Suzy Creamcheese wrote:As a longtime kefir fan, I've been looking forward to this. Are they actually open or is it just taking shape?
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:I tried the plain with mochi,
bibi rose wrote:Yeah, I was tempted to wonder if the menu at David's Bistro was part of the problem.
dddane wrote:Suzy Creamcheese wrote:I tried the plain with mochi,
do they have just mochi too? was that part good? ;p
LikestoEatout wrote:I know many restaurants are and will be doing badly due to the economy but sometimes I also think that's a cop out.
I know the restaurant business is hurthing, but I was surprised at the cited difference between December 2007 and December 2006, for that size restaurant.
I know many restaurants are and will be doing badly due to the economy but sometimes I also think that's a cop out.
I have to agree with this being a cop-out. The fact is that the economy is not bad. Gas prices are high, but we still have full employment. There is a glut of restaurants and you have to be inventive to survive, otherwise people go elsewhere. I only ate at David's once and it didn't strike me as special, so I didn't return.
geli wrote:I dunno. I have many friends who work in the restaurant business, from servers to cooks to owners, in a wide variety of restaurants, and almost all of them say that this December (and the 2007 holiday season in general) was absolutely atrocious compared to the previous year.
John Danza wrote:LikestoEatout wrote:I know many restaurants are and will be doing badly due to the economy but sometimes I also think that's a cop out.
I have to agree with this being a cop-out. The fact is that the economy is not bad. Gas prices are high, but we still have full employment. There is a glut of restaurants and you have to be inventive to survive, otherwise people go elsewhere. I only ate at David's once and it didn't strike me as special, so I didn't return.
YoYoPedro wrote:I have to say that "full employment" is NOT the case in the advertising industry. And the economy IS bad for many folks. Realtors taking second jobs, mortgage brokers taking roommates, workforce reductions, the list goes on. And all of those people are watching how they spend their money. So yes, the economy DOES affect restaurants, and NO, it's not a cop-out. IMHO.
You have to stand out or at least show off yourself and work to build a clientele. You can't expect to open the doors and they will come.
John Danza wrote:There's an interesting review in today's Tribune about a restaurant in Evanston called Life Vegan that points out the issue of why good places fail. It was noted that the food was excellent, but the service is horribly slow even if it was friendly. In the last paragraph it was stated that the restaurant said their business was pretty slow. If a Vegan place can't make it in a college town, they really need to look at their operation!
Back a few months ago, I was told by someone at Julius Meinl that the new (Montrose and Lincoln) location would probably be opening in April. So I called a few days ago, and was told "we're aiming for late summer."
Santander wrote:Three words for anyone else considering opening an even remotely Polynesian / Hawaiian-themed restaurant in Chicago:
Puka. Dog. Franchise.
There is no other way.
http://www.pukadog.com/
EvanstonFoodGuy wrote:And word yet on what restaurant will be replacing the old Wolfgang Pucks in Evanston?