". Live tweeting of a meal seems to take over analysis to the extreme, and I'd fear that it would diminish enjoyment of the experience.
(edited typo)
eatchicago wrote:I think if you look at it in terms of kitchen theater, it's quite interesting. We seem very accepting of open kitchens, kitchen tables, moto-style acrobatics, or Achatz-style production numbers, why not this style?
eatchicago wrote:I'm not saying that it's something I'm particularly interested in, but I think what most interesting about this form of kitchen expression is that it's completely optional to be a viewer.
eatchicago wrote:We seem very accepting of open kitchens, kitchen tables, moto-style acrobatics, or Achatz-style production numbers, why not this style?
happy_stomach wrote:He certainly re-tweeted positive brunch comments during service.
happy_stomach wrote:One thing I have really enjoyed since using Twitter on a more regular basis is that it's given me access and allowed me to communicate with really interesting people, "experts" in certain fields for example, with whom I'd probably have no other contact and certainly no interaction.
But did you know these people to be "experts" prior to Twitter? Otherwise, how does one establish themselves to be an expert in anything in a medium which allows you one sentence per Tweet? With only one sentence, it seems like anyone could represent anything because one sentence doesn't allow enough detail or discussion to ferret out whether that person is full of crap or not.
Kennyz wrote:eatchicago wrote:We seem very accepting of open kitchens, kitchen tables, moto-style acrobatics, or Achatz-style production numbers, why not this style?
For one thing, this style uses "words" like tweet, twitter, twittering, and tweeting. While "open kitchen" has a perfectly innocuous ring to it, these other "words" sound like fingernails on a chalkboard.
aschie30 wrote:happy_stomach wrote:One thing I have really enjoyed since using Twitter on a more regular basis is that it's given me access and allowed me to communicate with really interesting people, "experts" in certain fields for example, with whom I'd probably have no other contact and certainly no interaction.
[Don't mean to pick on you, happy_stomach, and this is probably a conversation best done in person . . .] But did you know these people to be "experts" prior to Twitter? Otherwise, how does one establish themselves to be an expert in anything in a medium which allows you one sentence per Tweet? With only one sentence, it seems like anyone could represent anything because one sentence doesn't allow enough detail or discussion to ferret out whether that person is full of crap or not.
jesteinf wrote:You just have to make sure the people you're following are the people you think they are.
There was a fake Shaq for a while (the real Shaq is on now and his feed is hilarious). Also, some guys from Deadspin were pretending to be Rick Reilly but they got busted (they still post as Fake Rick Reilly, which is even funnier than the Shaq feed if you've ever read any of the real Rick Reilly's writings).
aschie30 wrote:There was/is also a fake Doug Sohn (Hot Doug).
Vital Information wrote:But even better, it was fist bumps all around at @LocalFamily when this AM, when we saw that Bittman RT @EmilyNunn RT @LocalFamily on the subject of turnips.
But even better, it was fist bumps all around at @LocalFamily when this AM, when we saw that Bittman RT @EmilyNunn RT @LocalFamily on the subject of turnips.
happy_stomach wrote:aschie30 wrote:There was/is also a fake Doug Sohn (Hot Doug).
Time Out interview with faux-Hot Doug
I actually find the Hot Doug twitterer very helpful. My last two visits for encased meats were because of him/her.
Kennyz wrote:Can you explain what this means? As a non-twitterer, I mean this seriously - not sarcastically as it may sound. I am curious how Twitter helps one realize that he/she should go to Hot Doug's. Having never Twittered (at least not on purpose), I still manage to recognize that Hot Doug's is a place worth going to.
Mike G wrote:This is one usage of Twitter that actually makes sense to me-- if you "follow" Hot Doug, who is not actually Hot Doug, you get a message saying what the game dog of the day is and so on.
Mike G wrote:But even better, it was fist bumps all around at @LocalFamily when this AM, when we saw that Bittman RT @EmilyNunn RT @LocalFamily on the subject of turnips.
What does this mean in Earth language?
Kennyz wrote: If I'm actually contemplating a Hot Doug's visit, and will only go if the game dog is something I want - it seems much more efficient to just check out their website on that day. I guess in the push vs. pull communications debate, I fall solidly on the pull side.