Saint Pizza wrote:Thanks for posting.
Our wait was short, just ten minutes.
But we, too, had to wait 50 minutes for our food. Which I felt was unacceptable.
Yes, the place was full, but it's a tiny place.
How long does it take to cook a freakin' burger? Egads!
I can stay silent no longer, even though it might warrant a verbal spanking from the moderators.
This incessant whining has got to stop. Here in this thread, over in the Xni-Pec thread, and in the Burt's thread, we've got people who are visiting small restaurants
immediately after they have received huge publicity, being thrown into the spotlight, and then complaining because it was so busy. Did you think you were the only ones to see that episode of Check Please? Did you think the post office forgot to deliver the Chicago issue of Saveur to the
entire rest of the country and you were the only one to receive it???
The posters on LTHforum are supposed to be among Chicago's savviest diners and yet, here you are (not all of you of course, just the whiners) behaving like a bunch of yokels who don't have enough sense to stay home or go somewhere else until the hubbub dies down a bit. The whiner in the Xni-Pec thread actually went there
less than 24 hours after the show aired and was confronted by long waits and strained service. What did she expect? The Check Please phenomenon is not unknown on these boards. In fact, it has been a frequent topic of discussion and disdain. So knowing this to be the case, why on Earth would you visit a restaurant that has
just been featured??? And then blame the restaurant for your bad judgment???
All three of these restaurants have received LTH's GNR award, with an emphasis on the word
NEIGHBORHOOD. All three establishments served a modest but devoted core constituency until they were suddenly exposed to a much wider audience. I can only speak for Burt's, but I suspect the same is true for all of these places. We have made every effort to accommodate and cheerfully serve as many of our new (hopefully) friends as possible but no matter how far in advance you plan, no matter how much prep work you do to stay ahead of the demand, there is still only one oven and it will only hold so many pizzas. There is only one grill and it can only hold so many burgers. There is only one tortilla press and it can only spit out so many tortillas at a time (I'm just guessing on that last one). There is only so much work space for so many employees before you start tripping over one another, creating a counterproductive situation.
If you don't have the good sense to understand and accept that a small neighborhood restaurant that has
just been exposed to the entire Chicago metro area and beyond (in Burt's case it is a national, even international spotlight) is going to be over the top busy for a few weeks or even months immediately following that exposure, then please, just stay home. You are not doing the hard working owners, employees, or other, truly appreciative customers of these places any favors by taking up space in their temporarily overcrowded dining rooms.
If you want someplace that is designed to handle large crowds in an efficient manner, I'm sure there's a McDonald's or Burger King in your neighborhood that will be happy to take care of you.
This is the LTHforum, a website dedicated to the discovery, sharing, love, and appreciation of Chicago's best restaurants. Some of those establishments were designed to handle large groups of customers. Many of them were not, intending only to cater to a modest clientèle. Believe it or not, most of the owners of these smaller places are quite happy with their small businesses and have no interest in expanding or franchising. That's what gives them their allure and charm. That's why they can focus on the high quality that most LTHers appreciate.
Well, I got that off my chest and I feel better. BTW, a reference to Seinfeld's Soup Nazi was off handedly and jokingly used in one of these threads. For those of you who seriously believe that this is an accurate description of the owners of
any of these establishments, or me for that matter for having the nerve to make these statements, let me remind you that Jason Alexander in a recent Tribune interview made the point that the characters on the show who used that term were "the most selfish people on the planet".
You want to whine about waiting in line or waiting for food under very trying, very unusual circumstances? Go ahead. But you have just told the entire LTH community exactly what kind of person is doing the complaining.
Buddy